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Rancho Santa Fe, Honduras, January 2005 Dear Friends, Many tragedies have brought suffering to the world this past year. The numbers of dead and victims from man made violence and natural disasters seem to have reached proportions that we haven’t seen for years. Looking at what we do day in day out seems like the proverbial drop in the ocean compared to the staggering need for help and assistance world wide. Therefore, we have to keep our focus on where we do make a difference. And for us at NPH, we sure do make a difference in many children’s lives. I recall a family of four that joined our NPH family recently - one older boy and three little girls. They had just arrived at the Ranch and right away we offered them food. It was quite a sight to see a delicious meal in front of four malnourished and hungry children. Yet they were too scared to eat. Fortunately their anxiety quickly gave way to their natural impulses. Now, about two months later, they are well integrated into our NPH family, smiling and giving hugs to everyone who crosses their way. Jose* and Sofia* came to NPH from a government institution. After the children’s mother passed away, the children initially lived with an alcoholic and violent uncle. The uncle had become so abusive that the government intervened and sent the children to live with an aunt. Unfortunately, the aunt was even more violent than the uncle. She used to punish Jose by hitting him with a hammer on the head. She broke Sofia’s hip by tying her to a chair, placing a full case of soda bottles on top of Sofia’s lap, and then sitting herself on top of that soda case. After a year with our NPH family, both children are now quite well adjusted. The physical damage they suffered has become invisible, but it will take a long time for the emotional wounds to heal. We deeply care about each individual child God sends our way. We know that you do, too. Be it your generous financial support, your prayers, your work as staff or volunteer; these allow us to continue our mission to bring love, peace and hope into a world where it is much needed. Thank you. Many hugs and smiles from your NPH Honduras family. Sincerely, Reinhart Koehler National Director 2 The year 2004 was mixed year for Honduras. The year usually begins with the dry season and tremendous forest fires all over the country. This year it just rained enough to keep the grounds sufficiently moist so that very few forest fires started and could be extinguished fast. This is the first time in our almost twenty years in Honduras that we did not have a fire at Rancho Santa Fe. In spite of economic woes and high fuel prices which seem to especially hurt poor countries like Honduras, the economic development in Honduras took a turn for the better this year. The government kept inflation at bay at about 9% while economic growth is estimated at 4.5%. Teacher strikes that turned at times violent created chaos in the middle of the year. The public school students lost six weeks of schooling - two of which were made up by offering classes on Saturdays and by prolonging the year - cutting the vacation time short. From February through August, it seemed that between bus and taxi drivers, medical personnel, teachers and university professors, or students, at least one major group had been on strike. No major natural disasters such as floods, hurricanes, or landslides hit our small country this year. However, crime and violence seem to be on the rise. Although the government has been able to control kidnappings and car robberies, the situation with the youth gangs, narco-criminals and organized crime seems to be getting out of hand. In response to tough crime and anti-gang laws, gang members, apparently sponsored by organized crime, attacked at random a city bus, firing AK47s at the passengers from outside and inside the bus, one day before Christmas Eve. The death toll rose to 28 and left many more seriously wounded. The interpretation of this senseless act is that the organized crime together with gang members are trying to intimidate the government and the population in order to be able to continue, more freely, their evil doings. During this past year, NPH has enjoyed a cordial relationship with the presidential couple, Ricardo Maduro and his wife, Aguas Ocana de Maduro and received support directly from them. The year 2005 will be their last year of a four year term, as Honduran presidents cannot be reelected. The outlook for this coming year is that we are to expect a drought. The economy is supposed to do well. On the political level, presidential elections will dominate with the interest groups pressuring candidates for favors in exchange for votes. Crime and violence will continue to persist. Our main wish is for peace in Honduras and in the world. We hope for a calm and prosperous year as there is already enough to do as it is. We at Rancho Santa Fe will continue to be of service to the Honduran orphans and the poor in general as best as we can. Reinhart Koehler National Director 3 The educational programs at Rancho Santa Fe includes pre-kinder through 9th grade. We had another year of major improvements in our education department. We have recently revamped our reading assessment program. It is now organized to more easily track and improve the reading skills of our students. We also hired a bilingual Honduran to coordinate the ESL program and teach English. We are continuing to outfit our new science laboratory. Hopefully it will be ready for the beginning of the school year in February. We expanded our library and cataloged many new books, displays, and reading areas. We congratulate Oscar Paz, who served in his Year-of-Service in the library, for all of his hard work. In previous school years, Kelin didn’t participate in class, rarely read, and didn’t seem to have any interest in school. After we introduced Kelin to our resource room program, where she received individualized attention, Kelin started showing drastic changes. She now mixes more with her classmates and seems to really enjoy school. It seems that she needed only a little bit of personal attention to interest her in school. Goals: x Support the academic progress of the children in every way possible. x Amplify the individual attention given to the children. Statistics: x 20 teachers x 159 primary students x 55 secondary students x 18 primary graduates x 15 secondary graduates Lourdes Salgado