(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Lauren Rose working on one of the corner foundations for the new school during the groundbreak week for the school in Bambu 2, Nicaragua, February 2025.)
What does it mean to join Team Dayā for a school building project in an impoverished area of the world? This was a question I asked myself before my first school build in March 2024 (read Lauren Rose: An Awakening in Nepal’s Western Terai).
As I prepared for my second build less than one year later, I thought I knew exactly what to expect. The general structure of our days would be the same, we’d stay with a host family in the community and live as the locals do and the framework for building the school would be identical. While those elements remained the same, what I didn’t anticipate was having an entirely new experience that, once again, changed the way I view the world and also profoundly changed me as an individual.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Lauren Rose (white shirt, bottom left) during the very muddy groundbreak week for the school in Bambu 2, Nicaragua, February 2025.)
The Power of Community
The people you surround yourself with are your tribe, and the effort you put into your relationships is reflected back. The people of Bambu 2 are resilient, hardworking, and deeply committed to their community’s well-being.
One moment that stands out from this experience perfectly illustrates this. Bambu 2 is a small, remote village that sits at the perimeter of Bosawás Biosphere Reserve, the second largest rainforest in the Western Hemisphere (the park is a UNESCO biosphere reserve, and about 15% of the country’s land area).
The community sustains itself through exports, primarily its coffee crop. The homes are very spread out so the community members can maintain their land. Walking from my host’s home to the school build site took 30 minutes, up and down hills that were about eight inches deep in thick mud and on 30% inclines. Yet, each morning before the sunrise, a man who had no children or grandchildren who would attend the future school still made a grueling hour-long trek to help build it. He did so because he saw the immense value this school would bring to future generations.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā members Brianna Rozzi, Jay Sears, David Danziger and Lauren Rose during the groundbreak week for the school in Bambu 2, Nicaragua, February 2025.)
Tenacity
This school build was the first outside project this community had been granted. For 20 years, they petitioned the local government for support to build a new school. The closest town is an hour away through what can be a very treacherous journey, crossing over a river in 16 places, in approximately 20 inches of water in the dry season (in the rainy season the roads can be impassable). The fact that community leaders never gave up, continuing to fight for two decades, is nothing short of incredible.
Listen to Team Dayā member Lauren Rose explain why Building Change is important:
Impact.
The impact one person can have on an underserved community is so much greater than you can imagine. With $40,000, Team Dayā can fund the construction of an entire school – complete with local engineers, all of the structural materials, supplies like concrete, metal for rebar, etc.
It is a place where students are sheltered from harsh weather conditions and are safe to learn and continue their education with a curriculum customized for them. As a member of the ad tech community, I’m so fortunate to work alongside some of the best and brightest striving to make the web a better place. Spreading awareness of Team Dayā’s mission is a privilege, and if nothing else, this experience has reinforced just how powerful both financial contributions and personal effort can be.
I’m incredibly grateful to Jay and my fellow Team Dayā members who joined me in Nicaragua, Brianna Rozzi and David Danziger. I’m equally grateful to have met the community members in Bambu #2 in Nicaragua. This experience has left me energized as ever to bring my learnings back and apply them to my life going forward – spreading awareness, securing donations, and helping fund future schools to build a brighter future for communities in need.
(PHOTO: Students of Bambu 2, Nicaragua in front of their existing school. Team Dayā funded a collaboration with the community and other stakeholders to build a new school that will be enjoyed by these students. Groundbreaking for the new school took place in February 2025.)
If you have a combination of fundraising chops, an adventurous spirit and the belief each of us has the capacity to be Building Change, get in touch with us and have a conversation.
Team Dayā 2025 Plans
We are now actively recruiting members for our 2025 groundbreakings. These builds represent our second schools in Nicaragua and Malawi and our third school in Nepal.
Our Team Dayā 2025 school building dates:
Nicaragua, Central America [groundbreaking completed] Sunday, February 9, 2025 – Saturday, February 15, 2025
Malawi, East Africa Sunday, June 22, 2025 – Saturday, June 28, 2025
Nepal, South Asia Sunday October 26th, 2025 – Sunday, November 2nd, 2025
There is nothing greater than to take a risk, to embark on adventure, and to find unexpected surprises along the way. In many respects, it is a reward often greater than the expected outcome. In this case, uncovering truths with first hand knowledge, some might consider primary research, of the people of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta Guatemala was equal to or greater than the expected outcome of building them a new primary school. To raise money and build them a school was the visible part of the iceberg above the water line. To understand who they are, see how they live, and learn about their desires is the far greater substance of the iceberg below the water line that you often don’t get to experience.
