Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Rose Charities Madagascar - New school


Cheryl-Anne writes "Our school has grown yet again. We now have 199 students, 11 teachers and 3 support staff (not all are full time). Bina and the Mahatsara Parent's Association have built another school building as well as a smaller building (both located on the hill above the first school building)."

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Samoa post-tsunami relief - Counseling and Medical Supplies

SAMOA OCTOBER 15 - 21, 2009. INITIAL ASSESSMENT OF THE PSYCHO-SOCIAL IMPACT OF TRAUMA AND GRIEF ON THE AFFECTED POPULATION IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE 29/09 TSUNAMI IN SAMOA.

On October 8th I received an email from Dr. William Grut, director of AMDA Canada and RoseCharities New Zealand and Canada with the initial question whether I would be available to respond to a request from the Samoan government for counselors to come to Samoa to assist in the aftermath of the tsunami. William had been corresponding with Ms. Adimaimalaga Tufuna'i, Executive Director of Women in Business Development Inc. (WIBDI) based in Apia, Samoa. From there on communication started with AMDA Headquarters Tokyo and Dr. Rasalingam from AMDA New Zealand.

On Thursday October 15th I met Mr. Nithian Veeravagu from AMDA headquarters and Reverend Kyosuke Hirano at the Airport in Auckland NZ. They were delivering a huge amount of medical supplies to Samoa. Air New Zealand at the check in counter generously waived all fees for excess baggage. Two women from WIBDI picked us up from the airport in Apia. From thereon the team of WIBDI has gone out of their way to accommodate me and their commitment to their work is incredible.

On Thursday 15th October Nithian, Hirano and myself were taken to the disaster zone by Tina from WIBDI. The devastation is huge and has left enormous scars in the landscape. The people of the villages affected by the tsunami have all moved to higher ground along the Plantation Roads where we witnessed firsthand the impact of the tsunami on the families in their temporary shelters.

The emergency relief agencies have been working very hard providing shelter, food and sanitation etc. I was struck by the expression on some of the faces, several times I witnessed the expression-less flat affect associated with shock and trauma.

The next 3 days- Friday, Saturday and Sunday, were filled with one on one counseling sessions at the request of Women in Business Development Inc. WIBDI. Most of the people who equested session time were staff of WIBDI and staff of Faataua le Ola(FLO) the lifeline counseling service in Samoa.

Since the tsunami the staff of these organisations have been working overtime in the disaster area assisting survivors and providing support to families. It became very clear that these professional carers have been affected both personally in their own families as well as are being vicariously traumatised by working constantly with, witnessing and hearing the suffering of families and individuals in deep shock and grief.

I conducted the sessions where-ever people felt comfortable or as safe as possible and we worked together in a home or office setting or in the special counseling room at the FLO office.

From these three days of hearing the stories of these people working in the fieldwork it has become quite clear to me that there is a strong need for ongoing follow up debriefing, support and training of professional staff in order for them to function well and be able to continue their field work effectively.

I was asked to conduct a workshop on the Monday for staff of the NGO,s mentioned above. FLO generously provided the workshop space. The topics were training in basic counseling skills and recognising the effects of trauma, grief and loss. The participants were all working professionally in the field in one form or another, eg. social work, counseling, pastoral care, fieldwork and management of NGO's. We covered topics like listening skills, gaining trust, recognizing signs of stress, what blocks trust and open communication etc.

Halfway through the workshop there was another earthquake. I witnessed firsthand the trauma reaction in the group. After every-one had checked whether family was ok and heard there was no tsunami warning, this amazing group of people came back together in the workshop and the rest of the time was spent in a talking circle where they shared some of their traumatic experiences.

I want to express my heartfelt thank you to this group for trusting me with their stories of loss and grief as well as showing their incredible resilience and courage.

From sitting with some of the Samoan people and hearing their trauma and grief, I would strongly recommend regular ongoing training workshops, debriefing and support. Not only for the families affected, but also particularly for the health-care professionals. The impact of this disaster will continue to be experienced over a long time, years rather then weeks or months.