School Principal 4 The Rancho Santa Fe School Special Education Department offers an array of programs for children that need one-on-one tutoring and therapies. Our programs include resource rooms which serve for tutoring classes. The volunteers that work in this department have 10-13 children that they tutor throughout the school day. The volunteer removes the child from their regular grade classroom and works with them individually on a subject in which the child experiences difficulties. Each year these volunteers help our students tremendously with their most difficult subjects. This year we added tutoring for the children in the Vocational Workshops area. Previously the children in need of tutoring who studied in the Vocational Workshops had to come all the way down to the school to get tutoring. Now we have a volunteer and an employee who provide tutoring in a new classroom built in the workshops. It is clear that the tutoring has helped. Wilmer was in 3rd grade last year. When he came to us needing tutoring in Spanish, he had a 63%. After tutoring with Elsy, an employee, he raised his grade to an 82%. He was very proud of himself. We were also very lucky to receive new volunteer therapists. Over the year we acquired one new art therapist, two physical therapists, and a speech therapist. They continue to provide the children with essential therapies. The therapists also continue to step beyond the bounds of their specific job. Carrie made posters describing the sign language for Joel, one of our mute Pequeños, so that people are aware of what he is trying to communicate. Goals: x Continue to improve our records system, noting the services received by each and every Pequeño from our department. Statistics: x 7 employees x 7 volunteers x 1 2nd Year-of-Service youth x 53 tutoring students x 63 in therapy x 29 in the special needs classrooms Saily Sanchez Special Education and Therapy Coordinator 5 The boys’ home or “El Marañon” is home to 248 boys and adolescents of ages 7 to 26. There are eleven individual homes where they sleep, eat, study, and play. Each of the homes has four house parents working with the boys plus an international volunteer that helps out 2 hours each weeknight and on the weekends. Another year has passed in our boy’s home. We’ve had many accomplishments, achievements, and over all a great year. The best part is that we have been able to see all of our young men grow up one more year towards adulthood. We have had lots of changes to the physical face of the Marañon this year. We opened an office for the new psychologist. She works daily giving attention to those in need in the boys’ home. We were donated a new computer that is used for homework. We also built new medicine cabinets and finished an ambitious project from our metal shop to furbish all homes with new lockers. We are very excited to start a new pilot project this year. We have a group of younger boys – from 7 to 12 years old - who seem to be constantly getting in trouble. We will gather these boys in a small group with a maximum of twelve individuals, and give them special attention in our new home, Casa San Andres. We completely remodeled this house for this project. We expect the home to open in January or February of 2005. At the beginning of the year, Isaac Gomez was having a lot of difficulties. He was often misbehaving and regularly sent to the gardens to work. However starting at the beginning of this year, with the help of his teachers, caretakers, and a psychologist, he began to make huge improvements. He now spends much more time in the classroom learning instead of in the fields working. In fact he was one of the best in his class for the year. Whenever he has an opportunity to speak in public, he always thanks and blesses everyonever gonn in the audience. He seems truly grateful for everything that NPH has given him. Goals: x Attend to all of the needs of the youth in El Marañon. x Improve the academic performance of the youth. x Motivate the caretakers so that they give more to the boys. Statistics: x 28 employees x 4 Year-of-Service youth x 9 volunteers Roger Funez C. Coordinator 6 The girls’ home or “El Rancho” is home to 228 girls between the ages of 7 and 29. There are eight individual homes where they sleep, eat, study, and play. Each of the homes has four house parents working with the girls plus the international volunteers that help out 2 hours each weeknight and on the weekends. We had another successful year in the girls’ homes. In scholastic affairs we tried to emphasize the importance of reading and studying at night in the homes by expecting two to three hours of studying daily. We saw a drastic increase in scholastic success rates from last year. We congratulate everyone involved, especially the students, for such an impressive accomplishment. There have been some new additions to the girls’ home. We built a mini-library and a study room. We are grateful for the support that we received from the house director to realize these projects. A success story from this year involves one of our girls named Kendra. Last year, she was having behavioral problems at school and at home. She was even expelled from school for a month and asked to work in the gardens. At that time, we didn’t know where this wayward behavior came from. All of the traditional methods for improving her behavior were not working. The change came this year with the discovery of her birth certificate. The NPH Social Work office had been looking for her birth certificate and had finally found it. At that point we were calling her Kenia. In the certificate, they discovered that her name is really Kendra. This is when it all came together. We were always a little suspicious of her old name because she loved to ask us what her name was; she must have known that Kenia was not her real name. When Kendra “changed” her name, she also transformed her life. Since then, her school performance and overall behavior have improved immensely. It is amazing how something like a name can mean so much to a person. A name is an identity. When Kendra was called Kenia, a part of her individuality was missing. Goals: x Continue to foment the values of NPH to the caretakers so that they are able to transmit those same values onto the children. x Start a sexual education program that conforms to the values of NPH. x Instill respect and love for God in each and every one of the girls. Statistics: x 17 employees x 8 volunteers x 