Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Humanitarian Mission: Santa Fe Argentina Toba Community


The Pay it Forward Project (PIFP) was established to assist in rebuilding the lives, self worth, and spirit of individuals living in developing nations. The PIFP works in countries that have fallen victim to natural disasters providing assistance so that people can pursue gainful livelihood following such crisis. The PIFP uses donations to provide sewing machines in furtherance of this goal while also addressing needs associated with clothing, food, and adequate housing.

The PIFP is currently working on such a project in the “Las Lomas” neighborhood of Santa Fe, Argentina with an indigenous group of people known as the Toba. The 133 families of this community were part of a larger group of over 70,000 people who were temporarily displaced during recent flooding in April of this year. Their economic survival depends heavily on the success of this project and the need for financial assistance is great.

The Toba, sometimes referred to as the Toba-Pilagá, are an indigenous group that originally inhabited the Gran Chaco area of Argentina. The Toba are a traditional, nomadic people that up until the 1930’s were a hunter-gatherer group. Economic activity was seasonally dependent with the men traditionally bringing meat, fish, and honey into the community while the women provided fruit, vegetables, wood, and water. The women were also charged with maintaining the household and tending the children.

In 1875 a campaign known as the “Conquest of the Desert” was initiated by Argentinean General, and later President, Julio Roca to pacify the Argentinean indigenous peoples and take over their native lands. Although groups like the Toba fought back, this military campaign made way for the influx of colonists, missionaries and cattle ranchers that settled on traditional Toba land. This settlement by foreigners severely affected the mobility of these nomadic people and eventually led to difficulty in making a living from the land. This situation was worsened with the introduction of agriculture by Anglican missionaries in the 1930’s.

An additional goal of the “Conquest of the Desert” campaign was to organize surviving indigenous people such as the Toba into a cheap labor force for timber companies and sugar plantations. The Toba were ripe for such exploitation by the 1930’s as a lack of mobility and increasing dependence on foreign goods created a need for seasonal agricultural work. Unable to hunt for extended periods, the Toba eventually settled into communities and outside agricultural work replaced traditional tribal economic activity.

Urban Toba settlements began to appear in the 1950’s in cities such as Resistencia, Rosario, Santa Fe, and even Buenos Aires. Those communities lay on the periphery of those cities and were locally referred to as villa miseries, or miserable villages, due to their high level of poverty. Unprecedented flooding beginning in the 1980’s and mechanization in the 1990’s left many Toba unemployed and in 1996 any Toba willing to migrate to the Santa Fe Province were bought one-way tickets by the Gran Chaco provincial government. In 2001 a survey undertaken of households with at least one member recognizing indigenous ancestry showed that only about 1,516 Toba individuals followed a traditional lifestyle and community. In 2004 a complimentary survey taken (with involvement in design and data gathering by indigenous people) indicated an overall estimated Toba population of 47,591 individuals.

Today the economic practices of the Toba population of Santa Fe, as in other cities, are subsistence oriented with both men and women engaged in trying to find a way to make a living. The Toba Community of Santa Fe lacks any land, thus cultivation is unavailable and virtually all the inhabitants participate in the mainstream economy. The cacique, or community leader of this group, Carlos related to a PIFP member that: “We have no land to plant on. Precisely because of this, there is misery and hunger in our land... We are driven to suicide because we don’t mean anything”. Although work opportunities are greater in these urban environments than they are in Gran Chaco, most jobs are low paying, require no specialized skills, and provide little job security. In this setting the Toba are marginalized and discriminated against for being indigenous. In spite of this fact, they remain an easily exploited source of cheap labor to the benefit of the general populace of Santa Fe.

It is in this cultural and economic climate that the PIFP recently began its work co-jointly with the leadership council of the Toba of Santa Fe. While the PIFP has brought all the resources necessary for initiating the project, additional funds and resources are necessary to see this project actualize its full potential. Currently the project includes plans to create an industry based on the design and manufacture of clothing utilizing traditional Toba design in the style itself and fabric patterns. The use of Toba artisans in the manufacture of accessories such as handmade wooden buttons is also being studied. The PIFP is also working on the creation of training shops to assist the women in learning the design and manufacture of that clothing, and to teach them effective marketing strategies. The initial purchase of machinery as well as planning for this project has been achieved, but there is much yet to be accomplished.

The economic, cultural, and social survival of the Toba depends heavily on the success of this project and the need for outside assistance is great. Enhanced self -sustainability is the long range goal of this program and the PIFP and Toba leadership council believe this project is a good beginning.

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Thursday, June 7, 2007

Photos from my humanitarian mission



Hello everyone. As most of you already know, I moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in December of last year. I am working as a photographer, doing some freelance writing, some website design, and with a humanitarian organization. I recently returned from a mission with that group to the Santa Fe Province to work with an indigenous community there called the Tobas. They are only in Argentina and number less than 50,000.


Anyway, here are some photographs from my trip there if interested in checking them out:



Among other things the children there were remarkable. Even in such extreme poverty they seemed even happier than most children I find elsewhere in the world. I felt like the Pied Piper once I showed a couple of children the photographs of themselves on the screen on my digital camera. Before I knew it I had an entourage of about fifty to sixty children following me everywhere. I would take a couple of photos of a group of them and then kneel to show it to them and I would be immediately surrounded by the entire group. It was amazing…….. I would look up and literally only see a crowd of little excited faces……..no sky…….nothing but those dear faces.


So, I hope you all enjoy the photographs and that you all have a wonderful week.
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