Donna Tabor is a one-woman charity in Nicaragua
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| Granada, NICARAGUA
鈥淲ithout Donna, I probably would be in jail now,鈥 says Oscar Arnulfo Romero, 鈥渙r, more likely, dead.鈥
The 20-something man from Granada, Nicaragua, is not exaggerating. In his teenage years, he had shared a gang lifestyle including alcohol and drugs with his three older brothers. One of those brothers is in jail now. The other two are dead.
After the drug-induced suicide of one of his brothers, Mr. Romero decided he wanted out. He went to Donna Tabor, and she gave him an opportunity. 鈥淚鈥檓 studying for a degree in psychology now,鈥 he says.
In 1996, at an age when most people ponder retiring into a quieter life, Ms. Tabor quit her job as a producer for a Pittsburgh television station and joined the Peace Corps. 鈥淚 hoped they鈥檇 send me to El Salvador, where I already had been volunteering for Building New Hope, a grass-roots organization from Pittsburgh,鈥 she says. But instead she was sent to teach at a high school in Granada.
鈥淚 really don鈥檛 know why,鈥 Tabor says, 鈥渂ut I鈥檓 one of those [people] who can鈥檛 walk past a person in need without doing something to help.鈥 In Granada, this meant she couldn鈥檛 just ignore the many children living on the streets.
She began to give them food and helped them with medical emergencies.
鈥淪treet kids latch on to you very easily when you just show a little bit of interest in them,鈥 Tabor says. In no time, the children were no longer nameless bodies sleeping in parks and doorways. Instead, they were Flique, Jose, Moises, Jesus, and Michel Angel. For these youths, Tabor was no longer just another gringa; she was Donna, and they could always knock on her door.
Nicaragua is, after Haiti, the second poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. Revolution and civil war ruined the economy in the latter half of the 20th century. Today, 46 percent of Nicaraguans live below the poverty level, surviving on less than $2 a day.
鈥淢any see those street kids just as thieves and drug users,鈥 Tabor says. 鈥淚 always see the softer, better side of them.鈥
She took a genuine interest in their lives. One day, she grabbed her sleeping bag and slept with the children in the park, just to see what their nights were like.
鈥淚 found out they barely slept at all. They sniffed glue and socialized with each other through most of the night,鈥 she says.
When hurricane Mitch hit Granada in 1998, every room in Tabor鈥檚 house was filled with children.
鈥淚t was too dangerous for them to be outside, but they were also afraid to sleep inside a house,鈥 Tabor says. 鈥淭hey asked me to leave the doors open and all the lights on.鈥
When her two-year contract with the Peace Corps ran out, Tabor became her own one-woman charity helping street kids.
鈥淚n 1998 I started workshops for children in the patio of my house,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淪ome Nicaraguans came to help, and we taught them reading and writing and math.鈥
That was just one thing. Tabor also gave shelter, food, and love, and took kids to hospitals and rehab centers. She also raised money to bring children to the United States for medical procedures that couldn鈥檛 be done in Nicaragua. During that time, she herself lived on Social Security.
鈥淒onna is a very passionate, charismatic, and also a very funny person,鈥 says Therese Tardio, a member of the board of Building New Hope. 鈥淪he cares a lot about social justice, and she has identified many new projects in Nicaragua that our organization now supports.鈥 In 2008 Tabor was honored by the US Center for Citizen Diplomacy: She gave the $5,000 award to Building New Hope.
The work is challenging. Some street kids never escape their downward spiral.
鈥淥nce they are used to the street and the drugs,鈥 she says, 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 see a future for themselves anymore, no matter what you offer them.鈥
In 2004, Tabor started Caf茅 Chavalos, a restaurant and culinary workshop that employed four former street kids. It would become an ingenious and successful social experiment.
鈥淚 told Oscar, Orlando, Juan Carlos, and Moises they could work in the restaurant if they went to school and stayed away from the street and the drugs,鈥 Tabor says.
The young men did. During the day, they were in school and Tabor did the food shopping. In the evening, the boys learned how to cut onions, make a curry sauce, fold a napkin, wash dishes, and wait on guests.
鈥淐af茅 Chavalos was open for about three years,鈥 Tabor says, 鈥渁nd all four guys are now in a much better place. Oscar goes to the university. Orlando is a trainer in an upscale spa. Juan Carlos is a minister in some sort of church. And Moises is finishing high school.鈥
Caf茅 Chavalos closed when it was too hard to find a new crew after the original four moved on.
Along with continuing her interest in street youths Tabor has started Casa Lupita, a free animal clinic, where veterinarians volunteer their time to help animals from the streets and pets of the poor.
鈥淚t鈥檚 mostly cats and dogs, but we鈥檝e also had horses, pigs, and monkeys,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ince there were way too many strays living in the streets, we have a very intensive program to sterilize cats and dogs.鈥
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