4 Year-of-Service youth Belinda Bonilla Coordinator 7 The Babies’ house, Casa Suyapa, is home to 61 girls and boys aged a few months old to seven years. The house is split by gender into two dorms: one for the girls and babies and another for the older boys. Each of the homes has seven house parents working with the babies plus an international volunteer that helps out two hours each weeknight and on the weekends. We have had another great year in Casa Suyapa. Our year has been filled with watching many of our babies grow up while getting to meet some new ones. As always, the children make all of our hard work very much worth it. We implemented some new programs this year. They turned out to be very successful. First, we kept 11 of our Pequeños who went into first grade in Casa Suyapa. Normally we would have sent them to the older boys’ and girls’ homes. We decided not to do this because we did not want them to lose their sense of belonging, nor the stability that they were receiving in Casa Suyapa. By having them stay, we have seen them attain more autonomy, independence, and better academic performance. We had some needed renovations done on Casa Suyapa this year. The psychologist received a special area for her sessions with the children, and we built a new office for the director of Casa Suyapa. We also created some vegetable gardens for the children to work in. We refurbished half of the dining hall with new tables and chairs. We received many new children in Casa Suyapa over the year. One of them is Maria (name changed), who came in March of 2004. At the time she had some major physical problems. Because of abuse, her leg was so weak that she had difficulties walking. Thanks to physical therapy and a stable environment, she is now walking with a healthy stride. She is a happy little girl who constantly with a smile on her face. Another Pequeño who has made incredible strides is Angel, who came in September of last year. When he came he displayed very few positive habits or manners. Most things he got his hands on ended up destroyed. He didn’t know how to use a toilet nor silverware. He didn’t say please or thank you. Over a mere 4 months he has improved astoundingly. He is turning into a polite, well-behaved young boy. Goals: x Remodel the dormitory. x Paint the dormitories and dining room with more children’s images. Statistics: x 13 employees ,1 volunteer, 4 Year-of-Service youth (2 part time) x 3 Helpers (who clean and wash clothes) Victoria Madrid Anariva Coordinator 8 Casa de Los Ángeles is our home in Tegucigalpa for severely disabled children. The sixteen child residents live here and receive 24-hour care by the house parents, Pequeños attending high school, and a nightly nurse. Only one child in the home is completely mobile, another three can slowly crawl, and the rest are completely immobile. The majority of disabilities affecting the children are forms of Down Syndrome, Hydrocephalus or Cerebral Palsy. We have progressed a lot since last year. We are participating in a program that utilizes the Doman-Delacato method for five of our Pequeños. (This is a method of therapy for neurologically disabled children.) Also, we have started a program of hippotherapy (therapy on horses). We have given informational workshops to the student workers about such themes as the medicines our children use, the common disabilities that affect our children, and lessons to read basic tests of blood and urine. We have also solidified our relationships with the hospitals where we take our children. And lastly, we are very lucky to continue to count on the help of the therapist volunteers that come three times a week to give therapy to our children. This year we were given many material items like new furniture, a new roof, fans, an industrial blender, new pots and pans, and a microwave. We also built a new room for cranial-sacral therapy. Many of our Pequeños at Casa de Los Angeles make little progress each year because of their severe disabilities. Even so, we continue to be hopeful of progress in part because of the positive changes that we saw in some of our children this year. Reniery (hydrocephalic) has begun to show his displeasure of going to school or taking a bath by closing his eyes. Raquel (Down Syndrome) has begun to show that she has needs; she now will go to the freezer to look for a soft drink by herself. Goals: x Expand the Doman-Delacato Method and Cranial–Sacral Method. Statistics: x 10 employees x 12 youth (6 Year-of-Service youth, 6 high school students) x 3 part time volunteers Carmen Yadira Rivera Casa de los Ángeles Coordinator 9 Casa Eva is our elderly home here at Rancho Santa Fe. At Casa Eva we try to offer our Abuelos (translated as Grandparents) sources of entertainment, a safe environment, medical care, and as much love as possible. We currently have three men and four women. The health of the elders has never been better. Much of this is attributed to their younger than normal age and the care given to them. One of our oldest, Camillo, at 82, seems to be staying very healthy. There have also been many improvements in relationships between the Abuelos and the Pequeños, the employees, and between the Abuelos themselves. We continue to promote that our Abuelos integrate themselves as much as possible into the life on the Ranch. Two of the elders, Corina and Dortea, are taking classes in ceramics. Also, this year two of our therapists took all of the Abuelos to a park in Tegucigalpa to spend the afternoon. Whenever there are Ranch functions, we try to always bring the Abuelos. One of our newest Abuelos is Pascual – who came in May of 2004. In spite of his advanced age, he continues to be energetic and fun. He constantly manages to make everyone laugh as he is always cracking jokes. Our oldest Abuela, Engracia Sevilla at 84, is paradoxically also the most active and energetic. She always helps in the kitchen and with the sewing necessities. The most impressive part is that everything that she does for us is done voluntarily; she does this because she wants to help and give back to NPH. Goals: x Bring in another 2 Abuelos. x Continue providing good care to all of our Abuelos. x Continue the art activities with the Abuelos in the ceramic workshop. x Maintain promoting reading out loud activities. Statistics: x 1 employee x 1 Year-of-Service youth x 2 part time volunteer therapists x 6 total Abuelos (3 men, 3 women) Lidia Dolores Romero (Lolita) Coordinator 10 The