Angelica Pania, left, National Literacy Coordinator for the
Ministry of Education in El Salvador, hands one of thousands of
graduates a literacy completion certificate at a recent ceremony in San
Salvador. Pania said Adventists are the country’s “main partner” in
curbing illiteracy in the Central American country. [photos: Luis Pedro
Menendez]
930 local churches set to serve as community literacy centers in 2014
February 07, 2014
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Soyapango, San Salvador, El Salvador
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Gustavo Menendez/IAD Staff/ANN staff
A literacy program coordinated by the Seventh-day
Adventist Church in El Salvador has reduced the country’s illiteracy
rate from 17 to 13 percent, officials say, bringing new opportunities to
thousands and bolstering the influence and unity of the church in
Central America.
More than 2,500 students received literacy
completion certificates at a recent ceremony in San Salvador, making it
the largest graduation in a single event held in the church’s
Inter-American Division.
Angelica Pania, National Literacy Coordinator for
the Ministry of Education in the Central American country, applauded the
efforts of the Adventist Church, its volunteers in El Salvador and Hope
for Humanity, a humanitarian ministry run by the church’s North
American Division.
“I have no words to express our gratitude on behalf
of the Ministry of Education in El Salvador … because [you] are our main
partner in the process of eradicating illiteracy in the country,” she
said.
The Ministry of Education provides materials, training and an accreditation process for literacy program volunteers.
In a keynote address, Maitland DiPinto of Hope for Humanity thanked the hundreds of volunteers who tutor the graduates.
“I am so impressed by the commitment of volunteers
who invest more than two hours every day, four times per week, eight
months every year and then begin the cycle again the following year to
help transform lives,” he said.
According to the Adventist Development and Relief
Agency in El Salvador, more than 6,000 people have received
certification through some 650 literacy circles in the country. The
program is staffed by 520 volunteers.
Juan Pablo Ventura, ADRA El Salvador director, said
the program is a chance to partner with the Adventist Church and expand
the role ADRA plays in the community.
Graduate
Maria Elena Gonzalez, 70, displays her certificate during the
graduation ceremony after completing a literacy course led by the
Adventist Church in El Salvador.
“ADRA is not only an agency that comes to the aid
when disaster comes, but one that can be seen as an organization that
can enable the Adventist Church in the fulfillment of its social
responsibility,” he said.
The program is expanding the influence of the Adventist Church in El Salvador, too.
“This type of service to the community has allowed
us to establish ties and be known to communities, government agencies
and private entities as people who care for their fellow man,” said Abel
Pacheco, president of the church’s El Salvador Union Mission.
Among those who graduated from the literacy program
is Fermin Requeno, mayor of the San Juan de la Reyna Municipal district
in the state of San Miguel.
“Knowing how to read and write has changed my life,”
Requeno said. The mayor is now a main promoter of education in his
community.
Another graduate, Maria Elena Gonzalez, 70, works at
a laundry service in a medical center in the Apopa municipal district
and was among 22 people who attended the literacy circle there.
“My family was so poor and I wasn’t able to get an
education,” she said. “I felt so bad every time I went to the bank to
cash my check because I didn’t know how to write my name, so I decided
to make an effort to learn how to read and write.”
Eradicating illiteracy across Inter-America is a
priority of the church in the region, said Wally Amundson, ADRA director
for the church in Inter-America.
Although statistics vary from country to country,
Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras have seen their illiteracy rates go
down significantly, Amudson said.
“We want to explore all the possibilities to reach
the illiterate population within the church as well as in the
community,” he said.
To date, Hope for Humanity has funded literacy
programs in nine countries in Inter-America. Among the 3.6 million IAD
church membership, it’s estimated that there are hundreds of thousands
of church members who do not know how to read or write.
“Literacy is a challenge in the Adventist Church in
Inter-America and other parts of the world,” DiPinto said. “We say that
we are ‘people of the Word,’ but there are millions of church members
worldwide who do not know how to read their Bibles or Sabbath School
lessons.”
Each graduate at the recent San Salvador event
received a new Bible—a chance to practice newfound skills while learning
about God.
The Inter-American Division wants to implement more literacy programs based in the church, Amundson said.
“These literacy programs which are led by the
initiative and participation of church members make the program
successful because there is an infrastructure available to bring
together various ministries of the church to form groups of volunteers,”
he said.
Pacheco, the local Adventist president, said the
church in El Salvador has set a goal for 2014 to see each of the
country’s 930 Adventist churches begin serving as community literacy
circles.
So far, literacy circles in El Salvador have 175 facilitators, who meet with their students in homes and churches.
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