Finally I would like to express my heartfelt thanks to William Grut from RoseCharities New Zealand, Nithian Veeravagu Dr. Rasalingam and Reverend Kyosuke Hirano from AMDA, Ms. Adimaimalaga Tufuna'I and her wonderful staff from WIBDI for generously giving me this opportunity to work in Samoa. Your care and attention has been wonderful.

Liese Groot-Alberts
Grief-Therapist MNZAC
Cairnhill Medical Centre
95 Mountain Road
Epsom, Auckland 1023
New Zealand.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Rose Charities Microcredit: October 2009

Rose Micro-Credit has been in operation for three years and has successfully grown to include 1000 members in 10 communities around the township of Kalmunai, on the east coast of Sri Lanka.

It's goal is to raise $CDN1m by 2010 and put this effectively to use in needy communities around Sri Lanka, all affected by the tsunami and civil war, and then to other parts of Asia where Rose Charities already has a presence.

Our experience & research has shown us that communities with 1000 active micro-credit members are able to operate its project at a sustainable level, while communities of 10,000 active micro-credit members are able to create enough surpluses that they are able to support other community needs such as education, skills training, health & welfare initiatives, so much so that they may no longer require outside support.

Rose Micro-Credit's aim is to create self sufficient communities able to operate their own community bank or credit union and Kalmunai is on course to reach this by 2014.

Rose Micro-Credit was founded by Rose Charities Canada which is based in Vancouver, BC. RCC initiated relief and community projects in Kalmunai immediately following the tsunami in 2004, offering emergency relief to refugee camps and establishing a specialised children's ward at Kalmauni Hospital. Services were added to provide trauma counselling and counselling training, education and 'sports for peace' for children, university scholarships, skills training and English programs over the last three years and most continue today. Rose Micro-Credit is one of them.

As a result Rose Charities is well entrenched & respected in this community as it provides support at many levels to families: health, education and economic development.

Rose Charities Canada supports community-based projects in eight other developing countries.

Rose Charities has received funding and support from such organizations as the Government of Canada (through its CIDA projects), Global Agents for Change, Shaughnessy Heights United Church, The Ron Burkle Foundation & Drew Katz's Infinite Possibilities Foundation in the USA, Vancouver's Gordon Keep. Very recently it has become a partner of a major Swiss philanthropic organization for its child development, education and its womens education and empowerment programs.

Rose Charities Canada is part of a larger international network of over 16 countries that is based on providing mostly medical & emergency relief support. www.RoseCharities.org

For future financial and news updates please go to our website at www.rosemicrocredit.org

Growth rates should continue with funding from the Vancouver Board of Trade bringing membership numbers to a sustainable 1000 by year end.

Substantial funding to other related Rose Charity projects in Kalmunai means that some expenses can be shared, creating greater disbursement for loans.

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Rose Charities New Zealand Aug 2009 Newsletter

New Zealand:

September/October:

Thanks to a generous anonymous donor, Rose Charities NZ sponsored the Nepali eye surgeon Dr Basant Sharma, a consultant ophthalmologist and Chief of the eye plastic surgery unit at the Lumbini Eye Institute, Nepal, to spend three weeks in New Zealand. Basant stayed with chairperson Trish Gribben in Auckland and observed surgical techniques with doctors at the Eye Institute, Auckland, every day. Basant, who trained in Kathmandu and did post doctoral fellowship work in Vancouver where he met Dr William Grut, the international secretary of Rose Charities, and at the Rose Eye Clinic at Phnom Penh, was recently awarded the prestigious Asia Pacific Academy of Ophthalmology Distinguished Service Award.

An evening with the award-winning cookbook writer Alexa Johnson, who taught Basant to make Nepali momos in Trish Gribben’s kitchen, sent Basant home with $US600 to fund cataract eye operations for Nepali villagers, mostly women, who are unable to afford the operation. By August, about 20 operations had been performed.

