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The Most Poverty-Stricken Place I’ve Ever Been

by Tim Sinclair

“Everything looks like it’s under construction, but I’m pretty sure that none of it is.”

That was my first thought as our bus made its way up to the Pamplona district of Lima, Peru. Walls were half built. Roofs were unfinished. There were holes for windows with no glass in sight. The “homes” in Pamplona have been built into the side of the hills, and if one started to fall I’m quite sure that they all – like dominoes – would crumble in succession. It is hands down the most poverty-stricken place I have ever been to.

We regularly see parts of our world that have been ravaged by natural disasters on the news. We hear the stories of families that are trying to pick up the pieces of their lives that wind and rain have stolen. But these precious people in Lima aren’t in the process of recovering from anything.

No hurricane or tornado ripped through Pamplona last month. No fire broke out or storm blew in. No earthquake cracked their foundations and toppled their walls. These conditions are a day-to-day reality, not the result of a one-time tragedy.

Maybe it’s because this is my first day in Peru (or maybe it has something to do with me getting seven total hours of sleep in the last 66 hours), but I don’t see this city-within-a-city changing because of our visit. With our help or without it, I don’t see a revitalization of Pamplona in the near future. But you know what? That’s okay.

Americans especially like to involve themselves in mission projects such as this one because (in two weeks or two years or two decades) we assume that our efforts will be “worth it.” We enjoy seeing a “return.” We like knowing that we had a hand in moving a situation from bad to good. Or at least bad to better.

But Hugo, the young boy who got new shoes from me today, will need another pair next year. Mariabella, the cutest five year-old girl ever, will not be able to afford her own crayons or paper anytime soon. The man I saw sitting in a pile of old newspapers, looking out over his community, will probably see a very similar sight next year and the year after and the year after.

How am I okay with that? Well, sometimes, just sometimes, life isn’t about change or progress or transition. Sometimes it is about doing the right thing, regardless of whether or not there’s a return in it. Sometimes it’s about caring for someone’s today regardless of their someday.

Whether or not their futures are any brighter, today was better for Hugo and Mariabella. And that’s good enough for me.

Tim Sinclair is an author, blogger and radio personality with a passion for real and relevant discussions about faith. He went on a mission trip with Shoes for Orphan Souls in August 2011. You can see this post and others about Peru on his personal blog.


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