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creating personal relationships between communities of hope in the United States and El Salvador in order to share learning experiences, spiritual accompaniment, and material support in our faithful work to build communities based on justice for all who seek a dignified, sustainable life
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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Cielo Azul study trip! Join us April 2 - 9, 2011

Click here to access pdf brochure with complete information about the Cielo Azul study trip.


The Invitation
This is an opportunity for people in the United States who have themselves been part of “communities of resistance” to meet with Salvadorans who have been engaged in a similar struggle--expressly to learn from each other what are the sources of hope and renewal that each has found. On the trip we will be in dialogue with our hosts--about their histories and ours, about their strategies and ours, about their futures and ours.

It is not our goal to arrive as “helpers” of people in need, but as seekers who want to understand the lessons that people of El Salvador have learned in their years of struggle.

In addition, a goal of our meeting these people will be to encourage further dialogue by inviting those we meet to visit our communities in the US to further deepen the connections we make on our trip.



Trip Themes
• The theology of liberation, bible study and praxis-- visits, conversations and scripture reflections with various faith communities and pastoral workers.
• The arts in a social revolution--visual arts, music, performance, community murals,“popular education” publications, and folk culture.
• Preserving the environment--global economics, local politics and human rights as they impinge on a community where international firms want to extract gold.

Our Method
Our trip will combine home stays and lodging in simple hostels with travel to communities where we can hear the stories of folks who can illuminate our themes. We will be accompanied by an accomplished translator, so Spanish proficiency is not required.

Additional Details

Study group limited to 12 participants.  Cost will be $1350 - $1550 per person, based on minimum of 10 participants and airfare.   To reserve your place, send us an email using the contact form in the sidebar at right.  Or contact Ron Morgan at 610 220 1317.

CIELO AZUL will coordinate the travel details for the group. Pastors Ruth and Alex Orantes are the study trip coordinators in El Salvador. Our hosts for the trip are families of Iglesia Shekina Bautista, where Ruth is pastor. The church is a progressive, socially active community with a long history of welcoming visitors from the United States. For some parts of the time, we will be staying in guest houses that often welcome international travelers.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Light to Live In -- Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America

The annual summer gathering of the Baptist Peace Fellowship of North America  provided a great opportunity to network with a number of longtime as well as new friends of Ruth and Alex Orantes and the Iglesia Bautista Shekina.

With a theme of “Light to Live In,” this year's summer conference was held July 12 to 17 on the campus of Keuka College in the Finger Lakes region of New York .  More than 350 progressive Baptist  activists, peacemakers, pastors, students, teachers, families, and organizers from Canada, the US, Mexico,  Puerto Rico, Cuba, Burma and beyond came together to celebrate the BPFNA's mission of  “gathering, equipping, and mobilizing to build a culture of peace rooted in justice.” (See www.bpfna.org)

The conference schedule included an afternoon screening of the documentary film "Return to El Salvador," which features Alex and Ruth expressing their commitments to building a new vision of peace and justice in their country.   A number of people left the BPFNA conference with copies of the "Return to El Salvador" DVD in hand, planning to spread the story in their own communities back home.

In the discussion following the screening, several of the BPFNA participants attending the film spoke about their own experiences accompanying the struggles of the Salvadoran people. Some reflected on their participation in the repatriations of villages from refugee camps during the war in El Salvador. Others have been outspoken critics of oppressive economic policies like CAFTA (Central America Free Trade Agreement) and longtime advocates in the call to shut down the School of the Americas.

Participants in the BPFNA conference who have connections with Ruth and Alex talked about the importance of sustaining the work of these two talented, visionary leaders whose transforming work in their communities has been a cherished model and inspiration for many North American communities of faith.  (*** Check out http://thesimpleway.org/friends/cielo-azul/ in addition to this  blog for information about the “Cielo Azul Fund” created by a network of individuals, congregations, and groups inspired by Ruth and Alex's commitment to faith-based community development, justice, peacemaking, and healing.) And everyone agreed that the Orantes Family would be excellent to invite as participants in a future BPFNA summer conference!

We appreciate director Jamie Moffett's work to share the complex story of El Salvador's history, as well as to highlight some of the rays of hope for a new future.  For more about the film, go to www.returntoelsalvador.com.  

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Cielo Azul to offer study trips

In partnership with the congregation of Iglesia Bautista Shekina, Cielo Azul is planning a series of travel study trips to El Salvador starting in late 2010. Alex and Ruth Orantes will be the trip coordinators in El Salvador, helping visitors to see the Salvadoran reality by focusing on such themes as:
  • The Revolutionary Church: The Salvadoran experience in history, theory and praxis
  • Art in a Revolutionary Community
  • Immigration, Hope, and Despair: the impact of immigration on Salvadoran economic, family and community life
  • The Impact of Dollarization and CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreements) on Salvadoran Life
  • Third World Environmentalism (deforestation/reforestation, seasonal flooding, potable water, extractive mining)
  • Women in Post-revolutionary El Salvador.
The central idea is that dialogue with the people who have been engaged in work around these themes can
provide North Americans involved in the struggle for justice, peace and human rights with a valuable lens to view their own lives. More information will be available soon on our blog, or send us an email using the contact form in the sidebar for an update.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Painting the Salvadoran Reality -- Reflections by Alex Orantes

The whole history lived by Salvadorans is a combination of shadows and light, hope and despair, death and life. Those who have often dominated the story and wanted to take over the “painter’s” brush have reinforced the disaster of the poor, trying to break their spirit. These “painters” have humiliated the poor, shaping their identity merely as servants, forcing them to live out a fate that-–as they have made them believe—has been determined in a divine, sacred realm. For many, that is all they have known. Their poverty and misery have been part of God's will, which they have had to accept. They also have had to comply with the arrogance and humiliation that comes from the powerful, because they too are products of a divine will. So no one can interfere with or change what the gods have decided. That is untouchable, sacred. 

