Tours to Nicaragua

Looking for a way of getting involved in international solidarity?

Providing opportunities for people to gain first hand experience of Nicaragua is central to our work. Since 1984 over 1000 people from England, Scotland and Wales have taken part in brigades, study tours and delegations to exchange experiences and skills and to build mutual solidarity with Nicaraguan organisations committed to social and economic justice. Each trip has a particular focus but as far as possible we tailor the programme to the particular interests of the group. The trips usually last for between 12 days and 3 weeks. No special skills are needed but it is hoped that participants will get involved in solidarity work when they return.

'In Nicaragua I was able to experience what life is like at the other end of the consumer chain, and witness how important it is that we in the North at least pay a fair price for the products we consume. I am more committed than ever to promoting fair trade. I believe it is a real opportunity to challenge the vast inequalities that exist in the world between the rich and the poor.'
Participant in NSC fair trade work/study tour to Nicaragua.
 

 

 

 

 

 

2007 women's fair trade study tour members Kerry Starkey and Joan Smith with Pedro Sanchez, president of the San Antonio Co-operative. Credit: Karen Lawson

 

 

 


 

Tours for 2007

Fair trade & community tourism study tour to Nicaragua  28 June-13 July 2008 . For reasons beyond our control this tour was cancelled but to get an idea of how such a tour works, see below.

You may be interested in reading about the very successful 2006 community theatre project - also below.
 
 


Fair trade and community tourism study tour to Nicaragua  28 June-13 July 2008
Linking Fairtrade producers and Fairtrade activists

'The study tour gave me new understanding of the lives of coffee producing families and the organisation of fair trade cooperatives. We shared experiences with coffee producers and also met fair trade organisations and civil society groups. These meetings not only highlighted the importance trade justice for the producers, but gave a context of the issues in wider Nicaraguan society.’ Josina Calliste, member of women’s fair trade study tour to Nicaragua, 2007

‘Fairtrade means conserving and improving our land and the air that we breathe. It also means education for our children, healthcare for our families and better opportunities - above all for women - to organise and take decisions. It means producers and consumers working together … Fairtrade is not just a question of money.’
Blanca Rosa Molina, fair trade producer & president of the Organisation of Northern Coffee Cooperatives (CECOCAFEN), Nicaragua

The trip will give you a unique opportunity to:

• Get to know the people who produce the coffee you drink every morning

• Gain an understanding of fair trade from the perspective of producers particularly women and young people

• Learn about the coffee chain and how small producers confront the problems they face

• Enjoy the beautiful forested mountains of northern Nicaragua, where there are trails, waterfalls, rare birds, animals and flowers

• Understand the importance of community based rural tourism as a means of diversifying the income of small scale farmers, protecting the environment and providing tourists with a unique opportunity for cultural exchange and interaction with a community

• Learn how fair trade has empowered producers, opened up opportunities for community organisation and development and how tourism is part of that

• Use the experience to promote the Nicaraguan producers’ perspective on fair trade on your return

What will the programme include?

 Visits and talks to enable you to gain an understanding of the impact of globalisation on Nicaragua and the effects of trade injustice and global warming on small scale farmers particularly women.
 A six day stay with the families of fair trade producers giving you an opportunity to participate in the daily life of the community and a community based tourism project.
 Visits to other rural development projects, part of the Sandinista government's zero hunger programme.
 Trips to some of Nicaragua’s historic towns and the spectacularly beautiful coast and countryside.
 Other visits and talks will be organised depending on the particular interests of the group.

How much will it cost?
Ground and admin costs: £640 including UK/Nicaragua preparation and all costs in Nicaragua except insurance and airport taxes. Flight costs approximately £650. It is advisable to book as early as possible as flight prices can increase. Please note that changes in flight costs are outside our control. Maximum size of group: 10

Further information: email >>  or telephone: 020 7272 9619



Community Theatre Project. April 16th to May 2nd 2006

"Theatre in Nicaragua is a tool for social change and revolution. It's for and with the community."
Efrem from Ali Samul (Matagalpa Youth Theatre).


Anna Herrmann interviews Emily Hunka, member of the second Nicaragua Community Theatre Project organised by the NSC in April 2006. Emily talks about the profound effect the trip had on her and the way in which it has changed her approach to community theatre.
Photo shows the UK community theatre participants during a drama workshop with Nicaraguan community theatre group El Capullo.


" Staying with families and working with the theatre group was one of the most memorable experiences of my life, and incredibly inspiring."

What do you do in the UK?
I am Voices Project Leader for Greenwich and Lewisham Young People's
Theatre. We work through drama with young asylum seekers and refugees to build their confidence, and self-esteem.

