EMP Protocol Program

My wife Laura and I have been coming to the Dominican Republic since 2001; first as vacationers looking to escape the frigid cold of Alberta, Canada during the long winters. As the vacations came and went we soon began to develop an affinity EMP Protocol Review for the people of the D.R. We slowly ventured away from our all-inclusive resort and discovered a culture on the island fraught with problems and hardship of daily living. Often we would encounter local people who seemed to have almost nothing with which to survive. We toured small villages on foot and saw that most of the people lived in tiny shacks with tin roofs, or worse in many cases.

Often we would see throngs of children playing in the dusty streets, many of the barely clothed; some naked. "Was this normal?" we asked. Of course we fully understood that being in another country, in another culture, of a different language and socioeconomic environment that things would be different than back home. The differences though were astounding to say the least. Both Laura and I were stretched with the overwhelming level of compassion which strained to pour from our hearts on to these people. It was all we could do to refrain from going home and emptying our bank accounts to help them. Of course we also knew that this was not the answer. Still, there has to be an answer.

The following is a true story of hardship and compassion revealed to us in the Dominican Republic in May 2011. It was hot already when we stepped out of the black SUV as soon as it came to a dusty stop. At only 10:30 in the morning it had to be over 35 C, the sun was directly overhead and burned down on our uncovered heads mercilessly. As I moved around the SUV to the rear, Bill was already there lifting the hatch to reveal the boxes of food we had brought to the people of this "batey" in the Dominican Republic. A "batey" is a Spanish name for a village where migrant farm workers typically lived with their families. In this case, the batey of Ascension, near the town of Sosua in the D.R. was where over 2000 of these people lived.

The village was largely filled with Haitian migrant workers and their families, but some Dominicans also lived in the village. Migrant workers were brought into the country many years ago by the Dominican government to assist the Dominican landowners with sugar crop cultivation. Crops of sugar cane were grown and harvested each year. The workers were supposed to travel back and forth from Haiti to the D.R. each year but as time went by it was easier for them to just stay and live in the government provided housing in the 1100 batey's around the island.

https://worldhealthreviews.com/emp-protocol-review

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