Amazon culture in the center of Lima

[Note: No blog entries were posted while we took an extended trip to the Andes to visit Machu Picchu and the surrounding area. After returning to Lima the students traveled to their service locations for the next six weeks.  All arrived safely at their service locations.  We will now go back and catch up on blog entries from the last week the students were in Lima, and then from the trip to the Andes.]

Monday, Oct. 3

Tim walks in front of one of the neighborhood's many murals.
Tim in front of one of the neighborhood’s many murals.

In the center of very urban Lima we visited Cantagallo, a tiny part of the Amazon jungle that lives in the hearts of a few hundred indigenous Shipibo people, from the far eastern side of Peru, who have settled here.  Their language – Shipibo – is one of about 50 indigenous dialects spoken by various Amazon tribes.

So that their children grow up identifying themselves as Shipibo — knowing the Shipibo language, vision of the universe, culture, and medicinal plants from the Amazon – they started their own school.  We visited the school, spent time hearing the children explain aspects of Shipibo culture, walked through the shantytown where the community lives, heard from a missionary to the Shipibo jungle community, and bought Shipibo crafts.

Their dedication to make their lush Amazon culture flower in the center of an urban desert taught us all a lesson about the importance of culture.  Hearing that depression is almost unknown in the Shipibo community, despite the living conditions of their shantytown, also made an impression on everyone.