The school is also called the Republic of Venezuela School, as shown in these two photos.

The jicaro tree has been uprooted from the good lands now dedicated to more profitable crops, and relegated to marginal zones where there has been neither infrastructure of any type nor attention to the human beings eking out a living there. The school is aptly named.
It's a one-room school. This is the outside of the school looking from the bathroom facility. It has been painted recently, using funds from the Foundation and work done largely by people in the community. The local citizens are also working to finish a kitchen in an attached room behind the school. So they are willing and able to help themselves when given a hand up in the form of money to buy materials.


The school property is on the side of a hill, with dirt roads on two sides and cows on the other two sides.
The Honduras Agape Foundation agreed to fund the Jicaro School bathroom project after seeing the condition of the two existing toilets at the school, which are in the background of some of the photos below.
This is how the new building looked after the first day of work by the team. The real block-laying was done by Modesto, who is in the Agape church in Quimistan. The missionaries were guided in our efforts by Celvin, who is also in the church and was asked to be the project coordinator.


The blocks used for building in this area are somewhat like the cinder blocks we use in the United States, with some key differences. They are typically formed one at a time, in someone's back yard, by shoveling from a moistened pile of cement and sand into a tabletop block-making framework. You have to see it to believe it. The blocks thus formed are carefully removed from the frame and stacked to dry. When dry, they are generally hard enough but quite brittle. They make a

The missionaries did some of the grunt work, as you see Richard here screening river sand, and Danny hauling sand to the work site.



The well-mixed mortar is carried to Modesto for the block-laying, and after he has finished


Slowly the walls go up. Then it's time for the clean-up crew (also the photographer in this case). Check out the cool broom.


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