Reading Life's Textbook in Guatemala
BYU agronomy and nutrition interns work to
improve life in Chiquimula, Guatemala. Teaching programs
were established, and child nutrition was analyzed.
At the establishment of the Benson Agriculture and Food Institute
in 1975, Ezra Taft Benson commented on the association between
Brigham Young University and its new international extension
organization:
“It is fitting that this institute have its beginning here
at BYU, a place of learning with a worldwide reputation for
its pursuit of excellence. As we look to the need for developing
nations to learn how to use the resources they already have
to feed and clothe their people, it becomes obvious that BYU
is uniquely qualified to assume a role of leadership” (Benson,
1999).
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BYU
interns to Guatemala, 1999 |
The College of Biology and Agriculture abounds in students
involved in agricultural and nutritional studies with international
interests and a desire to serve. BYU President Merrill J. Bateman
recently addressed a new objective for BYU: “Advance truth and
knowledge to enhance the education of students, enrich the quality
of life and contribute to a resolution of world problems” (Bateman,
1999). The annual internship in Latin America offered by the
Benson Institute allows students to meet this goal directly
by participating in third-world improvement projects related
to their fields of study.
The 1999 spring internship at the Chiquimula office of the
Benson Institute extended educational service opportunities
to seven BYU students. Under the direction of international
coordinators Luis V. Espinoza and Dr. Malaquías Q. Flores, the
interns spent spring term learning what no textbook can teach.
Chiquimula, Guatemala
The Guatemalan province of Chiquimula lies in the southeastern
portion of the country. The Institute’s office is situated in
the area’s largest city, Chiquimula. The residents of the villages
surrounding Chiquimula subsist on corn and beans, the crops
traditionally grown in the marginal land of the area. The monotonous
diet and poor agricultural situation are the greatest health
and economic obstacles of these people.
The Institute sponsors Guatemalan university students fulfilling
graduation requirements. BYU interns assist these Guatemalan
students with their projects and participate in activities of
their own. From giving nutritional lessons at elementary schools
to encouraging erosion prevention on sloped farmland, the BYU
students help the people of Guatemala surmount economic and
educational obstacles with resourcefulness.
Nutrition
Four Brigham Young University nutrition students joined the
Benson Institute’s Guatemala project for seven weeks. Jacqueline
Brown and Jaycie Fidel, nutritional science majors, and Amber
Smith and Karen McGrew, dietetics majors, advanced hygienic
and nutritional improvements in the mountain communities of
Chiquimula. They prepared and presented pertinent lessons to
the community women and children.
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Fidel
weighs breakfast portions at the local school. |
Promoting the use of soybean in the village diet occupied much
of the nutrition students’ efforts. Soybean, a nontraditional
crop in the three communities, contains high quality protein
and fat, two essential additions to the protein- and calorie-deficient
village diet. On a weekly basis in each community approximately
20 women gathered for demonstrations of recipes involving
soybean, an ingredient foreign to traditional Guatemalan
cooking. At these sessions the interns instructed groups
of several women in the preparation of soy milk, soy patties,
and soy-fortified tortillas, basic recipes advancing the
use of soybean in the diet (see Figure 1 for the soy patty
recipe). The students and local women experimented with
flavorings and soy-to-corn ratios to achieve appealing and
nutritious dishes.
The four BYU students also associated with the village women
in presenting health and nutrition training sessions. At gatherings
similar to the recipe sessions, besides discussions on the nutritional
importance of soybean, the Institute’s interns held discussions
with the women concerning parasite and disease prevention.
In coordination with the teachers at the community elementary
schools, the nutrition students also presented lessons to the
youth. Each school group was trained to eat a healthful breakfast,
prevent parasitic infection, and use animal products in the
diet. The school children flocked to the lessons with hearty
enthusiasm and involvement. Amber Smith remarked in her internship
report that “we were able to let the students know that we were
excited to be in their communities and were eager to help them.”
Working with children is the foundation of successful change.
The Guatemalan government funds school breakfasts for these
rural students. The breakfasts, prepared by volunteering mothers
and served daily, had not been nutritionally evaluated. To accomplish
the task, the BYU students visited each school in the Benson
Institute communities on three separate days during the breakfast
hour and measured the amount of food served to randomly selected
children. By using the computer program Nutritionist IV for
the final analysis, they discovered that the breakfasts are
poorly regulated; portion size and preparation technique fluctuate
in each school with the rotation of volunteers and the order
in which the children are served. The interns left a recommendation
that the breakfasts be monitored to permit a consistent evaluation
of the food’s nutritional content.
