"The RPCV Global Village: When service abroad comes Home"
Our RPCV Global Village crew was brought together by volunteer extraordinaire Greg Plimpton to help a farmwokers community in Immokalee, FL. Greg is at far left, the whole crew in the middle. These awesome volunteers made my 80th birthday special, lower left with cake & a t-shirt signed by the crew that I will cherish forever. Photos by Linda Smittle.
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| Janice in garden |
But it wasn't just another birthday. It was a celebration of reunion and community. It was a celebration of what happens when you bring together former Peace Corps workers who served in countries around the world and put them to work here at home.
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| Kathryn planting at Mision Peniel |
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| K planted a whole new garden by himself! |
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| J shucking corn, i think it was |
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| K & Linda seeding |
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| Linda and Lupita, one of our superisors along with Rick, planting. We learned\ a lot about farming & gardening. |
It truly felt like we were working under the Eye of God, the meaning of Mision Peniel.

In addition to our extensive garden work at Mision Peniel, we worked in the gardens at the University of Florida Mother and Child Clinic, which serves hundreds of immigrants and newcomers who have many stories to tell of hardship and hope. We cleaned up, weeded, pruned, and raked one garden, and planted veggies in another. Previously Greg and volunteers had planted slash pines around the perimeter and they are growing nicely.![]() |
| Linda and Kathleen on ladders. Kathryn spackling. Ken with a trash bag, and hardworking Janice taking a much-needed break. |
It was a joy to work together, this team of active oldtimers. And it was a joy just to be together.
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| Here are some of the things we enjoyed together. 2nd row far right, Linda's Thai string bracelet. |
We watched beautiful sunsets and moon rises. We ate together in Greg's camper, a few times at local restaurants, at a park near our work site with our homemade lunches. We visited a Ranger station under Live Oaks dripping with Spanish Moss. We walked the trails of an Auduban park and the Six-Mile Cyprus Slough ( pronounced slew). We visited the Roberts Cattle Museum, which houses a great exhibit of Florida cowboy days, a winner for its sensitivity to the diverse peoples of the time and the great storyboards that accompanied the art and artifacts. We strolled along the shore of Fort Myers' Ralph Bunche Beach at sunset (which also has a story to tell), and collected shells along the beach of Sanibel Island.
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| Ken's gourmet pasta primavera. |
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| Greg made sure we had a good breakfast. |


We shared meals, conversations, memories, games, walks, special times. We talked about our PC experiences. On Friday March 13, Ken, with J's expert assistance, made us a delicious authentic pasta primavera, and afterwards, among a bustle of activity and whispers, brought forth a brightly lit cake! No it didn't have 80 candles on it. It glowed from the love and sharing that went into this memorable meal. This incomparable RPCV team also gave me an extraordinary creative t-shirt that Linda had found at Goodwill and that she prettied up and everyone signed, heralding this volunteer's 80 years of making history! It brought tears to my eyes. I wore that shirt for the next few days and didn't want to take it off, a forever gift from kindred spirits who already give so much to others.As we snuggled into our bunks for one last night, Kathryn gave each of us a card with sayings for life and dreams, and Linda came around to each of us and gave us a Thai blessing to take home. She gently wrapped a string bracelet around out wrists and wished us well, and gave us the opportunity to bless her in return.
From Greg: "Thank you ALL for being the best group of volunteers EVER !! You bonded and worked together like a family." That was us! But we want to thank Greg as well, for making this dream of an RPCV Global Village a reality.
Notes:
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| Kathryn doing some heavy- duty trail cleaning. |
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| Kathryn and Kathleen clearing trails at Pepper Farm. |

2. Harvest of Shame: CBS News, The day after Thanksgiving in 1960, CBS REPORTS presented what would become one of the most important documentaries of all time, about the plight of the men and women who had provided the holiday feast. They were America's migrant farm workers. It was intended, the producer said, "To shock the consciousness of the nation." And it did. "They are the migrants, workers in the sweat shops of the soil - the harvest of shame," CBS News correspondent Edward R. Murrow said. He called them "the forgotten people; the under-educated; the under-fed." With raw and striking images, Murrow's documentary exposed the poverty and deplorable working conditions endured by America's 2 to 3 million migrant farm workers. Men, women and children who harvested crops for the best-fed nation on earth earned barely enough to feed themselves. Today, mirant work is still backbreaking. Over the years, the faces in the fields have changed from poor whites and poor blacks to poor Hispanics, but pay remains low and benefits are few to nonexistent.

3, https://bittersoutherner.com/a-hunger-for-tomatoes-shane-mitchell?fbclid=IwAR0EBtJwjdiPae3PVV5O0gUTUVG0DLpG4Hr7hNTm1wfFecOVWLd5B21hDnk with thanks to Ken for sharing this great article.

















2 comments:
What a WONDERFUL summary of our week together in Immokalee. Thanks for taking time to document our experience - and to include all the pictures. It was fantastic to meet you and help you celebrate your milestone birthday. I hope our lives cross again in the future.
thanks for your great comment. Maybe next year in Immokalee.
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