Santa Teresa (rum)

Ron Santa Teresa (IBC: RST) is a Venezuela rum brand and producer. It is the country’s first rum producer, with more than two hundred years of tradition in crafting aged rums. Its current president is the Venezuelan businessman Alberto C. Vollmer, who belongs to the fifth generation of the family dedicated to the rum production in Venezuela. Ron Santa Teresa is known not only for its products but also for its social programs through the Santa Teresa Foundation, such as Proyecto Alcatraz, Rugby Santa Teresa and Proyecto Casas Blancas. The company’s headquarters are located at the Santa Teresa Estate, founded in 1796 by Earl Martín Tovar Ponte, which today functions as an agro-industrial, tourism, and sports complex.

History

By the end of the 16th century, sugar cane was already being grown in the valleys of what is now Aragua state, in northern Venezuela. In 1796, Count Martín Tovar Ponte, a signer of the Venezuelan Act of Independence, named the estate in honor of the patroness “Santa Thereza”. After the property suffered damage caused by the royalist forces during the War of Independence, a young man of German descent, Gustav Julius Vollmer Ribas, grandson of the general José Félix Ribas, purchased the estate and began producing the first Venezuelan rum in 1896.[1]

Starting from 1989, the estate began offering guided tours of the property to explain the rum-making process and showcase its facilities. Among the attractions are "The Rum Route", which includes the "Tovar House", the "Rum Museum", the "Private Cellar", the "Solitary Hatchery", the La Guadalupe sector, the coffee roaster, the cane fields, the "Aragua Cross", the distillery, the bottling plant and the El Consejo train station.[2]

Project Alcatraz Rugby

Proyecto Alcatraz is a rehabilitation program for youth with behavior problems that has succeeded in disbanding at least ten gangs without the use of violence. The program began in 2003, after a robbery at the company in which a security guard was nearly killed. One of the assailants was captured and offered the chance to work for the company for three months as his sentence. Another member was later captured and given the same offer, until a total of twenty-two members of the gang joined; during the process, they were also taught to read and write.[3] Although the initial idea was simply for the gang members to work on the estate, the company’s owner, Alberto Vollmer, proposed rehabilitating them through rugby. The program has had more than two hundred participants and has since expanded to include both a rugby school and a community program, with at least two thousand young people across the state now training in rugby as a pathway away from crime.[4]

References

  1. ^ Fermín, María Victoria (6 August 2017). "De paseo por la tradición ronera". El Nacional (in Spanish). Retrieved 10 February 2018.
  2. ^ Ron Santa Teresa - Página oficial
  3. ^ "Proyecto Alcatraz de rugby o como el Ron Santa Teresa salva vidas". Mundo Deportivo. Retrieved 11 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Proyecto Alcatraz: una historia de valores y rugby de la Hacienda Santa Teresa - Venezuela". www.noticias24.com (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 12 February 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2018.