I benefit greatly
from
the experience…
I see the generosity
of our students and
then
the benefits of
that contributing to
the well-being of the
villagers. It’s
good to
be in a position
where I see the
blessings on
both sides.
–Theology
professor
Dr. Steven Bridge |
Why is this man smiling?
Faculty and students get down to work in Guatemala and share in the
common good
By Matthew Pascarella ’06

“It's at the heart and soul of
our identity as Christians, and it’s
at the heart and soul of our identity as a college,” explains
theology professor Dr. Steven Bridge about the importance of service
to others.
In January, Bridge led a team of 18 students and one other
professor to Guatemala, where, in conjunction with Partners in Development,
they helped Mayan villagers in the second-poorest country in the Western
Hemisphere.
When the team arrived in the village of Concepción,
the mayor and a large assembly of excited villagers welcomed them. The
streets were decorated with streamers and a generous banquet had been
prepared. A TV crew also showed up: This was the first time an organized
effort had been made to help this village, and it was big news.
Most
of these villagers had never seen a doctor or even brushed their teeth.
After some preliminary training, the Saint Joseph’s team got right
down to business. While some students took blood pressures, checked blood-sugar
levels, dressed cuts and abrasions, and dispensed more than 15,000 vitamins,
others demonstrated proper brushing and flossing, administered 300 fluoride
treatments, and cleaned the teeth of 511 patients.
Still other members
of the team helped to build a house for Felipe Conroy and his family
of nine, who had been living in a small shack made from scraps of wood.
In just six days, the team dug the foundation, filled it with concrete,
and started to construct the walls. They also dug a 150-foot-long trench
for the water pipes. Thanks to the Saint Joseph’s team and subsequent
teams from Partners in Development, the Conroy family has now moved into
the new, two-room house which has running water, a bathroom and electricity.
“The
needs you find internationally tend to be more acute than the needs you
find domestically,” says Bridge. “Christianity shows us that
there’s something innately good about reaching out to those in
need – that in doing so, we literally encounter the Divine.”
• www.sjcme.edu/guatemalaservicetrip.htm
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