Youth Leaders program, which coordinates the Year-ofService Youth, is designed to give work experience to the youth that graduate from ninth grade and then again after high school. It also provides the opportunity for each Pequeño/a to give back to NPH. These young adults are placed in areas, according to personal interest and program needs, throughout the Ranch. After completion of three years of high school in the city, students who want to move ahead to the university then complete another two years of service. There were 49 youth in the Youth Leaders program this year. Our Pequeños had another successful year in their Year-of-Service. Our greatest achievement was that all of our “Aspirantes” (those students who are in the Youth Leaders program and still in school) passed their academic year, and at the same time, served NPH for a year. Goals: x Ensure that all of our youth are more independent, assertive, and skilled in decision making. Also guarantee that they serve as role models to the rest of the youth at the Ranch. Onilda Witty Youth Leaders Coordinator Our NPH higher education programs allow the youth - who have completed ninth grade and a Year-of-Service at the Ranch - to study in high school or in a specialized technical training program. The chance to study is offered in Tegucigalpa and other large cities of Honduras. The students live with their peers in one of five student homes scattered throughout the capital, or are rented a room with a family. This can be a challenging, exciting time for these Pequeños/as, living in the city and adjusting to a new school, home, responsibilities and classmates. This year we were able to have more high school students on the same budget. We will have even more high school students in 2005. In order to keep up with the increasing numbers, we built new rooms in three of our students’ houses. Currently fifteen of our Pequeños/as are enrolled in various universities studying various careers. We also were able to provide scholarships for many of the university students. Mario Lagos graduated this year from the university. He is the first Pequeño to come to NPH at an early age (at six years old) to graduate from college. With Mario’s graduation, we have reached a major stepping stone in the development of NPHHonduras. We hope to continue to see our Pequeños becoming university graduates. Goals: x Have another year where 95% or more pass their school year. Statistics: x 17 high school graduates x 72 students in high school and the university x 95% of the students passed Lic. Jose Augustine Alvarez High School and University Students Coordinator 11 In the year 2004 we were able to realize a number of construction and infrastructure projects: The house for the special needs girls at Rancho Santa Fe finally came to fruition and is ready for the girls to move in. We added two rooms for staff housing. We put in a large storage area to replace the storage area in the kitchen basement, which over time proved to be too moist to store clothing. All storage areas that were equipped with wooden shelves were refurbished with metal shelves as termites had pretty much destroyed the wooden ones. In the kitchen we also replaced the large mosquito screens. We finished the new science lab building at the school, which is larger and better equipped for science lessons than our old lab. We are converting the old science lab into a first grade Montessori class room. With funds from WereldOuders and the Wilde Ganzen Foundation from Holland, we added rooms for our high school and university students at three of our student homes. As a result of a special donation from Father Frank Colaccico of California, we built an amphitheater for religious celebrations and other special events such as concerts, plays, or readings. The farm staff worked diligently to develop more of our land into pasture land for the milk cows. We remodeled our internal clinic to make better use of the space. We also remodeled Casa San Andres to house a small group of boys with behavioral problems with aims of giving them more individualized attention. The expansion of our library has created more space for our children who engage increasingly in reading. Our wonderful librarian, Yolany Recinos’, enthusiasm continues to motivate our children to participate in the many events and special programs she organizes around the library. We did a lot of maintenance and repair work. As we enter our 20th year in Honduras, most of our buildings need extensive overhaul. This year, we repaired most roofs and replaced various wooden structures damaged by termites with metal structures. A most exciting addition to our Ranch is Enlacemundial@nph.com. This is not our new e-mail address. It is the name of our new Internet Café (with a satellite connection) that allows staff, volunteers and adult Pequeños/as to communicate with the world. There are many advantages to having an internet connection in house. The parents of our volunteers are especially pleased to have more direct contact with their loved ones. Direct access has been a major improvement for our daily operations as it allows us to communicate quickly via e-mail, to research items we need to purchase over the Internet, and do bank transactions; all of these can be 12 done without having to drive 22 miles each way into town - not to mention sitting in bad traffic and standing in long lines at the bank. At the school, we refurbished a large classroom into a computer lab and added 25 new computers (for a total of 30 computers). This was made possible through a generous Christmas gift from the Lawinger family in Minnesota. The lab also includes a work area for classes in hardware lessons (repair and maintenance). Finally, we continue to work on our surgical clinic. The building is about 60% finished. Through the generous contributions of the Daly family, their friends, and other benefactors, we have also secured 60% of the funding. Besides finishing the projects that are still under construction, we also anticipate these following major capital projects for the upcoming year: x x x x x x x x x x Classrooms and multipurpose room at the vocational complex. Paint and drying area at the vocational shops ($9,000). Additional classroom at the school complex ($7,500). Greenhouse for growing plants at the school as part of the agricultural classes. A place to make cheese from our milk production (we still need more research and a good feasibility study). An area