Dreams come true thanks to hard-working students.

Itā€™s difficult for most people to imagine the lives of those who sleep on cardboard and rags, whose children have no shoes, and whose local schools have hole-filled walls and roofsā€”if they have walls and roofs at all.

It was exactly that level of need that a dedicated group of the collegeā€™s students sought to relieve. After months of planning an d fundraising, members of the International Business Honor Society (IBHS) in the college embarked on the NICA Global Leadership and Service Project (GLSP): ā€œNicaragua December of Dreams Trip to Help Kids.ā€

Between December 26, 2005, and January 8, 2006, seventeen students in Team Managua, led by Norman Uriate, and twelve in Team Granada, led by Christian Jarquin, traveled on rugged mountain roads to remote areas of the region to help in a variety of ways.

ā€œOur primary project took place in the little town of Los Fierros, where we did substantial renovations on the dilapidated building where about 100 kids attend school,ā€ Uriate said.

For seven days, the students, aided by many of the 400 families in the town, built an exterior wall, painted inside and out, replaced broken or missing windows, and repaired a swing set.

ā€œIt was like a Habitat for Humanity construction project,ā€ he said.
And when the group visited a little girlā€”their ā€œposter childā€ during their fundraising effortsā€”they spontaneously reached into their pockets to collect money to provide the family, one of the poorest in this very poor town, with beds, sheets, and materials to rebuild the shack in which the foursome lives.

A celebration at which each child received a bookbag with a toy capped off the weekā€™s work.

The group also fixed up a second remote school, sent materials to a third for a local effort, and coordinated through a contact Uriate had in the United Nationsā€™ World Food Program to get food to the children.

Simultaneously, Team Granada was logging twelve-hour days distributing items to three orphanages, two schools, and various slums.

ā€œWe conducted some English lessons, had sing-alongs and dancing, played with piƱatas, and handed out cookies,ā€ said Jarquin. ā€œMainly, we focused on passing out the first toys, shoes, and school supplies these children had ever had. We met with the directors of orphanages, nuns, and the children of the streets. We also met the archbishop of Granada.ā€

The results exceeded Jarquinā€™s expectations.

ā€œOn paper, we thought we would touch the lives of 1,350 kids, but it was closer to 1,500. In one school, Escuela Miravalle, 300 children were packed inside a classroom waiting to get their donations and there were lines everywhere we went.ā€

This is the second GLSP conducted by the IBHS. Their purpose is to help create responsible business leaders who understand the environment in which theyā€™re working. The first took place in Bangkok in the spring of 2005; plans for the 2006 Bangkok trip are well underway. Participants from the Nicaragua GLSP are now thinking about sponsoring families in Los Fierros and about making another trip, this one in the summer when airfares and hotel rates will be lower.

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1 comments

It was such an honor to be involved in this project. Special thank you to Professor Roomes for tailoring his course to accommodate a greater collective goal. The class was so fortunate to have him green light this project we all cared so much about. So proud of our Panther family and Make-A-Wish volunteer Erin Briede for coming together to help make a huge impact in Lorenzoā€™s life.

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