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Elementary schoolchildren are showing that international giving is
possible at any age. Click on the pictures
above to learn more about the projects that students are
supporting. |
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In recent years, online charitable giving has taken off in record
numbers. The recent outpouring of support for tsunami victims over the
Internet is a case in point; in the first half of January alone, online giving accounted
for $350 million in relief aid (source:
GetActive). Part of the reason
for this phenomenon is that international philanthropic opportunities are now
widely available to people of all ages and income levels.
Just ask the following elementary schoolchildren, who in the past month
have donated to grassroots projects featured on
GlobalGiving.
Second and third graders from Brownie Troop 2233 in Essex,
Connecticut raised money from their annual cookie sale for
Bridging the
Digital Divide in Rural Areas.
The project will establish a computer lab in Haiti, where impoverished
students can improve their reading, writing, and
computer skills.
A fifth grade class from Dr. Green Elementary School in El Paso,
Texas collected donations for the
India Tsunami
Rehabilitation Fund, which will help survivors
to rebuild their homes and livelihoods.
Second and fourth graders from Kensington Academy in Beverly
Hills, Michigan chose to support
Wooden Boats
for Indian Fishermen. Altogether, the students
raised enough money to purchase a fishing boat and nets, which will
enable five Indian families to return to sea and put
food on the table.
Ms. Callan's fifth grade class from Edinburg Community Unit School
in Edinburg, Illinois raffled off gift baskets to
raise money for Tsunami Relief -
Safe drinking water in Sri Lanka.
This project uses an innovative UV technology to disinfect biologically
contaminated
water; each installation provides safe drinking water to thousands of
people for
up to twenty years. As Ms. Callan explained, "The most important
thing [the students] learned, or actually
stopped to think about, was how lucky they are to live where they do and
have
the things they have."
A warm thank you to all of these students, whose good will and
generosity are a shining example for the GlobalGiving community.
If these children represent the future, we have good reason to be
hopeful.
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As the AIDS epidemic continues to take its toll upon the
population of Uganda,
thousands of orphaned children remain destitute with little to no access
to education or
healthcare. Below, Twesigye Jackson Kaguri, founder and
co-director of the
Nyaka School in Southwestern Uganda, observes how more than 100 orphans
have come to rely upon the school
as their basic means of education and survival...
Addressing the problem of AIDS orphans is a daunting task, but the
Nyaka School, located in the Southwestern village of Nyakagyezi, has
taken on that challenge and is proving what a difference a small amount
of money can make on many lives.
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Providing education, healthcare, and other basic needs to
AIDS-orphaned children, the Nyaka School
has become a pillar of hope for local Ugandans.
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For orphans whose parents have died of HIV/AIDS, the Nyaka School
provides free, high-quality primary
education, social activities, and basic healthcare. Nyaka brings the
community together to provide these
children with a family atmosphere that will impart self-confidence and
values, which will significantly increase their chances of reaching
adulthood
as healthy, functional members of society.
In government-mandated exams, our students consistently test above the
district average. Our health interventions have improved the daily
existence
of many of the students, allowing many to attend school on a regular
basis
for the first time in their lives. Our community gardens have provided
food
for more than 200 families in the area, including student foster
families.
We have increased the number of orphans we serve by at least 25% each
year,
yet hundreds more are turned away due to limited resources.
Long-term financial support will allow Nyaka to serve a greater
proportion of the large number of AIDS orphans in Nyaka and surrounding
areas.
Not long ago, one of the 116 students at the school spoke of his
emotional journey.
"When my dad became very sick, my mom sold all the cows, goats and
chickens to get
medicine but the situation did not get any better. Then my uncle
suggested
that we sell all the land and move into a hut with my two
sisters, which we did. When it rains we stand in the corner and wait for
the morning to go
to our school, Nyaka. Without Nyaka, I would be working for food
everyday."
Kaguri's Nyaka School was one of the 16 finalists selected to the
2005 Marketplace. In qualifying,
the school was hand-picked from a pool of 112 candidates as a project
that was of the highest quality.
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Resources
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Bangladesh's Centre for Development Services (CDS) was established
in 1983 to provide start-up support,
technical assistance and guidance to the poor so that they could start
their own businesses. CDS's model
supports sustainable, self-initiated economic development, particularly
for women.
Courtesy of International
Development Exchange
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Runa Das described her former existence as "miserable:" living in a
slum of Chittagong City, Bangladesh, she
struggled to make ends meet for her husband and two children.
Like many residents of the slums, her husband moved the family to
Chittagong with a dream of factory work. However,
the urban realities are harsh and there is little work to be found.
Women in particular are affected, as
often they have minimal education and scant business skills to help earn
family income.
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Women in Chittagong City, Bangladesh have benefited substantially
from micro-loans and many now run their own small businesses.
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Centre for Development Services (CDS) has been working in the
Chittagong region for over eight years.
In 1999, CDS launched the Women
Entrepreneurship Development
program as part of its Economic Justice Initiative. The program not
only gives women the initial funding to start a
business, but provides training on running a business, as well as
savings and credit, so the women can sustain their enterprises.
Goals also include increasing self-reliance and mutual knowledge sharing
through women's groups, and
raising their awareness of human rights. Lastly, to make the women's
entry in the workforce
as seamless as possible, CDS provides preschool for participants' young
children.
Last year, Ms. Das received a microcredit loan of 25,000 Taka (about
$215) and purchased two sewing
machines, thread dyes, and fabric paints to start up her textile
business. At her weekly women's
group meetings, she and the others discuss progress and constraints of
their nascent enterprises.
They share their experience in marketing strategies and product
feasibility. They also find the
groups a forum in which they can freely discuss women's rights in
society and in the family.
Many note that their income generation made them more willing to assume
a role in making the
decisions that affect their families. Now Ms. Das has plans to expand
her business and open a
showroom at the local Kazir Dewri market.
With additional funding, CDS would like to expand the program to
include 25 more women in Chittagong.
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Resources
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VERSION 2.0, NUMBER 22. To see the online version of this newsletter,
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