Seeking sponsors for Social Business venture for this area. Together we can make a positive difference in someone's life. Help CBC teach the less fortunate how to survive in the 21st century.
1. LA MOSKITIA, HONDURAS
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
2. 50.7% HONDURANS
live in poverty.
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
3. • Though it is the second largest
Gracias a Dios is the department in the country making up
eastern-most about 15% of the land mass, it is
department of sparsely populated, and contains
Honduras. extensive pine savannas, swamps, and
rain forests.
• It is overlooked by Honduran society
In 2005, the
and government. In La Moskitia, the
estimated population
standard of living, income, and access
of 76,278 only
to healthcare is far lower than the
accounted for 1% of
national averages—all of which are
the total population
already among the lowest in Central
of Honduras.
America.
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
4. In 2000, the World Health Organization ranked the Honduran
healthcare system at 131 (of 190) in the entire world – the lowest
ranking of all Central American countries.
With few exceptions, the government provides little or no health
services in the Moskitia region, leaving the vast majority of care to
be supplied by charity and missionary organizations.
The lack of infrastructure (roads) in the region makes healthcare
delivery virtually impossible without the use of aircraft.
NATIONAL ECONOMIC
and HEALTH STATISTICS: Population (2009): 7,792,854, Per capita Income Average: $2,580,
Population below poverty line ($1/day): 51%
Healthy Life Expectancy: 61 years, Infant Mortality Rate (per 1000): 24, Mortality prior to Age 5 (per
1000): 41 (1 in 24) Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
5. Support the initiatives of the missionary family The Waits-
Reach Out Honduras in Puerto Lempira, la Moskitia.
Provoke more awareness regarding the living conditions of the
minority tribes, particularly the Miskitos & Lencas in Honduras.
Provide ESL material to help eliminate illiteracy in La Moskitia.
Teach the people and children that they are not forgotten
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
6. Lack of paternal • most of the men are dead, dying or paralyzed
due to free diving for Caribbean lobsters or
figures drug packs
• ( a uniform requires money to purchase it especially
Need for uniforms to if one household has approximately 13 or more
children of age) in Puerto Lempira uniforms are an
attend public school obstacle to schooling,
• logistics access in and out is not easy and expensive
Village economy thereby limiting how many people who may want to help
but cannot due to lack of funds for the expedition-
needs to be URGENT NEED to get government to do its part to ensure
stimulated some kind of frequent and affordable taxi service.
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
7. • the Miskitos speak a variety of
Language miskitos and Creole Spanish, most
barrier cannot read or write, math skills are
also limited.
Lack of village • early death of patriarchs results on
elders to pass on lots of orphans fending for
survival themselves, malnutrition of babies,
knowledge to new high mortality rates etc
generations
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
8. Young unprepared • teenagers caring for toddlers
teen mothers
Medical care • limited or non- existent
• All goods are priced according to
Exorbitant costs of weight transported from La Ceiba etc
basic food items
• They need to learn to produce locally.
• impacts on sense of security of
Narco-presence Hondurans to visit to help
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
9. Get military support for bi-
monthly airdrops of
common dry goods or of
supplies necessary for an
improved condition of life.
(dreaming big here)
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
10. Government can give tax
incentives to private sector
to ADOPT-A-
COMMUNITY/TRIBE
50.7%
HONDURANS live
in poverty.
Professionals can receive bigger salaries for moving to
remote areas to teach & develop communities.
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
11. :
• Baby Scale for House of Hope Malnourished Baby Program
• Baby Formula for Malnourished Baby Program
• Dry/Powdered Milk for Malnourished Baby Program
• Magazines that you are finished with – Christianity Today, Time, Newsweek,
Today’s Christian Woman, Wall Street Journal, Washington Times, etc. – for
Bead Necklaces
• Old Jewelry – for Bead Necklaces
• LEGOS – used or new- for LEGOS of Love Projects
• Spanish books for children (or Spanish/English) for Book Mobile Project
• School Supplies – spiral notebooks, pencils, Scientific Calculators
• Black closed-toe shoes
• Kids clothes – ages 4-18
• Medication for Children (Ibuprofen, Acetaminophen, Pepto, etc.)
• Sterile & Non-Sterile Gauze & Betadine or other solution
• Vitamins for Children
• Sports Equipment – balls, cleats, gloves, etc
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
12. ON-GOING NEEDS
MAMA TARA’S ORPHANAGE
NEEDS MEDICAL & SCHOOLNEEDS
• Peroxide • Children’s
• Alcohol Scissors
• Sheets • Bras • Ibuprofen • Notebooks
• Towels • Underwear • Pepto Bismol • Books in
• Deodorant • Brushes • Acetaminoph Spanish
• Lotion • Socks en • Pencils
• • Colored
• Hair • Toothpaste Pencils
Conditioner • • School
Toothbrush Supplies • Paper
• Shampoo es • Markers • Rulers
• Soap • Clothespins • Crayons
• Feminine • Flip-flops • Glue
Napkins (sturdy)
•
• Broom G
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
13. Clinica Evangelica Morava
Ahuas, Gracias a Dios, Honduras
MAG works in partnership with a Honduran charity Alas de Socorro (Wings of
Help) to provide air support to the hospital in Ahuas.
Since 2005, MAG has supplied a missionary pilot/mechanic to fly and maintain two
Cessna 206 aircraft based in Ahuas. These aircraft provide emergency medical
evacuation services, transportation for hospital staff, and form a vital supply link
for the hospital and surrounding area.
MAG personnel are volunteers, raising their own financial support in order bring
medical care to the Miskito people by providing 400-500 flight hours and hundreds
of hours of aircraft maintenance support annually. This translates directly into
hundreds of lives saved per year!
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
14. Rus Rus, Gracias a Dios, Honduras
Located only 5 miles from the Nicaragua border,
but nearly 60 miles from the nearest Honduran
"municipality," the Rus Rus hospital was once a
key medical outpost serving refugee camps that
flooded the region during the Contra war in
Nicaragua in the 1980's.
RUS RUS WAS RECENTLY
REOPENED BUT NEEDS A LOT OF
HELP TO RESTOCK AND PROVIDE
QUALITY ATTENTION !
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
15. Indirect
Direct Help HELP
Help
Organize a Write letters Sponsor a
mission to to the mission to
Moskitia President Moskitia
Open a Send letters to Send care
business in the packages with
Moskitia Newspapers items from list
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.
16. • Contact : at 99826053
• E-mail: info@grupomaraj.com
• CBC produces ESL material oriented at
preserving ethnicity and cultural pride, but it
costs a lot to mass produce material at a super
accessible price.
• ANYONE INTERESTED IN SPONSORING OUR CBC
SWOT, CARE PACKS, LOGISTICS COST, SATELLITE
CONNECECTION, PLEASE CALL & HELP US MAKE
LA MOSKITIA LITERATE and feel they are part of
HONDURAS!
Photos courtesy Missionary Air Group,
Guilmor Bonilla, Reach Out Honduras.