Advertisement

Third World Comes Alive for U.S. Teens

Share
Times Staff Writer

‘We’re seeing the other side of the world . . . just a few miles from home.’

--Julie Fuhrer

On a recent morning, three young women were repairing the door of an outhouse in a hillside community here known as Cerro Azul, or Blue Hill. The outhouse is the only bathroom for about 250 students at the community’s elementary school, itself a makeshift structure of well-worn plywood and battered boards crowned by a sagging roof.

The three young women hammered nails to reattach the outhouse door, which was hanging like a severed limb. The teen-agers were not students at the school, and their presence engendered some curiosity, especially considering the contrast of their fair skin against the many shades of brown here.

The American teen-agers, solidly middle-class and admittedly sheltered, were among 15 brought to Mexico recently by Los Ninos (The Children), a group that for 12 years has sponsored a program designed to expose young Americans to the harsh, poverty-lined life of the Third World.

Advertisement

‘Seeing Other Side of World’

In recent years, the San Diego-based group, funded principally through donations, has drawn hundreds of Americans from areas as diverse as Buffalo, N.Y., St. Louis and Los Angeles to the barrios and colonias of Mexico’s swelling border cities. The idea is to promote understanding on both sides of the international line. Some volunteers pay their way just for the experience.

“We’re seeing the other side of the world and how people live here, just a few miles from home,” said Julie Fuhrer, a 16-year-old from San Diego, one of the young women working to repair the outhouse at Cerro Azul.

Transport for the young people was provided by two Los Ninos vans, the Esperanza (Hope) and the Dorothy Day, named for the late Catholic social activist.

Their destination provided a stark contrast to a life of shopping malls and video arcades.

Stark Poverty

There is no running water in Cerro Azul, no electricity.

Residents eke out a living in the laborious hand-construction of bricks and tiles crafted painstakingly from the region’s superior clay.

But despite its poverty, Cerro Azul is also a place possessing a certain hard, sun-baked beauty, where a hump of land dotted by gigantic, primeval boulders rises gently upward toward a peak called Cuchuman.

“You’ve got more than a million people living in San Diego County, most of whom don’t have the vaguest idea what’s going on just south of the border,” said Brother Bob Hergenroeder, a Roman Catholic brother and president of Los Ninos. “It’s an eye-opening experience.”

‘They Need to Give’

“They need to give,” added the Rev. Ginny Wheeler, a minister at Saint Mark’s United Methodist Church in San Diego who accompanied the teen-agers.

Advertisement

“Californians tend to get so rooted; they don’t go overseas that often,” she said. “We need to shake them out of that self-centeredness . . . out of that ‘us and them’ mentality that can create prejudice.”

For the young students on this trip, the idea seemed to work.

“Most (American) kids never think about things like life in the Third World,” said Beth Bertke, an 18-year-old from Cincinnati who has been working as a Los Ninos volunteer for two months. “I feel like I’ve grown up a lot real fast here. I’ve learned a lot about people. It will help me when I get home.”

Industry: Brick-Making

The community chosen for this project is a cluttered neighborhood of about 600 families situated in the hills 10 miles south of downtown Tecate. Most residents of Cerro Azul earn their living as ladrilleros-- brick-makers.

The occupation is a common one in Mexican cities along the border, where large volumes of bricks and other clay products are produced and sold to the United States.

In Mexico, the ladrilleros are close to the bottom of the social scale. Often they live in isolated communities, their simple dwellings clustered along pits and gashes in the earth from which the clay is extracted for brick-making.

Scattered around are stacks of multicolored bricks and tiles and numerous beehive-shaped kilns--like prehistoric dwellings--where thousands of bricks are fired.

Back-Bending Toil

Although brick-making has long been a largely automated process in the United States, it is still done mostly by hand in Mexico, where labor is abundant. In Cerro Azul, brick-makers are said to earn between $20 and $30 a week for six 12-hour days of back-bending toil, which begins with the digging of clay and ends with the firing of bricks in the often-hazardous kilns.

Advertisement

“It’s a hard life,” said Manuel Salazar, 50, who was stacking thousands of wet bricks in molds along with an 11-year-old helper. Using a wheelbarrow, Salazar said, it would take him three days just to move the large volume of fresh bricks to a kiln about 25 yards away.

Salazar and other area residents said they appreciated the assistance of the young American volunteers.

“The community is very thankful,” said Apolinar Quezada, a neighborhood leader. “This is one of the poorest areas in Baja California, and we can use their help.”

Fixing the Schoolhouse

On the other side of a hill from Manuel Salazar’s brick-making operation, the volunteers from Los Ninos were attempting to fix the battered schoolhouse, which was clearly in need of a new roof, among other things. Such repairs usually must be financed by area residents, said Jaime Castro Gonzalez, the school director.

The American volunteers, untrained but enthusiastic, busily patched holes, nailed together benches and removed debris from the roof and surrounding area.

“I feel like we’re really accomplishing something,” said Patrick Johnson, a 16-year-old from San Diego. “It’s changed my whole outlook on Mexico. Before, I’d just come down as a tourist to Tijuana. This is totally different. The people are a lot nicer than I expected.”

Advertisement

In the past, Hergenroeder said, U.S. organizations doing such work in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin American at times have alienated community residents by failing to consult community leaders and occasionally displaying open condescension for area residents. Officials of Los Ninos pointedly avoid the use of the word “charity.”

No Dependency

“The idea here is to work with the people, not for the people,” said Rigo Reyes, a lifelong border resident and bilingual organizer for Los Ninos. “We don’t want to create a dependency. . . . Realistically, these people have to find answers for their own problems. The Americans are not going to be here forever.”

And representatives of Los Ninos, though supported by various church groups, say they stay clear of religious proselytizing. Such activities often have engendered mistrust throughout the Third World.

During their trip to Cerro Azul, most of the American teen-agers expressed surprise at the poverty, the lack of amenities such as running water and electricity, that are everyday realities outside the Third World. The American youths said it was easier to comprehend such commonplace deprivations after witnessing them first-hand.

“It’s made me appreciate what we have at home,” said one teen-age girl, whose soiled work gloves attested to her labor.

Added another: “What I (would) miss most here is my room.”

Advertisement