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Friday, November 30, 2012
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Family HealthCare Center, Fargo ND - Part 2, Refuge
The Family HealthCare Center provides needed primary care and dental services for Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured patients... basically, anyone in need.
If that wasn't awesome enough, the clinic is also part of a refugee resettlement program. Individuals... families forsake the ecosystem of their homeland, possibly never to return.
Samantha (Sam) Kundinger is the Director of Development at the Family HealthCare Center. Her efforts focus on grant and raising funds for the programs. The strategy she develops with the CEO, Patricia Patron, is vital for sustaining the quality care provided by the clinic.
Mark Johnson is the Construction Project Coordinator. The building was restored to provide better and more efficient space for the staff to treat patients. Mark knows every detail of the restoration. Pictures are available at http://www.flickr.com/photos/62836983@N08/
Sam and Mark made a great team for conducting the tour. Sam's energy, despite the late evening, played well off Mark's careful directions to the architectural facets and utility of the newly renovated building.
Mark Johnson and Samantha Kundinger
As the tour progressed, I learned more about the people that the center serves. Sam expressed the needs of the local population and of those in the New Americans program. The New Americans program helps immigrants and refugees resettle. They come to the clinic through a local and international Christian organization.
The majority groups of refugees are natives of Bhutan.
The Bhutanese resettlement results from people moving out of United Nations sponsored refugee camps. - https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bt.html. India, Nepal, and China are some of the countries involved in resolving the political tensions that caused the refugee issue. In the meantime, the United States receives some Bhutanese transitioning into a life that may take a long time (if ever) to feel like normal. There are individual and families from other Asian countries, as well as from African and South American countries.
I spoke to Patricia Patron about her plans and vision for the clinic only to find that she knows a thing or 2 about the deeply personal decisions and internal conflict this type of transition can bring, even in an unstable political situation. More to follow.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
El Cadejo Part 4
El Cadejo are spirits that follow travelers, one
black and one white. They look like dogs. The black one is perceived as
harmful. The white one is perceived as a protector. In a previous
article I implied that the difference between me speaking Spanish rather than
English could well be down to who got off the ship at what port of call.
In the last article, I wrote of particular ship voyages, the Diana and
the Vigilantie, implying how families were separated over Africa, the
Caribbean, Central and South America, and the U.S.
My great grandmother was born a slave. She lived to be over
110 years old. I was not old enough to remember her. Most of my
older brothers and sisters remember her well. She may not have been too
far removed from parents who suffered under the international slave trade. This
puts another spin on "He can pass." A family relationship to
Central or South America may not be as distant as one would think.
Click to View More |
This brings me back to the party and the well meaning but
potentially problematic comment, “He can pass.”
What of the El Cadejo
lurking around thoughts of skin color? Well, there were stronger spirits
in the room, the spirits of hospitality, respect, and warmth projecting from
the hosts. That set the tone of how I approached others and how they
approached me. It turned the entire situation to something that connected
us - brought us closer instead of something that segregated us.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
El Cadejo Part 3
El Cadejo are spirits that follow travelers, one black and
one white. They look like dogs. The black one is perceived as harmful.
The white one is perceived as a protector. In the previous article I implied that
the difference between me speaking Spanish rather than English could well be
down to who got off the ship at what port of call.
Emory University’s Voyages Database contains records on the human trafficking of Africans into the Americas and the Caribbean (http://www.slavevoyages.org/). One can track ship commission dates, ship names, voyage dates, regions of slave trade, destinations, and more. The database shows how different traders purchased people from the same region then distributed them from New York to Argentina as part of international commerce.
For example, in 1793 both The Vigilantie and the Diana did their slave trading along the Gold Coast regions of Africa. The Vigilantie left with 340 human cargo. It disembarked 294 into Suriname. Afterwards, it sailed into an unspecified port in the Spanish Central Americas (Panama-Colombia border area). The database does not list how many disembarked.
In the case of the Spanish Central
Americas, persons from the Vigilantie and other ships were distributed
throughout the Latin American isthmus and South America. In some cases, the
resulting population of those with African ancestry reached 50% of the recorded
population of Spanish colonies. Construction of the Panama Canal
brought immigrants from the Caribbean Islands and other countries into Panama
to find work.
The Diana left with 40 souls and
arrived at the Caribbean island of Sint
Eustatius with 35.
It disembarked 12 souls. It sailed into Savannah, Georgia, USA
delivering 23.
Read Part 4
Monday, November 19, 2012
El Cadejo, Part 2
El Cadejo are spirits that follow travelers, one black and
one white. The black one is perceived as harmful. The white one is
perceived as a protector.
Preview at Amazon |
Emory University’s Voyages Database contains records on the human
trafficking of Africans into the Americas and the Caribbean
(http://www.slavevoyages.org). One can track ship commission dates, ship
names, voyage dates, region of slave trade, destinations, and more. The
database shows how different traders purchased people from the same region
then, distributed them from New York to Argentina as part of international
commerce. – Read Part
3
Sunday, November 18, 2012
El Cadejo, Part 1
A head nod, a short phrase that included something like paso,
I looked at another man I had also met at the party. His overwhelming
willingness to translate from Spanish to English helped me feel comfortable
among the mostly Panamanian guests. “You can pass,” he answered. There
was a brief pause. Then, I laughed. Other guests laughed with me.
After all the jokes comparing Panama City against Colon,
after the hand-waving and gesturing about the difference between the Atlantic
tide versus the Pacific tide, after the gossiping and cutting of eyes, after
the wide-eyed children who were unable to stop laughing and incapable of
slowing down - even for a moment, after having a really good time at the party,
I thought about the comment, “He can pass.” I came to understand why
there was a brief pause. - Read Part 2
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Friday, November 16, 2012
Family HealthCare Center
Recently, I toured the Family HealthCare Center, an important community clinic in Fargo, North Dakota, USA.
The clinic provides needed primary care and dental services for Medicare, Medicaid, and uninsured patients... basically, anyone in need.
If that wasn't awesome enough, the clinic is also part of a refugee resettlement program. Individuals... families forsake the ecosystem of their homeland, possibly never to return. The clinic helps with health, language, and even dietary challenges.
.
I have plans to cover this clinic more and focus on the people dedicate to this work. In that, there may be an opportunity to relate a specific refugee story - understanding the sensitivity in doing such story.
Excerpt from
Song of the Oppressed
A single, soulfully raw voice,
a moan with words and tears,
captures the travail of
generations.
Fingers and lips echo the tragic rhythm
of unsettled feet....
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Lemberger Strasse
In Lemberger
Strasse, I chose to enter into the tunnel.
Red Earth closed
in around me.
I followed the
guide. Not a thought of how the journey
would end entered my head. I thought
more of not getting my clothes dirty, as if that really mattered.
I lowered my head
here and there. I listened to the
guide... an escape tunnel, in the event of a siege, down through the water well and
out the side of the mountain.
We stopped where the
tunnel floor gave way to a steel grating that was supported by steel girders,
hammered into the Earth.
The guide beckoned.
I followed. Some would not. But, I stepped out and stood up, suspended
between fear and comfort, bright sky and dark water, between the two people of
whom one could become.
Happy Holidays
Family
Labels:
Family,
Initial Post,
Rockford Alabama
Location:
Rockford, AL 35136, USA
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