Shanghai Daily

El Salvador kids surf their way to a better future

- Oscar Batres

STREAKING down the front of a curving wave, the little girl balances fleetingly before tumbling — she is one of dozens of poor kids in El Salvador getting a tantalizin­g chance to surf their way out of poverty.

El Zonte on the Central American country’s coast is a world surfing mecca, where powerful Pacific swells explode onto pristine beaches an hour’s drive from the capital San Salvador.

The little 11-year-old is one of around 20 local children from poor families being offered a chance to surf their way to future employment.

Schooled by volunteer instructor­s, the goal is to prepare them for a future as watersport­s profession­als, part of a multimilli­on dollar government project to develop the watersport­s industry.

“We are opening

an opportunit­y to learn how to surf and other activities so that these girls and boys can be empowered leaders of their communitie­s and can escape poverty,” said Yasmin Solorzano, 34, a coordinato­r of the volunteer program called Medusas.

The children also learn English from their instructor­s and are encouraged to study up to university level, added Solorzano, speaking before the novel coronaviru­s pandemic halted the program.

“It’s a path for them. We want them to use what they learn here so that they can have a profession­al career and at the same time surf,” said Mariam Lopez, 37, another instructor.

The program started two years ago, initially for girls to take surfing lessons two Sundays a month, but now it also welcomes boys who live near beaches in the local department of La Libertad.

El Zonte’s laid-back ambience is a world away from El Salvador’s notorious gang violence and central to a plan by President Nayib Bukele to present a tourist-friendly face to the world.

Surfing draws tourists here from the United States, the Netherland­s, Canada, Brazil and Germany, and many have chosen to stay.

Learning to surf in El Zonte is not cheap, and classes alone can cost between US$10 and US$50 an hour.

But instructor­s at the entirely volunteer-supported Medusas program — many of them foreigners — do not charge and boards are rented out at a minimal cost.

“I really like children and I also really like helping people, and I don’t just come here to enjoy the waves, but also to give something to people,” 33year-old Nette Klement from the Netherland­s said.

The children also take lessons on the environmen­t, English and art provided by Medusas one Sunday a month in the courtyard of a small hotel.

El Zonte is part of a US$200million Surf City developmen­t project promoted by Bukele to turn this part of El Salvador into an internatio­nal destinatio­n.

“Surf City is an ambitious project with which we want to position El Salvador as one of the best destinatio­ns for surf and beach tourism in Latin America,” said Tourism Minister Morena Valdez.

El Salvador earned US$1.76 billion in tourism revenue in 2019, up from US$1.5 billion in 2018, according to ministry figures.

The coronaviru­s pandemic cruelly prevented El Salvador from putting itself on the world surfing events calendar when the ISA World Surfing Games 2020 event, due to be hosted by nearby El Sunsal beach, was cancelled.

 ??  ?? A girl stands on a surf board next to a volunteer trainer during a surf lesson at El Zonte beach. — AFP
A girl stands on a surf board next to a volunteer trainer during a surf lesson at El Zonte beach. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China