YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Students experience life in Guatemala on $1 a day

    NEW YORK (AP) — For many American travelers, Guatemala is an inexpensive, exotic destination for visiting Mayan ruins or studying Spanish in a language immersion program. But for a couple of U.S. college students, the country was the setting for a social experiment. They spent a summer living there on the same daily budget that sustains over a billion people around the world: $1 a day.

    Then they made a film about it, "Living on One." The film shows just how hard it is to buy enough food on so little money — never mind paying bills and coping with emergencies — but it has another theme that's not quite as sexy as sheer survival. "Living on One" also tries to illustrate how people living in extreme poverty manage their money, and how microcredit — small loans for local entrepreneurs who can't get traditional bank loans — can make a difference.

    "By filming the whole experience, we felt we could bring people along on this journey with us," said Chris Temple, who conceived the project with Zach Ingrasci, a classmate from Claremont McKenna College in California. "We thought that by going through this dollar-a-day experience ourselves, we could make it more understandable and show through our eyes what life is like there."

    Now back in the states, they're taking the film on a college tour — Georgetown, Boston College, Berkeley, Stanford and others — and have founded the Living on One organization to connect students to these issues through social media. They hope to hit the film festival circuit eventually.

    A key aspect of their 2010 adventure in the tiny highlands village of Pena Blanca was replicating the unpredictability of their neighbors' incomes as day laborers. Temple, Ingrasci and two other students with filmmaking experience who joined them lived on a total of $224 — $1 for each of the four of them, for 56 days — but they disbursed their money randomly. They filled a hat with numbers from zero to nine, and pulled one number each morning to determine their budget for the day. Expenses included firewood, rice, beans and other staples; renting a hut where they slept on a dirt floor; and making payments on a $125 microloan they used to start a radish farm. They had an outhouse and no running water; their camera was powered by a connection rigged off an electric line.

    The worst moment, they agreed, was when Temple became seriously ill with giardia, an intestinal parasite. "After 10 days of being sick, waking up on the dirt floor throwing up, constantly going to the bathroom throughout the night, I was completely dehydrated," he recalled.

    It was a low point for others too. "I can't sleep another night like this," Ingrasci says in the film after waking up covered with flea bites, with his sick friend next to him on the floor.

    Temple says his illness was when "our simulation failed. We tried to go to a doctor in town to see what the cost would be. It was $25, which would have meant sacrificing food for a very long time." They decided to use medicine they'd brought with them in case of emergency even though their neighbors would have no such safety net.

    Before making the film, Temple and Ingrasci, now both 23, had studied economic development and worked for organizations that promote microfinance. (Microfinance made headlines in 2006 when Muhammad Yunus, a Bangladeshi banker, won a Nobel Peace Prize for showing how small loans can foster economic development among the poor.) Temple had also worked in Guatemala for Whole Planet Foundation, a charitable arm of Whole Foods that grants microfinance loans.

    The film ranges from scenes of pure joy — the shy smiles of curious children, shared meals with neighbors, the successful radish harvest — to YouTube-style goofball clips of the guys horsing around. There are also moving moments like a young woman wiping a tear as she says: "We are poor and we will continue being poor."

    But that woman, Rosa, turns out to be a success story. She starts a weaving business with a microloan and uses the profits to pay for nursing school. Ignasci says the women's group that funded Rosa has a 100 percent repayment rate for microloans, but he acknowledges that "we can't say all microfinance is good." Indeed, critics have found microfinance programs in some parts of the world have failed, often due to high interest rates.

    Other neighbors featured in the film include a bright, charming 12-year-old boy, Chino, who wants to learn English to "get a job," and a resourceful man who belongs to a savings club where a dozen families invest $12 a month so each can get a $144 lump sum annually, funding large purchases they could never otherwise afford.

    Ingrasci says it's easy to "idealize" the simple lives of the rural poor: "They don't have computers, they don't have this overload of information." But the reality of malnutrition, unemployment and illness, he says, is devastating. Temple notes that locals are not immune to the illness that struck him: Intestinal disease caused by contaminated water and poor sanitation can kill a baby, knock family breadwinners out of work and force kids to drop out of school.

    While they understand that they may be criticized for "playing at poverty," Ingrasci says they tried hard to avoid making viewers feel they were "getting played or preached at. It was such an important thing for our peers to feel like they're part of this journey. When someone tells us the film has shown them the issues in a new way, or has encouraged someone to grant a microfinance loan, that's the reason we're doing it."

    ___

    Online:

    Living on One: http://www.livingonone.org/about.html or https://www.facebook.com/LivingonOne

    Loading...
    • Trucker bumps I-5 bridge, sees tragedy behind him

      MOUNT VERNON, Wash. (AP) — The trucker was hauling a load of drilling equipment when his load bumped against the steel framework over an Interstate 5 bridge. He looked in his rearview mirror and watched in horror as the span collapsed into the water behind him. Two vehicles fell into the icy Skagit River.

    • Fired for word: 'Negro' in Spanish class

      One of the first lessons one learns in English class is that context is everything. The same holds true in Spanish.

    • The Video of the Washington Bridge Collapse Is Terrifying

      Seattle's KIRO-TV got their hands on surveillance video capturing the very moment when a too-heavy truck starts crossing the bridge and the supports start to collapse. You can see the next truck start to cross the bridge as the whole thing is coming apart. It is a terrifying video. Watch the whole thing below: 

    • Multiple aftershocks follow 5.7 quake in N. Calif.

      GREENVILLE, Calif. (AP) — At least 22 aftershocks have struck following an earthquake in far northeastern California that was felt as far away as San Francisco and in two other states.

    • Cycling-Road-Giro d'Italia classification after stage 20

      May 25 (Infostrada Sports) - Classification from Giro d'Italia after Stage 20 on Saturday 1. Vincenzo Nibali (Italy / Astana) 79:23:19" 2. Rigoberto Uran (Colombia / Team Sky) +4:43" 3. Cadel Evans (Australia / BMC Racing) +5:52" 4. Michele Scarponi (Italy / Lampre) +6:48" 5. Carlos Betancur (Colombia / AG2R) +7:28" 6. Przemyslaw Niemiec (Poland / Lampre) +7:43" 7. Rafal Majka (Poland / Saxo - Tinkoff) +8:09" 8. Benat Intxausti (Spain / Movistar) +10:26" 9. Mauro Santambrogio (Italy / Vini Fantini) +10:32" 10. Domenico Pozzovivo (Italy / AG2R) +10:59" 11. ...

    • Why a bidding war over Hulu is heating up

      Yahoo, DirecTV, and Time Warner are reportedly among the suitors

    • Damage reported from magnitude-5.7 quake in Calif.

      GREENVILLE, Calif. (AP) — Residents in rural northeastern California assessed damage to their homes and businesses Friday from a magnitude-5.7 earthquake, one of the strongest temblors to hit the densely forested region in decades.

    • Saudi Arabia warns against Iran's nuclear program

      RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal has warned against the danger of Iran's nuclear program to the region's security and said Iran should not threaten its neighbors since countries in the region harbor no ill-intentions to the Islamic Republic.

    Loading...

    Follow Yahoo! News

    Brought to you byYahoo! Finance