Children of The Fourth World Documentary Video Production © Dreamtime Entertainment, Florida

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[Music] it's said that the spirit of the Mayan ancestors haunt these hills it was from the rich soil of the Mayans of the Guatemala of today emerged [Music] a proud people and a proud country [Music] it is a country of stark contrasts the richest of all the Central American countries in terms of natural resources but 85% of the population lives in poverty 2% of the country owns 80% of the land but those figures do little to put a face on those who suffer here the most the Guatemalan children here in Guatemala City there are more than 5000 children living in the streets and the majority of them are either thieves prostitutes or glue sniffers they themselves are the survivors of a civil war that's gone on for more than 40 years at the cost of thousands of lives and yet even they would be considered privileged when you compare them to the ones living in the fourth world [Music] [Music] [Music] smoke clouds of the sky and vultures fill the air as a repulsive stench permeates the area surrounding the Guatemala City dump while the dumps residents go about the daily routine of scavenging to survive an American woman goes about her chosen work of trying to make a difference here people make them their houses out of cardboard or of whatever place tick bags or whatever but they're usually pushed away and they have to build again in another place because the government comes in and plows through here know this plow through their homes if they need to there's a stove on the left that they build from whatever they find there on the dump can imagine how sterile that is Carrie Engel left her hometown of Rockville Maryland in 1987 and set out on her own to fulfill a spiritual mission this is her story a story documented by filmmaker John before presidential election first brought him to Guatemala in 1989 but soon after meeting Kerry he switched his focus and spent the next nine years documenting her life and those around her what follows is the end result of that effort the reason that more than 1,000 children live in the Guatemala city dump can be blamed in part on the country's civil war this war has claimed over 100,000 wives and left many children orphans with no skills and no place else to go over half of Guatemala's population of 10 million people live in Guatemala City most are Indian children who have come from the exterior or countryside hoping to find work more often than not they are disappointed and soon turn to whatever survival tactics work shoeshines prostitution begging or petty theft it's often not as much a choice as a necessity to think Italian to survive 15 nothing I have seen or read about has prepared me for the surreal quality of this environment this 10-acre hellhole of refuse and humanity functioning as a kind of microcosm its own little world it is inconceivable to me that four generations of human beings have lived what they might consider a predictable everyday life in this horrific place they do the glue to to to get away the hunger pains that they have or a distant trying to get out of reality I know families that have been born there raised there they've married there they have their own kids there and it's their life you know and it's just been kind of a mundane thing all the time that they don't see any hope of getting getting a better situation and getting on there to give them hope carrie has devoted her life to the children of the fourth world in a place that's without running water full of disease and notoriously dangerous it can be violent you know you really you really have to pray hard when you go down there you have people there that rob and steal and they steal from the other homes they burn down their two homes they've had machete killings and machete fights and some of the kids that told me I always found my uncle down there he was buried under the trash and they killed him the other night you know I'm gonna talk about all the blood they don't talk about skinned knees or cut fingers that cut talk about the dead people you know and all the blood that they see down there [Music] distant situations in which they live it's it's it's awesome you know where the kids fight with the vultures for the food it's like a whole nother world a lot of people call this the fourth world because they all have their own way of living their own way of working and it's just a lot different than than in the outside world you can see right now there they're just trying to get the best pickings that they can some people have different things that they pick up they either get metal or plastic bags or plastic cartons and if you go into someone else's territory you can be trouble for you for you because if they get you start picking out metal when it's not your territory they'll go get on your case [Music] the eerie images the cries from the children's hunger and the faces of despair they all tell a story of life in the fourth world but amongst all this filth and darkness is a light that shines on the people of the fourth world it's called me refugio my refuge skills are learned meals are shared and smiles are plentiful and at this refuge the children are able to escape the refuse of the dump and receive an education that gives hope for a better tomorrow in 1987 Kari Engan started miracle year a place where the children of the dump could go and receive nourishment for the mind body and more importantly to carry the soul she began her mission work in Mexico working with orphans while she was still in high school Kari says it was divine inspiration that brought her here to Guatemala when I was younger I would watch the TV and I'd see how those those announcements you know for like the hungry and all the starving children in the world and I really had a desire to want to help them it was more of a desire to help the poor not just a hungry that for children that desire to help soon put her behind the wheel of a van headed to Guatemala once there she sought advice from a local pastor the pastor told me well have you ever seen the dump have you ever seen