November 27, 2007
In the World

Service In Honduras

Wittenberg Professor Emeritus of Geography Speaks About Service Work in Central America

Wittenberg University Professor Emeritus of Geography E. Leonard Brown first traveled to Honduras in 1974 to study post-disaster housing following Hurricane Fifi. In 1993, his wife, Lottie, a registered nurse, joined him as part of a medical team from Springfield, Ohio.

Forty trips later, Leonard and Lottie Brown have a lot of stories to tell – like the one about the summer of 1993 when Leonard took his first group of Wittenberg student interns to the impoverished Central American nation. Over winter break that same year the couple assisted a Habitat for Humanity work team.

Since their retirement in 1998, the Browns’ commitment to the people of Honduras has continued. It will be the subject of a Department of Geography colloquium presentation titled “Integrative and Participatory Development in Honduras” at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 29, in 115 Carnegie Hall.

The challenges of life in remote regions of a developing country, including a lack of electricity until 1998, unsanitary water piped into their home and traveling roads that are only passable with four-wheel drive vehicles to get to a mountain village school, pale next to the challenges of obtaining funds to successfully continue programs they have started.

An increased interest in education by the Honduran people remains the most rewarding change the Browns have both witnessed and helped to generate.

“We have facilitated a scholarship program for ‘young ladies’ to go to junior high and high school,” Brown said. “We also developed a lending library system for rural schools with 73 boxes of 50 books each.”

Their involvement with the people of Honduras has evolved from being visitors, with a primary interest in collecting information for courses and helping with various parts of a development program, to accepting the responsibility for providing funding and directing some specific programs such as an “Educational Center” constructed and furnished for some 26 students in a little mountain village.

“We have become friends and family to many,” Brown said. “We now have electricity, computer and Internet connection, and we are teaching the students how to increase their knowledge using a computer.”

Since 1998, the couple has returned to Honduras two or three times each year, normally spending one-to-three months for a total of six months a year in the country.

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Wittenberg's curriculum has centered on the liberal arts as an education that develops the individual's capacity to think, read, and communicate with precision, understanding, and imagination. We are dedicated to active, engaged learning in the core disciplines of the arts and sciences and in pre-professional education grounded in the liberal arts. Known for the quality of our faculty and their teaching, Wittenberg has more Ohio Professors of the Year than any four-year institution in the state. The university has also been recognized nationally for excellence in community service, sustainability, and intercollegiate athletics. Located among the beautiful rolling hills and hollows of Springfield, Ohio, Wittenberg offers more than 100 majors, minors and special programs, enviable student-faculty research opportunities, a unique student success center, service and study options close to home and abroad, a stellar athletics tradition, and successful career preparation.

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