After gaining its independence from Spain in 1821, the country was invaded and occupied by Haiti for 22 years. In the 20th century, as the country’s sugar cane industry prospered, U.S. influence began to grow. In 1916, U.S. Marines invaded the country and installed a puppet government to protect U.S. interests. The military occupation lasted eight years. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson ordered the Marines to occupy the Dominican Republic during another political upheaval.
"Invasions have caused a lack of self esteem among Dominicans," according to Dominican Sr. Rosa Reyes, director of education for Centro Dominicano de Asesoria y Servicios Legales (CEDAIL), a human and legal rights office created by the country’s conference of Catholic bishops.
She said that even the most educated Dominicans look for ways to flee their homeland and find work in the United States or in Europe.
"The bottom line is people want to leave the country because they cannot earn enough here," she said.
"As in so many other poor regions in the world, many of our parishioners grow up with the mentality that in our region there is no future," he [Fr. Marti Colom, pastor] said. "Therefore, to leave the area becomes the ideal, the dream, the hope for many, especially the young people."
"Our role is to demonstrate in daily life that there are actually opportunities to make a living right here in the parish territory," added Fr. Colom.
The task begins early and it focuses on education.
Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]