Identify an environmental culprit and fight it at the source
Zuleyma’s
Plan
Watch
Zuleyma's
story
Photography by Rodrigo Morales
Words by Rodrigo Morales | Reading time: 3 minutes
El Salvador
Zuleyma, 18, lives in the coastal area of La Libertad in El Salvador with her father, stepmother and siblings. In a country where land elevation is typically less than 10 metres above sea level, Zuleyma’s community is especially susceptible to flooding, as it sits next to an estuary.
Watching the mouth of the river overflow with water, especially during the rainy season, used to fill Zuleyma with dread. “The biggest emergency we had was during quarantine,” she recalls. “The water came out of the mouth of the estuary and flooded here. Then we had to go to the school, but we couldn’t leave unless someone came to evacuate us, because it was too full of water.”
Beyond geography, Zuleyma points out, there’s a second culprit in the flooding that has nothing to do with Mother Nature: “When the mouth of the estuary fills up completely with water, the water overflows into the community,” she explains. “It does this because so much trash and leaves clog things up, [giving the water] no other way out.”
Preventing trouble at the source
Together with several of her classmates, Zuleyma is leading a recycling initiative. Working with other community members, her tireless team has collected over three tonnes of plastic and cans from the river and sold them to recycling companies. In addition to helping prevent flooding, they also prevent trash from ending up in the sea.
Calling herself “a leader and a collaborator,” Zuleyma takes her role seriously. When she’s not collecting waste, Zuleyma is mobilizing her friends and neighbours to join her in protecting their community and environment. Her boundless energy and dedication have earned the attention and respect of her elders. As one community volunteer puts it: “Even though [Zuleyma] is very young ... if she is called to something, she is very willing to say, ‘I support; I’m going.’”
ZuLEYMA’s Plan
Identify the environmental culprit in her community.
Figure out
how to stop it at the source.
Mobilize others to join the fight.
By the Numbers
• Between 2018 and 2024, the Increasing Resilience to Floods in Central America program impacted the lives of 7,090 people across La Libertad, Chalatenago and Cuscatlán.
• In 2020, tropical storms Amanda and Cristóbal caused losses and damages worth over US$28 million and affected more than 53,300 families nationwide.
• 80% of that territory is
located in the coastal zone of
the country, where land elevations are less than 10 metres above sea level.
• Approximately 10% of
El Salvador’s territory (about 2,000 square kilometres) is susceptible to flooding.
For several years, young people such as Zuleyma have actively participated in Increasing Resilience to Floods in Central America, a program facilitated by Plan International. Its goal is to provide community members with technical and community organization tools. The program conducts outreach in schools, training young people in solid-waste management and implementing a collection system that runs solid waste through a recycling station.
Along with receiving instruction on identifying glass, caps, cans and other inorganic waste, participants receive training on gender equality, enabling girls like Zuleyma to adopt leadership roles that will help keep their communities strong. “I consider myself a leader,” says Zuleyma. “We girls have the same rights to say and collaborate in everything.”
How Plan International Helped
Message in a bottle
Beyond geography, Zuleyma points out, there’s a second culprit in the flooding in her community that has nothing to do with Mother Nature: “When the mouth of the estuary fills up completely with water, the water overflows into the community,” she explains. “It does this because so much trash and leaves clog things up, [giving the water] no other way out.”
Solid advice
Zuleyma participates in the Increasing Resilience to Floods in Central America program facilitated by Plan International. The program trains young people in solid-waste management and implements a collection system that runs solid waste through a recycling station.
From trash to cash
Zuleyma and her classmates have collected over three tonnes of plastic and cans from the river and sold them to recycling companies. In addition to helping prevent flooding, they also prevent trash from ending up in the sea.
We girls have the same rights to say and collaborate in everything.”
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close
Taking the lead
Zuleyma’s boundless energy and dedication have earned the attention and respect of her elders. As one community volunteer puts it: “Even though [Zuleyma] is very young ... if she is called to something, she is very willing to say, ‘I support; I’m going.’”
"
Zuleyma grew up knowing that her community’s location at the mouth of a river in El Salvador made it especially prone to flooding. In this film, she shares what happened after she discovered that Mother Nature wasn’t the only one to blame:
The biggest emergency we had was during quarantine. The water came out of the mouth of the estuary and flooded here. We couldn’t leave [the school building] unless someone came to evacuate us.”
"
Zyleyma grew upknowingthat her community’s location at the mouth of a river in El Salvador made it especially prone to flooding. In this film, she shares what happened after she discovered that Mother Nature wasn’t the only one to blame:
The biggest emergency we had was during quarantine. The water came out of the mouth of the estuary and flooded here. We couldn’t leave [the school building] unless someone came to evacuate us.”