Monday, 13 December 2010

Solstice and Yuletide greetings!

I climbed Apu Linley 2 days ago for this view of the town of Pisac and the Vilcanota river.
The Kusi Kawsay school is above the town on the left in front of some trees.  Our new house is just to the right of center.
Many thanks to all for reading this blog and for the help we have received over the past year in our work with Shipibo children in the Amazon and poor chidren at the CEBA school in Pisac.

It's been a great year that has seen the founding of the Kusi Kawsay Andean/Waldorf school which is now flourishing despite a rocky start as we all faced dealing with massive flooding in the early months of the year.  The school's success has been felt by all as a triumph by way of a positive project into which we have put our energies, a cooperative community effort in which we have shared the sensation of overcoming adversity and disaster in the creation of a wonderful new venture.

Lourdes and I have moved to a new house two blocks from the main square in Pisac from our house in Coya 7 kilometers distant where we have been for the last 3 years.  The new pad is a slightly ramshackle and eccentric building but we have fixed it up and are now enjoying living near many friends and close to both of the schools in which we are involved.  I now have a new woodshop as well, one mile away.  I commute by bike and I like the excercise.  We are using our car a whole lot less.

Saturday, 11 December 2010

Kusi Kawsay School, Pisac Update


Kindergarten children with teacher Sara and Eurithmy teacher Darsi (my step-daughter).
The newly finished kindergarten building is behind.

The beautiful new kindergarten building is now up and running.  Yours truly built the Inca-style doors.

We are now at the end of the southern hemisphere school year and Kusi Kawsay school is one year old.   It's a new initiative combining Andean traditional culture and the agrarian calendar of the Incas with Waldorf alternative education.


The school is off to a really good start and we had a Unesco film crew come for one day which resulted in us being included in a promotional documentary covering schools who belong to the Unesco educational association.  These are schools recognized for holding to high standards promoting environmental awareness, equal rights and social conciousness.


We finished the school year with each class presenting dances and theatrical pieces.  Our secondary study group of older students wrote an Andean adaptation of Shakespeare's 'A midsummer night's dream'. They made masks and costumes.  It was a lot of fun.  The character of Bottom was transformed from a donkey into a 'cuy' or guinea pig and 'Inti' the sun presided over everything.


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'Inti' the sun and 'Cuy' in Andean version of 'Midsummer night's dream'.


Shamanic journeys in Peru 2011

I plan to accompany a small group to the Amazon jungle in April to partake in a 9 day dieta with my Shipibo friends near Pucallpa.  Dates to be determined.

Following on from a fantastic journey with four friends in 2010, later in the year I want to offer another shamanic pilgrimage to sacred sites in the central highlands and northern coast of Peru for friends and trusted friends-of-friends.  The idea is to be up at Chavin for October 28 which is the Mayan calander end date according to Carl Johan Calleman and Barbara Hand Clow.

For further information please contact me at   martinstevens@juno.com