Figure
1. Recipe for soybean
patties |
| 2 cups of soybeans
1 cup corn flour
1 egg
onion, chili pepper, tomato, cilantro, pepper, parsley,
and salt to taste
cooking oil |
Soak the soybeans overnight in water. Spread the
soaked beans in a warm, sunny place until dry. When
the beans are dry, heat a frying pan and toast the soybeans,
moving constantly for a uniform color and to avoid burns.
Allow to cool. Grind the beans into flour and store
in a tightly closed container until use.
Add water to the soy flour and corn flour to create
dough. Finely mince the onion, cilantro, parsley,
and chili pepper. Add the minced vegetables, pepper,
and salt to the soy dough, mixing well. Add the
egg to the dough and vegetable mixture and mix well.
Form patties. Add oil to a frying pan and heat.
Fry the patties until golden. |
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Agronomy
Brigham Young University students Merrill Dibble and Jessica
Hess; agronomy majors, and Susan Eldredge; botany major,
served as interns of the Benson Institute agronomists. The
Benson Institute agronomy projects in Salitrón, Chancó,
and Corral de Piedra, the Institute’s beneficiary communities,
focus on improving farming conditions faced by the village
producers so that economic and nutritional needs can be
met.
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Students
in Salitrón admire the garden they made with BYU interns.
|
The agronomy component of the Institute works with the main
producers of the villages as well as school children. One of
the continuing projects concentrates on creating vegetable gardens
both in family and school settings. The concept has grown in
popularity since its initiation, particularly as children take
their excitement and knowledge about the school’s garden home.
Jessica Hess noted that “several times while in the villages
we were approached about obtaining seeds for garden spots that
children had convinced their parents to prepare or had prepared
themselves.”
Teaching establishment and maintenance of tree nurseries forms
a major part of the agronomy program also. The families involved
in this project use the trees for fruit production, fence rows,
reforestation, and agroforestry systems (see article, page 37).
Cutting tree stands to create cropland has provoked numerous
problems in these communities, particularly an increased rate
of erosion. Replanting trees whenever possible results in both
economic and environmental benefits for the producers. The soil
that must support the communities’ food production gets replenished
and protected; sources of firewood, building materials, and
fence posts increase without disturbing existing trees; and
fruit produced from certain species can be sold in the market.
During the interns’ stay they took part in a project of soil
classification. Working with community residents and the Institute
staff, the interns collected soil samples and other data from
a representative area in each of the three communities. Using
matrices relating slope, nutrient content, soil texture, soil
depth, erosion damage, rockiness, and drainage characteristics,
the interns and Institute workers classified the soils according
to their most appropriate use. With this new data the Institute
can focus on long-term goals to help the communities use their
resources to the greatest benefit of the residents.
Other programs in which the interns took part include teaching
proper pesticide management, testing new varieties and hybrids
of corn and black bean, running fertilizer and plant spacing
trials, and general crop advising. Each project centers on the
community producers as the future propagators of successful
agricultural methods.
Susan Eldredge, in addition to the agronomy work, continued
a project of plant classification she began during the 1998
internship. She collected and pressed samples of numerous common
plants. These plants were gathered as the initiation of an herbarium
at CUNORI, the local satellite campus of the University of San
Carlos. An herbarium is an essential element of botanical studies,
providing access to representative species. The samples are
also part of a compilation of medicinal plant information that
will be catalogued and provided to the community residents as
a preservation of their traditional medicine.
Fulfilling BYU mission
Brigham Young University’s Aims of a BYU Education
states that “BYU should nourish in its students the desire to
use their knowledge and skills not only to enrich their own
lives but also to bless . . . the larger society” (BYU, 1999).
Karen McGrew summed up her impression of the internship by saying,
“The mission of the Benson Institute goes hand in hand with
the mission of the University. The program is one of charity
and love of our fellowmen.”
In addition to directing students toward service, the “intellectual
aims of a BYU education are intended to give students understanding,
perspective, motivation, and interpersonal abilities—not just
information and academic skills” (BYU, 1999). Reflecting on
the impact of the internship in these areas of her life, intern
Amber Smith commented, “Once you’re in a setting like that you
realize what you have learned and how it can help others. You
don’t take your knowledge or your education for granted anymore.”
Working together, Brigham Young University and the Benson Institute
educate the next generation of motivated scholars to look beyond
themselves and seek answers to the world’s pressing development
questions.
Works Cited
Bateman, Merrill J. “Bateman Lists ‘Pillars of BYU Education.’”
Y News, 27 Aug. 1999, p. 1–2.
Benson, Ezra Taft. “Response: Announcement of the Ezra Taft
Benson Agriculture and Food Institute, Brigham Young University.”
Benson Institute, 23 Sept. 1975, p. 1–6
Brigham Young University. (1999). Aims of a BYU Education
(Online). Available: http://www.byu. edu/about/aims (1999,
14 July).
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