for cranial-sacral therapy ($4,000, $1,200 already received). Purchase of two new mini-vans ($18,000 each). A writers’ project bringing well-known Honduran writers to our classrooms to teach our children the art of creative writing. We are working with a former volunteer to secure funding for this project. A program for teaching music and art as many of our children are very talented in both areas (received $5,000). A guest house for visitors (several rooms of different sizes, small kitchen and one common area (no plans and cost yet). We continue to receive more and more visitors - including groups for which we do not have adequate housing. Once the surgery clinic is finished, we hope to receive entire medical brigades that can provide specialized surgeries. These teams alone may bring as many as 15 people at a time. Thank you for your most generous support. Reinhart Koehler National Director 13 NPH Vocational Workshops help each student learn a trade while they attend academic classes. Some students are in the secondary school and take vocational classes in the afternoons. Others study in the vocational academic programs which includes studying a vocational trade. The vocational academic programs are for older children and youth who entered school late. These final two academic programs provide a student, who has had little or no formal education when they arrived at NPH, with the chance to earn their primary or secondary school diploma while concentrating on a learning a trade. The vocational workshop program is unique in its design and in its challenges because each vocational student has only two to three hours daily to learn and participate in the production of goods. This occurs when he/she is expected to be certified in his/her trade over only three years. This year 90% of the eligible students for certification passed their certification exam. We congratulate them all for the hard work done. We received various donations and bought many new items for our workshops. Two examples of these items are soldering machines for the metals workshops and industrial sized irons for the tailors workshop. The electricity workshop received tools and materials worth almost $10,000. Goals: x Achieve a higher level of certification accreditation with the Honduran Workshop Accreditation Organization CADERH. x Continue with the Vocational Internship Program. x Have a 100% retention rate in the Workshops. x Improve our Adult Education Programs. Statistics: x 14 graduates (Elementary School), 32 graduates (Middle School) x 4 volunteers x 20 employees x 17 Year-of-Service youth x 24 external students from the surrounding communities attended classes at our school and shops Jorge Guadron Vocational Workshop Director 14 Seventy two students participated in six week vocational internships at businesses, factories or small shops in Tegucigalpa. This experience gave many of them an experience of life outside the Ranch. We took advantage of this time to place our youth and young adults with relatives whenever possible, so that the students can identify first hand with the struggles a poor family experiences to simply put food on the table. After years of living within the security of NPH, it’s easy to forget how difficult life outside our NPH home can be. The internships also teach our youth about the professional environment, the demands an employer puts on the employee, and the speed and quality of work expected. Many return to Rancho Santa Fe realizing that they need to hone their skills substantially in order to compete successfully in the Honduran job market. This year, we worked with 38 companies in Tegucigalpa and in a few in other cities. Besides giving our youth work training, some of these businesses gave the interns free informational lectures on safety in the workplace. After completing the internship, the students seem to have acquired more selfesteem because of what they have learned from the excursions in the city, the internships, and the personal outings. They feel good about themselves and that is a motivation for them to improve themselves. We also started a Youth Council. It is a committee of youth that discuss between themselves their perceived problems of our home. Next, they bring their results to those in charge. It is a great way to provide fresh critique of the home within an organized forum. Dixi Marbely did her internship at a sewing workshop. Even though she was the youngest, she did better than everyone in her internship group. She received an evaluation of 98-100. She was also totally self-sufficient during the internships. She walked to work and she managed her own money. Her boss offered her a job at the end of the 6 weeks, but Dixi decided to continue with her studies instead of entering the work world. We congratulate her for working so hard. We are also very proud that after being offered a job (a powerful temptation because the monetary benefits) that she decided instead to continue her studies with us at NPH. Goals: x An Internship program that lasts more than 6 months. (Now there are 5 months of preparation and 6 weeks actual internship.) x Include an orientation class about the NPH Vocational Internship Program in the study plan at our school. (2 hours a week) Ibrahaim Ender Arslam (Ibo) Vocational Internships Director 15 This is the second year which I have run this program. We are making many changes and starting some new exciting programs for our ExPequeños. Lisa, a volunteer, and I started a major new project this year called the Mother’s Project. It consists of giving support to the single ExPequeña mothers. This project will center around a house that will be rented in Tegucigalpa within the next few months. We want the home to be a combination small business/meeting space/refuge for the mothers. The primary goal of the project is that the women can eventually start a micro-business in the home to help them earn money for themselves and, at the same time, help pay for the costs of the program. Within the safe environment of the home, we also plan to give talks to the women about health and security. I especially want to thank our Director Reinhart, and former volunteers Vera Dinkelacker and Elizabeth Dart Caron for giving us so much support in starting the Mother’s project. I would also like to give my thanks to Lisa for putting so much of her time into this project and helping get it off the ground. Our Ex-Pequeños can have it very hard outside of Rancho