Photo: Alberth Snider Centeno Thomas (Facebook)
By Erica Belfi and Danielle DeLuca
By Erica Belfi and Danielle DeLuca
On March 12-13, 2020, in La Esperanza, Intibucá, Honduras, 11 Lenca women from radio stations in 7 different communities gathered for two-day workshops on community radio communication with a focus on gender equity organized by Cultural Survival, the Red de Desarrollo Sostenible Honduras (RDS), the Association of Community Media of Honduras (AMCH), and the Central American Network of Indigenous Community Radio Stations.
Honduras es un país centroamericano con una biodiversidad valiosa para la región y una población trabajadora. Dos tercios de su territorio están cubiertos por montañas y tienen área protegida constituida en la reserva de Biosfera Río Platano en la Costa del Caribe con 830,000 hectáreas, la cual fue declarada Patrimonio de la Humanidad por UNESCO.
Without electricity or a telephone signal in the vicinity, a community radio station was almost an impossible dream for the Lenca people of Azacualpa, an Indigenous community of Yamaranguila in Intibucá, Honduras, who believed that as an impoverished community, no one would be interested in assisting them in setting up a radio station.