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Saturday, April 20, 2013

Best way to send money to Fran

Fran has an education account in Oregon to hopefully provide for her ongoing needs over the next 4 years.  Any time you want to donate, you can mail a check to the Oregon Community Credit Union.  The account will be used for tuition, books, fees and to help her with rent and food.

Please mail donations to:
OCCU
PO Box 77002
Springfield, OR 97475-1046

Make the check out to:: Francisca Education Fund, acct. # 1067571

Thank you for your continuing generosity.  I hope you will consider telling one other person about Fran's journey and invite them to our circle of support.

She registered for her entrance exam


This is Fran at her computer this morning, studying math for her upcoming exam.  Just yesterday she found this UNAM site that prepares students step by step for the math part of their exam, which is more rigorous than the one she will face in June.

She divides her study between mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, history and Spanish grammar.  This morning she had a long and intensive session.

She finally managed to get all of her papers together to submit to the college and pay for her exam day before yesterday.  On Monday, via internet, she will get the official study guide.

The advice and counsel she has been getting as she prepares for her exam has been all over the map, from "It's WAY too difficult -- you should find a college with an easier exam and forget this idea" ... to "It's going to be much easier than you think -- they just want students!"  She knows that not all students are good students, and doesn't believe any of the extreme positions.  All she can do is study every day and do her best, but it is a large body of material!!

Her complex job is beginning to be more routine, which is allowing her to dedicate more of her brain to her studies -- the timing of all that was fortunate because starting now she will need every ounce of concentration she can muster.

Also, as I have mentioned before, a dentist in Oaxaca has taken her under his wing and has been providing her lots of expensive care for free.  She just got a full set of braces, which is why she didn't want to turn around and smile for this photo!  They will be removed in about 4 months, though for the life of me I don't understand why she needed them!

Fran's education is, of course, much more than what she is gleaning from all her studies.  Yesterday, for instance, we had a hotdog and she tried mustard for the first time.  This is only one of the many valuable things she is learning from me....

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Fran needs an on-call math tutor

Though Fran's math skills (believe it or not) seem to beyond many people here and in the states, her challenge is only going to get harder as she attempts to get her engineering degree.

We are now accelerating the search for a local, Spanish-speaking, math whiz to be available to her as needed.  If you know anyone who might know anyone, please let me know!

Or, if you can contribute towards paying the tutor, we can really use the help.  If we can pay someone an hourly rate, we'll probably be more successful.  Thanks for your consideration!

Photos of Fran's village and surrounding country

Fran was born in the district of Cuicatlan in the southern Cañada region in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico, a mountainous area covering 4,300 square km. The Cañada, named after a hot low canyon that links the Valley of Oaxaca to the south with the Valley of Tehuacán in Puebla, was the major Precolumbian route between the two valleys. It was conquered and controlled by the early Zapotec state based on Monte Albán at some time around 300 BC.

...and what is most amazing to a Oaxacan archeology nerd like me, is that it is thought that the the original inhabitants of Oaxaca actually walked through this canyon to populate the Valley of Oaxaca!!!

Her village, San Pedro Cuyaltepec, is situated in the municipality of San Juan Tepeuxila of which her uncle is now the President (this position rotates).  According to a source on the web,  Cuyaltepec has 646 inhabitants, though Fran thinks it is more like 2,000, and it stands at 6,800 feet above sea level.

Her village was populated in the early 1600s when the Spanish conquerors displaced everyone living at a more fertile and advantageous location.  They destroyed the original village and created a prosperous finca or ranch that still grows coffee and other crops.  This older location may be where the community still has rights to a plot of land...I will check on this.

Education in her village is limited to elementary school.  Students who want to attend beyond that (and there are few) have to make complicated arrangements with relatives or strangers to let them live with them during the week, and then return home to their parents on the weekend.  If they want to go to high school, they have to move to a village 4 hours away and live independently.  That's what Fran did.  Though she is only 23, she has lived on her own for 7 years on nothing but her wits.

There is only one person (other than Fran) in her village that speaks Spanish.  Fran has told me that if a Spanish speaking stranger arrives in town -- a rare occurrence, everyone scurries home and hides to avoid them.

Women in the village are often married at age 14 and start having children.  By their mid-twenties they may have 3-5 children who they can barely feed.  Between the lack of nutrition, the hard work, and continuous childbearing the young women are often unhealthy -- with dry hair that falls out, rough and blotchy skin, and bad teeth.  Many villagers have teeth missing.  There is no medical or dental care close to the village, and no one can afford it anyway.

The men in the village are uneducated and mostly "borrochos" (drunks).  Some of the women are drunks too.  I will ask Fran to clarify, but I suspect that they make their own alcohol.

Family food is gathered from the land, not bought in a store.  Each villager has at least one plot of land, though they may have to walk an hour or more to get to it.  There is also communal land that all the villagers are entitled to use -- but that is a seven-hour walk away.  This distant plot is fertile and planted with fruit and coffee, but it is too far away to carry much back to the village.  If they walk there, they have to spend the night on the ground, and there are many poisonous snakes there.

There are no animals like chickens or goats allowed within the town's limits and most people are too poor to own animals anyway.  Fran's father has spent 200 pesos on a chicken someone brought from Oaxaca.  I don't imagine he's done that more than once.

It is a mystery, as always, why some people look around them and can't accept their condition, or the future it implies.  Fran was one of those people.  She left of village of extreme poverty and suffering with nothing but her youthful energy and intelligence, and so far she seems to be doing just great.  Her supervisors at work promoted her more quickly than her workmates and treat her very well.  Her teachers at the Learning Center can see how serious and intelligent she is, and go out of their way to help her.  I don't know where she learned her organizational and people skills, but she has more of them that most people I know.  In other words, no one has to tell her what to do and when to do it.  She knows how to buckle down, how and when to take a break, and how to ask for help.  She will go far!

Here are some photos of the country around her village, and her village.  All are very recent except the one dated 2009.

Fran's little brother (right) and a friend walking on the main road through Cuyaltepec

Distant view of Cuyaltepec

Street running behind the Municipal Building.  Fran's house is out of sight to the right...

New road running into town.  Fran once walked all night, alone, on trails to get to her village when she was dropped off on the closest main road.


Fran's uncle, currently serving as the municipal president stands near his truck.  Indigenous communities rotate responsibilities every year (i.e. her father was just assigned to take care of the church, ring the bell, help out the priest.)  Three years ago five villagers died, including a pregnant woman, when this truck capsized on a narrow curve.  Anyone who owns a truck is automatically a main source of transport for the population as their is no public transportation.

The countryside around Cuyaltepec

The Cañada Region




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