A few years back I had the privilege of travelling to
Honduras for a business trip. I have
travelled to many places in my life; most of them developed European countries. I knew that Honduras was a poor country, but
what I expected to see paled in comparison to what I actually witnessed. The conditions of human life in this country were
terrible. There was an extreme division
of classes (upper and lower). The rich,
mostly government employees and drug cartels, lived in guarded compounds with
pools and beautiful houses, and the poor lived in huts with old billboards and corrugated
tin for roofs.
What amazed me though, was the prideful and hardworking nature
of the Honduran people. Clean drinking
water was scarce and many houses had dirt floors, yet those that inhabited them
were very clean and kempt in appearance.
I rarely saw beggars. Most people
were busy working their trades to selling goods by the roadside. There was a story that I read in Shann Ray’s
book, American Masculine, where a boy
is pulled between two world perspectives.
His mother was able to find the good in the world and his father saw the
world as a dark place, “and people darker still”. This seemed to cause a duality of perception in
the boy…a struggle to see the light in the dark.
In Honduras, I didn't see sadness, as I would
have expected. Rather, I saw a people
who thrived in the love of God and their families. This trip was a wake-up call to my
consciousness. My first-world problems now
seem trivial in comparison to those of the average Honduran.
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