October:

A night-to-remember with an exuberant farewell to our Trustee, Dr David Sabiston, was held in the Hawkes Bay Club, Napier. About 100 friends gathered, many of whom have been very generous supporters of David’s work for Rose Charities NZ at the Rose eye clinic in Phnom Penh.

A continuous slide show and brief talks by Dr William Grut, secretary of Rose International, Trustee Mike Webber, “Sabo” himself and our visitor from Nepal, Dr Basant Sharma, led many people to say they had gained a much better understanding of the Rose Charities work that helps literally thousands of people gain better sight.

“Without vision the people perish” is the slogan writ large on the walls of the Napier airport. This is literally true for so many people, both young and old, in Cambodia and Nepal and our evening at the Hawkes Bay club left us all in no doubt about the value of our Rose contribution.

Palliative care and grief therapy:
Once again, Rose Charities has helped Liese Groot-Alberts, the psychotherapist who has an international reputation as a palliative care educator and grief therapist, to give workshops in Hong Kong and Malaysia.

Poonga:
The Tamil Community Education Group, which supports students from pre-school to high school in Auckland, has received $1200 to buy a laptop to co-ordinate their activities. The group meets in different halls and caters to a wide range of families. As chairperson of Rose Charities NZ, Trish Gribben wrote to Auckland City Council supporting the Poonga Group’s search for a permanent place to meet.

Ak Refugee Community Coalition:
Rose Charities NZ has been approached by the chairman of this coalition, for help with setting up a Trust to aid family reunification. The Auckland Trust would be modeled on a very successful Wellington Trust which, over the last seven years, has raised $500,000 and helped more than 135 families to reunite. The Trust particularly needs the skills of financial management and legal governance. Anyone interested in being involved should contact Trish Gribben, at: trishgribben@xtra.co.nz
Or the Chairman of the Auckland Refugee Community Coaliition, Kafeba Mundele at : P. O. Box 27 157, Mt Roskill, Auckland, 1440; aucklandrefugeecoalition@hotmail.com. Or kafeba96@hotmail.com


Nepal:
Training of volunteer female health workers

After discussions with Basant, Rose Charities NZ decided to support an educational training project as an outreach from the Lumbini Eye Institute in Nepal. Female volunteer health workers are to be trained in basic eye-care education, preventive work and early detection of eye problems. As well, they will help identify candidates for eye surgery or glasses before surgical outreach camps arrive in their villages. Eye problems occur with distressing frequency, even in the very young, in Nepali populations.

Generosity: The budget prepared at the Lumbini Eye Institute, where Dr Basant Sharma is a medical director, came to $9,000.
As a result of Basant’s stories and impressive professional status, a very generous Rose benefactor couple gave $2500 for the project in Nepal.

The rest of the money was raised quickly, thanks to the PIF Foundation who contributed $5000 and three Auckland donors who each gave $500.

Reports have been received from Basant, naming all the women who have received surgery or training. This makes the Rose philosophy of “People helping people” seem very real. There have been delays due to political problems, curfews and monsoon flood but by August more than 360 women had been enlisted and given basic training.

Basant says: “Politically Nepal is still in a state of conflict. It’s been nearly two years since we became a Republic but we neither have a new constitution nor a parliament yet. The country is being run by a caretaker government formed from a Constituent Assembly so there is constant civil unrest.

“This makes outreach work difficult but we are hoping to finish by the end of this year. At least the fighting has stopped and we can hope for a better future.

“Thank you all for your kindness and generosity. We look forward to future co-operation with Rose Charities.

Cambodia:

Our Trustee Mike Webber visited the Cambodian clinic in April and was able to host our patron Dame Silvia Cartwright for a visit to the clinic on Anzac Day.

Dame Silvia wrote: “I want to say how much I admire your commitment and want to thank you for the invaluable work you are doing to support the clinic.
“We both know that Cambodia is one of the most deprived countries in the world and anything we westerners who are so privileged can do will be of assistance. So many of us however, do little to make a difference. You and others in Rose Charities are the ones who do."



