Wednesday 15 January 2014

Don't Call Me "Garbage"



This is not a fictional movie but a true story.
Cateura in Paraguay is one of the poorest slums in Latin America. About 2,500 families live here with their small house next to the huge garbage dump; most of the residents have no electricity, drinking water is polluted, kids are wandering between dropping out of school, boken family, crimes and drugs.
About 1,500 tons of garbage delivered here everyday. The major income of the villagers relies on scavenging; they search for recyclable materials in the garbage dump, Nicolás Gómez is one of them.
Another Kind of Musical Instruments
One day, as Nicolás found an old, broken violin in the garbage dump, change is in the air for the ordinary slum.
Nicolás showed the broken violin to Favio Chávez in the village. Favio is a foreign Environmental Engineer who came to Cateura for a recycling project. As years passed, Favio has built friendship with the local residents. Favio has been planning to teach music to the kids in the village, however, in that poor & barren community, a violin is more expensive than a house.
Nicolás & Favio thought of scrapping various types of used & broken stuffs from the garbage dump into musical instruments. They even started to dream about the birth of a “Recycled Orchestra”.
Through the crafty hands of Nicolás, oil barrel & kitchen utensils became a “cello”, water pipe & spoons turned into a “flute”, crate & marmalade tin made into “guitar”…… Each instrument is a unique piece.

Kids in the village love these “Garbage Instruments” made by uncle Nicolás; they came to the musical class irregardless of sunny or rainy days. Under the patient instruction by teacher Favio, sweet-sounding music started to flow from these unusual musical instruments……
Garbage Turned Instruments, Kids Turned Orchestra
After 4 years of experiment, Nicolás & Favio have figured out the knack. They know which recycled materials are best made into certain types of musical instruments; the tune of their instruments is getting finer and more precise.

The kids were not only learning to play musical instruments from teacher Favio, they have also learned from uncle Nicolás making instruments with recycled materials. Up to date there are more than 200 kids benefited from this project.
After several years of cultivating, the dream of Nicolás & Favio, “Recycled Orchestra”, is gradually becoming a reality.
The public started to notice the miracle happening in this village. Emmy Award nominated director Graham Townsley made the story of “Recycled Orchestra” into a documentary called “Landfill Harmonic”.
Over the year, “Recycled Orchestra” led by teacher Favio has started to travel internationally. They played at countries such as Brazil, Argentina, Panama, Columbia, Arizona in the United States, Germany……and received good responses.


The Honor for the Garbage Village
Teacher Favio said in “Landfill Harmonic”, “People realize that we shouldn't throw away trash carelessly, and we shouldn't throw away people either.”
In the movie, Juan Manuel Chavez , a shy 18 years-old boy, played the “Prelude to Bach's Cello Suite No. 1” with a cello made of used oil barrel & broken kitchen utensils --- If you listen with eyes closed, it sounded not much different from an expensive cello.
15 years-old girl Ada Rios said, “When I play the violin I feel transported to a beautiful place --- clear sky, green field, no garbage, no pollution……”
During the “60 Minutes”, United States TV documentary, Ada’s grandmother Mirian Rios said, “I would say it's a blessing from God. People used to humiliate us and call us ‘trash pickers’; today they are more civilized and call us the ‘recyclers’. So I feel that this is a reward from God that our children who come from this place can play beautiful music in this way.”
The kids who used to be ignored & forgotten by the world, they are now standing on the stage of the world, courageously plying the symphonies of music masters.
The kids from Cateura originally can’t escape the fate of “joining gasters, becoming drug dealers”. However, as the “garbage” from Cateura were reclaimed & made into musical instruments, the kids from Cateura were also shaped into world class orchestra, and have found the meaning & purpose of their lives. As a result, not only the whole community was transformed, other corners on earth were also being influenced……
Misplaced Resources
I believe there’s no such vocabulary as “garbage” in God’s dictionary.
If man were wiling to cherish & make good use of every natural resource created by God, the resources are actually enough to supply our needs forever, which is the common word “sustainable” we have been mentioning now-a-day.
However, somehow along the way, mankind has invented “throw away” culture --- unreasonable & madly discarding.
Anne Leonard, the environmental pioneer from United States said in her book “The Story of Stuff”, “We engage in non-stop buying, non-stop throwing, but we do not realize our health and environment have been greatly damaged during the process.”

What happen to the stuffs after being discarded? In the documentary “Trashed”, starring Academy Award winner Jeremy Irons, mentioned that, “‘Garbage’ if aren’t buried at landfills forever, they’ll be burned in the incinerators, or floating away to oceans --- non of these places should be the destinations for ‘garbage’.”
If we were to start looking at “garbage” from the right point of view, we will discover that these so called “garbage”, are actually “misplaced resources”.
Being Honored together with the Land
The relationship between man & land is far deeper that we could ever imagine.
As Genesis 1:28 and Psalms 8:6 in the Bible say, God commanded man to take good care of animals in the field, birds in the sky, fish in the sea --- That was actually a commandment attached with blessings, because the goodwill of God during creation was that: Man will take good care of the land, and the land will also function, provide & produce for man.
When man reaffirm the value of “garbage”, man will also find their self-value.
Just like the “Recycled Orchestra” from Cateura --- Man & land are mutually blessing each other, and shining brightly together in the hand of the Creator……

HoeyTee
( Chinese version was published in the “Shepherd” section of Nanyang Siang Pau on 2014.1.12 )