What first made you interested in the Nicaragua community theatre project?

I first heard about it through my work. My manager suggested it looked like an interesting project… The more I read about it, the more it sounded fantastic, and very relevant to the work I do with young people from abroad.

What were your impressions of Nicaragua? What did you learn about the country?
I had an absolutely amazing time from the minute I stepped off the plane and was given a warm welcome by Julian (the NSC representative), to the moment I arrived at the airport to fly home. My impressions are of a small, passionate country, with immense beauty, but more than this, immense conviction. The difference between this trip and others was definitely the fact that it had an ideological background - organised by the NSC from their perspective of the politics and history. This was very important because it gave the trip a focus. I learnt a huge amount about the Frente Sandinista (FSLN), the revolution, the Somoza era and current economic and social policies. Before this I knew nothing about Nicaragua, so it was a steep learning curve and a very exciting one.

How was the organisation of the trip?
I really can't praise the organisation of the trip enough. The Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign staff and Gioconda Perez (who was contracted to work with the group in Nicaragua) looked after our needs far better than I have experienced on other trips. The programme was well balanced between theatre work and sightseeing.

How did you find the companies you worked with? What issues were they dealing with?
I had profound experiences working with El Largatillo in the Achuapa region in a remote village with limited electricity and running water. Staying with families and working with the theatre group there was one of the most memorable experiences of my life, and incredibly inspiring. It was brilliant to see 'political' theatre in action - theatre about the immediate experiences of people in the community. We made theatre about globalisation, in particular the globalisation of water, with El Capullo. It was exciting to be addressing issues at such a complex level through immediate theatre.

The second experience was with Seguan, a coastal community in Salines Grandes, Leon. It was a more challenging experience because we were told we would be collaborating on a project with children but that didn't materialise. However, it was still great to see a very different community to El Largatillo, and to see how human rights and theatre combined to address extreme poverty and the issues that arise from it. We also got the chance to run a workshop for children, and do some work with members of the community on charity versus sustainable support. We devised pieces using the title "What is better, to give a man a fish or to teach him how to fish?"

I also, under my own steam, visited a youth theatre project in Matagalpa, who work with Children's Right's organisation Cesesma to discuss issues affecting children in rural communities. I saw some extremely inspiring theatre work about domestic violence against children.

What was your greatest point of learning?
Nicaragua's history itself and how extraordinary it is to work with people whose experience of it remains current and visceral in their theatre work. Efrem from Ali Samul (Matagalpa Youth Theatre) said "Theatre in Nicaragua is a tool for social change and revolution. It's for and with the community." Although government funding of the arts has been cut back to practically nothing, this ideology is still current in all the work, from El Largatillo to work done by politically and socially aware children. Even Capullo's production of Midsummer Night's Dream seemed to embody (and was dedicated to) the Sandinista ideal. I felt so inspired, because this experience is something we've moved completely away from in the UK. I came away feeling I've learnt that theatre really could and SHOULD be used politically.

What was your biggest challenge?
It was all so well organised, interesting and inspiring that there weren't too many challenging moments. Even the bits I thought would be difficult like living without electricity and the extremely long bumpy bus journeys were OK because we'd been well prepared. In terms of the country itself, the poverty and brutal history were extremely shocking. I think I came away much more politicised. But I'm glad we were exposed to it. A really good trip includes not just the pretty or awe-inspiring bits but the reality and the challenges to us to change, and this did!

What would you say to someone who was thinking about going?
I would say categorically that this experience will change your life and you should go if you can. It can seem expensive, but it's actually extraordinarily good value for money considering once you're in Nicaragua food, travel, accommodation is all included. And all the people are absolutely fantastic too. It was great for me because it was theatre. It gave it a pertinent focus that was relevant and exciting. But you don't need to be a theatre professional to get a lot out of it. Just a passion for theatre is enough.

How has this experience affected you in the UK or changed your ideas/views?
As I said, I've come away much more politicised and aware of the impact of globalisation and capitalism on the world at large. I really want to do some political theatre with the young people I work with, where as before, I didn't think such a thing was possible. It's also made me even more convinced that theatre has the real power to change lives. I've never seen this demonstrated before as I did in Nicaragua. My company is hoping to set up an exchange with the Matagalpa youth theatre, so young people can be inspired in the same way! I also know a lot more about a part of the world I was very ignorant about before.

Emily Hunka, November 2006



 


Web Site connections

The Body Shop
http://www.the-body-shop.com

Fairtrade Foundation
http://www.fairtrade.org.uk

Traidcraft
http://www.traidcraft.org.uk

Twin Trading
http://www.twin.org.uk