On the Gringa Trail I can honestly say I have only
volunteered once and it was just for a few hours picking up garbage on little
Corn island in the Caribbean. It’s not that I shun volunteering, I know there
are a lot of good organizations but there are a lot of bad organizations that
rip you off and profit from their volunteers. I just don’t like to work for
free and I most definitely will not pay to volunteer! That is just nonsense!
So you can imagine how enthused I was to volunteer my time
during the Boots and Hearts music festival and for World Vision nonetheless Those
awful commercials during Christmas with that horrid John Lennon song showing
images of malnourished African kids with bugs in their eyes came to my mind.
Way to ruin my jolly Christmas spirit! The one time of year when people are
merry and the jerks have to go and play that commercial and make me feel like
an asshole.
“So this is Christmas
And what have you done
Another year over
And a new one just begun
And so this is Christmas
I hope you have fun…”
And what have you done
Another year over
And a new one just begun
And so this is Christmas
I hope you have fun…”
Yeah thanks World Vision I am really
having fun now! By the way turkey and stuffing don’t mix too well with visions of Africans with puss coming out of their eyes and bugs living under their
finger nails. Jerks!
It is easy to change the channel on the TV
and ignore the fact that there are issues out there that are bigger than our
problems in our daily lives. Most people do turn a blind eye and I was one who
changed the channel in disgust when those commercials came on. However World
vision has created a new approach to bringing awareness to the situations in
Africa. I volunteered for The One Life Experience at the Boots and Hearts Music
Festival. Essentially it is a 2000 square foot African village. The objective
is to provide awareness on issues children face in various African countries and
on the deadly HIV and AIDS pandemic and to inspire people to move beyond the
statistics by hearing the voice of a child in the midst of this struggle.
There are four life stories you can experience
Stephen, Beatrice, Olivia and Samuel. My job was to try and encourage people to
go through the tour. I was labelled the town crier and I wore a colourful
African shirt. Once I had them convinced to try it they met my friend and she
gave them the low down on the tour. You become a child; you see and hear their
life, you have an Ipod which begins with children playing, it then becomes very
real.
I went through both Beatrice and Stephen. Stephen’s
story is a hard one, the sights and sounds can be a bit graphic. He was a
normal little seven year old boy but one night he was kidnaped and forced into
a rebel army. He was made to kill, beat and perform very gruesome tasks. It is
heart wrenching and was hard to continue through the sounds and sights. You are
asked to pick up a gun, the gun that Stephen used, I could barely lift it. The
good thing is there are positive outcomes with all the stories, so I wasn’t
that traumatized. Stephen in particular was
found and placed into a World Vision rehabilitation centre that helps children
rid themselves of the brainwashing of the rebel armies. I felt better and
could hold back my tears when I realized Stephen was able to reunite with his
family.
However the audio informed me there was a
darker danger lingering still; I was told to go through the door into the
medical clinic and wait for my results. A cold emotionless hand came out of a
window and gave me a piece of paper with a red symbol on it, negative or
positive. I was a seven year old boy who overcame the rebel army; would I
overcome the threat of HIV?
Completely gut wrenching! I couldn't take
this! To overcome the odds and now I might have AIDS! World Vision what are you
doing to me! Thankfully Stephen did not contract AIDS and I did not completely break
down but there are two stories in the One Life Experience that do.
The tour really did change my perspective
on World Vision, that and talking to my friend’s mother who has volunteered for
the organization for many years and has gone on trips to Africa with World
Vision. So apparently they aren't a bunch of uber-religious jerks out to ruin my Christmas. By the end of the
festival I was an expert volunteer and I might even do it again next year!
The perks of enjoying the festival for
free, free food and free camping weren't so bad either!
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