Marianny Essay on Global Potential Experience, December 2011

Written by Marianny Martinez, Global Potential Youth Ambassador, Boston Fellow 2010-2011

“Interested in a cultural exchange? … Want to travel to the Dominican Republic and Haiti and do community service? … Want to make difference? … Are you a leader?”

These were the questions that the flyer that changed my life asked. It was a recreating flyer from Global Potential, a non-profit organization that takes at risk urban kids from Boston and New York to do community service in third world countries, looking to find its first cohort in Boston.

In the summer of 2010, I arrived in Batey 7 in the Dominican Republic, a village where Haitians and Dominicans work the sugar cane fields. Batey 7 is a small community where everyone knows each other. With dirt roads and homes constructed of wood, mud and tin and no in-door plumbing. The only businesses in the Batey were a few small corner stores, a clinic, a person who panted nails, two home bakeries, two fried food sellers, and one elementary school. The night I arrived to the Batey, all I could say to myself was, “What did I get myself into? I have to be here seven whole weeks?!”

After the second week, however, that whole mentality had changed as I became engaged in the tasks at hand. In the seven weeks I was there, I helped in the construction of a water canal, interned at the clinic shadowing the only doctor, instructed an English class for kids between the ages of five and eighteen in the elementary school, gave sex education classes, participated in community clean ups, and a Dengue campaign. Out of all the tasks I had that summer what had the greatest impact on me was the English class. Working with the kids of that community gave me such a sense of accomplishment. When I walked down the roads and heard one of my students ask me in English “Hi, how are you today?” the smile on my face reached ear to ear. Through these activities, I not only became closer to my team from Boston and New York, but I created beautiful bonds with the community members. The people I was living with were no longer my host family; they became my mother, father, and sisters.

Part of my cultural exchange was also a five day visit to Haiti. In Haiti I saw not only, the damages that the earthquake produced, countless homes, businesses and churches destroyed and made into rubble, and huge numbers of people living in refugee camps. But what surprised me more than all the destruction and poverty was the fact that all the stereotypes that I had heard growing up and during the time that I was staying in the Batey were all false. There was this belief and way of life in the Batey like the rest of the Dominican Republic that Dominicans were better even superior than Haitians. I saw for myself the atrocities of these stereotypes. The people of Bas Gromand, Haiti were the most welcoming people I had ever met. Despite the language barrier there was not one moment in which I felt misplaced or uncomfortable. Their food, culture, and way of life were so similar to my Dominican culture, especially that of the Bateyero, that I just could not perceive why there would be tension between the two.

The time I spent in the Batey and Haiti left a lasting impact on me. I learned about the racism problem in my native country*, and became interested in making a change through continuing to be a part of Global Potential. Upon my return from the Dominican Republic three students and I cofounded a social entrepreneurship project where we collected donation to ship off to villages we visited, while spreading social awareness in Boston. As well as the following summer I travel to El Hatillo, Nicaragua and took my experience and the skills I had acquired to help both the community and the new cohort of students that were traveling for the first time.

Travel, cultural exchange, leader… All words that I can still picture from the flyer. Words that introduced me to a world that my parents fought against letting me know, words that changed me that allowed me to see what was beyond the borders of Boston and made me understand that I have the power to make a lasting impact on not only my life but in the lives of others. But finally words that made me who I am today a young women striving for excellence in her education to change her own personal life, the life of her family and ultimately the lives of the patients who will be sitting in her exam room five years from now.

My name is Marianny Martinez and I am making a difference in Boston! I am a junior at the school Health Careers Academy recently changed, in honor of Edward M Kennedy, to Edward M Kennedy Academy for Health Careers high school in Boston.

I am also a youth leader in the flagship program of a non-profit organization called Global Potential (GP). I became a youth member of GP in January 2010 and since then I have made significant changes in my life and the lives of others in my local and global community. As a GP Youth Leader and Participant, I carried out this summer a six-week long service trip to a rural village in the Dominican Republic and to the capital of Haiti Port-Au-Prince to do community service work and live and share cultures with my host family and community.

After my return to Boston in September this fall 2010, I felt personally changed and passionate about the people that I had lived with over the summer. With that love and passion, I teamed up with three other GP youth participants and leaders to create a social venture. This social venture evolved from a task, to a passion for my teammates and me to help the people of the communities we visited over the summer in the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Nicaragua. Our social venture is called “Les Manos United” (LMU) because we got the name by mixing our three languages (Spanish, Haitian Creole, and English).

LMU’s mission is to give back to the families and communities that welcomed us and made us feel at home during the summer. It is also meant to increase global awareness in our local community of Boston on important issues happening internationally and what we can all do about it. We are currently in our second phase of our venture. Our first phase was called “Toys for Haiti”. We set that up around BPS schools from October to December, involving Boston communities through events and fundraisers to raise 220 toys and funds to ship them for Christmas time in Haiti and put a smile on our Caribbean neighbors who suffered so much due to last year’s earthquake. On December 19, 2010, we sent off three duffel bags full of toys to the children living in the camps of Delmas 33, near Port-Au-Prince in Haiti. (Pictures of our first phase can be seen on our facebook page:http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162256943805464).

*We are now preparing our second phase of LMU until April, called “Shoes for the Batey”, where we will collect shoes around Boston to send to the rural village in which we stayed in the Dominican Republic this past summer, a huge need there. The third phase “Books for Nicaragua” we will collect books and magazines around Boston to send to the rural village in Nicaragua where some of us also stayed during the summer. The next two phases will also incorporate fundraisers in Boston and in the BPS schools, collecting from our homes, friends and families, and by applying to grants.

I speak on behalf of my team since I know they feel the same way we are proud, happy and feel a huge warmth in our heart with what we are doing locally in Boston and internationally to positively change the lives of many marginalized community members. The 6-week long trip to the Dominican Republic and Haiti changed our lives. We experienced things that are only seen in movies and that was all thanks to our host families and the community members of the villages in which we stayed. To give thanks and to try to help with their situation is the reason of why we created our social venture.

We also wanted to make sure to increase awareness about global issues in our local community of Boston which sometimes is sheltered about what the rest of the world is going through (and vice versa). Giving these people toys, shoes and books doesn’t come close to the memories and inspiration that they instilled in us, but it is a start. With that said we hope not only to win this contest but to educate and spread the word to people of what GP and LMU are but also the help that thousands of people need around the world. The change starts here locally, in Boston, in our Boston Public Schools, among the youth, to connect us locally and globally.

Stellar GP leaders and alumni!

This page is under construction.

Here we will be highlighting the stellar work and community engagement that GP leaders and alumni are involved in once they come back from their international immersion experiences in the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Nicaragua…For many years ahead of them!

Please stay tuned.

For leaders and alumni, please use the form below to tell us about your amazing work so we can make sure to share this with the world! You all are so amazing!