sábado, 26 de junio de 2010

Welcome to Wachirpas!

Hello, friends!

I don’t know you, and you don’t know me… yet. My name is Jiyunt Uyunkar. I’m Ecuadorian and I’m from Wachirpas community. I’m twenty-two years old and I’m single. I am an Achuar woman.

I want to help the women in my community. My culture is strict. If a woman makes a mistake her father doesn’t let her study, so the women are not educated. Our elders think we are not capable of studying and that we can only work in the garden and serve the men. But we are capable of studying the same as men, so I want and I’m going to help the Achuar women. We can do the same things that men do, and lots more, because we are intelligent and strong.

I am a woman who has fought a lot to be able to study and work. I lost my father when I was six. I was in first grade and only my beloved mom helped us; she didn’t have money to buy school supplies or clothes, so she made sintas (headbands), pinink (Achuar pottery), and chicha (yuca beer) to sell at Kapawi Ecolodge.

I remember one time my mom said to me, “Daughter, you can’t study because there isn’t any money to buy school supplies.” I was in seventh grade. I said, “That can’t be.” I begged her to let me study and I promised to look for money, making handicrafts for her to sell. My mom accepted and I went to high school in Kapawi community. It’s two hours upriver from Wachirpas in kanu (Achuar for dugout canoe!). I was living in a Catholic mission with Mexican nuns, and my life was very sad because every day I needed something and I had to fight for everything, so that I could graduate.

In this high school, before, the nuns taught us English—but they didn’t know much either! Then when I was in eleventh grade, Wain Collen, a volunteer from South Africa, came to teach English with the Pachamama Foundation. He was my first real English teacher, and with him I started to learn. I learned to say, for example, “Good morning, teacher! How are you?”

Every three months the English teacher changed, and I had a lot of teachers from the United States and England. It was difficult to understand the ways that they taught and spoke, but I always liked learning English. And I still do.

In six years I graduated, and then I was living at home. I didn’t have my English classes for three years, and I forgot a lot. But then I met many new volunteers and they were very friendly people and good teachers and they helped me remember my English. I learned a lot.

Now I’m the volunteer English teacher in my community. I am teaching sixty-three boys and girls, from eight to fifteen years old. And I love teaching all day.

I want to be an example for Achuar women and girls, because I’m an Achuar woman too. That’s why I want to study Education at a university: to help my community. Especially the women. And I want to invite people who want to help the students of Wachirpas community to visit us!

Thanks for reading my story.

God bless,

Jiyunt Uyunkar

1 comentario:

  1. Hello Jiyunt,

    My name is Rosa Martin. I am 19 and come from England. Do you take on assistants to help you teach in your community? I am going to be in your area from the 5th of May until the 27th of May and was wondering if people ever come and stay and volunteer?

    My Spanish is very limited but I love being in a classroom environment and am very willing. I have also helped out in primary schools before (in England)

    I look forwards to hearing from you. My email address is rosasommermartin@hotmail.co.uk

    Kind Regards, Rosa Martin.

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