Legian Special Project – San Pedro Las Huertas

On the outskirts of San Pedro Las Huertas, a town located 4 kms from Antigua, Guatemala, there is a small community of families living in extreme poverty. When Habitat Guatemala visited the families, we realized their need for a Healthy Home Kit: a smokeless stove, a sanitary latrine, and a water filter.

For 25 of these families, their reality has changed since the last time we visited them. They used to cook over an open flame and did not have access to proper sanitation or safe drinking water.

Each family has received a Healthy Home Kit, thanks to the support of Legian & Habitat for Humanity Netherlands. The Kit helps families improve their own lives in a drastic way through access to basic everyday household services.

“I feel really happy with my Kit! The stove is working really well, I am really thankful for all who have helped us. I invite you to continue with your support to all the people in need,” says Carmen Olayo, one of the beneficiaries, who used to cook on an open fire stove and owns a small tortilla shop that now is growing because of her new stove.

The official inauguration of the project took place on April 25th, with representatives of the community, local committee members, and Habitat Guatemala staff members.

With these solutions, we are making life changing impacts, join in and let’s build a better Guatemala together!

 

 

Rain Water Harvesting System Project in Huehuetenango

This project started as a way to support the residents of the village of Chichim, in the municipality of Todos los Santos Cuchumatán, Huehuetenango, who are facing extreme poverty and lacking of basic services.

The community mainly dedicates to potato and corn harvesting as a way to earn a living. Previously, Habitat Guatemala worked on other projects with them such as: sanitary latrines and various educational trainings regarding Healthy Homes and Financial Savings.  These type of interventions are only a few of the ways that Habitat Guatemala seeks to encourage families to make steps towards sustainable self development.

With the rain water harvesting project we have served 48 families. Now, these families can have access to water at any time, since it is a vital element for them in their daily life. Furthermore, families now have access to safe drinking water because they have been provided with a Habitat for Humanity Guatemala water filter. This specific project was made possible due to the “sweat equity” and financial contribution of the beneficiary families. Residents of Chichim paid for approximately 60% of the total cost, provided local materials, and donated their time and unskilled labor for the installation of the system. Habitat Guatemala believes that because the families are invested in projects like that of the rain water harvesting system in Chichim, they will care for their products which will ultimately improve their quality of life and ensure the safety of their crops.

Habitat Guatemala: 40 years in 10 facts

We are celebrating 40 years of Habitat for Humanity in Guatemala!

To reminisce on all that we have been able to achieve since our doors opened, we want to share ten top facts about our history.

  1. Three years after Linda & Millard Fuller founded Habitat for Humanity International, Habitat started operations in Guatemala in 1979.
  2. During its first 16 years, the organization utilized handmade blocks and, on average, it took 12 months to build a house.
  3. In 1999 Habitat Guatemala began expanding the type of solutions that it had to offer to the Guatemalan population. This initiative was named “Más que Casas” or “More than Houses.”

4. By 2005, Habitat Guatemala had achieved national coverage in the country’s 22 departments.

5. The Healthy Home Kits program (which consists of providing families with a smokeless stove, a sanitary latrine, and a water filter) started in 2011. Currently, Habitat Guatemala delivers over more than 8,500 Healthy Home kit products a year.

6. To celebrate our 50,000th Housing Solution, in April 2013, volunteers and staff gathered to build 20 homes, one of which was built in a record-setting 24 hours and 23 minutes!

7. Habitat Guatemala expanded its services and reached a total number of 75,000 Housing Solutions in 2015.

8. To celebrate our 39th year of operations, we reached our 100,000th Housing Solution, which was built in the department of Zacapa.

9. To date, we have been served more than 643,842 people.

10. Our next goal is to serve 1,000,000 million Guatemalans by the year of 2023 in our efforts to continue reducing the housing deficit across the nation.

My Habitat Experience: Celia Enríquez

Celia Enriquez has been a part of the Habitat for Humanity Guatemala (HFHG) family for more than 8 years. Recently, Celia has taken on the position of Donor Relations Officer and we sat down to ask her about her HFHG experience.

Why Habitat Guatemala?

Putting into words what it means to work for Habitat Guatemala is one of the most difficult things I have been asked to do. Perhaps it is so difficult because the more we feel, the more difficult it is to describe ​​what we think and what we experience. But if I can say something, it is that Habitat has taught me the importance of believing in something and working towards it.

