Ender supports his community in Maicao

Each year on the 20th of June, the world marks World Refugee Day, the international day of recognition that raises awareness on the millions of people who have been forced to flee.

Despite the constant threat of hunger, dispossession and discrimination, the Wayuu people native to the Guajira peninsula, have survived. While they are one of the largest indigenous ethnic groups in the northern regions of Colombia and Venezuela, they are also among the most vulnerable. Economic insecurity have affected their livelihoods for decades, only exacerbated by the humanitarian crisis in Venezuela. But while scarcity has been a fact of their living conditions for years, many maintain a hopeful outlook for the younger generation.

“It has been a really nice experience to share these three years with the professors here in this effort to improve this institution, and well, here is God listening to you, because this is a step.”

Ender Enrique Fernández helped to build the RHU superstructure classrooms that support the education of Wayuu youth. ©Guidoulloa & Piso18

In Maicao, Colombia, UNHCR has supported Wayuu Venezuelan refugees since the beginning of the refugee crisis nearly ten years ago. UNHCR provided temporary shelters for Venezuelan refugees through the Centro de Atención Integral (CAI) transit centre until emergency shelters were no longer needed. With RHU shelters now available from the CAI, UNHCR partnered with the municipal government to repurpose the RHUs as classrooms for Wayuu children from Venezuela. On the building of the classrooms for Wayuu children, UNHCR in Colombia said:

There were changes in the flows of people arriving, including having more of a social network in Colombia, meaning the need for emergency shelter upon arrival decreased. Consequently, UNHCR decided to tailor our services to strengthen processes of local integration, community-based protection and socio-economic inclusion.”

UNHCR Colombia

Ender was one of the Wayuu Venezuelan refugees who was supported by UNHCR at the CAI. When it came time to transition the RHUs from the CAI to classrooms, Ender was enlisted to support in the building process. He learned the installation process, and was a part of the construction team until the successful completion of the classrooms. Today, the RHU classrooms are providing Wayuu children from Venezuela with vital education. Among the students that have learned in the classrooms, were four of Ender’s own children.

Alejandra Castellanos, UNHCR Colombia field officer in Maicao, Colombia with Wayuu youth who attend regular schooling in RHU superstructures. UNHCR field officers are critical in the performance and maintenance of programming for displaced people. ©Guidoulloa & Piso18

“It is from the small things that the greatest blessings come.”

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