the Guatemalan dump and I said the Guatemalan dump I've never even heard of it you know and and he said what you haven't seen anything yet if you've seen all these other perceptions you haven't seen anything until you've seen the dump so we went down there and when I saw the dumb boat was just like a piece you know such a piece that I got from being I said this is it you know he says we'll go for it this is what God's we need to do go for it this is Kerry's new home these are her neighbors but this is the reason she came before opening the school Kerry spent an entire year in the dump she did so to gain the trust of the people in the process she received a firsthand education on their problems and way of life we're using they're using the cardboard for sure they're probably gonna use it for the house help reinforce their house and prepare it for the rainy season that's coming up rainy season is really rough because all this becomes mud and slush and and you just sink a lot in the mud but I glue-sniffer up there he's getting out his glue get his fix hi behind that wall it's talking to himself and but whatever they're hallucinating you know you never know what they're hallucinating so he started he threw a bottle at us did you see the bottle he screwed us then he hid it right behind the wall took out his blue thing we spoke with a few of the dumps residents and while the circumstances that put them here varied they all shared a desire for a better life what if they don't care to see up there why don't you want to leave yeah okay please because my family lives here and this is where we've always lived Familia no Chieti yeah so you do want to leave well yes certainly they say oh yeah well I want to leave one day that's it yeah to where wherever I can go [Music] [Music] this little boy my right is on Gustavo and he's been with me in the school for the two years that I've had to school he's been orphaned here on the dump and a family took him in I'd really like to come and see him be at the home he's really underweight he's 12 years old and he's very melon nutrition and has a has a problem in his learning abilities but we're just praying that he's gonna become better and become what God wants him to become as a king is born to the throne so are the children born to the dump their world is a birthright they never asked for they are the dumps most tragic victims but at seven thirty each morning those victims now have hope because that's when their school day begins at me refugee [Music] [Applause] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] don't start with 10 12 year olds they don't even know how to read and write hold a pencil how to color well it's been such a different atmosphere for them that they've just gotten Willard that adjusted rapidly to the to the system here at the school and they love it it's a joyful place for them it's a change of a change of pace for them they're not always running through the dump all day but at least they get a new experience you know with it with the materials that we dip and all the colors we try to make everything colorful so they do get out of the black and smoke and all the things that depressing you know down the dump the children have such needs emotionally and physically they've been either abused physically or sexually or emotionally that it says trauma traumatize them and it's caused them trouble and their studies also so our main emphasis not as just not as in the studying or in the eating my main emphasis is having to know the Lord so that the Lord can hear the number of their wounds that they've had in their life [Music] at the end of the first year I got all the kids together you know and I was really proud of them they had come a long way for kids who had never had studied before you know they were learning colors they learn how to write they're learning how to write their name they really even some of them learned how to read in their first year and it was just a blessing to see how much they progress the end of the first school year brought Carey the feeling of success the only complaint she heard from her children was that they had to leave for summer break you know I'm really proud of you guys you guys have come a long way you've learned how to read and write some of them are going to first grade some are going to second grade and you just come a long way for some of the children that attend me were fooled you it's more than just a school it's become home I've had nine kids that have been abandoned to me here at the school three of the brothers were drug addicts they were glue sniffers and they would just come hi they'd be left on the street their mother would just abandon them completely she'd go off with other men and drink herself and get into drugs herself and the boys would be on the street that beg for bread and they'd they just kind of dirty and filthy even the other kids would reject him because they were even dirtier than the rest of it when we first visited Carly in early 1990 mirror fool you had a total enrollment of about 50 children [Applause] one year later the school has grown over to 100 students with two locations both close to the dump but the year was not without sadness the Guatemalan government thought it was been appropriate for a single American woman to care for the nine children who made me with Julio their full-time home the government demanded the children be sent to foster homes within three months the children had run away from the foster homes and were back in the dump we were there when one of the children Juan Carlos came back to the school to visit with Carrie this is one of the boys that I used to have at the house one of the nine kids that ran away when he knew that the court system was going to take him away Carlos he's 13 years old his brothers make him sniff glue just to keep him on the same level as their but he really doesn't want to be there he doesn't want to sniff glue and he never wanted to leave the house and when I told the courts that he was back in a dump sniffing glue and was dirty and wasn't eating properly they just they just said that they were glad that he wasn't with me anymore he's been