| Published June 17, 2003 |
Volume 11, Number 6 |
Tulancingo Sister City Organization Celebrates
20th Anniversary
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| In April, the Pleasanton delegation
received a warm welcome in Tulancingo. |
Improving understanding and appreciation between communities
and fostering the interchange of ideas, cultural heritage, language, and
mutual respect are the admirable goals that Pleasanton’s Tulancingo Sister
City Organization has worked to fulfill for the past 20 years. To celebrate
its anniversary, 40 members of the Pleasanton Delegation visited its Sister
City in Tulancingo Mexico April 4th – 9th. A welcome dinner attended by over
150 of the Tulancingo delegation was held for the visitors from Pleasanton,
and throughout the five days, members of the Pleasanton delegation visited
numerous local organizations and venues that included the Rotary Club, Soroptimists,
Lions Club, Tulancingo Fire Station, and City Hall. On September 17th – 22nd,
40 representatives from the Tulancingo delegation will be visiting Pleasanton.
“Our first contact with Tulancingo Mexico was 1983 and we were proclaimed
sister cities in 1994,” says Bob Athenour, president emeritus and a founding
member of the Tulancingo Sister City Organization. “The purpose of it was
to develop better understanding between our two peoples and create goodwill.
It’s been a very active organization in Pleasanton and it continues to grow.”
On its 20th anniversary visit to Tulancingo, the delegation visited the new
Chabelo Center, to which the Pleasanton Sister City Organization has donated
financial and moral support over the past years. Chabelo is Tulancingo’s
center for neurologically handicapped youth. A special visit was also made
to Asilo San Jose, a local orphanage housing over 30 girls ranging from the
ages of 5–15.
Pleasanton’s Tulancingo Sister City Organization has a history of providing
aid to its friends in Mexico and is joined in this effort by other local
civic groups. This month, Athenour and members of the Pleasanton and Pleasanton
North Rotary Clubs visited Mexico to donate 240 wheelchairs to Tulancingo
and 280 to Oaxaca. “It’s amazing how many people, especially out in poor
areas, have no mobility,” Athenour says. “It’s a sad story but there’s a
tremendous need.”
For the past 19 years, members of the Sister Cities have also engaged in
a student exchange program. Every year, five students from Tulancingo come
and stay with families in Pleasanton and five students from Pleasanton go
to Tulancingo. So far, about 200 children from both cities who have participated
in the annual four week program.
The Tulancingo Sister City Organization has one local fundraiser each year
that combines a barbecue, dance, and auction. This year, it’s slated for
August 2 at the Fairgrounds. “We’ve been presenting our annual fundraiser
for 18 years,” Athenour says. “It’s very well known here in the community,
and we like to get the word out so people can mark their calendars.” The
Tulancingo Sister City Organization is always interested in welcoming new
members who are interested in Hispanic culture. For more information about
the organization, call Bob Athenour at 925-846-2966.
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