There are others who have “painted” out of a collective life in solidarity with the poor--history seen from the bottom. These have painted without permission. They were never given the brush to paint, but created their own, a subversive brush, one that exceeded the official work. They painted with other shapes and colors, giving importance to the faces of the people. Servants were portrayed with dignity and their future was painted in decency and justice. 
 
Alex Orantes painted this piece (see image below) in November and December of 1989, and gave to the Central Baptist Church, where he was visiting when the six Jesuits and two women were murdered at the Jesuit University.

These daring underground painters destroyed theologies and made gods and lords collapse. They played down the voices of priests and pastors who tried to impose shadows in the lives of the poor, justifying their beliefs and preaching that violence and injustices all come from “above.” Thus, a new work and a new thought was being created. People decided to take charge of their own destiny even if their names were not well known. No longer seeing themselves only on the margins of the great work, THE POOR now see themselves with dignity; they want their own future, know their rights, are changing their old patterns of thought. Every day they are removing their chains; and now everyone wants his or her own brushes; they all want to paint in their own touches, their traits, creativity, their ideas. 

What we hope for in the end is a collective work, a beautiful work, a new history for Salvadorans. We will remove colors like gold and silver, which painted crowns and royalty, oligarchs and military laurels. Instead, we will paint people, land, education, clear blue skies, beautiful sunrises, tiles, ceilings, new walls, good foundations for new homes. We want our landscapes to celebrate peace and justice in the everydayness of the simplest, of the poorest. How beautiful it is that this work, our large mural, our history, is being painted with the participation from all of us!
We acknowledge that there are strong critics, educated and cultured people, who know about good art and sponsor museums and artists. They are not satisfied, do not like the socialist touch, the solidarity touch, do not understand why we celebrate the fact that the servant, the ignorant, the tattered, the homeless, the barefoot, the social activist, the revolutionary are painting methods of dialogue, consensus, inclusion and broad participation. They do not understand, will not understand. They will conspire against this work; they want to destroy the mural; they will leave their marks of violence and their names will be marked as those who hate folk art and folk life. “The people” never existed according to them. If people existed, it was just them, their circle of bourgeois exploiters, who think that they coined the word "Salvadoran people" to refer to their own.

To all these and their strong bulls of Bashan, we will give the consolation of a place, only if they want to paint in the new style. But if all they want is to be masters of all the brushes and all decisions, they will lose the opportunity to be part of the work. And in the exhibition in the galleries of every district, neighborhood, village, marginal zone, in communities everywhere, where the poor have lived ignored, when the work is shown, history will judge these dominators for being headstrong, for their selfish hearts. 
 
And this great painting will be signed by all the Marías, the Josés, the Carlos, the Romeros, and the Shaficks, who are part of the people. Those who participated will be immortal; their memories will be eternal. Those who were above, might want to buy and own the artist. But everyone knows-- it is in everyone’s mouth and conscience-- this new work and its artists are not for sale, nor is their fate or their determinations. Never again, God willing.

Alex Orantes
Santa Ana, El Salvador, January 6, 2010

Translated by Laura Miraz, edited by Ron Morgan

Friday, January 8, 2010

Shekina Christmas project aids sister church damaged by Hurricane Ida

a report from Shekina...

Our Sister Church - Iglesia Bautista Discipulos de Cristo - in the outskirts of San Martin suffered dangerous and tremendous damage in the night of Nov. 7/8th 2009 because of Hurricane Ida.  There were 2 dead in the congregation.  Members of the church lost all fields of beans and corn, which went down into the valley, 300m deep. The church terrace was damaged as well, and they will have to move before the rainy season 2010 (May).

On December 22nd, the Shekina Solidarity Committee (comite de solidaridad) delivered a much appreciated Christmas present of food baskets to 38 families at Iglesia Bautista Discipulos de Cristo.  We got to know each other better and celebrated an improvised thanksgiving church service with the pastor.






Updates about the Orantes Family

We recently received the disturbing news that Ruth's teaching job at the Colegio Bautista (the Baptist school in Santa Ana) has been eliminated as of January 1st.  Ruth's position in the Christian Education department was one of 20 jobs eliminated across various departments.

This puts added pressure on the family budget, especially since Victor Hugo's school tuition was a benefit of Ruth's employment. Happily we can report that a donor to the Cielo Azul Fund has designated funds to cover all of Victor Hugo's school expenses for 2010. 

The loss of the teaching job leaves Ruth free to spend herself in her pastoral work at Iglesia Bautista Shekina.  But while there is full time work to do at this growing congregation, the congregation can not match the salary she has lost from her teaching position.

Your continued support will help to give the family a stable economic base for their service to the community.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

A new partnership with The Simple Way!

We are happy to announce that the Cielo Azul Fund has completed our recent transition and we are now financially sponsored by The Simple Way, a multi-faceted not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization in North Philadelphia. 

Over the years, there have been many mutual visits between the Orantes family and members of The Simple Way, so we are very happy to deepen this connection between people whose ministries are rooted in service and accompaniment of the poor and marginalized.   Visit The Simple Way website at www.thesimpleway.org to learn more about this exciting community!

The Cielo Azul Fund is now featured on the TSW website as one of their global projects!  Find us under the "friends and partners" section of their website. 

All contributions to the Cielo Azul Fund will be processed by The Simple Way, which means that we are now able to accept secure on-line credit card donations designated for Cielo Azul through our blog at www.cieloazulfund.blogspot.com.