Global Citizen Journey
  • About Us
    • Background
    • Global Partners
    • Leadership
    • GCJ Advisory Council
    • Finances
    • Contact Us
  • Journeys
    • Guatemala
    • India
      • India 2017 – Maher in Maharashtra
        • Journey Blog
        • Maher Host Organization
        • 2017 Delegation to Maher in Maharashtra, India
      • India – Kashmir 2018
        • About Kashmir
    • Africa
      • Uganda – November 2020
        • About Uganda
      • Liberia 2011
        • About Liberia
        • Project and Host
        • Liberia Blog
        • Liberia Peacebuilder Community Summit on 4th of July
        • GCJ’s Initial Trip to Liberia
        • Details of LPI Summit Activities
        • “Pray the Devil Back to Hell”
      • Ghana 2006
        • About Ghana
        • A Perspective on Ghana
        • Ghana Together Blog
        • Ghana Journey Report
        • Beyond Axim: follow up projects in Ghana
      • Nigeria 2005
        • About Nigeria
        • Nigeria Trip Report
      • Burundi 2008
        • Burundi Partners
    • Personal Journeys
      • Sabbatical 2017
      • India Blog
  • Blogs
    • India
    • Liberia
    • Nigeria
    • Ghana
      • Ghana Blog, Page 2
      • Ghana Blog, Page 3
      • Ghana Blog, Page 4
      • Ghana Blog, Page 5
      • Beyond Axim: follow up projects in Ghana
      • Ghana Blog
    • Burundi
    • Personal Journey – India
      • India Blog 1: First days in India: Arriving in Bangalore
      • India Blog 2: Tirunvannamalai
      • India Blog 3: Auroville
      • India Blog 4: Days of rest and reflection up in the hill town of Kodaicanal
      • India Blog 5: From charming Fort Cochin into the paradise of the backwaters of Kerala
      • India Blog 6: Ashram of Amma, a living saint… to Trivindrum
      • India Blog 7: Schools & Women’s empowerment centers with heart and soul
      • India Blog 8: Uttrakhand – foothills of the Himalayas
      • India Blog 9: Holy Cities on the Ganges: Hardiwar & Rishikesh
      • India Blog 10: The Pink City of Jaipur and Ranthambhore National Park
      • India Blog 11: The Planet’s Favorite World Heritage Site – Taj Mahal and other Agra sites
      • India Blog 12: Holiest of Holies – Varanesi
  • Participate
    • Delegates
      • Journey Preparation
      • Fundraising
      • Traveling Positively
    • Sponsors
    • Volunteers
    • Orientation Session for Volunteers
    • Make a Difference: Donate!
  • Resources
    • Resources and Bookstore
    • Fundraising Techniques and Comprehensive Guide
    • News & Links
      • News
      • Press
      • Calendar
  • Donate
  • Apply
  • The Compassionate Listening Project Source Book
  • Search
  • Menu
  • Facebook

Tag Archive for: Guatemala

Posts

News

Villages of the Lake

IMG_4755 IMG_4745 IMG_4700 IMG_4765 IMG_4786 IMG_4822 IMG_4852 IMG_4688 IMG_4679 IMG_4641 IMG_4620Once you settle in, the fun thing to do is take day trips.  There are villages all around the lake.  I got to visit a number of them.  In each town, the women and girls wear the beautiful and colorful hand woven huipil symbolic of their village.  Everyone is very friendly – is considered polite to always say hello, Buenos dais (or tardes…).  The people are so beautiful – though, compared to most North Americans, tiny:  I feel so huge and lumbering!

When I first arrived I came through Panajachel, known as Pana, which was the first area to become well known by tourists and has many hotels, restaurants, nonprofit projects, markets, etc.  It is a great place to shop and access services but lacked much charm or atmosphere.  You can hop on a boat for a 20 to 30 minute trip across to San Pedro for just 25Q (quetzals – about 7.5 to a dollar, so the ride cost $3.25).

I found San Pedro quite enjoyable – easy to walk around through narrow alleys that the ever present tuk tuks managed to squeeze through, with a steep hike up to the central market, church and lovely tiny city park.  I enjoyed heading to the outskirts of town where my friend Nancy is living in a friend’s house that she has helped to landscape and decorate exquisitely.  With an incredible view once you hike up to the upper house and climb up three steep flights to the terrace!  Wowowowow.

One day we headed to nearby Santiago – a more traditional town where even the men still where their village trajes.  It is beautifully situated on the shore of a deep inlet of the lake. This is the town told about in Martin Pechtel’s colorful and amazing memoir of how he became a shaman, Secrets of the Talking Jaguar – a great read, especially while here.  This town was the capital of the Tz’utujil since pre-colonial times. During the war Santiago was especially hard hit with state-sponsored violence.  Many villagers were murdered, tortured, disappeared – including the assassination of Roman Catholic Priest Stanley Rother by right-wing death squads on 28 July 1981, and the massacre of 14 people (and wounding of 21 others) when the Guatemalan Army opened fire on a crowd of unarmed civilians on 2 December 1990.  Today there are collectives of women’s back-strap weaving and many Mayan traditions continue.  For example, there are Cofradías (religious brotherhoods) who are the guardians of the modern and ancient religious practices:  one task is to take an annual turn in guarding the cult of Maximón –a cigar puffing god-effigy to whom people come to offer liquor and tobacco in exchange of favors.

