Morazán Community Beach Trip

Alex Ugorji

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Check out the latest Morazán Monday, a weekly series about Ciudad Morazán / Bootstrap City. This week we explore the first Morazán community-organized beach trip!

​Despite living less than an hour away, many of the kids and even some of the adults had never gone to the beach. Learning this reminded me of how lucky I am and how important it is for places like Morazán to exist so that they can create opportunities for others to flourish too!

Background: October is one of the big holiday months in Honduras. Residents thought it would be fun to organize a trip together someplace enjoyable. But where to go? As is often the case, residents used a telegram poll to decide on a destination.

​The destination they chose? None other than Copan in western Honduras, not far from the border with Guatemala. Copan is famous for its Mayan ruins and beautiful scenery.

But, once the trip planning began, it quickly became clear that Copan’s distance and popularity meant going there on a holiday weekend would be too expensive. Luckily a few members of the Morazán community decided to solve the problem by planning an alternative beach trip.

Although Morazán is not a beach city, there are beaches less than one hour away such as Puerto Cortes. Therefore, a beach trip would be a much more affordable and accessible vacation for the Morazán community. They found that for less than $200 a bus could be chartered for 60 people for a day– around $3 per person.

​They used another Telegram poll to confirm demand, a Google forum was created for people to sign up, and a sponsor was found to lower the ticket price to $2 per person!

Although the bus left a little behind schedule, it was able to get everyone safely to the beach.

At the beach, everyone had a great time relaxing and enjoying themselves in nature, especially the kids!

Primary Blog/Morazan stories/Morazán Community Beach Trip
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Hi, I Am Joyce Brand

CEO Of Morazan Model Association

I am a woman who is passionate about freedom. I understand that freedom is an overused and misunderstood word. By freedom, I mean responsibility — specifically the responsibility of living without allowing any self-proclaimed rulers to make my moral judgments for me. A coercive government can impose negative consequences on me for disobeying its edicts, but I am free to the extent that I recognize my own responsibility for the risks I choose to take in following my own moral judgments. That is what it means to live free in an unfree world.

​The label that I use to describe myself is voluntaryist because it is the clearest word I can think of to describe my most important belief — that all interactions between human beings should be voluntary. There is never any moral justification for the initiation of violence or coercion. The Morazan Model Association explores the implications of that core belief.