Welcome friends and family!

I am traveling through Central America with the University of Georgia as part of a program titled Culture and Content in Latin America. Another teacher, Rebeccah, and I are traveling as a team representing our school system. While we are there we will be visiting schools, health care facilities, hiking through the rainforest, snorkeling, and experiencing border crossing on foot as we travel into Nicaragua. In addition to living with a family in Costa Rica for a few days, we will be staying at the Ecolodge on UGA's campus in Monteverde (see pictures and links in the right hand column) and in various hotels. You can check the itinerary links to see where in the world we are on a given day. I have included some maps and photos of where we will be (and will be adding more as we go!). While I expect internet availability to be intermittent during the trip, I will be posting updates of my travels as often as possible--so keep checking in!

Monday, June 25, 2007

Crossing the Border . . .

Yesterday (Sunday), we spent the day traveling from Costa Rica into Nicaragua. We had to travel from Santa Rosa back to Liberia because you can't catch a bus into Nicaragua as close to the border as Santa Rosa. So, while we were only 12 kilometers form the border where we were staying, we traveled an hour back to Liberia, waited on the side of the street to flag down our bus, and then rode for another hour and a half by bus to the border.


Once we arrived at the border, we waited in line, clinging to our backpacks strapped across our chests, to exit Costa Rica. Then we all boarded the bus again, and the bus drove across the border and then through a car wash kind of device which sprayed the bus down to kill any hitchhiking insects, which we found hilarious since they could surely just fly or crawl across the border on their own, right? Then we all unloaded all of our large luggage this time and waited in yet another line with all of our belongings. I wish I had pictures to show what we saw and experienced, but this was not at all the place the pull out a camera. We waited here for hours in the heat, holding all of our bags, with no place to sit down and no bathrooms. We snacked on cookies knowing we would not be eating lunch that day. While it is easy to imagine being upset about this, I just couldn't be because I saw a man digging through the trash to find discarded scraps of food, and I could only be so thankful for my cookies no matter how hungry, hot, and tired I was.

We really found out how unpredictable the border can be when our leader and her eleven year old daughter were forced to stay behind in Costa Rica. She has dual citizenship (CR and US), and our leader had been told by immigration authorities before the trip that she would not need a visa to enter Nicaragua as a Costa Rican citizen. But once we got to the border she was denied entry without the visa. Her US passport had expired earlier this month, or she would have been able to enter as a US citizen. It was emotional for everyone to be separated, and it really caused me to think about the trauma of family separation our immigrant students experience. In our case, we know they will be able to join us in a day or two or three, or worst case we will meet them when we return to Costa Rica on Thursday. For our students, the separation is often for years or even for the rest of their lives. The sacrifice is nearly incomprehensible, but witnessing the circumstances which motivate these decisions overwhelms me in certain moments.


So, now we are here (minus two) in Granada, Nicaragua, the oldest colonial city in all of the Americas. It is a beautiful city, and after our previous stop, I am really appreciating the absolutely lovely hotel and the first air conditioned accommodations of our journey.



Sorry I can't rotate this picture of our hotel here in Granada, but just tilt your head! You can see a volcano on the horizon.

I'll send an update soon now that we have internet access!

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

All I can say is WOW and hang in there. This is an experience of a life time.

Anonymous said...

It sounds like a really unique experience!!!!! I can't wait to read more!!
Enjoy the A.C.
Alison

Betsy said...

Wow! What great experiences you are having. It is really exciting to be following along.
Enjoy the A.C. while you can.
Betsy