We all hear and some of us feel the migration and immigration challenges the U.S. faces. And even on a trek to Central America to build a school with Team Dayā, the relevance of U.S. immigration is an association at best in my consciousness to start. Living among the people of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, who speak the Mayan language Qʼeqchi, it becomes very real when the realization of their inadequate infrastructure is in stark contrast to the basic human amenities nearly all Americans enjoy.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Scott Cunningham signing the covenant agreement for the school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)(PHOTO: The many thumbprints on the covenant agreement indicate a high rate of illiteracy. The new school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala will begin to change this. December 2024.)
Language. The people of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta speak Q’eqchi (pronounced Quay-Chee). This is a Mayan language common in the north central part of Guatemala and parts of southern Belize and Mexico. Many speak some Spanish as well, especially males. However, upon the covenant signing at the beginning of the week when all community adults agree to the school covenants, such as gender equality, many signed with their fingerprints thereby making their mark indicating the low literacy level of the community.
Water. There is zero potable water supply or infrastructure. Living with the people of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, you appreciate their resourcefulness. They manage to construct crude gutter systems from their roofs to capture as much rain water as possible and fill up large storage basins, buckets, and even drinking glasses. If it can hold water, they use it. They use this water for everything from drinking to bathing to washing mud off boots. This was the rainy season, or the end of it, and mud was everywhere. Get used to it, they did. There is a stream nearby which is used in the non-rainy season while some women are seen making the trek in the day as well.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Scott Cunningham working on a footing for the school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)(PHOTO: A new school rising. After just a few days of collaborative work with the community, the outlines of new Team Dayā school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala can be seen. December 2024.)(PHOTO: Team Dayā members Jay Sears, Scott Cunningham and Maureen Cunningham during the groundbreak week for the school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala, December 2024.)
Sanitation. There is no sanitation or plumbing infrastructure. All families have some form of latrine, though in the evenings, any bush tends to provide cover for boys and girls rooms to get business done. In one situation, we were asked to do a large dig next to the new school for the school latrine. We spent half a day per the site supervisor digging the new latrine area when a village elder stopped us. He informed us that any deeper we were about to come in contact with an old latrine buried years earlier. Ok, mental note one, always find the village elder or the equivalent of the HOA president to learn where the previous crappers have been buried. We moved our dig 7-8 feet away. Sanitation in this part of the world is a step above back country camping, every day and night, with leave no trace behind protocol.
(PHOTO: Local community members in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala demonstrate true farm to table – how corn is harvested, processed and made into tortillas. All the work is done by hand. December 2024.)
Food. Corn is the largest owned and operated crop from their land. Each family by all accounts, is a farmer. Chickens roam their property as does the rooster who served as our daily alarm. They harvest their own land and many have animals as would any small farm. Corn, coffee, beans, and some spices are the primary crops in this region of Guatemala. What they don’t have, they trade for. Their nutrition seems well, including the children. Cultivating their land is only limited by size and lack of harvesting equipment so as to say, they really have giant gardens (a few acres) which limits their income as most food is stored, consumed or traded.
Cooking here is log fire based and indoors. While these homes are all “ventilated” based on their poor quality and large gaps, the respiratory issues from inhaling this much smoke was not lost. All of our clothing and the entire valley for that matter, has the same fire-based smell as the smoke is contained either in the home or cloud cover.
One evening, at about 10 PM, rifle shots rang out across the valley. This was a bit surprising, but we were told the next morning the locals were trying to save the animals from a predator. We are in the land of large cats, panthers, jaguars, etc. A day later, we were told by our host family that no, this was a deer hunt. The community members hunt at night as the deer come out then to feed on their crops and they trade the deer skin. This made much more sense. Mental note two, make sure to wear a headlamp or bring a flashlight when finding that bush to go number 1 at night, you do not want to be confused for a deer.
Telecommunications. Before our trip, we were told not to expect mobile phone signals or electricity. Bring battery backup and make sure all family know the contact info which was straightforward in case someone needed to get a hold of us. However, the valley had 3G and in some cases 4G LTE. This was amazing. Not because we could WhatsApp back to family, share photos, or occasionally check email, but because the people of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta had phones on one of the country’s telecom networks, Tigo. There are parts of the Rocky Mountain West in the United States that are dark, but here, what seemed as the most remote place in Central America, we could remind our kids to feed the dog and water the christmas tree (lucky them).
