From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Folk singers remind Hondurans 'they are not alone'
From
NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date
11 Nov 1999 14:28:54
Nov. 11, 1999 News media contact: Linda Bloom·(212)870-3803·New York
10-32-71B{607}
NOTE: Photographs are available with this story.
By Paul Jeffrey*
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (UMNS) -- Two United Methodist folk singers returned
to the United States on Nov. 8 after spending a week touring Honduran
villages ravaged a year ago by Hurricane Mitch.
Jim and Jean Strathdee, music directors at St. Mark's United Methodist
Church in Sacramento, Calif., were invited to Honduras by the Christian
Commission for Development (CCD), an ecumenical organization supporting
reconstruction work in more than 400 Honduran villages. CCD is the main
partner in Honduras for the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR).
"We went to share some of the music we sing in our own churches in the
north, though translated into Spanish," Jim said. "But the music was mostly
a tool to gather people together, to give us an opportunity to listen to
their stories of horror, of how they survived the hurricane and how they've
been rebuilding their communities and lives. And it was also an opportunity
for us in a small way to remind people that they are not alone, that their
sisters and brothers around the world are praying for them and supporting
them in many ways."
Everywhere they sang, the couple asked villagers to share the songs they
sang in their community gatherings and religious meetings. Jean said that
while many villagers were shy at first about participating, the "power of
the music usually broke down the walls, and we enjoyed good moments of
sharing."
She particularly enjoyed singing with CCD staff members, both in the
countryside and at the organization's headquarters in Tegucigalpa, she said.
"We sang with them songs of justice and love, and you could tell that they
were singing about what they were living every day in their work."
The Strathdees had been to the region before. During the 1980s, they
traveled to Nicaragua three times, singing songs of peace and justice in the
middle of the Contra war. In 1995, they visited Nicaragua again, and also
came to Tegucigalpa to lead singing at an international gathering sponsored
by Heifer Project International.
St. Mark's financed the Strathdees' trip to Honduras. They were accompanied
by their daughter Julie and five other congregation members interested in
exploring new ways of understanding mission in the region.
The group visited reconstruction projects under way in the rural provinces
of Santa Barbara, Intibuca and Valle. They also visited housing projects in
the capital city. In addition, the group visited a workshop where rural
farmers are being trained to use diesel-powered block machines provided by
UMCOR.
The Strathdees spent Nov. 6 leading an all-day workshop on music and liturgy
at the Honduran campus of the Latin American Biblical University.
Jean claimed it was hard to return to California. "It would be easier to
stay here and continue singing than to go back home and help people face up
to our lifestyle decisions and how we support an unjust world," she said.
Jim said he now faces the task of composing music that would describe their
visit.
"We met with groups of women who refused to see themselves as victims, who
lost all to the storm but who came together to rebuild their houses, to
rebuild their lives, to fight for dignity," he said. "I'd like to find a way
to connect their refusal to be victims to our refusal back home to be
accomplices, to make connections between their reality and ours.
"Our relationship with them needs to go beyond just sending money to build
houses," he said. "It also needs to look at our public policy decisions and
the environmental impact of the decisions we make as consumers."
# # #
*Jeffrey is a United Methodist missionary in Honduras.
*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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