real hesitant to come back because he's afraid that they're gonna take him away and the court system apologized for what they have done but it was it's it's really too late for me to take the kids in without damaging them emotionally again and today he came to visit me and he's telling me right now that a little girl died in the dump this is a wall of sorrow it contains the remains of infants and preschool children but for those children who died in the dump there'll be no marker it's as if they never existed [Music] of the nine children whom the government removed from carries care only one was able to escape the dumps deadly grip car II was able to convince the government to place Gustavo Rivera in the care of her friend Robert Rose the boy who was abandoned in the dump was given a chance to succeed and he made the most of it [Music] all the children at Mira fuya have special needs but Rafael Castellanos are unique he was born without the use of his left arm that's been hesitant for him to be able to function because sometimes in the classroom other kids can do other things that he's not able to do and he'll just sit there and he won't respond and then how calm you know trying to nurture him and say okay you can do this I'll do it a different way but to help him to feel comfortable when word of Rafael's condition reached dr. John Kagan one of the many grassroots supporters Kerry has in the United States he decided to do what he could to help together with prosthetic specialists Steve Freese they flew to Guatemala from Florida to see if they could make a difference in Rafael's life you know I mean that's smaller than it was a parent but what Rafael needed was a body powered prosthesis which in effect serves as an artificial hand we're gonna measure this your arm so you can make a little hand for you okay all right three and a quarter inches in circumference okay hold your hold your hand out like this we'll be able to fit this little boy with a prosthesis that will enable him to function more independently in his in his classroom and his life out here with his family and in the dump will provide him with an additional level of dexterity we'll need to make the prosthesis very very durable and we'll need to accommodate his growth so that he'll be able to use this for a number of years hopefully in the future let's have you sit up here for me just for a second good there you go muy bien this'll work this'll work fantastic when the artificial arm was finally completed and the moment of truth had arrived it was apparent that the hard work had paid off yeah tighten up after a few minutes of instruction Rafael was performing practical functions with his eye for the very first time there you go give me a hug here a guy that he did real good his life in the dump will be for the most part unchanged but with a little help from two people who showed some concern his future seems a lot brighter the darkness of the dump is illuminated by the faith of a woman a woman determined to make a future for the dumps children [Music] Mira fugu represents hope faith and love against all odds the school is a place that I wouldn't mind have grown up in myself that's that's how comfortable I feel here at the school the kids are well cared for they're supervised they're clean again they're being presented with an opportunity to to break out of what might be a very miserable life for them you know I've gone on to being Tata the basics and fundamentals of mathematics and grammar and and skills working skills and again it's all the product of one woman's faith boy oh boy you realize first of all how fortunate you are to live really have the opportunity yeah family house and you realize that you can do something for other people and that the things that you do can be worthwhile and you don't have to worry how small those things might be because in some people's eyes even the small things that you do are great when the school first opened its doors supplies were scarce but the resources that carry needed to keep things going came from where they always had in the past her faith people always ask me what religion I am but I really don't believe in a religion I believe I believe that we can all know God I think look within ourselves and then it's a relationship a religion puts you in a box whereas a relationship draws you closer to God well as I said before you know we live by faith I go to a church here but we're not under the church you know the church said and sent me on it's just a mission that God has given us to given me to start the funds are sent going to my to my home address where they're sent back to me directly and it's user that way than sending them directly here to Guatemala because of the mail system they know who's an American who's not by the address and everything and it's just safer to be sent to the States from there just our major needs are a lot of Prayer we need a lot of Prayer too to keep us functioning there's a lot of spiritual battles that we have it really just affects us here we need a lot of personnel that are dedicated to work for these type of children to understand the needs that they have and hey love and compassion it's not it's not this teaching of class you know it's more of being able to give to the child completely yeah oh come what stock yen dr. John Kagan and Steve fries returned to Guatemala to check on the progress of their patient Rafael he's become more friendly he's not opening he relates more to the other kids he doesn't shy away as he used to do he's even talked more fantastic they're pleased to hear about the progress Rafael has made still Rafael's mother has other concerns she said she's really concerned because he's just he's very rebellious and he doesn't he doesn't listen to her and even though he has the arm and we've done so much for you've done so much for him she said that um she's very concerned for his feet he's now he's older soon there's another concern that threatens Rafael and all the dumps residents well right now there's a real concern about the cholera coming to LA tomorrow and there's been a lot of prevention about it and a lot of talks in the schools and in the