On the other side of my base of San Pedro is a small village, San Juan.  This town seems to have a very unique character.  Almost no hotels, no tourists – and a very enterprising population:  apparently an American helped create a women’s cooperative many years ago and from that has spawned many women’s’ cooperatives.  So all of the shops sell wonderful, organic, natural dye products and all share the profits with their members.  There are many gorgeous murals throughout the village.  And some of the services such as school and sports field seem better established and maintained.

Beyond that I visited San Marcos – a haven for New Agers.  There are holistic healing centers, yoga retreats, and health food stores.  It is on the shady side of the lake and has a more tropical feel.  Very quiet, peaceful and lush, with narrow paths from the dock leading up to a sweet shared playground where gringo and native families gather to watch the children play.  There is a beautifully maintained little park with paths and vistas and swimming holes – and four ceremonial circles (one for each pillar of the earth – used at different seasons) – where I came upon Tata Pedro and Shuni.

I also visited Santa Cruz, accessible only by boat:  there I visited friends’ of friends who founded Amigos de Santa Cruz which has established wonderful programs for the six small communities associated with the town – for vocational training, nutritional education, early childhood education, and scholarship supported advanced education.  This small village needed to be traversed by precarious wood planked walk ways at the lake’s edge, as the planned lovely broad pathway was now submerged.

On another day I took a day trip away from the lake to Chichicastenango’s famous market and vibrant K’iche town.  The shopping everywhere in Guatemala is insane:  there is such richness of beautiful textiles, beads, etc. in wild and vibrant colors with painfully detailed handwork.  Needless to say, my suitcase is now emptied of the books and art materials I brought to Taa’Pi’t but is overflowing with handicrafts….  The church at ChiChi is fascinating, with observers conducting a maya-catholic blend of ritual similar to what I once saw in San Cristobal in Mexico.  Candles, incense, offerings of corn, flowers, pine boughs, liquor and prayers by shaman while the Catholic saints look on.  The church is the site where the one remaining copy of the holy Popul Vuh telling the Maya origin stories was found in the early 18th Century.

…I was sad to leave the gorgeous lake, which really cast a spell upon me… But excited to have more adventures ahead: I’ll soon post the last two blog entries – one from Tecpan and my visit to Project Somos and one from the jungles of Peten where I visited Tikal.IMG_4623 IMG_4856 IMG_4646

March 9, 2014/by Susan Partnow
uncategorized

First Days in Guatemala: Antigua

Que pais magnifico! What a wonderful country! Despite Guatemala’s horrendous history and recent past – I find a deep sense of serenity and welcome here.  The climate is deliciously perfect.  The scenery is astonishingly magnificent.  The people are impeccably kind and friendly.  The arts and crafts are an explosion of color and gorgeous design.  Antigua is a city of remarkable beauty and charm.  The artistic life is pulsating –from traditional crafts to contemporary art – painting, sculpture, architecture.  Oh fellow Global Citizens, we are blessed with such an amazing planet and so many rich cultures!

Yet amidst this beauty, serenity and charm, I find myself repeatedly triggered when confronting the beautiful and pervasive colonial influences.  I feel my stomach tighten and churn, as every historical figure, church, painting all make me think of Los Conquistadores – the cruelty, greed, violence, genocide that has swept this land for hundreds of years with their wanton destruction of so much of Mayan culture – which manifested in the last century in the cruel greed of “Banana Republics” and CIA supported death squads. (With Israeli supplied helicopters.)  I feel culpable and sad. Read more

January 26, 2014/by Susan Partnow

Donate

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Archives

Categories

  • Blogs
  • Burundi
  • GCJ Sponsorship
  • Guatemala 2025
  • India
  • India 2017 Journey Blog
  • Kashmir 2018
  • Liberia
  • News
  • Nigeria
  • Personal Journey
  • Sidebar News Posts
  • Uganda 2020
  • uncategorized

“Building the Global Community through Grassroots Connections, Bridges of Peace”

About | Contact | Get Involved

4425 Baker Ave NW, Seattle WA 98107

© 2018 Global Citizen Journey

+1.206.310.1203 | info@globalcitizenjourney.org

All donations to Global Citizen Journey are tax-deductible to the full extent of the law

   
© Copyright - Global Citizen Journey
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Participate
  • Journeys
  • News and Links
  • Resources and Bookstore
  • Contact Us
Scroll to top