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Day to Day, Many of Guatemala's rural indigenous communities lack
infrastructure basics such as clean drinking water, sanitation and
electricity.
A group of American
eco-engineers in the United States from the Appropriate Infrastructure
Development Group is working with a number of Mayan villages to change
that.
At Xela Teco, a workshop in the
town of Quetzaltenango (or Xela for short), tech-minded Guatemalans
build eco-friendly devices. The workshop is a small business supported
by the U.S.-based nonprofit Appropriate Infrastructure Development
Group.
Xela Teco builds environmentally
friendly technology that can be used to bring survival basics to
poverty-stricken villages in the Mayan highlands: clean water,
electricity and fuel.
While Americans
are part of the Xela Teco effort right now, their goal is to step
aside. The hope is that arming rural communities with certain skill
sets will help break a cycle of poverty, disease and malnutrition.
If the effort is successful, Xela Teco may end up becoming a blueprint for the future of development work.
This article is available online at:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7105046
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