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Cherokee Youth Learn from Eco-Study Tour in Costa Rica

 

The young eco-travelers and their chaperones.

One way CPFdn engages youth in learning and preserving their culture is to develop cross-cultural experiences such as visits to other indigenous communities. Such exchanges expand the horizons of young people, and the experiences also deepen their appreciation for their own culture.

Several groups of Cherokee and other youth in the region (ages 14-17) have experienced unique eco-study tours of Costa Rica since 2005. The trips are funded by CPFdn and planned by the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service and EARTH University in Costa Rica.

Getting ready to tour a banana processing plant.
Getting ready to tour a banana processing plant.
Highlights of the trip have included:

  • A visit with members of the Maleku tribe.
  • Adventure trips, such as canopying (moving through the treetops on zip lines) and canoe trips.
  • Working on EARTH University’s organic farm tending goats and pigs and planting pineapples and seedlings.
  • Visits to a volcano, a banana plantation, a rainforest and a beach.

Here are some of the things the young travelers have had to say about the trip:

  • “I learned that you have to give something a try because you many not ever have the chance again.”
  • “The trip opened my eyes to see the advantages we have.”
  • “Our cultures are similar in a way because (the tribes in Costa Rica) are going through a struggle with government issues like we did. What is different between us is language, which is what is really lacking in our Cherokee culture.”
  • “We not only learned a lot about the cultures of the tribes in Costa Rica, but we learned a lot about our culture as well.”
  • “The people in Costa Rica don’t waste anything.”
  • “If we don’t recycle, this world is doomed.”
  • “The people (in Costa Rica) eat beans and rice for breakfast, lunch and supper.”

Canopying through the lush Costa Rican forest.The trip is a wonderful experience for the young travelers. They learn they can do anything that they set their minds to do. They also better appreciate what they have at home and the importance of preserving the Cherokee language and culture.

 

 

 


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