areas and we've had a lot of talks with the parents and trying to get them prepared and that's a real concern because we're just praying that it won't hit us especially the people in the dump because they would be more susceptible to it than anybody else the concerns about cholera are soon justified it's very sick needs to go to the hospital now so we need some help getting him out of here when we came in today one of the little children came up and said that his brother was dying and so we went into the house and sure enough right I mean I'm telling you he doesn't have a call brother was in shock [Music] so we picked him up and carried him to the local hospital and I helped out I'm getting some lines and IV started and turns out that he has cholera but he's probably going to make the cholera epidemic is no longer a threat and maximilien de la Roca is back to his daily routine of working in the dump although he remembers very little of what happened to him he has a few words for dr. Kagen see you at school mucho kiss and that's what I did maybe I'm right he says he appreciates him a lot because if he wouldn't help him he would have died they're hiding hey I see you John before continues to file stories about carries works on a television station in Fort Myers Florida the air in the fourth world is thick and heavy tonight from this Guatemala City dump I'll tell you how soon after other reporters from his home state follow their only hope lies in the hearts of caring people people such as our union they begin filing stories about an amazing American who saves kids from a place called the Fourth World our top story tonight an outpouring of community support and prayers following our special report on the 4th world our Lobby packed with shoes and clothes and tools to help the people who call the Guatemalan city dump home the reports of Kerry's mission which air in the United States draw an enormous response from television viewers donations are packed in boxes and it takes a cargo plane to deliver all that is nobility the plane touches down in Guatemala several tons of supplies well when they first home in a telephone that it was a couple of tons of stuff I'd they asked me if I was sitting down and I said I I wasn't this way better sit down they said we have a couple tons of stuff not just a couple boxes good times I just was like I can't believe it you know I mean and I thought of just Fort Myers compared to all the states and to think that just that one place has just been touched so much and I thank God for that I think the people that have that have given from their hearts and from their homes to share what these children haven't had the blessing [Music] to me it's guys listen it just shows that that God has just touched more hearts to show about the school and to be able to share with more people about what's going on it's just a time of his for me it's an encouraging time to finish up the old year bringing the new with refreshment the joy to bring more to these children than we've ever thought we could do [Music] a lot of people are questioning because our funds are going down we were losing staff we weren't getting the strength that we needed to be able to keep this school running and last year we almost had to close the school and a lot of people said well if you don't know the funds are you gonna have to close and I said no I won't close until God tells me to close through just this it just shows me that God still wants me to keep going you know keep on going until he says stop nothing said stop yet so [Music] amazingly the children with so little have spirits that's sore they pay back the generosity with smiles to the well-wishers they'll probably never meet I really believe that that the Lord is going on is blessing this this school and is allowing it to grow and I believe that even though he may not keep this building only the Lord knows what's gonna happen next year is the end of the contract but God is going to provide a place for our own you know we can just construct we can have it say this is our place this will be for the people I really believe the Lord will give us in the future a piece of land big enough to construct in the community center well we can have the trade school and the school line and at the same time where the parents can come and learn but they can also work so that they want they don't worry about being being said they won't have to worry about any needs but they can learn to be able to progress and to become somebody in the community and not just an outcast [Music] seven years after opening the doors of Mira Fujio the unthinkable occurs the owners of the school building have decided to sell the building and overnight the signs of hope are silenced everything that Kerry has worked so hard for as vanished and the children are back in the dumps sniffing glue to once again numb the pain I love them so much you know and I just I just want to see them be okay you know they become a part of you they become as if they're your own the school has been closed for an entire year Kerry searches for a new home for the school and runs down dozens of leads that all turn into dead ends another team of American journalists do what they can to help find a piece of land that would be appropriate they arrange meetings with the United States ambassadors office in Washington and while everyone is sympathetic no one really does anything that makes a difference all seems lost until Paul Bush a businessman from the United States hears about carries needs and decides to help he gives her the money she needs to put a deposit on her own piece of property in San Pedro soon others also contribute to the cause of purchasing 12 acres of greenery located a 30 minute drive from the dump the property is ideal to bring the children away from the smoldering embers of the dump to the serene setting of the countryside for the very first time well it's incredible the only word that I can think of we're here seeing all this and I don't know if I really understand it all I mean there's unbelievable poverty and you see the birds and garbage and people living in this and yet I see kids smiling and trying