The Medical Director of the clinic, Dr Hang Vra, was been furthering his training, thanks to generous support from the PIF Foundation. It is paying his fees of $US900 a year for three years. It also paid for $NZ3500 worth of instruments for the clinic.

Mike Webber also visited the National Refraction Training Centre in Phonm Penh, which he was instrumental in having set up. The delivery of refraction training (the making of glasses) is considered to be one of the best ways of helping poor people with eye defects in Cambodia.





International:

Rose Charities originated in Canada and now has branches working with a wide variety of projects in the U.S. , U.K., Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Malaysia and Australia, as well as the Cambodian and Nepali programmes that are the focus of Rose Charities NZ.

Looking ahead:

Next year Rose NZ plans to develop local projects that support our refugee communities.

Some Rose Charities NZ Trustees will be visiting Cambodia in June next year and Nepal in late November. If anyone is interested in joining a group, please let Trish Gribben know. (All travel will be at personal expense.)

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Rose Charities 2nd International Meeting. Feb 27 -March 1st 2009 . Ho Ch Minh City

Presentations, Discussions, Notes and Images from Rose Charities International Meeting, Ho Chi Minh City, February-March 2009

Sat 28th Feb 2009

History and Overview.

The history of Rose Charities is hard to define as so many of those involved have brought in their own particular streams. All these histories may be likened to the roots of a large tree, each coming into the main feeder root at different times, but each being essential and vital to the saga of the whole organization. The amazing histories that everyone brings and which feed or ‘Rose tree’ are all equally relevant: none have any more significance than

any other and each makes up the whole

One can however take the history line which carries the name Rose and at least look at that. Rose Charities came out of projects in Cambodia founded in the early and mid 1990’s . Establishing a project in Cambodia in 1992, with the organization AMDA in an outlying district to provide health services for the refugees returning from the Cambodian-Thai border area, it was clear that there were huge needs in almost every sector. One of these was sight restoration and in 1995 we were able to found an organization we called IRIS (International Resouces for the Improvement of Sight) to help address this issue with simple low cost inra-ocular surgery. Drawing on contacts with AMDA Nepal, experts were brought from that country to set up a very successful rural ‘eye camp’ program. As the program developed a plan was formulated to extend the simple operation, surgical rehabilitation (ie eye operation) concept to other needed areas. One of these was land mine injury, the incidence of which was enormous. Several excellent prosthetic groups were in the country, but the medical system was inadequate to provide the large number of stump preparations (one cannot put an artificial limb on a non-prepared, often ragged and uneven stump). Other surgical rehabilitation areas included cleft lip and palate surgery, burns injuries, old improperly treated traumatic injury, slow growing tumours, and burns. (often deliberately inflicted by acid throwing). To separate this new division of IRIS from its originally intra-ocular brief, the name ROSE was used, standing originally for ( Rehabilitaion Oriented Surgical Enablement), and operations began in 1997.

In 1998, the IRIS directors decided to split off ROSE from IRIS and an organization was registered in Vancouver Canada in order to run the newly independent ROSE project. This was the birth of Rose Charities Canada. Over subsequent years, other Rose Charities organizations were registered including New Zealand, the UK. Resources steadily increased through donations and grants from the Canadian, Australian and British Embassies support wings and the Kadoorie Charitable Foundation in Hong Kong. In 2002 however the entire project was nearly destroyed when it was subject to a major theft , looting, vandalization and linked identity theft by a locally resident disenfranchised expatriate.

Shocking as these events were both for the poor of Cambodia and Rose Charities donor base, the wave of international support enabled most of the equipment to be replaced in the subsequent years. This fulfilled the pledge of Rose Charities to the original donors such as the Kadoorie Charitable Foundation ( KCF ), Australian and British Government / Embassy Funds, Canada Fund, and private donors that their generous support would not be in vain. In overcoming this event a lesson was learned and a foundation forged which has stood the test of more than a decade and helped the organization to grow and mature. Now, in Cambodia the two projects (eye and rehabilitation surgery) teach, train and operate at multiple levels and act as foci for international experts and groups with specialized expertise to come to assist and bring their skills for the aid of the Cambodian poor, while training personnel from Hong Kong, Australia, Canada, New Zealand etc come to teach and train.

