Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras
Over twenty-five years ago two Americans, Dr. Diana Frade and her husband, Episcopalian Bishop Leo Frade, founded Our Little Roses Home for Girls in San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Until then abandoned girls were often given to prisoners since no such homes existed. Now Our Little Roses has some 60 rescued or orphaned girls in a city once considered the “murder capital of the world.” Poverty and violence—especially in the past 25 years attributed to deported Los Angeles–based gangs—has affected the lives of all in the poorest Spanish-speaking country of the hemisphere. Unaccompanied youth from Honduras were among the 100,000 refugees, which also included children and youth from El Salvador and Guatemala, arriving to the United States between 2013 and 2015. American poet and Episcopalian priest Spencer Reece spent two years at Our Little Roses teaching poetry to girls who have lost family due to poverty, violence, and disasters like Hurricane Mitch that struck Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala in 1998, resulting in 22,000 people dead or missing, 2.7 million homeless, and $6 billion in damages.
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Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras
Over twenty-five years ago two Americans, Dr. Diana Frade and her husband, Episcopalian Bishop Leo Frade, founded Our Little Roses Home for Girls in San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Until then abandoned girls were often given to prisoners since no such homes existed. Now Our Little Roses has some 60 rescued or orphaned girls in a city once considered the “murder capital of the world.” Poverty and violence—especially in the past 25 years attributed to deported Los Angeles–based gangs—has affected the lives of all in the poorest Spanish-speaking country of the hemisphere. Unaccompanied youth from Honduras were among the 100,000 refugees, which also included children and youth from El Salvador and Guatemala, arriving to the United States between 2013 and 2015. American poet and Episcopalian priest Spencer Reece spent two years at Our Little Roses teaching poetry to girls who have lost family due to poverty, violence, and disasters like Hurricane Mitch that struck Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala in 1998, resulting in 22,000 people dead or missing, 2.7 million homeless, and $6 billion in damages.
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Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras

Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras

Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras

Counting Time Like People Count Stars: Poems by the Girls of Our Little Roses, San Pedro Sula, Honduras

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Overview

Over twenty-five years ago two Americans, Dr. Diana Frade and her husband, Episcopalian Bishop Leo Frade, founded Our Little Roses Home for Girls in San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Until then abandoned girls were often given to prisoners since no such homes existed. Now Our Little Roses has some 60 rescued or orphaned girls in a city once considered the “murder capital of the world.” Poverty and violence—especially in the past 25 years attributed to deported Los Angeles–based gangs—has affected the lives of all in the poorest Spanish-speaking country of the hemisphere. Unaccompanied youth from Honduras were among the 100,000 refugees, which also included children and youth from El Salvador and Guatemala, arriving to the United States between 2013 and 2015. American poet and Episcopalian priest Spencer Reece spent two years at Our Little Roses teaching poetry to girls who have lost family due to poverty, violence, and disasters like Hurricane Mitch that struck Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala in 1998, resulting in 22,000 people dead or missing, 2.7 million homeless, and $6 billion in damages.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781882688555
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Publication date: 10/15/2017
Pages: 120
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.70(h) x 0.40(d)
Age Range: 3 Months to 18 Years

About the Author

SPENCER REECE is the author of The Clerk’s Tale and The Road to Emmaus. He is the national secretary for the Spanish Episcopal Church, Iglesia Española Reformada Episcopal, and lives in Madrid, Spain.

Table of Contents

Foreword We are Alive! by Marie Howe 11

Introduction A Confession by Spencer Reece 13

Poems

Little Rose/Rosita 47

Ancestors/Los antepasados 50

I was Six Years Old/Tenia seis afios 53

Slow Motion/A camara lenta 57

To My Books/Por mis libros 60

The Shepherd/El pastor 63

Invisible for All My Life/Invisible toda mi vida 67

My Honduras/Mi Honduras 70

Water fall/ Cas cada 73

I am an Ant/Soy una hormiga 76

Some Lists/Algunas listas 79

I will be a Happy Girl/Sere una ninafeliz 82

Metaphor/Me tdfora 85

A Honduran Story/Una historia hondureña 88

Little Red Hot lAps/Caperucita de. labios pintados de rojo 91

Beauty & the Beast/La bella y la bestia 94

The Walls/Los muros 97

A Prayer for ILda/t/na oratión para Ilda 100

Counting/Contando 103

Soon/Pronto 106

For All to See/Para que todos lo vean 111

Rose/Rosa 114

Postscript A Hidden History by Luis J. Rodriguez 117

Afterword Why Poetry? by Richard Blanco 127

Acknowledgments 129

Biographies 131

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