to live some kind of a life life just goes on through all of this I also say that with just so little help can mean so much to to some of these kids and change their life so much and carry what is what she's doing an American woman to come down here and live and get to know these people and gain their trust and try to create a new life for these kids to get out of here and to get into the mainstream and to become useful happy people I think what she's doing is just while Kari appreciates the contributions she's not at all comfortable with the status of st. I'm really nothing without God and I'm nobody and God is the one that is directing me to be here it's not charity in a sense where you're just giving away money you're you're giving away something that's going to multiply you're educating these children you're giving them a new vision that's going to change their lives it has this multiplying factor and their health if we can help them help themselves that makes it worth a lot more when the school day ends it's back to the dunk for the children I wanted to experience what their world was like at night still working do the trucks come all day and all night with trash they don't come into tonight these are the last types that will come in later on other particular trucks like you know from the city or other and they run somebody over the last garbage trucks make their way out of the dump well after nightfall but the job of recycling goes on into the early morning hours the children appear out of nowhere and just as quickly disappear into the darkness [Music] on any given night untold stories of sexual abuse and violence take place here under the cover of darkness it was also here at night that Kari experienced an unforgettable tragedy involving the school's cook Dona Juana one night she and her husband went into the dump to to pick through the trash and a truck came and came where she was and backed up over her and the husband tried to tell the driver that she was under the wheel and she couldn't get out when the truck finally did move it was of little use because the ambulance refused to enter into the dump at night soon after Dona Hannah died Danya Juana left behind four boys and an alcoholic husband who was unable to care for his children it was up to Cory to care for the boys the father didn't want to take care of the kids they didn't want to be a father to these four kids so we just started praying and we tried to take care of the kids you know help him to become the dad and really become the strong point of the family and he just couldn't handle it he couldn't he couldn't be the father and he said he didn't want to have the kids anymore not wanting to split the family up Cory searches for a family willing to adopt all four brothers the task is even more difficult because Matt the oldest boy suffers from cerebral palsy Velva Valenzuela was one of Carey's original students what he arrived on her doorstep he could neither read nor write he excelled during the four years he spent at the school but needing money to support his family he returned once again to the dump and worked part-time at the school well builder was was with us for a while working and then he dropped his job and then by the beginning of the year his mom came and asked me to help him look for look for him because he had been disappeared for three days and we looked into the hospitals and the police and we didn't have any sign or any clue of where he was at and then we we got the news that he was found in the dump and cut into pieces his head had been chopped off in his arm and they [Music] [Music] the loss of so many close friends in such a short period of time inevitably takes a heavy toll on car it's it's very it's very devastating because you you've seen a child you've been working with them and you take them into your heart becomes part of you and when you lose them like that it's just it's just it's very hard to express the pain that you feel and you want to ignore it because you just you feel it a lot and sometimes it's hard to to to fix people among the tragic stories that have unfolded over the years there are many of hope Oliver also learned to read and write at Mira Fuli Oh today he is just two years from achieving his goal of becoming an accountant Oliver what advice would you as a success story give to little children living in the dump for how their life could change the parents have to realize what the kids are are doing to make sure they're not getting into trouble to watch out [Music] [Music] after more than a year of not having a school to go to the day has finally come to start up again the children line up before dawn at the original trade school they are transformed from dumped children to clean-cut schoolchildren once again still several are not allowed to make the trip for a few days because of lice Kari introduces the man who helped make their first trip away from the dump possible when the other scenes [Music] the children step aboard the bus a step that signifies more than just a ride being barely taken on its a chance at a new life the trip takes them away from the city and to an oasis of their very own [Music] place where the children see trees and smell fresh air for the very first time what's incredible it's a joyful day I mean the transformation right from this morning when we saw those kids that were in the dumpling with the animals and all the squalor dressed and clean and smiling parents smiling and getting onto the school bus and coming up here it's like taking them into a whole different world I think it's a minor miracle a good education is what will help the children break free of the dumps deadly grip that education also comes in the form of vocational skills that allow the children to earn a steady income outside the donor school and she's also helped my parents who worked in the dump and don't make enough money this helped me since I was a little girl his assistance has not only been gratefully received but it has also inspired some students to make career choices for their future that I know them asking to see time I would like to help people in need the way khari helps us all well for