The 2004 Asian tsunami saw Rose teams working with AMDA Canada to provide assistance both in Sri Lanka as well as Aceh Province in Indonesia, emergency relief initiatives which were carried on in later years to Pakistan (Earthquake), USA (Hurricane Katrina), Indonesia (Earthquake), Nepal (floods). Rose Charities and AMDA Canada have always worked very closely in this area where AMDA are emergency relief specialists. The Sri Lanka team which brought child medical assistance to Kalmnunai, exists too this day as Rose Charities Sri Lanka with its numerous multi-sectorial projects and at the time of writing is currently engaged in emergency humanitarian aid activities assisting the tens of thousands of displaced persons escaping from the conflict areas of the north east. In the past three years Rose Charities Sri Lanka has been funded by The Canadian International Development Agency ( ‘ CIDA ‘)

Rose Charities supported AMDA International in their assistance to both Myanmar / Burma in the terrible cyclone of 2008 and the Sichuan Earthquake. AMDA was one of the very few international organizations which was able to send teams to both locations.

From 2004 Rose Charities has continued to expand organically both in Asia, and, more recently in Africa. Rose Charities Australia, and Vietnam (both 2006), Rose Charities Madagascar (evolving from the UCCAN group in 2007), and the linkage of the Hillman Medical Education Fund (2007) which now runs through Rose Charities. This wonderful fund supports medical education in Africa and Pakistan for those who are not able to afford it as well as conducting mother and child teaching workshops and promoting all related aspects of health and education. Based on the incredible lifetime work of Professors Don and Liz Hillman (both O.C. .. Orders of Canada awardees) the fund continues to expand its field of operation.

.The Rose Charities microcredit group, run by Rose Charities Canada and Sri Lanka is one of the most successful sub-groups and it is planned in future to extend this arm to other countries where it could be implemented. Scores of small scale businesses have been assisted in gaining viability which in turn assists families, communities and the country in terms of poverty reduction.

Rose Charities in Cambodia, Vietnam, and, one of the newest members of the network. Malaysia have all been very impressive in the recent years in the expansion of their scope of activities, initiative and involvement. The Rose Charities Cambodia Eye clinic now is statistically the second most productive (numerically) in Cambodian and the Operation FIRST/Rose Charities cooperation project is now one of the main foci for specialized as well as routine rehab surgery operations running properly in Cambodian Ministry of Health facilities. Every year it is also visited by many medical students for elective purposes. Rose Charities Malaysia has, along with the kind hosts of this wonderful conference, Rose Charities Vietnam, made considerable strides forward. Activities are too numerous to list in this report but Rose Charities Malaysia has conducted health missions for the indigenous people of Malaysia, assisted with help for the elderly, supported ‘Health Expo’s and many other charitable efforts. Rose Charities Vietnam on the other hand has continued its blind assistance and poverty reduction programs, assisted with fundraising (overseas) for Vietnamese orphanages, moved to try to assist with a new corneal transplant project and, (between the end of the conference and the time of writing this report) sponsored its first operative eye camp.

At this meeting we welcome three directors from Rose Charities USA. Registered in New York, Rose Charities USA has been concentrating on fundraising, and also its own intra-USA project of working with Nez Perce Native American Youth in digital art training and production. Rose Charities New Zealand and Canada also assist with projects within their own countries.

Rose Charities interest and support groups have emerged in Hong Kong, Europe (Austria, Switzerland, Sweden, France), and Singapore, and others continue to emerge organically. All trustees, directors and members of Rose Charities groups hold the same values of maximum cooperation with other groups, contacts, and joint problem-solving for the benefit of those in need. This policy brings many wonderful friendships and confirms the simple fact that assistance is always a two way process.

