Tuesday. Although I had more than enough to be getting on with I spent most of the morning chatting to Ana Lucias cleaner, Lisbania. Considering the surgical cleanliness of the flat, Im surprised she can find enough work to do. However it pays relatively well, jobs are at a premium and whilst Ana Lu is convinced the place is filthy in perpetuity (if not in reality) she will always be required. This is only the second time I have met Liz but she is a very cheerful and friendly person which considering her story is no mean feat. You see despite her youth (30 years old) she has already been widowed twice. The first husband was the victim of a motorcycle accident and her second husband (who in a morbid irony bought the motorbike) was shot dead not 2 months ago. Now look me in the eye and tell me you wouldnt be paranoid if you were in her flip flops.
By coincidence, she lives very near to the El Diamante school in Aguablanca and is convinced she knows our guide Geraldo. We talk about education in the area and which school her children attend. She tells me that they all go to a state school (technical skills as opposed to commercial), though her preference would be a private institution as she believes it offers higher quality. I ask her if she is aware of the PAC programme that offers goverment subsides to select private schools and therefore concessionary/free places to a given number of poor children. Interestingly, she hasnt the slighest awareness of the school mix in Aguablanca or the potential of a private education for her children. We have a look at the comuna 13 school records on my PC and I point out the relevant institutions and potential opportunities in her environs. Ignorance is probably as bigger hurdle to opportunity as availability in poor areas. I hope she gets lucky as few people probably deserve it more.
We were due to meet Geraldo in the El Poblado neighbourhood at 2.30pm, however I trashed that by mentioning to Joni how pain free the whole research process had been to date. Needlesstosay, that was trigger for a spot of bad luck as Geraldo arrived nearly an hour late due to brake problems with his scooter. It was closing in on 4pm as we headed in the direction of couple of private institutions in the Poblado2 neighbourhood, known for being a particularly sensitive area. The bad luck continued as first the DoS of Instituto Comercial Santa Rosa (private)declined our overtures (too busy at this time) and secondly Liceo Pedagogica Sur Oriental (private) was closed for the afternoon. Beyond them both and deep into bandit territory (as Geraldo quaintly described it) was a large public institution also called Santa Rosa (though no relation). Outside were numerous parents who as security informed us were attending a parents meeting, a second great smash and grab opportunity in the mould of Luz Haydee was presenting itself though much would depend on our timing and the attitude of the DoS. As luck would have it, our host and DoS was Victor who we met at the Community Violence debate a few weeks previously. It was Victor who so candidly contextualised dry politics in terms of the daily tragedies on the Aguablanca streets. Fortunately, he is by no means all talk and received us efficiently and courteously despite the stress of the meeting. We quickly briefed him on the scope of our research (which we can now describe on auto-pilot) before he disappeared to greet his audience, meanwhile we waited in the office for his return. Joni, Geraldo and myself had been chatting for about 20 mins when we suddenly became aware that Victor was introducing us to the crowd and what a crowd it had become. As we stepped beyond the office threshold it became apparent that over 200 parents had come to the meeting, obliged as they are to attend. Victor invited me to speak and whilst I feel my Spanish has improved Im no Miguel Cervantes, so I put in a sidestep and threw a languid hospital pass to my partner. Fortunately, Joni is a true trooper, not to mention an outrageous lingistic (5 languages at the last count) carrying it off with great aplomb and receiving a big round of applause for his troubles. We asked the parents to spare a little time after their teachers meeting to complete the questionnaires and it just remained for us to organise an appropriate situ. At this moment, we all paused to consider the full breadth of opportunity. With Luz Haydee just around the corner, we could drop off the teacher and DoS questionnaires and complete that set having already carried out the parents session. Whilst I remained at Santa Rosa to greet the parents post-teacher meeting, it was agreed that Joni and Geraldo would headed off to LuzH with the requisite documents and return asap. It so happened that minutes after their departure, numerous parents and their children were already departing requiring it seems little teacher reassurance. In the absence of any official recognition I grabbed a table and a few available chairs, offering them to a number of willing interviewees and quite a few unwilling ones. Forty minutes into the process and things were turning a little chaotic, whilst I had 5 or 6 parents safety seated I had found myself tied to a semi-literate women who obviously needed plenty of assistance. However, whilst I was so occupied I wasnt able to give the essential prompt to other parents who were drifting closer to the exit. Just as I was preparing to cut the ambilical, Joni and Geraldo came to the rescue once again. In total we snared 29 parents and could have had many more had I not run out of questionnaires. One notable individual was a tiny, displaced indigenous woman with the worries of the world on her shoulders. She was so intent on understanding the scope of our work in Agaublanca and how it might help her community. Its clear that displacement as well as violence are significant inter-related factors that effect society and consequently education in this area.
I would have appreciated a few minutes more with her but both Joni and Geraldo were getting concerned about the time, it was long after dark and we were in Poblado2, renown above all neighbourhoods. I gathered up all the paperwork and as we waved a hasty goodbye Geraldo looked around for the nearest and safest escape route, one with plenty people even if the light was in short supply. We crossed the central plaza and around a few children playing basketball. I felt reassured by their presence but as Geraldo told me later, its not the locals who have anything to fear. Whilst I could see the bright lights of a major throughfare there no way through but for one of the dark, narrow and sinister streets, Geraldo picked the most populous and we followed meekly and rapidly behind him. Whilst we kept our heads down to avoid eye contact, youre are aware of being sized up by everyone you pass and even though we reached the main street in short shrift, Geraldo kept up the pace until we were safely esconsed in a cab. Once out of Poblado2 he spoke of the group of bandits he noticed, the strong smell of hash and the fact that no questions are asked here, if these guys want something youll probably end up on the slab before a word is even uttered. No time for photos then.
After a day like that you deserve a beer or two and lo it came to pass…….