Santa Fe. For example we have been following Juan, who left the Ranch to help his father when his father was sick. At this time, the father was suffering from soemthing that was probably tuberculosis. Juan stayed at his father’s bedside for many months. After his father passed away, Juan became sickly from not eating. Even though he had had a drastic change in diet (or lack there of), Juan became convinced that he was sick because he had tuberculosis and that he was also dying. We kept in contact with him and gave him counseling and support through this ordeal. Over the past year he made major recoveries. He even decided recently to start his first year of secondary school. We wish him the best of luck in school and hope to keep in touch with him for as long as possible. Goals: x More scholarships for the Ex-Pequeños. x That the Mother’s project is carried out to its full potential. Statistics: x 5 scholarships given to Ex-Pequeños for study (There were none last year) x Stay in touch with about 800 Ex-Pequeños x 1 employee and 1 volunteer Patricia Gámez Program Coordinator 16 Every year I am continuously pleased with the spiritual progress of our young ones here at Rancho Santa Fe. I see this advancement everyday in their participation, with outstanding composure during and outside of religious activities. I am continually reminded that each and every one of our Pequeños is a child of God. Our year was filled with many successful religious celebrations and retreats. During Holy Week I saw a very active participation from the children which helped everyone celebrate our faith with much more vigor. We also participated in “la Campaña Infantil”, or The Children’s Campaign. It was a festival put on by the Catholic Church that emphasized the production of the arts with religion as the common theme. The children really got into the Campaign. It seemed to bring out all of their diverse talents. The religion department was given much material help this year. Benefactors contributed a new computer, a TV, and a VCR. Father Frank Colaccico, from California, made the construction of a new church on Ranch property possible. It is an outdoor amphitheatre that is almost finished. We are only missing the roof. It was first used during our Christmas Mass. We are very excited about such a venue in which to celebrate our masses. Our religious programs continue to thrive. This year we worked on the musical aspect of our faith; we changed and amplified the format of the religious musical education program on the Ranch. We also started a youth group of 15 girls. We now have an altar boy/girl group of the same size and a choir that sings at all of the masses. There are classes of religion in almost every level of primary and middle school, as well at our vocational schools. Farid Morel, one of our Pequeños, is very interested in the work of the religion department. He helps every week with the altar boys and in the sacristy. He also has hopes to do his Year-of-Service in our department. This would be the first Year-ofService youth to do this! He has even voiced possible ambitions of becoming a priest. We all hope that if Farid continues to seek such a religious calling later in life that he will follow that path. Goals: x Finish the construction on the amphitheatre and finish the chapel. x Move the Pequeños/as closer to God through daily exposure to our work in catechism and religion classes. Statistics: x 1 priest, 2 employees and 1 volunteer x We had 34 Baptisms, 82 1st communions, 37 confirmations Father Reynaldo Galindo Coordinator of the Religion Department 17 NPH Honduras has two clinics on its premises. The external clinic serves the population of the surrounding communities while the internal clinic is for the children and staff. There is also a dental clinic that serves both the internal and external populations. There were some new additions since last year. We were donated another computer. A Year-of-Service youth now helps us in the pharmacy. Also for improved and more efficient work, we have begun to have departmental meetings each week. A very important construction project that should be completed in 2005 is the Surgical Center. We are building the Surgical Center to invite surgery brigades and specialists to the Ranch. The surgery brigades will serve the Pequeños and those of the surrounding countryside that are in need of surgery. It is a clinic of 550m² (5920 ft²). Other x x x x x x x x x x x Achievements and Improvements: Improved supervision of special medicines. Better control of arriving medicines to the two clinics. Performed a screening and fumigation of the Chinche or “Assassin” Bug (the carrier of Chagas Disease). Gave informational lectures about the use and abuse of medicines. Discontinued the use of expired medicines. Reactivated regular service by the Pequeños and the volunteers to Ciudad Blanca. We now go two or three times a week. Were donated 30 pairs of glasses with more to come in January of 2005. Started the screening of kitchen cleanliness. Revised the prescriptions. Now we are using only WHO recommended medicines. Implemented a system of charts for each patient. Gave the first audiovisual test to all of the Pequeños. Goals: x Install ophthalmologic office and a lenses bank in the annex of the external clinic. It would serve both internal and external patients. x Provide additional training seminars for the nurses. Clinic, Laboratory, and Dental Statistics: x 15 employees and volunteers, 1 Year-of-Service youth Clinics: internal patients: 1219 external patients: 8108 brigade patients: 1189 Laboratory: internal patients: 524 external patients: 1001 employees: 124 Dental: internal patients: 619 external patients: 308 employees: 67 Dagny Henning Health Coordinator 18 General Administration is responsible for the daily operations of the Ranch. It offers a variety of services including seminars, spiritual activities, excursions, event planning, and educational classes with guest speakers. These services are available for the house parents, staff, volunteers, and children. New last year were seminars for the care takers with themes like “teaching study skills.” Under the direction of General Administration, there is a new Boy Scout program at the Ranch. It has been an incredible success. We have noticed a huge positive difference in the children who have joined the scouts. They seem to be more active, have developed leadership qualities, and have much more self-discipline. There