This meeting will see the launch of the Rose Charities International Charter which has now been worked on for a year from its initiation at the first Rose Charities (10 year Anniversary) Meeting in Penang, Feb 2008. A very great vote of thanks is due to Linda Roberts both for this and for assisting with the organization of the current meeting today. The Charter will finally create a proper ‘hub’ for the Rose Charities network, allow the creation of a Rose Charities International Board and establish proper working practices and guidelines for all official Rose Charities Groups. While there is little desire within the members of the organization to add excess bureaucracy, there is both the wish and need to have linkage, overseeing and intra-Rose Charities discussion mechanisms both for ensuring standards as well as planning out future directions and policies which affect all groups.

The year since the first Rose meeting in Penang in Feb 2008 and this meeting has been a busy one, full of exciting developments. The overriding factor in all these efforts is the dedication, perseverance, drive and charity of so many of those who make up the Rose Charities networks. This meeting, once again brings many of us together to share thoughts, ideas and friendship. Our gracious hosts this year, Rose Charities Vietnam are foremost in perpetuating these characteristics and I want now to express all our gratitude to them for the wonderful arrangements they have made to make this meeting a successful and enjoyable one. Thank you



International Rose Meeting: Sunday 1st March, Asian Ruby Hotel. Ho Chi Minh City. 9.30 am

Attendees: Linda Roberts (Canada), Joanna Thomson (Rose Charities Australia), Noot Seear- Annie Henley – Jason Rosenstock (Rose Charities USA) , Will Grut (Rose Charities Canada, UK, New Zealand) , Dr Nous Sarom – Ms Dim Vanny (First-Rose Cambodia), Lawence Cheah (Rose Charities Malaysia),
Skype video attendee: Josephine de Freitas (Rose Charities Canada)

Issues were discussed as per the headings below and summarized as follows…


Regional networking – ways forward: Regional networking was considered to be very beneficial for exchange of ideas, plans, resources. Already it has been seen in a expedient and generous donation of sutures for eye surgery from Vietnam to Rose Charities Cambodia when there was an unexpted need and those on order had not turned up. The group was of the opinion that any further contacts an links on a regional basis should be promoted as much as possible. Lawrence Cheah (Malaysia), indicated that he has possible contacts in Indonesia, Singapore, West Malaysia and other areas who might be interested in the Rose Network. It was however noted that regional contacts should not be at the expense of integrated Rose links throughout the whole network. The world today ia one of rapid and easy communications and travel which brings all areas within easy reach of each other.

Development of specific interest areas (eye surgery ,counseling, education, micro-credit etc). The promotion of specific interest areas should be according to the aims and desires of each national group. Rose Charities deliberately has a very wide mandate. ‘Rehabilitation is a term which is applicable to almost any sector. Will Grut (Canada, New Zealand) noted though that groups which had been concentrating on a particular area (such as New Zealand with its focus on eyes) was becoming specifically known in its donor base for its link with this area; and this was often beneficial

Women’s group development. The need for the development of specific women’s groups and / or women’s projects was considered very relevant. Linda Roberts (Canada) had recently been in Nepal , working with Kunti Chapagai to set up a specific womens group to assist with the problems of trafficking.

Emergency relief.. why when how. While emergency relief is important, it needs to be put in context. There are many specialized organizations which deal specifically in these areas which huge amounts of specialized resources and materials available at very short notice. It is important that any relief effort actually assists and does not hinder. Rose Charities should only undertake work in this area if it is clearly of benefit to the recipients and within its logistical capabilities. There has been a very close relationship with AMDA over the years, which is one of the specialist agencies and was one of the very few organizations which had teams both in Sichuan and Myanmar / Burma in 2008 for their respective earthquake and typhoon disasters. Rose Charities contributed to these efforts. Generally however any Rose Charities effort will more likely be undertaken if the disaster is in a country or region where there is a Rose group of project.

The recession and funding. While the recession has certainly reduced levels of donation, the extreme cost effectiveness of the majority of the Rose Charities programs has minimized the impact on the organization. Some small cuts have been necessary in field programs but in almost all cases 100% function has still been preserved by careful planning.

