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COVID-19: Teachers in Honduras get on their bikes to help deliver school meals

Nutritious meals reach children despite coronavirus lockdown through collaboration between WFP, UNICEF and government
, WFP Español
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Changing lives: Teachers Dorla Haylock and Delsa López unload a ration of food from their ATV buggy. Photo: Courtesy of Golda Haylock

By Hetze Tosta

A fishing ban that came into force at the beginning of March — and is set to last until July — is exacerbating the already challenging situation faced by families in La Moskitia, a region on the eastern tip Honduras's Mosquito Coast. With parents' sources of income disrupted, school meals represent the only food that children are likely to receive during the day.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, their predicament has worsened. When authorities ordered the closure of schools across the country to contain the outbreak last month, the National School Feeding Programme —which supplies hot meals to 1.2 million children a month — was also suspended.

To the people of La Moskitia, in Gracias a Dios, the poorest, most vulnerable and hard-to-reach department in the country, it seemed that this new storm had taken their only lifejacket.

It is a story being echoed across the globe, as partial or country-wide closures of schools are reported in almost all the countries where the World Food Programme — as the largest provider of school meals — implements or works with governments on feeding programmes.

In Honduras, the authorities took action on the matter and ordered mitigation measures that allowed students to continue receiving their food.

Thanks to a collaboration between World Food Programme (WFP) and UNICEF, in support of the Honduran Government, safety protocols have been developed for teachers, together with school feeding committees, to prepare food rations that had been left unprepared when the schools shut.

As a consequence, one adult per family can go to a school to withdraw a ration of food, consisting of rice, beans, oil and cornmeal.

Security protocols developed by WFP and UNICEF also allow for the delivery of take-home rations. So, professor Golda Haylock, District Director of Education in Kaukira, in Gracias a Dios, and the 80 teachers there, rolled their sleeves up.

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Professor Dorla Haylock got on her motorcycle to visit her students and document their situation so they can receive help. Photo: Supplied

"We decided to go for the door-to-door delivery to avoid crowds in schools, and it was also an opportunity to see how the children and their families were doing," says Golda, who is also a teacher at the Kasbrikapiska school (which in Miskito means ‘piece of sky').

In delivering food, the teachers take the opportunity to train families on how to keep the coronavirus at bay. They also verify the identity of families and document their living conditions, so that they can receive the appropriate assistance down the line.

Kaukira is a community of Municipality of Puerto Lempira in Honduran Mosquitia, in the department of Gracias a Dios. This is were the Miskitos live, one of the eight ethnic groups in Honduras, who have their own language.

Classes in educational centres are taught in Spanish and the Indigenous language, Miskito. Kaukira is located on the other side of the Caratasca lagoon. From Puerto Lempira it takes an hour by boat to reach these communities.

The National School Feeding Programme is one of the most important social protection provisions of the Honduran Government. It benefits 1.2 million boys and girls in 22,000 educational centres around the country.

Teacher Dorla Haylock — Golda's cousin and a teacher in the kindergarten in the village of Dapa — was not deterred by either the sun or the distance involved. She and teacher Delsa López prepared the food rations and rode on an ATV, or quad bike, to deliver the cherished cargo to students' homes. The experience left Dorla, who's been working in Dapat for 18 years, with mixed emotions.

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Dorla Haylock and Delsa prepare the food rations to deliver to students. Photo: Courtesy of Golda Haylock

She says: "This distribution allowed me to see how each of my 48 students were, see the conditions they were in and witness the joy with which they received the rations we delivered … in many homes, not even the stove was lit.

"It was very sad to go to these communities and see that the children are looking for green mangoes, because many times it will be the only thing they will eat that day."

Karen Sánchez, a WFP field monitor, says: "Seeing the faces of happy children when they receive school meals is priceless, as most of them often have nothing to eat at home."

She adds that the teachers' use of bikes to deliver rations door-to-door is motivated by the love they have for their students.

Overcoming obstacles

According to Danny Greenwood, WFP's coordinator in the area, it is a logistical challenge for WFP to support the Government in the implementation of the National School Feeding Programme in Gracias a Dios department.

Ninety percent of journeys to La Moskitia are made by water. This makes the operation riskier. Trips can be three times more expensive than they would be to other parts of Honduras.

In addition to its isolation, moving from one community to another in this area can take up to six hours by boat — it can take up to three days for all of the food to be delivered. "This process is supported by local authorities, teachers and parents, since the food of the National School Feeding Programme is highly appreciated in these areas where the situation of families is very difficult," says Greenwood.

You can read more here about the effects of COVID-19 on WFP's school feeding programmes, and the actions being taken to address this.

Learn more about the response of the World Food Programme to COVID-19