are scout troops for both the boys and girls. There are 60 youth currently participating; the Scouts get together two times a week with a scout troop leader. With the scout program, our track and field team, and our excursions to Ciudad Blanca and the Crematorium, we hope to continue to give our youth opportunities to leave the Ranch and experience the world outside of our home. We have just started a Human Resources department that will be part of General Administration. Eventually this department will provide us with one centralized process for recruiting, selecting and training employees. It will also develop a manual that describes the duties of all of the employees. We do not have an adequate system of accounting. The current software (by a Mexican software developer) does not work within our current needs. The problem is that we are occasionally losing information, and this makes our whole system completely untrustworthy. (A list has been created to document the errors in the system.) We are not sure if the problems have to do with the network, the computers, or the software. Our current repairman – who is not trained in the program - charges $22 and hour and has not been able to fix the problem. Goals: x Develop a set of plans to reduce spending. x Create manuals for the internal control department. x Guarantee quality and efficient work from each of the different departments. x Amplify and fully implement the Human Resources Department. Statistics: x 14 employees in total (in purchasing, internal control, accounting, human resources, and the warehouse) x 2 volunteers and 1 Year-of-Service youth Maria Lilian Irias Romero Administrative Director Alfredo Benitez Director of the Ranch 19 The Psychology Department has had a very successful year. The most important change in the department was the introduction of a team of three psychologists to the department. With more personnel we are much more able to attend to the child, youth, and adult population of the Ranch. This is an important addition as we only had one psychologist last year. We were also given material supplies. New chairs, desks, and other office furniture have blessed our office. We have had many successes this year working with our children. One of our biggest successes has to do with a Pequeño named Mario. With the help of the psychology department and the school, Mario learned to read and write at 15 years old. The department was able to help him work through some personal issues which gave him the strength to move forward academically. Goals: x Continue attending those in need at the Ranch. (Children, Youth, and Adults) x Develop educational programs in sexual education, morals and ethics, selfesteem improvement, and long-term goal setting. Statistics: x We currently are attending: 53 children and youth, 20 women, and 33 men. Bertha Grádiz Müller Chief Psychologist The Social Work Department has finished another year helping to integrate some of the neediest children of Honduras into NPH. We were able to do this with the help of great staff and with much support from the general administration. There are some of the new children integrated into the Ranch this year. One of those was a family of four: Jessica, Giovanni, Yorleny, and Elizabeth. They were supposed to come in last June, however their father refused to sign the appropriate papers for their release into NPH. They returned to living on the street begging for food and looking through the trash for things to eat. We in Social Work knew that the only way to get these children to NPH would be by going through the Honduras judicial system. Finally in the autumn of last year, we got the necessary judicial orders issued in order to have the children come to NPH. They came to the Ranch in early November. Goals: x Accept a larger number of abandoned children for next year (Minimum of 70). Statistics: x 37 new children to NPH-Honduras in 2004 x 39 children and youth left NPH x 541 total children at NPH-Honduras Silvia Elizabeth Reyes Social Worker 20 The farm and gardens expanded greatly in 2004. We started a project to export Japanese and Chinese eggplant to foreign countries. They will complete their life cycle in February. We will know by then if the program was financially viable. The fruit tree project goes well. The trees are healthy and growing as expected. The banana trees we planted in 2003 are already producing. We have new tractor implements to prepare plots of land, a new storehouse, and a new tiller. We have also constructed a new pig slaughter house. We will have some major new help next year. One of our Pequeños, Mario Lagos, graduated in December from the Zamorano University, a prestigious agricultural engineering school in Honduras. He will be working in our farm for his Year-of-Service next year. We are all very excited about this new development. Goals: x Open up more fruit tree fields. x Start a fishery project to have another stable source of meat at the Ranch. x Open up more land for food and feed production. x Grow enough corn for the needs of the farm and the kitchen. x Augment the milk production (with 80 cows) to be able to support the needs of the Ranch. x Improve the genetic quality of the cattle. x Renovate many of the buildings. x Give the Pequeños working in our department classes in agricultural science. Statistics: x 12 Employees x 5 Year-of-Service youth x 4 youth in their “Year of Reflection” x The farm produces 70% of the kitchens’ needs x We have 28 nance, 35 mango, 40 tamarindo, 17 papaya, 90 citrus, and 33 avocado trees x 15 female calves were born this year x $16,000 earned from selling chickens x List of vegetables produced: (* means total self sufficiency) Tomato*, Cabbage, Cilantro*, Green Pepper*, Lettuce*, Corn*, Carrot, Cauliflower, Broccoli, Cucumber, Celery, Onion Oscar Humberto Cruz Gardens Coordinator Gustavo Adolfo Gonzáñez Zapata Farm Coordinator 21 The volunteer program continued to prosper and expand in 2004. We again had a plethora of nationalities giving a year towards NPH. There were two groups that came: one in January and one in July. We are expecting another group in the beginning of January, 2005. We had many successes and triumphs in the last year. 92% of our volunteers stayed on to complete their 13 month service. This means that 22 volunteers were integrated into the program. We attribute much of this success to a very successful orientation program in January and July. Our volunteers continue