Next International meeting. The next (3rd) Rose Charities International meeting is planned for February 2011. Candidate countries are Malaysia (Penang) again, or Cambodia.

Representatives for international board. These will be decided over the next few weeks and the board be in action by March/April 2008


Saturday, March 14, 2009

Hillman Fund - Rose Charities Canada Report - Spring 09

HILLMAN MEDICAL EDUCATION FUND

Partner in Kenya
Dr Liz Hillman started the Hillman Medical Education Fund to support medical education and to foster future leaders in medicine, particularly in East Africa. She and Dr Joanne Young travelled to Kenya in October to find partners and projects for the fund. The first priority was to find an organization in Kenya that would work with HMEF to administer the Kenyan programs. A visit to Dr Fred Were and Dr Cecelia Keiru at the Kenyan Pediatric Association resolved that problem. The KPA agreed to manage the funds of the HMEF in Kenya. Liz was delighted as she and Don were involved in the creation of the KPA many years ago and this seemed a great beginning for the HMEF.

Training of Trainers
Liz and Joanne then met Dr Mike English and Dr Grace Irimu from the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Nairobi to discuss how HMEF could be best used for medical education in Kenya. They were told of an urgent need to train trainers in Emergency Triage and Treatment (first 48hours) ETAT+. This is a course in the resuscitation of children that arrive in the emergency acute care at the hospital. Many of these children die if they don’t receive immediate and appropriate treatment, and this course is designed to provide that treatment knowledge. HMEF funded the training of 16 Kenyan trainers in Jan 2009. This has made the University of Nairobi self-sufficient in providing future courses. They will now begin training all the final year medial students in the emergency resuscitation of children. HMEF will also provide a pediatric manual for each of these students that they can carry in their pocket for quick reference.

Fostering Leaders in Medicine in Kenya is a priority of HMEF
While Liz and Joanne were in Nairobi they met several physicians who remembered, with pride, the prizes they had received as medical students. They decided it was important to reinstate 4 prizes that would be given for the demonstration of leadership potential: one prize to an undergraduate student and one prize to a pediatric postgraduate in both the University of Nairobi and at Moi University in Eldoret. It was suggested an appropriate prize could be a diagnostic kit (ophthalmoscope and otoscope) . HMEF has sponsored two memberships to the Kenyan Pediatric Association and one scholarship for a pediatric post graduate to attend the Annual KPA Meeting in Mombassa.

The workshop in Nairobi to revise the PHC Manual for Health Workers in Africa was dedicated to Don Hillman as Don and Liz wrote the first manual many years ago.

The PHC Manual is used in more than 13 medical schools in Africa and greatly appreciated for its core concepts and practical content. Liz Hillman and Kay Wotton joined thirty senior faculty from universities in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia, Ethiopia and Botswana for the five day work shop It was funded by HMEF and the University of British Columbia


It is the intention of HMEF to support Family Medicine in Uganda. Liz and Joanne met with faculty and postgraduate students from the departments of Family Medicine at both Makerere University and Mbarara University, and there are many exciting possibilities.

Partner in Pakistan
Frontier Primary Health Care
In the northwest frontier province of Pakistan, Dr. Emel Khan and his wife Wagma have established the Frontier Primary Health Care organization that runs 12 health clinics in remote and impoverished communities. Kay Wotton and Liz have both worked in Pakistan with Emel and Wagma and are very impressed with what they have achieved with very little resources. Emel travelled to Canada last year and spoke with various health care groups. After a meeting with the Rural Physicians of Canada in Halifax, that group was so impressed that they managed to raise $2000 on the spot! HMEF has matched that contribution. The funds will be used to train 30 traditional birth attendants in two rural communities in Pakistan


Donations
If you share the vision of Don and Liz Hillman please support the work of the Hillman Medical Education Fund with a donation. We are all volunteers so that your donation will be spent directly on the projects in Africa or Pakistan and not be wasted on overheads.

