Team "Leiva"
(1971 - 1980)
In the summer of 1970, the four members of the newly formed team met in Bogota: the nurse from her assignment in Haiti, the social worker from Brazil, the priest from his assignment in Munich and the agronomist from Immensee.
They got to know each other better while studying the language and learning about the situation and conditions in Colombia. The young team, guided by a social psychologist, jointly agreed on the working method of the Brazilian Paulo Freire.
In the village of Leiva, in the Western Cordillera, where the Bethlehem missionary Fridolin Höin had been working for two years, the team began visiting the people in the villages and hamlets. This helped them get an idea of the reality in which the people lived. It also created an initial relationship of trust with the people with whom they wanted to set out on their journey and with whom they were prepared to share their lives.
Dialogue as a basic attitude
Meanwhile, the members of the team orientated themselves according to the professions they had brought with them: the nurse had the previously unoccupied infirmary full of patients after just a few days, the priest was called into the extensive parish.
The social worker and the agronomist were the only ones the campesinos could not fit in, nor did they see what they could be used for. With patience, they sought contact with the people and gradually created groups interested in their proposals. There was not much left of Freire’s systematic, strict working method – raising awareness with the aim of bringing about change.
Nevertheless, all members of the team tried to maintain the habit of talking to the people, dialogue as a basic attitude, respect for the opinions of others and the desire to learn from them. Over the years, the nurse was able to train a handful of girls as nurses, and the social worker left behind a group of women who were well motivated to make improvements.
Change in society
Together as a group, the members of the SMB team organised a leadership course for men and women. After some time, the women gave positive feedback: their men had become different, more responsible, more willing to talk, less violent and open to change.
Also as a joint effort and under the construction management of Brother Carlos, a centre was built to accommodate rural children and enable them to attend the village school.