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Giving Back: Volunteering While Abroad

Giving Back: Volunteering While Abroad

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A little over five years ago, this garden was a parking lot. Now, it is a flourishing natural paradise in the middle of a concrete jungle.

It all starts with a seed. (Actually, way before that.)

Huerta La Margarita began well before the first seed was planted—as a dream. Seeing the cement jungle of Buenos Aires, Carlos Briganti and his team recognized a disparity in natural plant growth and created a plan to help combat it. Partnering with a local university, Huerta La Margarita has become a wonderful community outlet that creates opportunities for students, families, and volunteers to learn about urban gardening.

The garden has personally taught me a lot. I have been amazed by all that goes into one single salad. It begins, surprisingly, not with a seed but with a different kind of ‘salad’ (scraps of unused or rotten fruits and vegetables). This food waste is broken down into fertilizer, a base for the next wave of growth. This process has taught me that life is cyclical and that the work I put into mixing fertilizer will eventually come back around as a delicious mango that I get to eat.

For many people in the modern Western world, including me, food is something that you eat, not something that you grow. Before this experience, I wasn’t aware of all that is needed to grow one single cucumber, and I took for granted the work of those who produce my food. But by being a part of that work, I have gained a greater appreciation for the process, and I have learned that the best-tasting cucumbers are the ones you helped grow.

A smiling young man stands behind two tables filled with freshly harvested vegetables at a community garden or farm. The tables display leafy greens, corn, squash, herbs, radishes, and other produce. In the background, several people work and socialize under shaded outdoor structures, with gardening tools, chairs, and a whiteboard visible nearby.
A table full of vegetables after a day of harvesting at the garden.

To live is to give.

Studying abroad is, first and foremost, an act of receiving. It is a faithful leap into a new culture, hoping that you will be welcomed and taken care of. At least, that’s how it was for me. And the beautiful thing is that I was taken care of. The hospitality that was demonstrated to me by my host family, CIEE faculty, and even random strangers was incredible. I found myself desperate for a way to reciprocate this generosity. La Huerta gave me the opportunity to give back to the place that had given so much to me.

I would say that I wasn’t living in Buenos Aires until I was giving to Buenos Aires. There is a special bond that forms between you and a place when you play a part in improving it. By volunteering at La Huerta, I was able to build a stronger connection with the city. I was no longer passively receiving; I was actively reciprocating.

Volunteering in your study abroad community is a must-do in my opinion. It allows you to form connections with great people, grow in your understanding of the host culture, and—of course—give back.

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