In November I had the privilege to visit Agros’ 39th village, Bella Vista, in Honduras. The land had been purchased in September, and in just two short months so much had already been accomplished! We drove up the dirt road from Santa Barbara (the nearest city) and entered into the fog over the mountains where Bella Vista is located. After 30 minutes or so, we parked next to a huge pile of PVC pipe and I was informed that we had arrived.
As I got out of the truck, through the mist I could see the frames of six different houses going up, and could hear the pounding of the nails going into the wood. The PVC was for their water system, to bring the critical water from a neighboring water source to irrigate their crops. Almost all the families had planted their corn to feed their families, and several had already begun planting coffee plants.
Two families had transferred from Los Bordos, the poverty-stricken slum along the rivers outside of San Pedro Sula, to return to the rural farming life they used to live. We had a meeting with all of the families and the new secretary of the group diligently took notes throughout our time together. The Agros model in action… so quickly seeing transformation take place before my eyes.
By the end of the visit the mist lifted and I could finally see what everyone had been so excited about and what they named their community after… the beautiful view. La Bella Vista!
Today the families in Bella Vista have accomplished the following:
- Over 50 acres of corn planted and growing for the families’ food security
- 6,000 new coffee plants sown, and 12,000 more in the nursery
- Over 5 acres of land in preparation to plant more coffee plants
- 80% of the ditches have been dug to lay the pipe for the irrigation system
- The full property has been measured and subdivided among areas for crops, forest and housing
- Five homes have been built (three of which are currently inhabited), and three more are in process of construction
- Three latrines under construction
- Six of the homes have water connections already
- Families have received trainings in soil conservation, use of composting latrines, leadership, and how to create community bylaws
- Three community members have volunteered to lead small workshops on hygiene, nutrition and cooking cleanliness
- Community is working with other organizations to access seeds, market their goods, as well as receiving some technical assistance in health and education from them
- Community is partnering with a local church
On January 6th the families completed the process of dividing the parcels of land among themselves. Our Honduras staff wrote me that everyone in the community was anxious and excited to see which plot would be theirs…for their homes and for their crops… For their children and for their future.
Bella Vista has taken off and they are not letting any time be wasted as they build and design their community.
What a beautiful thing to witness.
Laurie Werner: Director of Program
ove the use of their land and their stewardship of the land. As in many rural communities, the families of San Miguel were practicing a technique called “slash and burn” where they burned their corn crops after harvest as a form to remove the dead stalks. While this is an easier method to remove dead corn stalks, it is damaging to the soil and increases erosion. Agros staff began working with the families to change this practice through a new project—the planting of fruit trees. In 2006, three families accepted this challenge, did not burn (but instead mulched the dead plant material on their land) and planted their fruit trees. Jonas’ family was one of them, one of the key leaders of San Miguel. Soon after, Jonas got some additional fruit trees from the local government, and started a small fruit tree plantation on his land.
Over the past couple of years, each time I visit San Miguel, Jonas proudly shows us his fruit trees. He began with nearly 80 fruit trees—avocado, citrus, and peach. From there he became a promoter and participant in the development process, and worked to encourage other families to not burn their land and to plant fruit trees. Today there are 58 families who have planted fruit trees on their land, for a total of over 26 acres of trees planted! There are avocado, lemon, orange and peach trees. Not only has this radically reduced the practice of slash and burn and is improving the environment in San Miguel, but it is also a source of income for the families. This year their trees are beginning to produce fruit and the families are coordinating to take their produce to the neighboring cities of Ixtapa and Tuxtla to sell. This will continue to grow into a strong source of income for these families over time.
their own.
Last week we were privileged to have three guests with us here in our Seattle office, joining us for our annual fundraising event, Tierras de Vida. Visiting were Sergio Sanchez, our Agros Mexico Director, Diego Bernal, Productive Projects Coordinator in Cotzal, Guatemala, and Teresa Sanchez, Agros villager and staff, who currently works as a Productive Projects Promoter in the Ixil region of Guatemala.
