One Great Hour of Sharing gifts renew women’s lives and livelihoods in Panama
April 11, 2023
Paola Tognarelli’s connection to Mother Earth is sacred.
Just like the bond she now shares with the other significant women in her life.
When the pandemic was at its loneliest, Tognarelli blossomed through new, life-giving friendships nurtured around community gardens and in WhatsApp-based support groups sponsored by Women’s Meeting Space, a nonprofit organization based in Panama City, Panama.
“In quarantine, it was great to meet this group of women who, despite the situation, took time together to share their experiences and give each other feedback,” said Tognarelli.
Women’s Meeting Space is a nongovernmental organization that advocates for the rights of Panama’s women, both Indigenous and from its poorest communities. It helps the women, primarily heads of household who are unemployed, and their families grow food at home to help them overcome the challenges made worse by the pandemic, including high unemployment.
“Personally, planting helped me a lot with my daughter who has autism,” she said. “Planting was, for both of us, a therapy; and then my husband and my other daughter also joined us. This united us more as a family.”
Women’s Meeting Space — along with the Chilibre Women’s Training Centers and the Gonzalillo Community Organization, also in Panama City — receives funding through the Presbyterian Committee on the Self-Development of People (SDOP), which is in turn supported by Presbyterians’ generous gifts to One Great Hour of Sharing.
Founded in 1949, the Offering’s purpose of helping neighbors in need around the world remains constant, giving the PC(USA) a tangible way to share God’s love. One Great Hour of Sharing benefits the ministries of the Presbyterian Hunger Program, Self-Development of People and Presbyterian Disaster Assistance. Although the Offering may be taken anytime, most congregations receive it on Palm Sunday or Easter Sunday.
“I’m not surprised that when we first started working in Panama, we were finding women’s groups,” said Teresa Bidart, bilingual mission specialist for SDOP. “We started in the Dominican Republic in 2007, Belize in 2010, and now Panama in 2018. Everywhere we go, most of the organizations we reach out to are women’s organizations, which doesn’t surprise me because in all these poorer countries, children and families mostly depend on the women for everything they need to live.”
This project — designed to foster knowledge of urban production and boost the capacity of the community to overcome crises — also includes starting an experimental nursery to produce seedlings and installing a community stand. Its goal is not only to feed the growers’ families but to sell surplus food to cover the basic needs of workers.
For Tognarelli, the gardening project not only contributed to her family’s livelihood but it also “sparked creativity” in her and helped her reconnect with the strong women in her family.
“Not only did women work in the sowing, but the garden also became a family space,” said Ileana Lopez, coordinator of the project. “It seemed to improve the mental health of many participants impacted by the COVID-19 virus.”
As Tognarelli began to teach workshops on sowing through improvisational theater, she found the clouds of Covid lifting.
“My mind forgot how terrible the pandemic was, and I appreciated how important it is to be in contact with the earth,” she said. “Also, in this process, it was beautiful because I remembered my grandmother, who always told me about the benefits of medicinal herbs, which she planted and shared with her neighbors. That is what I did: planted, and then we shared.”
As women everywhere struggle to put food on their family’s tables, Lopez and the many women whose lives are being transformed by this project are grateful that the people across the PC(USA) continue to think about them.
“I thank all the women, the managers [of Women’s Meeting Space] and the Presbyterian Church for giving us this support that went beyond what I thought,” Tognarelli said. “I’m always very grateful to all of you.”
Rev. Emily Enders Odom, Associate Director of Mission Communications, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Daily Readings
Today’s Focus: One Great Hour of Sharing gifts
Let us join in prayer for:
PC(USA) Agencies’ Staff
Farsijana Adeney-Risakotta, Mission co-worker serving in Indonesia, World Mission, Presbyterian Mission Agency
Andrej Ajanovic, Attorney, Legal Services, Administrative Services Group (A Corp)
Let us pray
God, help us to die to the old and rise to the new, that we may be your faithful disciples. Amen.