Naturally, people learn to love and be proud of the place where they are born. But, for me, Guatemala means more than that. I think of Guatemala as a place where every day there is a lot of pain, as a place where the past continues to have a stronger impact than ever, as a place that has only very recently been able to heal and emerge as what it really should be: a dignified country.

Historically, politically, socially and economically, we are one of the most vulnerable and unequal countries in Latin America and the world. It is certainly not easy to find opportunities when most of the wealth and power is concentrated in the hands of so few. This harsh reality is what makes me belong to Habitat Guatemala, it gives my work meaning and it makes me enjoy what I do.

I could mention many reasons why I like to be in this organization, but these are some of them:

We don’t just give things away

Providing families with housing solutions is a complex task. At Habitat, we do not give our products away, instead the families are involved throughout the process, either through their payments or through their involvement in the construction or labor processes. This is one of my favorite things about Habitat.

People’s expressions speak more than a thousand words, and looking at their smiles when they finally receive something they have dreamed of and worked hard for, is one of the most beautiful sensations that I have been able to feel. Being able to say “this is my home” or “now I have my own stove” are phrases that contain empowerment and self-esteem, and these are feelings that nothing and nobody can ever take away from our partner families.

Getting to know new places

The number and variety of the places in this small and diverse country will always be impressive! Working with Habitat is being open to see so many distinct and beautiful towns. From one department to another, there will always be different cultures and different meanings, which we can perceive from the language, the colorful clothing, and the foods and traditions, which have so much to tell us. I have always believed that this variety is one of the most beautiful resistances that, despite everything, our small towns have managed to keep.

Meet and work for our families

Meeting the members of our partner families by name is definitely one of the best opportunities that we as Habitat employees can have. Having direct contact with people and learning from the strength that emanates from them every day is something very significant and truly inspiring. Playing with the kids, trying to speak the same language, teaching them how to use a tool on the construction site, shows me what tenderness and hope looks like, and talking to their parents shows me how sincere a thank-you can sound.

Personal and professional challenges

I have been with Habitat for eight years already, but for me that has never meant doing the same thing. Being able to change tasks often, and most recently moving into a new position and the fact of having to know more about a subject in order to talk about it and gain more support through that, is something that keeps me motivated and makes me want to learn more. In addition, the variety of knowledge and professions needed to maintain such a large organization, is one of the things that I find most valuable, because they are all focused on the same goal but it makes us realize how we need from each other.

Getting to know my own family

Finally, I think Habitat is just that: a family. Being here has allowed me to meet incredible people with whom I have shared a significant part of my life. At the end, people with whom we share those eight-hours-a-day of our lives, become part of a family with whom we can talk about a problem, with whom we learn how to face things and finally with whom we enjoy so much what we have worked so hard for.

So, why Habitat Guatemala?

Because I firmly believe in small acts of hope and in returning all the good things we have. I think that feeling sorry is a mistake and that, instead, feeling empathy and putting oneself in the place of others and doing something about it, is an act that should define us all. For me, Habitat is that: empathy and hope.

Want to get in touch with Celia and learn more about the impact of your tithe? Write her at tithe@habitatguate.org

Planting Dreams and Improving Homes

Calanté is a small community located in the Highlands of Uspantán, Quiché.  The population consists of 64 families who mostly dedicate their time to agriculture.

In 2017, alongside América Solidaria Foundation Habitat for Humanity Guatemala, implemented its Family Gardens Project with 41 families. Our aim is to contribute to food and nutritional assurance, through the strengthening of productive, nutritional and social capacities of the community in a period of three years.

Since most of Calanté homes are built in precarious conditions with wood and leaking metal sheets,  the families suffer from different diseases caused by low cold temperatures.  Most recently, we started a  small project which consists  in the implementation of vinyl covers on their walls and transparent roofing materials in order to combat the cold and other weather variations, giving a new use to vinyl covers that have been donated to us.

It is Habitat Guatemala’s hope that these changes will prevent respiratory diseases and discourage unhealthy housing practices, which will ultimately lead to families having a safe and healthy environment to inhabit.

Healthy Communities

Muy Útil started in Guatemala on 2,000 providing Guatemalan families with world class water filters on affordable prices.