As much as they lacked everything else up to this point, phone usage, notably smart phone usage, was common. In fact, within a day of us arriving, one of the daughter-in-laws of our host family video called the father of her daughter. He was in Los Angeles (more on this later). She wanted us to be introduced, plus he spoke fluent Spanish (many in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta speak Spanish) as does Dr. Maureen Cunningham. He thanked us for being there and building the school. We asked what he did. He was working at a “manufacturing plant” around Los Angeles whose name was difficult to understand (maybe intentionally).
And all the while these people communicated globally, I was curious to where they get their power and what other forms of information they received.
Electrical. I can only assume (as I never asked) that the reason many had some form of solar grid with battery storage at the home was for mobile communication. To our surprise, we found rooms with a light and some of the more developed homes had electrical outlets. Note: no large appliances ran on any of this, but it was a step above camping even if a dirt floor was common. Our room had a single, low powered light that could be turned on connecting two wires that originated from the solar battery pack. Some families offered to charge our phones which we happily accepted to save our own mobile power packs.
But make no mistake, the electrical capability, while extremely limited, was used to power mobile devices.
Communication. The multiple translations proved difficult for interpersonal discussion. However, we gathered in gender specific discussions with the community. Dr. Maureen Cunningham met with about 15 women, and us guys met with about 15 men. This proved very enlightening.
In this discussion, the men asked as many questions of us as we asked of them. This dialogue really started to shape the knowledge of the ice berg below the water for me. We touched on life, and lifestyle including marriage, information sources, religion, and labor choices.
The community of Santo Tomas primarily uses radio and Facebook to gather their information. There was no comprehension of synthesis of what may be real or not. This weighed on me given the disinformation systems even in the developed world. However, most of the younger generation used Instagram and Tik Tok was growing in usage.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā members Jay Sears and Scott Cunningham spent an afternoon speaking with these men in the community of Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)
We found that arranged marriage is really no longer a thing, most couples meet through social gatherings now and communicate on social media. It is important to note, many females first conceive at 15 or 16 and the men are in their early 20’s when they marry per our discussion with the males. (Note: Maureen confirmed the women do not practice any form of birth control).
Given the lack of males in the community compared to females, we asked these men why they hadn’t migrated. They were scared. They cited a few men who migrated to larger plantations in Guatemala and they had not returned, losing their life at the plantation. The wages to these men were not worth the risk. While I do not know what the equivalent of OSHA is in Guatemala, I suspect labor practices are not well regulated. As for the trip to the United States, the risk was not worth the reward with little idea of when they could return safely and then make it back to the U.S. Maureen and I confirmed, the son of our host hadn’t been home in 10 months while living in Los Angeles. Because if they left the United States, there was no guarantee they could return to the wages they left behind in the United States. While in the community, or on the way in, and on the drive out, it was called to my attention a few times regarding a few homes being built. It was always communicated with a preceding statement, “that family is in the U.S”. How did they know? The money was the only thing driving them to build that home, to take the chance of migration, knowing their fortunes, and in some cases their lives, were anchored in the outcome of migration even if living in fear of death, or living illegally, or both.
(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Scott Cunningham at Dr. Maureen Cunningham at home in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)(PHOTO: Team Dayā member Scott Cunningham and Dr. Maureen Cunningham playing a competitive game of Uno at the neighbor’s house in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)(PHOTO: Team Dayā members Jay Sears, Dr. Maureen Cunningham and Scott Cunningham with just a few of the future students who will enjoy the new Team Dayā school in Aldea Santo Tomas Xacalta, Guatemala. December 2024.)
I asked the men in front of me, what is it they hoped for? And right there, through two translations, the answer grounded me with all nodding in unison with the man who responded. We want our children to have a life better than we had. In the most simplistic of answers, they wanted what I wanted. The only way I could respond was that “our values are the same” with a smile. I wanted my kids to have it better than me (and I had it good, make no mistake). In that response however, I remembered why I was there, and finished by saying, I wanted their kids to have it better too by giving them a school. I locked eyes with many of them and even if we couldn’t speak the same language, we were communicating through our shared hopes even if our experiences and means were different.
They just did not have the resources to be successful.
Before we departed the end of the week gathering, we left a few gifts. A soccer ball, games, and a notebook. I told the two hundred or so community members that one page was for every girl there and was theirs to write about their hopes and dreams. In order to do that of course, they must learn to read and write. That was my challenge to them. Through our corporate partners, industry friends and family, Maureen and I raised half the money for this school. In a two room school, we can say there is a classroom we built with our names on it.