Any day that an Agros family receives their land title is a very exciting day here at Agros. May 13th was an especially exciting day, because not only did two families get their land titles, but they were the first land titles to be transferred in El Salvador by Agros!
 
Two families became landowners this day, but an entire community shared in their pride of ownership. The San Diego village was started by a group of 18 families who had a long history of commitment to one another. Having been displaced first by civil war and then again by Hurricane Mitch in 1998, the group came together through one man’s generous invitation to share his half-acre parcel of land with 18 other families to live on, and together they would cultivate the adjacent rented land. But because they could only rent the farmland, their income would always be limited and the lack of true assets meant they couldn’t qualify for any traditional enterprise loans to grow a fruitful business. So, with a shared tenacity and vision to improve their circumstance further, the group negotiated a purchase price to acquire the 141 acre parcel of rented land and make it their own in 2000 with Agros’ help.
After just 8 short months, Agros Mexico’s newest community
Ten families are involved in the shared tomato project working together to produce as many crates as they can to sell in the local market. Starting from scratch on the new property, the families first cleared the land by hand using machetes, and then built an irrigation system. The group then planted the tomatoes, using techniques shared from both Agros staff and neighbors from nearby communities who have experience growing tomatoes as well.
Now the group is gearing up to finish up the tomato season, projecting to produce 150 more crates. With the sale of 13,320 pounds of tomatoes, the participants will earn approximately $1,240, providing their families with much needed income and seed money for their next economic adventure.
The families in Santa Fe Ajké are encouraged by the success of their first project and are looking forward to incorporating more income-generating activities in order to earn income year-round for their families. With the jalapeño harvest just around the corner, it looks like the enterprising families in Santa Fe Ajké are doing just that-well on their way towards crop diversification, year-round employment and economic self-sufficiency. Congratulations Santa Fe Ajké!
“My dream? To give my children the education I never had.â€Â I’m sitting with Petronila, a sturdy woman with a tender but determined posture in the Agros community “Trapichitos” in the highlands of Quiché, Guatemala. As she tells me about her life before Agros, the war and suffering in her country, she recalls how hard life was. “We suffered. There were no houses. No land to work or produce.â€Â In addition to the physical suffering, being an indigenous woman kept her from learning to how to read or write, resulting in years of shameful discrimination — a legacy that she is now committed to preventing in the lives of her four young daughters.
Around the side of Petronila’s home is a raised compost bin where hundreds of little worms break down organic matter, like kitchen scraps and yard waste, into rich compost that she can apply to her crops. “My motivation for all of my projects is my children. I don’t want them to have to suffer like my husband Cristobal and I did. Every project we do is so they can continue going to school.â€Â She proudly opens the lid of her bin and shows us the rich, dark compost that symbolizes life for her entire family. Compost that not only nourishes her crops, but her family’s needs for nutritious food, bountiful crops that provide income, and a full education for their children.
Petronila isn’t the only one who values education. Petronila, who has participated in the women’s Agros Community Bank for the last eight years to support her projects in chickens, textiles, vegetables and coffee, has instilled enterprising spirits and a vision for the future in each of her young daughters as well. When I ask one of the girls her name, she takes my notebook to not only tell me her name, but show me how to write it. “J-A-C-I-N-T-A,†she spells deliberately and proudly. Petronila is gleaming. I ask each child what they would like to be when they grow up. “A nurse!†Jacinta quickly responds. “I want to cure all the sick people in my community.â€Â It’s obvious that this little girl not only has a vision, but a strong purpose at a young age.
In April 2002, a group of twelve farmers began to organize and explore the possibility of owning fertile land. At the time they were working as field workers for landowners in the northern part of the Gualala Santa Bárbara region of Honduras. The poverty they had been forced to endure for so long was such that owning land was more of a dream than a tangible reality.
