The IPPs of 2010, Almeria, Spain
The IPPs of 2010
In 2010 there are CISV International People´s Projects in Colombia, USA, Spain, Brazil, Finland, Germany, Mozambique, and Egypt. Each project has been created by a local CISV chapter in co-operation with a partner organization to meet a community need. Each project brings together CISV volunteer staff and participants from around the world. In this blog you will find a day-to-day reports of our work, descriptions of our experiences, thoughts and expectations.
We hope you enjoy the words and images and will understand that through projects like these ordinary people can take action and make the world a better place. (Are we optimists? Yes we are - and we are proud of it!) Perhaps this blog will even inspire you - gentle reader - to take action yourself.
The IPPers of 2010
Spain's IPP: Patera
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Patera 4: 25 men arrive on August 12
Super Patera with 450 people arrives in Canada
Friday, August 13, 2010
The First Patera
The immigrants arrived in a boat that belonged to the "Salvamento Maritimo" because their patera was completly destroeyd in the sea. A policeman was checking the immigrants as they left the boat and another escorted them to a big room where they would be checked and interrogated.
Most of the immigrants were shivering and they had torn, wet clothes.We gave them blankets and new clothes and they were asked to change.
Abdallah, An Algerian red cross volunteer was talking to the immigrants to obtain the necessary data about each one of them. The healthy immigrants were given a green bracelet and the sick ones red bracelets.
Once Abdallah was done with his examination, we were asked to give food to the persons with green bracelets. We gave them 2 cupcakes, juice, coffee and water.
After all the immigrants were preperly dressed and fed, the police took charge and we had to leave. It was an unforgettable experience to help people who have risked their lives and left everything behind to start over in another country not knowming wether or not they will make it.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
UM
I went with Minton and his team into the centre of Almeria, and Cait went with the other team. The main purpose was to give homeless people food, drink and hand out sanitation bags. Minton and his team knew who and where people were homeless in the centre. The people we met had the typical problems we associate with homelessness, alcohol abuse, addiction issues and social issues. Homelessness like any sub group in society is made up of different people from different places. On that night we met Spanish, Moroccan, French and German people.
We started by going into strips of waste land with flash lights and searching under clumps of trees and behind half derelict walls. Calling ‘hola, roja cruz’ . People often lived on old mattresses laying on cardboard and had old, dirty, well used sleeping bags. The team were well known, and everyone we met was happy to chat for a while and take coffee, magdalenas (little cakes), sandwiches with ham or cheese, juice and a sanitary bag (containing tissues, shower gel, shampoo, sanitary towels).
We then went to supermarket car parks, the back of the police station (some people lived there for safety) old abandoned cars and abandoned houses. In one of the abandoned cars the seats in the back had been folded down and at first glance it looked like a huge dust bin, however it was a collection of thing that might be useful old tin cans, clothes, cardboard, spare magdalena cakes, almost all items old and dirty.
The team was made up from a group of people with such a strong social conscious, both Minton and Esperanza had both come to live in Spain from Ecuador in South America. Minton had only been living in Spain for two years with his family and didn’t yet have his papers. Ramon was Spanish and I had been told (the description isn’t politically correct- due to translation difficulties) his brain was like a computer. All of them gave up three nights a week (and always Saturday) to do the UM.
There had been a mistake with the sandwiches (probably because Cait and I had helped and hadn’t ordered them in the right way for the UM) and we hadn’t brought enough cheese sandwiches many of the people we gave food to were Muslim and so didn’t eat meat unless it was halal meat. So they had to choose to go without. Minton was really cross about this, he really felt he was letting down people. He would also go back to pieces of waste land a couple of hours later to try to catch people we hadn’t seen before. There was also two vegetarians both very thin and with the problems of the street (alcoholic and drug dependency) but still very principled in their belief about not eating meat- it was difficult to comprehend.
At one thirty we finished and exhausted though I was it really was a very special learning experience.
Sarah.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
The Third Patera
- Putting black plastic mattresses out in a line, where the immigrants would sit and wait,
- Preparing coffee, water, Magdalena cakes
- Getting the prepared clothes ready for everyone, in different sizes
- The process was so well planned, organised and managed and the Red Cross really have so much experience in dealing with the arrival of Pateras.
- From start to finish everything was calm and co-operative.
- The immigrants seemed in pretty good health considering their journey.
- It was so good to be part of a team who had so much experience, and trusted us to be part of the work.
- It was such a brilliant and valuable experience to see what happens first hand when a patera comes into Spanish water.
Monday, August 9, 2010
Friday, August 6, 2010
Patera 2: All in the same boat?
Patera arriving from: Algeria
Reported time at sea: 3-4 days
Carrying: 17 young men dressed in casual clothes, in good health
On the night of the 3rd/4th August, a few of our group experienced the arrival of illegal immigrants to the coast of Spain in two Pateras- the boats which give our project its name. The boats had both left the north of Algeria at the same time and arrived to Almeria in the early hours of Wednesday morning, a few hours apart.
