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By Sunny McClellan Morton
It sounds like something out of
Peter Pan: a remote mountain village populated almost
entirely by orphan boys. [1] But this group of "lost
boys" is no fairy tale. The boys of Flor Azul live on a
rocky mountain hillside above
But survival is only part of their story. As small groups of international volunteers arrive to help or teach these boys, they are finding that the boys have much to teach them about hard work, hope and a sense of community.

The residents of Flor Azul work hard for their
own maintenance. They help build their own buildings and cultivate
their own food.
"The community of Flor Azul
is only two and a half years old," explains Karen Godt,
who runs Hope for Honduran Children Foundation, a charity in
the
Sister Maria didn't have a home for the boys. Instead she took them far into the mountains to an abandoned building owned by her charity, Sociedad Amigos de los Niños. The two boys began homesteading the rocky hillside.
"More boys began to gather," continues Karen. "In the blink of an eye there were twenty-four boys, then eighty." Now Flor Azul is home to 100 Honduran boys, all victims of abandonment, neglect or abuse.
Poverty in
"The ones who make it to Flor
Azul are the lucky ones." Karen describes the dire situation
in
Flor Azul

An aerial view of Flor Azul, high on a Honduran
mountainside.
Flor Azul is one answer to

A concrete dormitory at Flor Azul. The
laundry hangs to dry in the breeze.
Six days a week the boys of Flor Azul rise with the sun to care for their crops and animals. They aren't just subsistance farmers, however. "Our ultimate goal is to provide the necessary tools and instill the desire for these children to become self-sufficient, caring and responsible adults," says Karen.
The boys attend school, learning not just mathematics and English but also career skills in fields like business, farm management, and carpentry. When older boys with no schooling arrive at the home, they start in the first grade and work their way forward with the younger students. "We won't send someone away until he has an education and a job." This means that older boys might be around for awhile (the oldest there right now is 22). Meanwhile they help care for the younger boys and run the orphanage.

The boys study with visiting instructor Matthew
McCue, a teacher from
Who Runs the Orphanage?
A few adults shoulder the enormous
daily responsibilities of running Flor Azul. Executive Director
Geovany Herrera grew up in an orphanage run by Sociedad Amigos
de Niños. "He commutes daily in his pick-up truck from
The boys' schoolteacher, known to all only as Gustavo, lives a two-hour walk down the mountain with his own family of six children. He rises before dawn to be at Flor Azul when the boys get up, and he is often there past dark. "He is such a Renaissance man," Karen says as she shakes her head in amazement. "This man lives in a humble two-room adobe home and reads Socrates, Plato, and anything else he can get his hands on. I don't know where he gets all his energy. He teaches the boys everything, from math to manners."
A young family and an older man actually live at Flor Azul with the boys. Anival, his wife, and their two-year old son "work 24/7" for this little village, says Karen. Anival grew up in an orphanage as well. "He guides the boys with a very strict discipline but amazing grace, dignity and love.”
The boys' other resident companion is Don Beto, known simply as "abuelo" ("grandfather"). A former resident from a neighboring community, he now commits all his time and 80-year old energy to his "grandsons."
International Visitors Include an LDS Youth
Inevitably, word of Flor Azul has
spread beyond
One of Karen's student workers
is Brandon Jackson, a Latter-day Saint youth who lives in
Since then, fifteen-year old

"Teach them to fish": a tilapia
farm under construction at Flor Azul.
"If it's successful, they'll
be able to eat fresh fish every day," explains

Brandon Jackson hauls bricks with a resident
of Flor Azul.
What about the language barrier?
"A lot of people think you have to speak Spanish — it was
not completely true," explains
Karen has been so impressed with
"Enter to Serve, Go Forth Having Learned"
Working with Hope for Honduran
Children is like no other service project Brandon has ever participated
in. "My parents always taught me about tolerance and about
knowing more about the world than just what
Arriving at the airport gave
He continues, "You watch the
news. You see people who are suffering, but you can change the
channel to your favorite sitcom and forget about it." Not
in
Great lessons about hope and community
are taught by the boys of Flor Azul. "They're really happy.
All they really have is each other, the school, and God. And
it's enough,"

Brandon Jackson and Justiano, who became
instant friends.
Another student watched the distribution of a bag of hand-me-down clothing at Flor Azul. "I remember seeing boys running around, holding up shirts, and asking what they could and could not take. Not a bit of greed came across their faces. The older kids would stay back and let the younger boys get their first pick [of] the newer or nicer things. This just shows the brotherhood that is in their community. These boys are a family to each other." [5]
"They are hungry, but they are not desperate," writes Karen in her book A Pocket of Heaven. [6] "They are proud of their achievements. They are strong, bright, beautiful and wonderfully happy. We ask them about their dreams. They tell us — food and shoes."
Making a Difference One Life at a Time
Karen and Brandon easily admit that the scope of child poverty at Flor Azul and throughout the world is staggering. But they also each stress that one person's efforts are not lost in a sea of need. "To the world you might be one person, but to one person, you might just be the world," writes Karen.
How Can Others Help?
"Financial support is the greatest and most overwhelming challenge," says Karen. The most immediate needs are food, clothing, and shelter. "A dollar a day will do that. So if you just make a five-dollar donation, you have just taken care of a child for five days."
Her organization's website www.HopeforHonduranChildren.org accepts online donations in any amount. A donor can sponsor a child ($30 a month); pay the teacher's salary for a month ($50); feed the entire orphanage for a day ($100), or contribute to building, hospital, micro-enterprise (small business), scholarship or emergency funds. Karen's book A Pocket of Heaven is also available at the website (proceeds benefit the children).
There are other ways to help. "Hosting
an event (a concert, bake sale, party, or other fundraiser)
to create awareness and solicit donations for our children"
is a great way for families or individuals to contribute. Another
suggestion is to arrange for a presentation by the Hope for
Honduran Foundation at a school or community function. That's
how
Karen also invites adults and older
youth to join one of her travel groups to visit the children
in
Any of these things will help the
children in
[1] Mark
Krieger. "
[2] Interviews by Author with Karen Godt, March – April 2007. Telephone, email, and face-to-face meetings. Notes in possession of the Author.
[3] UNICEF. At a Glance:
[4] Telephone interviews by Author with Brandon Jackson, March – April 2007. Notes in possession of the Author.
[5] Brittany Byrd. "Reflection. March 2007." Electronic diary. In possession of Karen Godt, Hope for Honduran Children. www.HopeforHonduranChildren.org.
[6] Karen Donovan Godt and John Ransom Godt. A Pocket of Heaven.
Copyright 2005 by the Authors.
[7] Quoted in A Pocket of Heaven, p.68.