Though the families are organized, hard working, and united, there is still a great deal of work to do. The
In April of this year, we shared how the skills and hard work of the Guatemalan refugees living on the southern border of Chiapas, Mexico, were in stark contrast to the desperate need and injustice they have faced for generations (
This community, formerly known as El Naranjo, waited for years to have the opportunity to own land. Their primary sources of income and food came from growing basic grains on rented land and working as day laborers on sugarcane and coffee plantations. Fathers and sons would leave their families behind for months to work in the plantations, struggling to provide enough income to survive. After so many years of living in devastating poverty, these 36 families are now able to stay together throughout the year, learning new skills to develop agricultural business projects on land they will one day own. Journeying through
After decades of war, hunger, and profound struggle, one hundred and twenty Quiche families now have the opportunity to flourish. The 36-year civil war in Guatemala was devastating for the villages in this region, leaving families marginalized, displaced, and forgotten. In 2006 the Guatemalan Land Fund gave these families rights to 688 acres of land in Villa Hortencia. While this was a hopeful first step, the land they received was rocky, dry, and not very productive. Lacking the necessary agricultural knowledge and support, the families continued to struggle.
Joel MartÃnez Durón is a certified Agricultural Engineer with a Master’s Degree in ‘Generation of Development Projects’ and a background in Business Administration and Organizational Development. Joining Agros as the Executive Director of Agros Honduras, Joel’s twelve years of experience directing development projects in the field will greatly contribute to the families in Agros Honduras communities.
The families from Aduana Dos, Nicaragua, have displayed an impressive degree of leadership throughout their plantain project. Management skills, accountability, and decision-making have allowed them to grow higher quality crops. The success and growth is impressive.
It is important to note how much the women in the community have been absolutely key in the success of this project. They leave their homes early in the morning to sell and market the products in neighboring villages.
On June 2nd, 2008, Nathan Hawkins joined Agros as the new Service Team Coordinator. Nathan is originally from Minneapolis and has lived in Mexico, East Tennessee, and most recently New Orleans, where he helped with rebuilding efforts after hurricane Katrina. He met his wife Joy in Tijuana, and together they moved to Seattle on November 2007. We’re truly excited to have Nathan join us.
Sebastián and Margarita have lived in Nueva Palestina, Mexico, for the last thirteen years. Like so many other families in the Chiapas region, they were forced to flee from their home in 1989 due to religious persecution. They lived the next six years as internal refugees, struggling to support their family on day-laborer wages.
Margarita, just as modest as her husband, has also made a major impact on her community’s development. Just a few short months ago no one in Nueva Palestina knew how to embroider the elaborate clothing that is traditional to their heritage. Margarita has led a passionate, organized group to receive sewing workshops from Agros staff, obtain enterprise loans, and to purchase two sewing machines!
I had the great honor of attending their graduation ceremony in November. Sitting in the audience, I thought back to that first year when I visited them as they began their studies. I no longer saw the timid young people who were trying to find their place in the world. Now I saw five mature people, proud of their heritage, proud of their new skills, and excited about what life has in store for them. With dreams and hopes, and the tools to achieve them. What a blessing to witness this, and what a blessing they will be to their communities.
The leaders of La Providencia greeted us when we arrived. Each of the men had smiles ear-to-ear — they were anxious to give us a tour of their new home and the fresh start of opportunity was in the air. We found ourselves crossing a rickety suspension bridge swaying over the river, bushwhacking our way through the coffee plants and overgrowth, and posing under the glorious waterfall for photos. During this two-hour tour, we were able to engage in valuable conversations with both the community leaders and the staff of Agros Guatemala.
La Providencia — both the fertile land and the amazing people who will make up this new Agros community — is alive with a deep sense of hope and opportunity. After visiting La Providencia and spending time with the families and Agros Guatemala staff, I now have a clear understanding of why the Agros tagline is “Land. Hope. Life.”












