Karen Pickett’s recent trip to Ecuador to work with Habitat for Humanity already brings back fond memories.“One of the bricklayers working on the project was a pastor and he started to sing in Spanish.
Pretty soon we recognized the tune as “Praise Ye the Lord” so we all started to join in—some in English, some in Spanish,” she said. “It was kind of a bonding experience for all of us.”
Raising buildings while raising their voices Pickett and the eight other volunteers from the United States — who were sponsored by Thrivent for Lutherans — helped build two houses during their two-week stay.
Pickett, from Burlingame, was part of a group of volunteers who traveled to Tosagua, Ecuador, to work with local families and other volunteers from inside Ecuador to build housing for Habitat for Humanity. Habitat has built 21 houses over the last three years in the Tosagua area that was hit hard by earthquakes in 1998.
During her stay Pickett was able to visit the home of one family whose home was destroyed by the earthquake and waiting for a Habitat house.
“They lived in a 4-foot by 20- foot building sandwiched between two other houses. We crawled through a window opening to get in and out,” Pickett said.