For 30-plus years, staying true to its mission

Moscow's David Barber, second from right, stands with Vielka Águilar, right, and her family on Feb. 6 in Villa El Carmen, Nicaragua. Águilar is a university English major and benefits from a scholarship from Moscow Sister City Association.

Editor’s note: this is the first of two installments from Moscow’s David Barber and his work with the Moscow Sister City Association.

In February, I spent three weeks in Nicaragua. So much has changed in everyone’s life in the past month that it’s a different world, with COVID-19 at the center. But other endeavors continue; my trip involved a local organization whose goal precedes and will outlast the current crisis: “To promote peace through mutual respect, understanding, and cooperation — one individual, one community at a time.”

My main business was to visit Moscow’s sister city, Villa El Carmen, on behalf of the Moscow Sister City Association, to check on our scholarship program. This program builds on the organization’s long effort, going back to the 1980s, to offer physical and emotional support to people in a country suffering from poverty and war.

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