Villagers at Caspana, Chile, celebrate the festivities of the Candelaria. |
Solar Panels, Page 2.
In March 2012 the two cousins travelled to the
village of Tilonia in the northwest Indian state of Rajasthan, where the
Barefoot College is located.
They did not go alone. Travelling with them
were Elena Achú and Elvira Urrelo, who belong to the Quechua indigenous
community, and Nicolasa Yufla, an Aymara Indian. They all live in other
villages of the Atacama desert, in the northern Chilean region of Antofagasta.
“We saw an ad that said they were looking for
women between the ages of 35 and 40 to receive training in India. I was really
interested, but when they told me it was for six months, I hesitated. That was
a long time to be away from my family!” Luisa said.
Encouraged by her sister, who took care of her
daughter, she decided to undertake the journey, but without telling anyone what
she was going to do.
The conditions they found in Tilonia were not
what they had been led to expect, they said. They slept on thin mattresses on
hard wooden beds, the bedrooms were full of bugs, they couldn’t heat water to
wash themselves, and the food was completely different from what they were used
to.
“I knew what I was getting into, but it took
me three months anyway to adapt, mainly to the food and the intense heat,” she
said.
She remembered, laughing, that she had stomach
problems much of the time. “It was too much fried food,” she said. “I lost a
lot of weight because for the entire six months I basically only ate rice.”
Looking at Liliana, she burst into laughter,
saying “She also only ate rice, but she put on weight!”
Liliana said that when she got back to Chile
her family welcomed her with an ‘asado’ (barbecue), ‘empanadas’ (meat and
vegetable patties or pies) and ‘sopaipillas’ (fried pockets of dough).
“But I only wanted to sit down and eat
‘cazuela’ (traditional stew made with meat, potatoes and pumpkin) and steak,”
she said.
On their return, they both began to implement
what they had learned. Charging a small sum of 45 dollars, they installed the
solar panel kit in homes in the village, which are made of stone with mud
roofs.
The community now pays them some 75 dollars
each a month for every other month maintenance of the 127 panels that they have
installed in the village.
“We take this seriously,” said Luisa. “For
example, we asked Enel not to just give us the most basic materials, but to
provide us with everything necessary for proper installation.”
“Some of the batteries were bad, more than 10
of them, and we asked them to change them. But they said no, that that was the
extent of their involvement in this,” she said. The company made them sign a
document stating that their working agreement was completed.
“So now there are over 40 homes waiting for
solar power,” she added. “We wanted to increase the capacity of the batteries,
so the panels could be used to power a refrigerator, for example. But the most
urgent thing now is to install panels in the 40 homes that still need them.”
But, she said, there are people in this
village who cannot afford to buy a solar kit, which means they will have to be
donated.
Despite the challenges, they say they are
happy, that they now know they play an important role in the village. And they
say that despite the difficulties, and the extreme poverty they saw in India,
they would do it again.
“I’m really satisfied and content, people
appreciate us, they appreciate what we do,” said Liliana.
“Many of the elders had to see the first panel
installed before they were convinced that this worked, that it can help us and that
it was worth it. And today you can see the results: there’s a waiting list,”
she added.
Luisa believes that she and her cousin have
helped changed the way people see women in Caspana, because the “patriarchs” of
the council of elders themselves have admitted that few men would have dared to
travel so far to learn something to help the community. “We helped somewhat to
boost respect for women,” she said.
And after seeing their work, the local
government of Calama, the municipality of which Caspana forms a part, responded
to their request for support in installing solar panels to provide public
lighting, and now the basic public services, such as the health post, have
solar energy.
“When I’m painting, sometimes a neighbor comes
to sit with me. And after a while, they ask me about our trip. And I relive it,
I tell them all about it. I know this experience will stay with me for the rest
of my life,” said Luisa.
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