to work hard in and outside of the job. They continued a program called The Family Project. This is a program where a volunteer spends an evening with a specific family of children on the Ranch. We find this program indispensable because the Ranch is split up into different age groups, and many of our children do not always get to see or spend a lot of time with their siblings. This program tries to help remedy this issue. Every night there are one or two families in our Volunteers’ House playing, conversing, and eating with their family and one volunteer. We have also recently overhauled the library in Casa Personal. One of our volunteers, Rebecca, has started a card catalogue system where the children can come and check out books. A Reading Club was also started for some of our lower performance readers. This meets once a week on Saturdays for two hours. We hope the practice and the opportunity to read will help our children in their scholastic performance and help pass on the very important love for reading. Our volunteers also did some public service for the community this year. About 5 of them went out with a medical brigade and translated for a group of American doctors in August. Our volunteers often do service projects for the Ranch. Some of the highlights are: x Volunteer Dagny Henning is making the arrangements for a sick Honduran boy to travel to Guatemala for heart surgery. x Volunteer Stephen Feuerstein accompanied Pequeños to visit their families around the country. x Teresa had a cooking night with her boys. She had certain foods for her children to cook and there was a competition based on the quality of the food produced. It was a grand success. x Gabriel started giving a series of speeches for the caretakers on studying and proper study skills. x Fred and Andrea visit a project for elderly disabled men on a regular basis. Goals: x Improve the volunteers’ work with the children even more. x Integrate each group of volunteers into the daily life at the Ranch. x Involve the volunteers with the weekend plans. Etienne Röder & Fred Rockwell Volunteer Coordinators 22 The sponsorship office went through a lot of changes this year. I Lena became the director of the office after Wendy Ryerson returned to Canada. We have had a great year at the office. Throughout the year I saw Pedro, Jenny, Sandra, Donald, and I learn to work more and more together as a team. We will be sad to see our volunteer, Sandra, return to Switzerland in midFebruary. We were propelled into the 21st century this year with some changes in technology. Most importantly, we acquired a high speed Internet connection. Since so much of our work involves communicating with the offices in the U.S. and Europe, this new connection has changed – for the better – the face of our work. We are also working with a godparent database that is accessed online through the NPH Intranet. It connects us to all of the offices, keeps us more organized, keeps the Pequeños data current, and gives us instant access to the sponsors. We continued to celebrate birthdays once a month for the Pequeños. We changed restaurants in Tegucigalpa from a Pizzeria to a Chinese restaurant. We wanted to give the children a sense that they were going out to eat instead of only going for a quick slice of pizza. We have also hired a clown for the birthdays of the younger ones who are not old enough to go to the restaurant. Lastly, through a generous donation to NPH from a US government economist, Fransuaz Melez, all of our children were invited to the movies in Tegucigalpa once this year. We thank him for this special gift. Goals: x Give the children as many if not more chances to communicate with their godparents. x Make the office even more efficient and effective. x Pass on the values of NPH to our clients, co-workers, children, and acquaintances. Statistics: x 3 employees, 1 volunteer, 1 High School student Organization, # of Sponsors, # of Sponsorships: Forderkreis, 4, 4; FOTO-AZ, 50, 62; FOTO-CAN, 27, 30; FOTO-IL, 46, 47; FOTO-MN, 156, 161; FOTO-NW, 95, 103; FRSF German, 12, 13; Honduras, 3, 6; NPFS-FR, 18, 24; NPH-IT, 255, 262; NPH-SP, 85, 88; OKW-NL, 304, 379; OLBS-Virginia, 173, 188; UKBS-AUS, 239, 271; UKBS-CH, 115, 138; UKBS-DE, 394, 478, TOTAL, 1973, 2248 Lena Zuniga Rivera Sponsorship Coordinator 23 Social Work x A telephone/fax for the Tegucigalpa office Casa de Los Ángeles x Large Pots and Pans Health Services and Administration x A visit by a medical specialist every 15 days Elderly Home - Casa Eva x Wheel chairs x Living room furniture Sponsorship Office x Digital Camera Girls’ House – El Rancho x Urgent repair of each home x A change to metal lockers in each home x Teaching material in the minilibrary x Remodel some of the bathrooms Youth x x x Leaders CD Player Television VCR and DVD Vocational Internships x A permanent internship sponsor x A full time program coordinator Boys’ House – El Marañon x A computer in each of the homes for homework purposes x Wood or Metal doors for the boys stalls (now there are only shower curtains for privacy) x Study Cubicles x Bookshelf in each home x Update the leisure and text books x A washing machine for the younger boys’ homes x A photocopier for the homes Vocational Workshops x A room for technical drawing x Showroom\storeroom for the finished products x Painting room Farm & Gardens x Farming implements and supplies x A mixer (for chicken and cow feed) x A computer General Administration x Funds for The Boy Scouts program Volunteers x A new picnic table x A wheelbarrow x Games and books for The Family Project High School and University x Computers for each house x Updated books x Kitchenware Babies’ House – Casa Suyapa x The other half of the tables and chairs for the dining room x Sandals for the next school year x Children’s books for the library Therapy and Special Education x A speech therapist x Fix the floor of the therapy rooms Follow Up Pequeño/a Program x Machines for the Sewing workshop for the Mother’s project x Furniture, pots and pans, and other items to equip the new house. Furniture for the living room, kitchen, dormitories, clothes and other items. x Vitamins for the children of the mothers in the Mother’s Project Psychology x New Test Materials (We are still actively looking for the funding for some psychology tests and games. This project can be accessed on the NPH Intranet.) x Educational Videos (on Values, Sexual Education, etc.) x Toy Room for different therapies 24 x 3