I was recently able to spend time in San Jose — one of our newest Agros villages located in the Matagalpa region of Nicaragua. It was an incredible experience. The last time I was with these families (just over a year ago) they were landless and living on approx $2 per family per day. This averages out to about $.25 a day per person. They were growing single-season subsistence crops on unproductive, rented land. With no irrigation and poor housing structures they were at the mercy of unpredictable weather. They were struggling with hunger, health problems, lack of access to clean water, no work or food security, and a pervasive sense of despair.
Today — one year after starting this new Agros village — these same families invited us to a banquet… a feast of chicken, corn, and other food produced on their Agros farm. It was a feast!
Here is what they’ve accomplished over the last year:
- Temporary houses (with latrines) have been built
- An irrigation system with piped water has been established
- The families are planting 8 different crops year-round during three unique growing seasons
- Proceeds from a recent tomato harvest have been invested into cattle worth more than $6,000
- They are storing the surplus of recent corn production, waiting until the prices go up so that they can make additional profit
- 10,000 coffee plant seedlings will soon be planted in order to increase coffee production
- They took out an additional loan from Agros and built a coffee processing machine and a pump
- Everyone is involved in community development activities, the women are actively involved in leadership, and children now have access to both preschool and elementary school
WoW!!!! Talk about impressive! And they did all of this while also being impacted by Hurricane Felix, which hit in September of 2007. I was (and am) blown away. What a story!!!
These families are representative of hard-working Agros families across Central America and Mexico. They are a great example of how the Agros model enables the poor to develop assets, create security, and slowly but surely work their way out of poverty.
This is Land, Hope, and Life at work! Here are a few photos from this incredible Agros village:












I’ve just returned from an extended time in the field. Driving through some of the poorest areas of Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala I was struck by the faces and stories of so many people without land, without jobs, and without hope. People begging on the roads, fathers abandoning their families to work in another country, single mothers risking everything because they don’t have anything. There are so many thousands of families with children living in borrowed houses on borrowed land, with no security for tomorrow and often having to migrate to secure even just a little food for their children.
My name is Kira López. I am Nicaraguan and the mother of my six year old daughter Kyra Saraí. I am the oldest of 5 brothers and sisters, all of whom had to work very hard to get to where we all are today. I live in Managua, the capital of Nicaragua, a stunning country of lakes, volcanoes and other natural beauty located in Central America. With His grace, the Lord has allowed me to enter into a career of Business Administration and receive a Master’s in Business from the Central American Institute of Business Administration (INCAE). I asked Jesus Christ to come into my heart when I was seven years old and since that day I have been living following the example He has given us.
Have you ever been to an Agros village? What were your first impressions? Poverty, sickness, people, mud huts, beautiful children, tall corn, dirt, smiles, new smells and sights. Crops, dirt, water, dirt houses, tin roofs. How do you get behind and below?
Listening to their excitement was contagious These were new friends eager to share with me their joy and dreams for a different future. It all starts with land… providing hope… to produce, nourish, and sustain life.








