Picture a space roughly the size of a child’s bedroom, created out of sheets of plywood, metal, or, if you’re very fortunate, cinder block. Roof it with corrugated tin. Divide that into a kitchen/living area, a bedroom or two, and a privy. There’ll be no television or telephone or even refrigerator, which is just as well since electric service is sporadic and unreliable, when it’s available at all. Perhaps you’ll have a tiny gas stove to prepare the one meal per day that your family depends on. But there won’t be any running water, and very limited access to clean drinking water. When it rains, the rain will come into your home, and if you live too near it, so will the river. And if that’s the case, when it rains heavily, you will have to take your few belongings and evacuate to higher ground, and wait, unsheltered, until the water recedes. Along the narrow, deeply rutted and unpaved streets – often barely wide enough to accommodate a single vehicle – there might be piles of garbage, or open ditches flowing with sewage. Dogs are everywhere, but it’s best to avoid them for fear of rabies. The simplest things we take for granted, like streetlights, sidewalks, windows glowing with the blue light of countless televisions, are all absent. It’s nearly impossible to comprehend that a human being would actually call this place home, this landscape so utterly deprived that it borders on the surreal.
For some residents of the city of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic, that landscape isn’t a nightmare; it’s the norm. They call it Sabana Perdida, the lost savannah. More than one hundred and forty thousand people live there, many of them children. This is the Third World, something we hear about on the news, but have managed to keep at a comfortable distance, not realizing how close to home it truly is. Relatively few Americans know much at all about the Dominican Republic. If you’re good at geography, you know it shares an island with the country of Haiti. Or you might have heard of the incredibly posh resorts, like Punta Cana, that dot its coastline. The combination of that growing resort industry and proximity to the US – the DR is barely two hours by air from Miami – is driving increased American tourism and awareness of the DR. That’s good news for the Dominican economy. But what they don’t tell you in the glossy resort brochures is that the Dominican Republic is the third poorest country on earth. It’s hard to fathom this kind of extreme poverty, right at our doorstep. Yet it’s the hidden face of the Dominican Republic, the one you won’t see at the airport, or at the rental beach villa, or in the charming, ancient streets of historic Santo Domingo.
The third poorest country in the world – how poor is that, exactly? The average annual income in the Dominican Republic is $2,080 USD. By comparison, the average median income in the United States - $43,318 – is just over 20 times that number. In the DR, a poor family might scrape by on about a dollar’s worth of food per day. In the US, where we feed a dollar into a vending machine in exchange for a Diet Coke, that’s a tough concept to wrap your mind around. In the Dominican Republic, despite the taxes that citizens pay, basic amenities like water and sewage, power, transportation, and public education are painfully inadequate. How inadequate? For one example, there aren’t anywhere near enough public schools to serve the population. This means, very simply, that a great number of the very poorest children will never have the chance to receive any formal education. And without education, there’s virtually no hope of breaking the cycle of poverty. Add to that poor nutrition, little or no access to healthcare, and the devastating effects of HIV/AIDS, and you have, in essence, entire generations of children just written off, condemned.
Hopeless, you think. The problems are too massive and complicated, too tangled a knot to ever unravel. It’s easier to be cynical, to turn away. And then you go to Sabana Perdida, or a place like it, and you see what’s possible when people don’t turn away. When one individual reaches out to another, and using the most basic tools, creates hope where there was none. This is the work of World Vision, the group we traveled with to the Dominican Republic. World Vision, founded over 50 years ago and today the fifth largest relief organization in the world, operates on a simple principal. One sponsor coming alongside one child, and, at minimal cost, providing access to better nutrition, clean drinking water, healthcare, and educational opportunities. Sponsorship, like World Vision itself, isn’t about charity; it’s about finding solutions to root causes of poverty. It’s about helping to create the environment and the opportunity for communities to become self-sustaining. It’s about developing that most precious and valuable resource, the one found in even the most wretched and forgotten places: children.
The children of Sabana Perdida are beautiful, silly, mischievous, playful, shy, clever, bold. Just like your kids or mine, or kids anywhere in the world. They’re smaller than our children, a result of poor nutrition. Darling 9 year-old twin girls, their hair carefully braided and beribboned were significantly smaller than my 6 year-old daughter Olivia. Their health is more fragile; the immunizations we take for granted aren’t available, and serious, even life threatening conditions like asthma and especially, HIV/AIDS, go untreated. Most of the parents I know agonize over which chewable vitamin to buy; can you imagine watching your child suffer and being powerless to do anything about it?
I went to Sabana Perdida with a lot of expectations. I expected to see terrible things. I expected to feel pity and sadness and even despair. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Here’s what I did see: possibilities. I know that seems impossible, but it’s true. World Vision has been working in this area for a number of years now. Sponsors – people like you or me – are the reason that so many of these children are now able to attend school. The buildings are small, the classrooms overcrowded, but it’s school and it represents the first step, maybe the most important step, out of the slums. There are job-training programs, there is a health clinic, and a clinic that treats and counsels HIV positive parents and their HIV positive children. There is a youth center; so primitive by our standards that I had to be told I was looking at a “gymnasium”. But every afternoon, that center fills with young teens. They study and play music, learn computer skills, and most of all, have a safe place to gather.
I sat down on the ground in front of a house, in the dump, by the river. Children clambered into my lap and pressed themselves as close as they could. I tried out some of my Dora the Explorer Spanish on them, and believe it or not, we managed to have quite a conversation. It seems that kids, no matter where they are, are surprisingly patient with adult stupidity. They giggled at my pronunciations, and nodded with delight on the few times I found the right word. Holding them, I was struck by how immaculately clean they were. Again, those expectations – I was expecting filth and hopelessness. One little girl who curled up in my lap was wearing a flowered dress. It was faded and old, but it was clean and starched. God knows how, in that crowded, sweltering, forsaken place, her mother found a way to iron that dress. I sure don’t. But I know this: that child is loved. And that, more than anything, is what I learned in Sabana Perdida. There’s no difference at all between my kids and those kids. There’s no difference at all between them and us.
Here’s why I support World Vision and am asking you to consider doing the same. World Vision works in 99 countries around the globe. And although it is a Christian relief organization, World Vision isn’t only about preaching Christ’s message. World Vision staff and volunteers show Christ’s message of love through the work they do. And they do that work in parts of the world where simply being a Christian is a life-threatening risk. World Vision isn’t a charity where those of us who have feel ennobled by giving to those who don’t. World Vision enters a region or community with the express purpose of eventually leaving it, strong, healthy, and self-sustaining. And World Vision is a first-rate financial steward. 87% of your sponsorship dollar goes to the programs that benefit your sponsored child. See for yourself at www.charitynavigator.org.
I know it’s hard to believe that a dollar a day can do anything for anyone. But I’ve seen it in action. I’ve seen what happens when a school appears where there was no hope of education. I’ve seen a hundred or more parents and children standing for hours in the sun just to register, and receive a few notebooks and pencils. I’ve seen what happens when a young mother is taught a marketable skill, or when a five year-old HIV positive orphan and his grandmother get enough to eat. When you see what a dollar really can do, you don’t feel hopeless. You don’t feel pity. You feel energized and inspired and ready to jump in and help. And believe it or not, you feel joy. When I went to the Dominican Republic to meet my sponsored child, 7 year-old Perla Estafania, I thought I was bringing her a whole sackful of presents. Little did I know, I was the one receiving the gifts.
You can learn more about World Vision and view videos and photos of our trip at www.bobandsheri.com/worldvision.