However, building a school was not all that was built. When saying goodbye to the host family and kids, they watched as we packed. They tried to gift me a squash. I walked away knowing that not only did this school serve as a foundation to improve the education from roughly a first grade to sixth grade level, they gifted me a chance to build a connection that truly served as a foundation for building change.
If you have a combination of fundraising chops, an adventurous spirit and the belief each of us has the capacity to be Building Change, get in touch with us and have a conversation.
Team Dayā 2025 Plans
We are now actively recruiting members for our 2025 groundbreakings. These builds represent our second schools in Nicaragua and Malawi and our third school in Nepal.
Our Team Dayā 2025 school building dates:
Nicaragua, Central America Sunday, February 9, 2025 – Saturday, February 15, 2025
Malawi, East Africa Sunday, June 22, 2025 – Saturday, June 28, 2025
Nepal, South Asia Sunday October 26th, 2025 – Sunday, November 2nd, 2025
(PHOTO: On July 19, 2024, Team Dayā member Mauricio O’Connell visited the Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro along with his mother Liseth O’Connell, father Mauricio O’Connell and daughter Isabella O’Connell.)
On July 19th, 2024 my daughter, parents, and I embarked on a journey that filled our hearts with joy, hope, and happiness. We visited the the Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro, that your generous contributions helped to build in the spring of 2023. Just one year later, it has grown tremendously, now boasting two teachers and 40 students across grades 1-6.
The transformation is incredible. The old shelter made of boards and sheet metal with a dirt floor has been replaced by a safe, new building with a proper floor. It’s a testament to the power of community and the dedication of Team Dayā, and its local partner in Guatemala, buildOn.
Since starting their work in 2018, Team Dayā has built six schools in developing countries around the world. The group will fund its second school in Guatemala (and seventh overall) this December. I’m humbled and proud that your donations helped make this particular school a reality. The impact is clear: creating educational opportunities for countless children.
I am deeply grateful that I was able to secure the funds to fully fund this school. Witnessing the smiles on the children’s faces and hearing the kind words of the lead teacher affirmed the importance of our efforts. He shared that the closest school before this one was a 40-minute walk up the mountain, highlighting the significance of providing education in this remote area (Caserillo Sector Los Castros, Departamento del Quiche).
(PHOTO: On July 19, 2024, Team Dayā member Mauricio O’Connell visited the Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro along with his mother Liseth O’Connell, father Mauricio O’Connell and daughter Isabella O’Connell.)
The children’s laughter echoed through the new classrooms, their eyes sparkling with the promise of a brighter future. Parents expressed their gratitude, sharing stories of how the school had transformed their children’s lives, instilling in them a love for learning and a belief in their own potential.
Inspired by this experience, I am already committed to raising funds for a second school, which will break ground in December 2024 when Team Dayā, led by ad tech veteran Jay Sears, will be in the country. It’s a small step, but one that will undoubtedly have a lasting impact on the lives of many children.
(PHOTO: On July 19, 2024, Team Dayā member Mauricio O’Connell visited the Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro along with his mother Liseth O’Connell, father Mauricio O’Connell and daughter Isabella O’Connell.)(PHOTO: On July 19, 2024, Team Dayā member Mauricio O’Connell visited the Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro along with his mother Liseth O’Connell, father Mauricio O’Connell and daughter Isabella O’Connell.)(PHOTO: The completed Team Dayā school in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro.)(PHOTO: The classroom in the Guatemalan community of Caserío Sector Los Castro before the completed Team Dayā school – it had dirt floors and walls of wooden boards.)
You can make a tax-deductible donation here to help Team Dayā build more schools and empower more children through education.
Any amount helps, but here are some examples of what your gift can provide:
$100: Five shovels for the foundation
$250: All the nails, nuts, and bolts for the roof
$500: An in-country mason for the entire construction
$1,000: Paint for the school
$40,000: A full school!
Together, we can build a brighter future for Guatemala.
Thank you for being a part of this journey. Your support has made a real difference in the lives of these children, their families, and the entire community. It’s a reminder that together, we can build a brighter future for generations to come.
If you have a combination of fundraising chops, an adventurous spirit and the belief each of us has the capacity to be Building Change, get in touch with us and have a conversation.
Team Dayā 2024 Plans
In 2024, we plan to build schools in Nepal (March, completed), Senegal (June 2024, completed) and Guatemala (December 2024, limited availability). These ground breakings will be our second school in each of these countries.
The exact start dates are:
Sunday, March 17, 2024 – Nepal (arrive Kathmandu) [groundbreaking completed]
Sunday, June 23, 2024 – Senegal (arrive Dakar) [groundbreaking completed]