We were awoken at 6am by a call from the on-call Red Cross team at Almeria port, saying that a boat carrying 17 illegal passengers had been detected, and that volunteers were needed for their arrival to the port. A similar call earlier the same night had detailed 12 Algerian passengers aboard the first boat, including two minors.
When the Spanish Coastguard detects a Patera at sea, the Guardia Civil (police) and Red Cross are immediately informed. The Guardia Civil sends a boat to detain the immigrants and bring them to shore, and the Red Cross also sends a boat out to assess the health and humanitarian needs of the passengers, including any emergencies. Meanwhile, the team leader on call at the Red Cross centre assembles a team of volunteers. This must be done quickly so that the Red Cross are present and ready at the landing station when the immigrants arrive.
The Guardia Civil boat arrived at around 6:45 with the 17 Algerian and Tunisian men aboard, and towing the Patera behind. We found the size of the Patera shocking, a small inflatable boat with a motor, that you could imagine hiring for a day out at the beach or a lake for a family of five or six. Somehow these men had made it across the Mediterranean Sea, risking their lives for the tiny chance of reaching the shore undetected and being able to escape into Spain in search of a better life. Unlike with Morocco, the Spanish government has a repatriation agreement with Algeria, which means that the immigrants can be sent directly back after their medical and humanitarian needs have been met. Brief chats with the men showed their relief and happiness at finally having reached Spain and the end of their gruelling journey, although they knew that they had only one or two brief days here before being deported.
There were no medical emergencies, but for the most part the immigrants were cold, wet and very dehydrated. The Red Cross medical officer assessed each patient and took details of name, age and nationality, giving a green wristband to those deemed "healthy", with the option of a red band for those needing the attention of a doctor. Meanwhile, we distributed dry clothes and shoes, water and hot drinks, and food to the immigrants. They seemed very grateful for everything and we were proud of the work we did as Red Cross volunteers.
The whole experience really put into context the process set in motion when a Patera arrives. Although we had it explained to us several times in the training, until I saw and felt the futility of the immigrants' journeys, I could not empathise fully with their situation. I can now relate the arrival to the immigrant settlements we visit inland. These people risk their lives for the chance of a better life, but when they arrive they are greeted by even further poverty, unemployment and exclusion from society.
Anya Stephenson, Aguadulce, Spain
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Go, live and become
I. Briefing, packing and acting:
As every day of work with the Red Cross, we planned our actions for the day. Today we worked on the project called “Asentamientos” which deals with delivering the basic food box to the immigrants who are living in the slums.
This box is almost 3kg of weight full of the basics sufficient for 72 hours: milk, rice, pasta, sugar, tissues. We made three stops this morning to different settlements to deliver the boxes to the people who were there (some of them were working). The rule was simple; each immigrant had to give their ID paper or health card to be registered to have a box.
This need of registration is very important because it enables Red Cross to evaluate the needs and the progress of the different communities.
We visited 3 middle sized settlements, all with a different feel:
All are located over what we would call ‘no man’s land’: the “sea of plastic” to describe a landscape full of greenhouses, and shelters made of garbage (plastic, pieces of wood, cardboard and metals). At the first settlement, there were only six immigrants and we met the only three women of the whole afternoon during our delivery of 70 boxes.
The second settlement was a camp of 17 very welcoming North African people, who invited us to drink tea and to come back whenever we wanted. One anecdote: they have a dog called Sarkozy, just to remind us that even in the place of nowhere the French touch could be present, I let you guess how, the animal was a guard dog.
The third camp illustrates well the fact that a trustworthy collaboration between the immigrants and the Red Cross is necessary to implement a dose of humanity in their daily life. In fact, the immigrants are scared about being arrested and sent back to their countries.
For us, far from solving the problem of these people, we learnt a lot about their conditions of living and realized the current gap that exists between their reality and our life of developed countries, consumers and citizens.
Through these moments with the immigrants and throughout this IPP we learn. Today we realized two things:
First, that these immigrants actually live at the door of our consumptive society. In fact close to the shopping mall you can find the place where the immigrants live in shelters made of recycled stuff. On the one hand, as their crazy trip betrays their secret hope, they are attracted by our way of life. On the other side, this consumptive society exploits them to allow us to take the fruits of their work.
Second: even if they live in shelters, steal to survive and are the casualties of the developed countries’ way of life, as we advertise them on TV, they stay human, friendly and grateful…
To conclude, before writing a post about our intervention on the Pateras we expect in the next few days, we could discover today the reality of the end of the immigrants’ trip, and hope that it would just be the hardest step for them to reach their dreams and fulfill their lives.
A voice from within Spain`s Sea of Plastic
What you don´t see on the beaches, or in the holiday communities and shopping centres that line this coast - are the workers who plant, tend and harvest the produce. They are hidden from sight. Most are undocumented workers from Africa who eke out a meager living, often for years, in illegal limbo.
Ali is an undocumented worker from the African nation of Burkino-Faso who nows lives and works in the sun-baked Almeria region. For two years he has navigated the shadow world of charity handouts and under-the-table cash payments for work in the greenhouses. The workers in these greenhouses only get cash - so there are no bank accounts, no records of employment, and no payroll taxes go to the Spanish government that help pay for health care and social security payments. He says his Spanish employers will not even acknowledge or greet him if they pass each other on the street or in a shop. For them he is a non-person.
