discovering the real Caribbean...
 April 2008 
  Guadeloupe, Leeward Islands, West Indies
Sailing, sailing, sailing! Hands Across the Sea, our 46-foot Dolphin 460 catamaran, has been speeding across the ocean miles as we make our way north from Brazil to
the East Coast of the United States. First working our way up the Brazilian coast from Salvador, Brazil, against the prevailing breezes, we headed out to the island of Fernando de Noronha, a marine reserve 250 miles off the northeast corner of Brazil. From there Hands made a 10.5 day, 2,000-mile passage to Trinidad and Tobago. It was the first ocean passage that we'd made in 16 years, and we (re)learned a lot, including how demanding sailing 'round the clock, grabbing sleep in three-hour shifts, can be. We also rediscovered how rewarding ocean sailing can be — the beauty of sailing along in the company of flying fish, dolphins, and seabirds, and the achievement of safely reaching landfall.

After adding some equipment to our boat in Chauguramas, Trinidad, and sampling the steel-pan band and masquerade competitions of Trinidad's famous Carnival, we began sailing north through the Caribbean's smorgasbord of islands: Grenada, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, St. Lucia, Dominica, Martinique, Antigua, Barbuda and Guadeloupe, thus far. We are finding similiarities among the islands: beautiful blue water, lush greenery, always a warm and windy breeze. But we are just as struck by the contrasts — the expensive resorts that share a beach with the simple, tin-roofed homes of local people, the lineup of million-dollar megayachts moored alongside the battered boats of the
fishermen. On each island, we looked for the real Caribbean that lay beyond the manufactured-for-tourism facade of "Caribbean paradise."

The majority of Caribbean people make a modest living through farming, fishing, or service jobs connected to the tourism industry. On many islands, government money for infrastructure, such as roads and schools, is meager. Digging deeper, we visited a number of primary schools (Harriet is a former teacher) and received a warm welcome from school staff, followed by a here's-our-school tour. What we found were classrooms packed with bright-faced, energetic kids and schoolteachers and administrators doing a great job with a bare minimum of resources. We began asking school principals what their
school most needed, from books for the library to dictionaries, pens, pencils, chalk, and grammar-teaching software. Meanwhile, we were calculating how we could procure the needed school materials once we reach the East Coast this summer and deliver them via Hands upon our November, 2009, return to the Caribbean (or arrange to have them shipped directly to the schools).

So where we are now is right where we aimed to be with Hands Across the Sea, our not-for-profit charitable organization: We are sailing among islands of paradise, and we are able to lend a hand to local kids and teachers.
Ahead of us we have a bevy of islands — Montserrat, Saint Kitts and Nevis, St. Martin, Anguilla, the U.S. and British Virgin Islands, Turks and Caicos, and the Bahamas — and many more schools to visit. If you have ideas or contacts that will help Hands Across the Sea provide needed materials for primary schools in the Caribbean, please do not hesitate to e-mail us or call us (telephone: 617-320-3601). We look forward to hearing from you...and we look forward to our next Caribbean island! — T.L. and Harriet

 
 
Hands Log archive
#1 (Nov 2007); #2 (Dec 2007); #3 (April 2008); #4 (Sept 2008); #5 (Dec 2008); #6 (March 2009);
#7 (April 2009)
; #8 (May 2009); #9 (Sept 2009); #10 (Nov 2009); #11 (Jan 2010); #12 (Feb 2010);
#13 (April 2010); #14 (May 2010)


ways you can work with Hands...
network with Hands If you have a project in which Hands can help — or if you want to help with the current Hands project — contact us!

collect books for Hands If'd you'd like to collect "gently used" children's books for Hands, please go to our Hands Book Drop page

sort or pack books for Hands Want to work hands-on? Please contact us!

host a Hands presentation or Hands fundraiser If'd you'd like to do either— contact us!

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