God in the backyard
Enormous disparities between rich and poor are nothing new for Ole Jakob Løland, a 22-year-old theology student who spent six months working with street children in La Paz, Bolivia, and two months travelling in Peru. But he was shocked by what he saw in Bajo Flores, a poor neighbourhood in Buenos Aires.
"Seeing such huge disparities and the injustice endured by the marginalised classes is such a contrast to life in Norway," he said. The experience of Bajo Flores, however, helped him "reaffirm the liberation of the poor as being central to me and to the church".
The visit has rekindled his desire to live among the poor. "In order to understand the poor, you must enter the world of the poor," he said, evoking Peruvian theologian Gustavo Gutiérrez.
Living in a Nordic country, said Ole, "it is very easy to forget the needy". But in a poor country, it is dangerously easy to "grow accustomed to poverty, to regard it as being natural."
Emily Ruff, a 22-year-old American who works with adolescents from homeless families in Orlando, Florida, described the experience of Bajo Flores as heart-wrenching. "I was overcome with sadness," she said.
However, she drew comfort from "strong, brave people", struggling for their daily bread. "I drew hope from their hope and the way they work their way upwards," she said.
Emily compared the comfortable middle-class neighbourhood where the youth event took place with the one before her eyes: garbage on unpaved streets and unfinished houses. "The differences are dramatic. This is like the backyard," she said.
She was full of admiration for the "cartoneros" (cardboard scavengers), sometimes entire families, who hunt through household rubbish bins for paper and cardboard that can be sold for recycling.
"In the middle of so much corruption," their "honest living" makes them stand out, said Emily. They are a clear example that God "is walking with people in their struggles". |