Many workers give up or become depressed in this strange limbo world, but as an educated and articulate advocate for change, Ali is not ready to submit to a life without hope, rights or a future. And he has an idea.
Ali's idea is simple: Require undocumented immigrants to contribute a monthly payment to the Spanish government to help pay for the health care that is now provided free to them. He says doing this would:
1) Allow them to document their time in Spain - as they must prove that they have lived here for three years to get a residency document - essential for finding better jobs. Official records are had to get for the shadow people in the Sea of Plastic. Many live in the shantytowns - called asentiamentos (settlements) made of plastic sheets or in crumbling abandoned buildings, where addresses don`t exist.
2) Allow them to have the dignity of paying for services and contributing to the society they want to join.
3) Spare undocumented immigrants from accusations of benefitting from the work of others - and getting a free ride.
4) Help the cash-strapping Spanish government pay for health services.
Ali´s arguments are well constructed - polished during long hours of work in the blistering heat of the greenhouses in the Sea of Plastic.
Ironically, he admits, there`s a catch - a big one. Helping people document their time in Spain and become legal workers will reduce their chances of being hired because employers prefer illegal workers who get paid less, work longer days and get no benefits at all.
In Africa Ali worked for an international environmental organization. He now dreams of creating a chapter of that group in this region of Spain - where the monoculture greenhouses exhaust the soil and so much human potential, and so many dreams, shrivel in the scorching sun.
Neil McGillivray, Aguadulce Spain
Monday, August 2, 2010
Breakfast, shower and lunch at the immigrant centre.
Soccer Championship of Senegal’s two biggest tribes: Wolof versus Peol.
Before the soccer game we met some of the immigrants and watched how skilled and fast they were atplaying checkers and cards: The concentration and motivation of the players was amazing, not to mention the excitement of the surrounding onlookers. Then the music started and the attention turned to the soccer game. Some of the footballers even play in the Spanish second league. It was a hot, long and very competitive game between the Wolof and Peol teams, but in the end the Wolof prevailed, winning 3 – 2. But there were no losers; each team celebrated by dancing – even the CISV team joined in – and received trophies. The experience provide us an opportunity to meet some of the immigrant community in their own environment, and to show u show a little piece of their culture, their skill and social activity. What an experience!
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Settlements
Friday, July 30, 2010
OperaciĆ³n Paso del Estrecho, Full Steam Ahead
Our little team, Camila and Isabel from Spain; Mirana from France, and Alice from Australia, left the Campsite and travelled to Almeria Port for our first day work with the children at the Red Cross Kindergarten.
It was really hot. Families were waiting in the cars prior taking the boat that will take them back home to Africa for summer holidays. Most of them have saved money during the year and will spend all the free days they have with their relatives. Crossing Europe from Belgium, Germany, France, UK, Italy or even further away, can be a huge and tiring effort for small children and for the entire family.
It took a little while since Gabriel, a Red Cross volunteer from Sierra Leona, opened the Kindergarten doors until the arrival of the first bunch of children. After four hours of mixed languages, the center was left in a colorful mess of toys, drawings and teddybears.
14:00 PM, It was the time for Gabriel to close the Kindergarten with a team of smiling exhausted girls after him.
¡Hola a todo el mundo!
The project we are participating in is called "Pateras", which is the name of the little boats in which illegal immigrants arrive to Almeria from Africa. Our job is to help the Spanish Red Cross with their work, providing assistance for the immigrants in many different ways.
The Cruz Roja helps the immigrants in many ways, providing them:
- medical care
- humanitarian aid
- food and shelter
- new clothes
- courses: spanish, computer literacy
- information about the Spanish law
- legal assistance if needed
- psychological support and counseling
- hygiene basics.
We are divided in three groups to help the Cruz Roja with their programs for now:
- The OPE (Operacion Paso del Estrecho), meaning crossing the strait of Gibraltar, location: port of Almeria --> here we will be working in the nursery at the port, where African settlers in Europe come to travel back legally to their home country (most of them on vacation). Our role is doing activities with the young people, diverting them from the long wait for the ferry.
- The Warehouse --> helping to store the deliveries of food and other supplies immigrants may need.
- The Asentamientos (settlements)--> Later on, we will be spending time in the immigrant settlements, distributing food, water, clothes and friendship of course.
Also, we have another responsibility with the Red Cross,
- Pateras: hen they reach the coast of Spain, the immigrants have often been without food or water for days at a time, and they require medical and humanitarian attention. The Red Cross have an emergency team, and we could be called at any time to assist the Cruz Roja.
We will also be spending time together as a group, learning from one another and growing as individuals. And of course having a lot of fun! :)
So far we have been here for 5 days and have been training for 4 days with the Red Cross in a variety of areas, from the basic principles of the organisation to the specific skills and knowledge needed in our projects. Today is the first day of practical work and the real start of our IPP journal.
¡Hasta luego!