Habitat Guatemala and Muy Útil started working together on 2012 to provide a better quality of life to Guatemalan families. This alliance has benefited more than 10,000 families till today.

The consumption of polluted water is one of the main causes of gastrointestinal diseases and with the implementation of the Water Filter, Habitat Guatemala gives an affordable and effective solution to this problem.

MuyÚtil water filter fights 99% of bacteria, also eliminates bad flavor and odor in water. The candle is composed of activated charcoal, and purifies more than five gallons in eight hours. It is easy to use and handle.  When families receive the filter, they also receive training in how to use and maintain it.

“Providing  drinking water for consumption has an enormous positive impact in the life quality of a family, it serves as a starting point to a better life, health and well being start with water.” Says Juan Carlos Chéves from MuyÚtil.

Vulnerable Families Fund

WHAT IS THE VULNERABLE FAMILIES FUND?

In 2017, Habitat Guatemala launched a campaign to help serve the most vulnerable families living in extreme poverty in Guatemala. These families would not otherwise be eligible to own a Habitat home due to their low levels of income, but are in difficult circumstances that Habitat Guatemala can improve.

Envisioned as a multi-year project, we will work year to year in order to identify families in the most impoverished areas of the country. The solutions that will be provided through the fund will be tailored to the specific circumstances and needs of each family.

Habitat Guatemala hopes to continue growing the vulnerable families fund through your generous partnership, which will allow us to serve more Guatemalan families in need.

Sucess Stories: 

Crisanta López Family

Crisanta was left widowed last year and she was struggling to fix the roof of her home where she lives with six of her children. 

Thanks to the help of several generous donors, Habitat Guatemala provided the López family with a new roof, a fresh coat of paint for the walls, a Chispa stove, a water filter, and a new sanitary latrine. This project improved their quality of life with a safe roof and adequate access to proper sanitation and a smoke-free environment.

The Morales Family

Álvaro and his wife, Lucrecia, are parents to four adult children, three of whom have special needs and use wheelchairs.  The family lives in a two-story house and previously, the children had to be carried up and down the stairs.

With the help of a dedicated volunteer, the funds that were needed for the project were raised. Habitat Guatemala built a solar-powered elevator in the family’s home, giving the children their independence, eliminating the risk of a fall, and adapting a solution specifically to the family’s story.

Projects that need funding: 

Juan César Gómez Family

Juan lives with his sister, Amalia, his niece Maribel, and his great nephew, Ángel, in the department of San Marcos.

The whole family inhabits a three bedroom house made of deteriorating wood, a leaky metal roof and dirt flooring. Amalia, Maribel and Angel share one room, while Juan sleeps in a separate one. They cook over an open flame in this space, covering the walls and ceiling with soot. This manner of preparing meals has caused several respiratory issues for the family.

Habitat Guatemala is planning to support the family by providing them with a new home. On October 12th, 2019, Habitat Guatemala will hold a race (5K &10K) in San Marcos to raise funds for the family.

We ask that you consider supporting the cause as well. Join us and be part of the construction of a better Guatemala!

 

#GivingTuesday2018

DONATE NOW

#GivingTuesday is a global day of giving, celebrated on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving, and the widely recognized shopping events like Black Friday and Cyber Monday. This day sets of the start of the charitable season.

In Guatemala more than 1.8 million Guatemalan families do not have an adequate house to call their own. That is why for this year’s #GivingTuesday, Habitat for Humanity Guatemala is planning to support some of the families who are affected by the housing deficit. By providing them with different home improvements these families will have the necessary tools to improve their quality of life.

WHAT IS THE VULNERABLE FAMILY FUND?

Since 2017, Habitat Guatemala approved a project to work with families who are deemed vulnerable and in impoverished and precarious circumstances, these families  may not otherwise be eligible to own a HFHG home due to their extremely low levels of income. Envisioned as a multi-year project, HFHG will work year to year in order to identify appropriate families of the most vulnerable departments in the country.

We hope that because of this campaign we can provide families  with a safe place to spend the holidays. However, we can’t do it without your help. Support us in raising funds to buy the materials and construction needed for these families. to improve their homes.

Join in, and help us make a difference!

Read about families who are a part of this initiative:

Cristanta López Family

 

 

 

 

 

 

Teresa Churunel Family

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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