us she's heaven-sent not only helps us but she gives us the love women artists TT baccaro hopes that art may also play a part in making the school's self-sufficient well I was inspired by the word of Kyrie and others and I thought that I could contribute with art since art is a vehicle that can be used to inspired to challenge and I thought that I could create a simple enough thing that the whole world could look at and realized that such an enormous work is being done here in Guatemala at Mira [Applause] several years have passed since Raphael was fitted for his prosthetic arm today he plays in the streets outside his home with the one thing that has always brought a smile to his face his dog I'm invited into Rafael's home by his parents Raphael is anxious to show off his new canvas I inquire as to what has become of his prosthetic arm you can see that he's grown up and he's 12 years old now and and he needed another arm so we just started to pray and I told him that that you know God could bring some more doctors down help him out he one day a couple months later after that he came into the school with with this new woman that he has on and I said I said well where'd you get that you know at the other institutions that are here working he said no a man from one of the trash trucks just gave it to me and he found it off [Music] khari left home to follow her heart but in it she carries along the encouragement for family and friends who continue to support and inspire her carry constantly reminds me that without the heart and hard work of the dedicated Guatemalan staff none of this would be possible I had a lot of people that are amazing that God is that God has touched and has brought them to to help this ministry to grow and to become what it is today it's his ministry and I believe that he God is the one that touches the lives of the people and he's touched my parents life by allowing them to be so supportive of my of my being in this country in Guatemala some who don't understand her mission often ask the question why Guatemala when people are suffering in the United States the answer it seems is that carries heart knows no borders I think a lot of people ask me why but I think I think it just comes from your heart and you just need to follow that and know that that God is there in each one of our hearts we'll just look for him and he's gonna lead us to love wherever we are and whatever we do [Music] more than a years passed since carrie has seen the four boys left behind when the school's cook was killed in the dump they were all four adopted into into Indiana and they're in Indiana but I hope to be able to see them someday again [Music] oh it's good to see you the reunion is a memorable one it is apparent that not only have the children adjusted to the environment but they're speaking fluid English and their lives are filled with love I just never dreamed that my life could be so blessed when these boys came I expected that we would be overwhelmed and instead we've just been greatly blessed the boys have just added a new dimension to our home they've added excitement to our home they've just brought so much love to our home and a blessings just the only way I can describe it it was just like they were own kids right off the back from the moment we got on a plane and till we got off there was no problems whatsoever is like they were born into our family the Guatemala dump may be thousands of miles away but the memories of their father and that horrific place have not faded for these children they they tell us about their father and they realized that he was an alcoholic and he was physically and verbally abusive to them and we've explained him that maybe it was her mother's time the Lord felt that she had endured enough and they had a home for them away from from Guatemala and away from that situation that's why he placed into my home but they pray for their father and they hope that someday he'll be saving you know it was a hard situation that goes through it was very traumatic for the kids and for myself as well for the whole family but I know God's Hannah was in it we didn't understand it at the time but just through the different prayers that we had prayed with with the kids mom and seeing the best for them I could see God's being working such a blessing to watch his healing work in the intricate ways to see his kids in the end time the pain of dealing with death and heartache is very much a part of the cycle of life in the Guatemala dump but on this Christmas four boys play in the snow filled field in Indiana having broken that cycle [Music] above all Kari keeps in mind the vision she had when she first decided to open be refugio a vision that he gave me was a vision of a whole bunch of kids on the hill and they were all coming down it was like a sea of kids they're all smiling you know they were all poor but they were they were they hardly any clothes on no shoes on but the one thing that I didn't know in descending was that they were smiling and that's the blessing that God gave me through that vision is the kid smiling and I believe that through this school that he's provided and all the needs that he's given it that we can see a hope in the future given to these children khari has been described by many as meek but to me it's amazing what one woman from a foreign country has been able to accomplish in the most hopeless conditions it makes me wonder what the world would be like if each of us followed our own hearts to help out in whatever way we can because I know now and have proof that one person really can change the world [Music] [Music] [Music] [Music] you [Music]
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Channel: Dreamtimeent
Views: 59,852
Rating: 4.7959185 out of 5
Keywords: Poverty, Activism, Children, of, the, Fourth, World, Guatemala, City, Dump, Mi, Refugio, Documentary, Poor, Recycling, Garbage, Glue, Sniffing, Mission, School, Orphans, Ali, MacGraw, civil, war, human, rights, nonprofit
Id: AxQokSwQW1M
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 56min 26sec (3386 seconds)
Published: Fri May 20 2011
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