On August 6, I interviewed Matthew Peters, the Executive Director of the Chesapeake Multicultural Resource Center at his office at 331 East Dover St. in Easton.
Mr. Peters, a native of the Eastern Shore, served in the Peace Corps in Guatemala, using his educational background in forestry and agriculture.
After a brief period back home, he returned to rural Guatemala in 2001 where he started a non-profit to carry out reforestation and agricultural support. He remained there for 11 years.
When Peters arrived in Guatemala, there were no roads into the village where he began his work. He had to walk in. Beginning in 2003, however, transportation and other infrastructure improved dramatically, making it more inviting for the cartels that were being driven from Colombia and Mexico, both of which have law enforcement mechanisms superior to those in the Central American countries.
By 2010, he said, the drug cartels had moved into Guatemala and other Central American countries. The presence of the cartels then contributed to the formation and support of the violent gangs. The improved transportation also made migration easier. During much of that same period the U.S. economy was growing, Guatemala had lots of construction, and jobs were plentiful. Since then, increasing violence, especially since 2012, has produced the waves of migrants that we have experienced in the U.S. That change also drove Matthew Peters from the country, his work no longer viable.
The Chesapeake Multicultural Resource Center began in 2012 with seed money invested in the Mid-Shore Community Foundation by Peter and Mary Anne Byrne. Matthew Peters was hired as Director.
The mission of the Center, he said, is to empower the immigrant community and to break down language and cultural barriers. Where possible, they do their work through partnerships. Chesapeake College, for example, provides English as a Second Language classes. When transportation to the classes is a problem, the Center tries to remedy that lack. They also will arrange babysitting so that mothers can take the classes. The Center also provides support to immigrants seeking help in dealing with USCIS (United States Citizenship and Immigration Services). Peters noted that there are only three immigration lawyers on the Eastern Shore. The Center does make referrals to Mid-Shore Pro Bono at times.
The Center has a youth development program in cooperation with Talbot County Public Schools, providing tutoring and mentoring after school at all levels. Volunteers are welcome for this program. An application form can be found on the Center’s webpage at https://chesmrc.org/volunteer.
Peters noted that the issue of domestic violence affects some immigrant families, as it does the general population. Local community organizations, such as Mid Shore Council on Family Violence, exist to support victims in their native language.
Mr. Peters emphasized several times that the Center uses the services available in the community and then fills in where they find gaps. He also stressed that he didn’t see the Center as permanent; that as services in the community grew, perhaps in 10 years, there would be no need for their services. This may be an optimistic assessment. In the meantime, the Center is a valuable resource for the community.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk