
In almost exactly six months, Baker Park in Frederick, Maryland will be filled with colorful Brazilian costumes, exotic Brazilian food, traditional Brazilian dancers and crowds of people who want to find out more about life in their South American sister city.
At least 15,000 people are expected at the party.
Frederick, Maryland has adopted Aquiraz, Brazil as a sister city, and Brazil Day on September 7, 2008 is the biggest benefit event on the sister city calendar.
Dirci Marquart, a Brazilian Adventist who has been living in the US for more than 14 years, is the force behind Brazil Day and the sister city association.
“Brazil Day in Frederick happened after a challenge from the Frederick mayor’s office,” Marquart says. The mayor said that if Marquart could get at least 12 people to attend a public meeting showing they were interested in Brazil, the mayor’s office would consider a “sisterhood” with a Brazilian city.
When the meeting was announced, well over 200 people showed up - and the mayor agreed to adopt Aquiraz.
The first Brazil Day in Frederick, held last September, attracted a crowd of more than 5,000.
This year the Brazilian Embassy in Washington, DC is getting involved.
Marquart chose Aquiraz, a historic city on Brazil’s coast, as Frederick’s sister city because of the volunteer work she had been doing there for many years.
Dirci Marquart seems to be the force behind a lot of things.
She was born in Brazil to a German/Italian family. In the early 1970s, she went to the US to study, and in 1984 she moved to the US permanently.
But she hasn’t forgotten about where she came from, and she travels to Brazil several times a year on mission trips or for business.
Since moving to the US, Marquart has started a successful family company, Son’Art Galleria by GranTops, which imports and designs exotic granite for countertops in homes and businesses. (GranTops is the major sponsor of Brazil Day.)
In January, she took members of Frederick’s business and political community to visit Aquiraz. “Aquiraz is located by the sea in a wonderful setting,” Marquart says. “However, the needs of the community are overwhelming. We visited the vacation spots as well as the local hospital, schools, and community centers to bring back a report and to make plans how we can better make a difference in that community.”
Marquart says the most exciting thing about the sister city program is “the opportunity to mobilize communities to make a difference in the world for the better.”
The sister city program benefits Frederick by showing its citizens how they can contribute to society, and where they can go on vacation. And Aquiraz gains through its association with Frederick in many ways – the most recent gift is an ambulance donated to its municipal hospital.
Marquart also works to help Brazilians in ways beyond the sister city program.
Marquart spends a lot of time with a foundation she started, called MissionServ International. Through MissionServ, she has been organizing trips to Brazil for many years, and specifically to Aquiraz for volunteer work. She has helped to organize more than 90 volunteer mission trips to Brazil, doing everything from medical to construction work.
She takes lots of people, mainly Americans, to Brazil with her.
“We have done projects with some [Adventist] academies, churches and self-supporting groups,” says Marquart. “However, most of our projects are done by volunteers that come to us from all walks of life, not necessarily church groups or members.”
MissionServ has ten dental missions planned for 2008, and two surgical missions. This month, professionals from Flying Doctors of America are traveling to Brazil.
Marquart’s foundation is also in the middle of a church building project in Euzebio, Brazil. A group – supported financially by a church in Pennsylvania – is going to complete the building this month.
In September, ten evangelistic series are going to take place in Brazil. The volunteers are being organized by MissionServ, together with The Quiet Hour.
Marquart’s newest program is called Youth Ambassadors for Peace, where young people will compete to become the representative of Frederick overseas. Marquart organized a huge benefit Chocolate Gala to launch the new program, as well as raise funds to send the donated ambulance to Brazil.
It’s obvious that Marquart does not compartmentalize – all of her programs and businesses and foundations complement and help each other. And when she sees something that needs to be done, she doesn’t wait for someone to step in – she goes out there and creates something or organizes something to make it happen.
But she makes it look simple to juggle all these interlinking projects and trips and programs. “There was nothing really difficult about starting the sister city program,” she says. “It was an exciting challenge.”
Dirci Marquart has worked for the US Steel Corporation, Rio Tinto in London, the United Nations (Economic Commission), the World Bank, ADRA International, and her own consulting companies.
Comments
This is a wonderful endeavor and most praise-worthy. But look at our own country: A segment on 60 Minutes last Sunday night highlighted the plight of nearly 50% of U.S. citizens: no health insurance. This is a national disgrace in the world's largest superpower and pretends to be the leader in morals.
The Remote Area Medical, which has previously operated overseas by giving free medical, dental and eye care, set up a one-day event in Knoxville, TN recently. A reporter for the local paper described the scene at the event as a "Third World emergency room." Here in the U.S!
One woman was hoping to get in to the clinc. When asked what she would do if she couldn't she said "I don't know. I have a lot of friends and I have a lot of church support. I was very active in my church and have a lot of friend in church. I just hate to ask. I've worked all my life. I hate to ask."
The people began lining up hours before the clinic was opened and had to be issued numbers for entering. At the close of day they had treated many hundreds of patients, and turned many other away, which necessitated another day of treating patients, many had not sought earlier treatment because of the cost; ultimately some of these would have wound up in ERs which would have been extremely costly for the state.
I agree with the writer of this column: It IS a national disgrace. The U.S. is the only industrialized first world country that does not have universal health care, and also has a higher infant mortality rate than some third world countries. Rather than flexing its military muscle, when the U.S. begins to take seriously the care of its own citizens, it will have shown the world its true compassionate side.
Elaine,
So on the mark! This story is inspiring, but it makes one think of what we are dealing with here at home. I only saw part of that 60 Minutes piece but I felt a sense of outrage rising up from within. Oil companies making record prophets, a defense budget that is out of control to pay for a war based upon incompetence and lies, but we can't take care of our people's medical needs... not only the uninsured but also the underinsured!
Michael Moore may not have been so accurate in all his details, but his point was devastatingly accurate.
Frank
Thank you Dirci for your efforts on behalf of our neighbors in Brazil with the good people of Maryland! Truly we live in a small world all together sons and daughters of a loving and caring God. The notion of a sister city seems to grasp well the usefulness of being reminded of the fact that although we may be confined to separate corners of this earth we are in fellowship with all humanity.
Otherwise I imagine it would be quite easy to become so self-involved in our own corners that we forget about the whole. Or indeed perhaps it is precisely by being engaged with the wider world that our local problems are seen through new eyes- that expanding our vision empowers us to tackle problems at home and abroad in new and better ways.
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