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About the Project
The Chiapas Project was founded in 2001 by the Brody/Liegner
family of Newton, New Jersey. Responding to the wishes of
their then 16 year-old son Nick, Joanne Liegner and David
Brody contacted the Salesian Sisters in Newton and arranged
to have Nick spend 9 weeks volunteering in one of the 6 orphanages
the Sisters run in the city of Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas,
Mexico. When Sister Ernestina Vieyra of Mexico City learned
that Joanne is a gynecologist and David is a dentist, she
implored then to join their son at the end of the summer and
travel to the remote town of Ocotepec to provide medical and
dental care, as none was available to the Zoque people who
live there. Thus The Chiapas Project was born. The Project
is non-denominational and international. There are no admistrative
expenses and all volunteers pay their own way for the privilege
of helping others. School, civic, and religious groups of
all faiths have been involved in supporting The Chiapas Project
The Chiapas Project travels to southern Mexico twice each
year, once at the end of the summer, and again in the late
winter. Our next trips will be August 17-24, 2002 and mid-March
2003.
While in Chiapas, the group, which grew from only the Brody/
Liegner family of four in August 2001 to 25 volunteers in
February 2002, provided medical and dental care to over 1700
people during its first two trips, in the town of Ocotepec
and its surrounding villages. They also treated children at
the Salesian school for sexually abused girls in Campainala
as well as at the boys orphanage in Tuxtla Gutierrez.
Care has been limited to treatment of acute maladies (dental
infections, parasitic and general medical infections, post-partum
bleeding and infections, pre-natal malnutrition, etc) as follow-up
care is not currently available and supplies are limited to
what is brought by the group on each trip.
The goal of The Chiapas Project is to one day create a permanent
presence of trained medical and dental care providers for
the indigenous people of the region. This will be accomplished
by expanding the circle of volunteers who travel to Mexico
so that groups will arrive more often, and to further involve
the medical and dental communities of the capital city of
Tuxtla Gutierrez in the care of their poorer and more isolated
neighbors. Donations of supplies and medicines (or the funds
to purchase them) are critical to the expansion of service
provided.
To learn more about the work of The Chiapas Project please
go to the Past Missions and How You Can
Help sections of our website.
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