Barbara-Ann's mission to care for street children in Bolivia
Caring for others is in the
nature of Barbara-Ann McVean.
The 24-year-old Stromness woman has recently
taking up a volunteering position at a children’s home called the Casa de Amor
(House of Love) in the city of Cochabamba in the Latin American republic of
Bolivia, where she cares for children who call the streets their home.
This is the third time Barbara-Ann has
headed abroad to help some of the world’s most needy children.
When she was just 18, she went to East
Malaysia (Borneo), where she stayed for a year, helping out at a children’s home
she describes as being “practically in the middle of the jungle”.
Then, in 2002, she headed out to Guatemala,
spending two years working in a home for 150 children, just outside the capital,
Guatemala City.
She returned home to Stromness and worked at
St Peter’s House for ten months, saving up as much as she could to help pay her
way for a year in Bolivia.
Barbara-Ann set off on her latest adventure
in October, and has quickly settled into life at the Casa de Amor - a project
she found by searching the internet.
“It was in Guatemala that I discovered my
love for Latin America,” said Barbara-Ann. “I was wanting to go back, so I
looked up all sorts of different orphanages on the internet and I found the Casa
de Amor. “It just hit me - I’m not sure what it was about it, but it felt
right.”
She e-mailed an application stating her
previous overseas exploits, along with references and a police report, and it
wasn’t long before she was asked when she could start.
As a volunteer, she has paid to stay with
the home for a year, but says she may stay longer.
“I worked at St Peter’s House and saved as
much as I could for the ten months I was home in Stromness.
“I also have a couple of people who are
sponsoring me - giving me a set amount of monthly, which I am most appreciative
of. It can be hard when you have to spend, but have nothing coming in.”
To reach the home, Barbara-Ann flew via the
US, Brazil and Santa Cruz, in Bolivia, before the final 45 minute flight to
Cochabamba, where she was met by the home’s director and founder, Jennifer
Thompson.
“Staring out of the window, I was trying to
absorb absolutely everything,” explained Barbara-Ann.
“The scenery here is awesome. Cochabamba has
the stunning background of the Andes, and is blessed with a perfect climate as
it is at a perfect height - 8,200ft.
“It doesn’t have the intense heat of the
lowlands, nor the biting cold you can find higher up in the mountains.”
But behind this idyllic setting is lies a a
tragic story, of an estimated 5,000 children either living on the streets or in
orphanages.
After just a week, Barbara-Ann said she had
settled into life at the home, helping to care for nine children, the oldest of
whom is not even three.
And over the few short weeks she has been at
the home, she has experienced many of the problems faced by people in the area —
including being threatened by a knife-wielding mugger.
“I was walking with a Bolivian friend of
mine and I noticed there were two boys walking towards us. They were 15 or 16,
their hair was matted, their clothes in tatters and as they came closer I could
tell that they were high.
“One of them said ‘Dame monedas’ - give me
change. I was told to ignore them and keep walking.“One of the boys followed me, opened his
hand and I saw that he had a knife up his sleeve.” He demanded more, but more forcefully, and
Barbara-Ann handed over the equivalent of 50p and he went away.
“It certainly has made me a little more
wary, but I have learnt from it,” she said.
On another occasion, Barbara-Ann had to
accompany a social worker to give a statement to the police after a woman was
seen throwing a two-year-old girl onto the road. “The police wanted my social worker friend
to make a statement, and it was made in front of the lady who had hurt the
little girl.
“It is very different to how things work
back home. I have no idea what happened to the woman, who was the girl’s aunt.”
Another upsetting incident happened when
Barbara-Ann spotted a family sitting in a shop doorway.
“They were obviously very poor by the way
they were dressed. I then saw blood all over the ground in front of a girl who
was probably my age. She was coughing up mouthfuls of it, I think she had TB. I
have heard it is very common here.”
In addition to her work in the home,
Barbara-Ann has also taken care directly to those who need it.
She explained: “Every week, a couple come
and set up a tent where they wash street kids, give them new clothes and a meal.
“For the older kids and adults, they wash
their hair and give them food.
“This was one of the most amazing things I
have ever done in my life - sitting there as the little kids come in one by one
to be washed.
“I must have bathed between 15 and 20 of the
little darlings. It was such a humbling experience, washing the feet of the
little ones.
“They were thick with dirt and all cut from
being barefoot all the time. I asked one of them if they had shoes and with her
head hung low, she whispered ‘nunca he tenido zapatos’ - I have never had
shoes.”
Barbara-Ann describes this as a rewarding
activity and something she is going to continue to do in addition to her work at
the home.
There is also a much lighter side to life in
Bolivia.
A huge open air market, called La Cancha,
offers the chance to buy everything from chicken feet to CDs, and Barbara-Ann
has even found time to go to her first football match.
“The two opposing teams from the city were
playing and it was the most hilarious thing I have ever seen.
“The referee was card happy and eight yellow
cards and two red cards were given. One of the players who was sent off refused
to go and they had to get the police to come and take him off, covering him with
their shields so that none of the things thrown from the crowd would hit him.
“They were throwing bottles, bags, anything
they could get their hands on.
“I am looking forward to the next match -
and losing my voice yet again from shouting too much.”
How a young woman's
dream helped build Casa de Amor
Casa de Amor - the House of Love - is the brainchild of a
young American woman called Jennifer Thompson, with the help of her parents.
Still only 23, she has an interesting background.
As a teenager, she travelled to Russia with her parents to
meet the baby they were adopting.
Inspired by the visit, she made eight more trips to Russia
and also visited orphanages in Mongolia, China and Mexico.
She set about raising US$50,000 to establish Casa de Amor
after reading an article about the Hospitals of Hope, an organisation founded by
a physician from Kansas.
The two got in touch, and plans were drawn up to establish a
home next to his new hospital in Cochabamba, initially catering for up to ten
children, eventually expanding to 20.
Construction was completed last year, and Barbara-Ann McVean
is one of eight staff who help run the home.
Ms Thompson acts as the home’s director, there are three
childcare workers, a psychologist, social worker and a housekeeper/cook, plus
Barbara-Ann.
The home’s children generally come one of two ways — a
referral from the Bolivian government (such as a child who is abandoned, removed
from an abusive home or orphaned) or a referral from another ministry.
Further details of the Casa de Amor are available online at:
www.casadeamor.org
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