In mid-March a group of seven students and four staff from the REAL School took a life changing trip to the Dominican Republic. The trip was the culmination of months of service learning, planning and fundraising, and taught the students inspiring life lessons that no textbook could teach.
Staff
members Marie Reidman, Max Brandstadt, Paul Field and Page Nichols traveled
with students Brian Parent, Jamee
Fillmore, Ernie L'Orange, Jurnee Larson, Emily Denbow, Aiden Conway-Stuart, and
Julia Kaserman. The REAL School has been taking students to the
Dominican Republic for five years, said Reidman, but never on such a large
scale. Previously, they have traveled with the non-profit organization Seeds of
Independence, with one staff member taking one or two students. This year, a
whole class made the trip.
One
of the major tasks for the group was to install water filters in homes on the
bateyes, which are villages in the middle of sugar cane fields where Haitian
refugees work and live. Field said these refugees are recruited at the border
of Haiti, and often have very little opportunity to ever leave the batey. When
they aren’t working the fields, they build up debt to the company, which keeps
them there, essentially as indentured servants.
The
workers are paid very little, have no medical care and their education, if they
get one, stops at seventh grade, said Reidman. Often, education and medical
care are not accessible due to transportation issues.
In
addition to installing water filters, the students set up a medical clinic for
a day, and distributed educational supplies. Reidman said they were also able
to provide a scholarship for a young woman finishing her last year of school.
Brandstadt,
an Americorp member working at the REAL School, said that organizing and
raising money for the trip seemed like an impossible task at times.“It took a
lot of effort and an incredible amount of perseverance on the part of staff
members,” he said. The students raised $15,000 through various efforts that
included a letter writing campaign, a walk, a flatbread pizza fundraiser,
private donations, and a video appeal to local water companies asking for help.
The Falmouth and Sebago Lake Rotary clubs also gave donations for the trip
after seeing Brandstadt and students present to the clubs.
Reidman
said that the service learning that is part of every REAL School day was
dedicated to preparing for the trip this year. Students learned about the
Dominican Republic, the people on the bateys, what their needs were, and how
the group might be able to fill those needs, in addition to planning and carrying
out fundraising efforts.
Because
staff had been to the Dominican Republic previously, they could prepare the
students for what they would encounter. Students spent months learning about
the history of both the Dominican Republic and Haiti, why Haitians are in the
Dominican, the racism that exists and the history behind that racism.
The
trip really opened up the eyes of the students, said Brandstadt. Some of the
students come from very difficult, impoverished situations and have never met
anyone with more difficult life circumstances than they have, he said. This
trip allowed the students to see that they have more opportunities than they
realized. “Even though some of our students have tough lives, I think that this
trip really helped expand their horizons and realize that they aren’t as tough
as they thought they were,” said Brandstadt.
Reidman
added, “On the other side of that a lot of our kids don’t look at themselves in
a really positive light. It was a way for them to be on the giving side of aid,
and they felt so good about that. It made them see themselves in a different
way.” Reidman hopes the trip will have a long term impact on the students. “It
opened up their world to what they might be able to do in the future,” she
said.
The
work was hard, but the kids rose to the challenge. One of the interpreters
commented that their group worked harder than any group they had seen, aside
from themselves, Reidman said. “They were really proud of that,” she said.
“They were proud of how much they could give to someone else.” The group
installed 30 water filters in homes while they were there, 20 of them in one
day.
The
trip touched students in ways they’d never experienced before, offering
valuable lessons on compassion, gratitude and accomplishment. “Compassion
blossomed in the students,” said Brandstadt. He illustrated this with a story
about a severely disabled man they encountered on the betay. Placed in a broken
down wheelchair, the man was left to sit under a palm tree in the heat all day,
without much interaction. On their second visit to the batey, one of the
students approached the man and talked with him, then gave the man his hat. “He
was just overjoyed to receive this hat and get some attention from someone,”
said Brandstadt. The man’s happiness touched the student so much that he was
filled with emotion and began to cry. Brandstadt said the incident brought
about a huge and important shift in the student’s concept of what being a good
person means, as well as what it means to be a man. In a reflection, the
student wrote, “I have a bigger heart than I thought. Real men cry!”
When
they left, many students left their shoes behind. “They felt like they had so
much…too much. They were moved by that,” Reidman said. Reflection statements written
by the students showed just how much students learned about themselves on this
trip, with comments like “Happiness can be so simple,” “I learned to think of
others before myself,” “I understand better what true need looks like,” and “I
have so much compared to the people in the bateyes.”
Jamee
Fillmore, a junior, said that the trip opened her eyes up about a lot of
things, and inspired her to continue doing this kind of work. It was hard, she
said, to be in an entirely new culture. “It was crazy to see how everything was
so different from our part of the world,” she said. Another struggle was
working out the dynamics with the other students she was rooming with, but she
said they worked through it and all had a really good time together. When asked
what she learned most from the trip, Fillmore said, “I learned that I take
everything for granted – like clean water, and hot showers.” Seeing people who
had so little made a big impact on her. She also said she learned a lot about
herself. “It made me feel really good about myself, knowing that I helped
someone,” she said.
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