To Donate by cheque
Cheques should be made payable to
Rose Charities HMEF and mailed to

Rose Charities 1870 Ogden Ave, Vancouver V6J 1A1

To Donations by credit card on-line through www.rosecharities.org

To donate stocks and securities. There are tax advantages to donating shares other securities directly to a charity. We accept donations of this kind through MD Management. For more details please email Rose Charities Director Josephine de Freitas at Josephine@shaw.ca

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Women's Mission against Trafficking - Nepal





Anti-Trafficking Project Start-up
Report to: Rose Charities Canada
Date: February 17, 2009

Activity Progress Report from August 2008 to February 17, 2009

Description of Project: With assistance from the start-up grant from Rose Charities Canada, a group of women led by Kunti Chapagai have formed an organization to work on anti-traffickng of women and girls. The organization is directed by a Board of Directors. There are seven local women on the Board. There are also 22 women who are general members of the organization. In addition, we have a former police officer in the border area, lawyer, social worker, local political leader, school teacher as resource people who help us with the awareness projects. The local women’s micro finance group have offered support for the program.

We have undertaken several awareness programs in a rural community near the border with India. In the rural areas the women and girls are more at risk because they are poor, illiterate and have no rights. The awareness programs that work best are street drama and FM radio. In these areas, people will come out because street dramas are means of entertainment so we can get the message across. The other popular way to inform people is FM radio. We have also talked to girls and boys at the local school about the trafficking problem.

Kunti Chapagi has visited with families living in migrant communities to find out their problems and talk about anti-trafficking awareness.

Activities of group to date with outcomes

July 08
Planning: Kunti Chapagai contacted women and political leaders personally about a meeting to talk about social problems. Rose Charities Canada contacted about small grant as start-up. Kunti went door to door talking with individual women about local social problems.

- Canadian grant from Rose Charities Canada
- suggestion from RCC to apply to Global Fund for Women for on-going funding

August 08
Informal Street Drama: boys and girls from the community wrote a script and put on a drama in Chylia Jungle Village Development Committee.
- 4 girls and 6 boys were in the drama group;
- about 100 people mostly girls who were looking after their animals attended the event
- request from girls for more formal dramas

22 Sept 08
Interaction meeting with women, political leaders, Chief Guest and Speaker - Mrs. Santa Manawi, MP.
Purpose: raise awareness about trafficking project, share knowledge on problem and discuss cultural barriers for women. General discussion on problems of women’s heath and sanitation, sexual diseases, family planning, scholarship for children of poor families, informal education programs, adult education. Among problems need to raise awareness about trafficking first priority.
42 in attendance (30 women in attendance). 75% woman showed interest in the project (20).
Received encouragement to continue project and group members asked Kunti to be Coordinator.

September 08
Formal Street Drama planning: recruit street drama members, write the script by drama group and Kunti with support from ex-police officer from rural area familiar with problem; identification of rural communities: Rupandehi District, Aamuwa VDC, ward no. 6

- drama script written
- communities identified
- date chosen for drama

28 Sept 08
Street Drama on girl-woman trafficking and HIV/AIDS. Individual contact with village development committee, village secretary, social workers, leaders about program. Group meeting with village leaders. (1 week process to involve community).
Drama publicized by word of mouth. Held in Rupandehi District, Aamuwa VDC, ward no. 6
- Community leader awareness and support
- 100-200 attend drama are direct beneficiaries of information
- 500-700 indirect beneficiaries who hear information from attendees
- drama actors who receive small allowance and also publicize program to their communities

23 Nov 08
Lecture Program in school and community: message on girl-woman trafficking, sexual diseases, and drug and alcohol. Bhamumadyamik Vidyala School in Rupandehi District, Aamuwa VDC, ward no. 6. Received support from Principal to conduct program
- grades 7, 8, 9 and 10 students (about 200)
- questions asked during program – signs of trafficking, and STDs
- 5 women teachers supportive of program will help if come back ; principal liked program and said to come back

26 Dec 08
Group discussion about program activities, future program and forming NGO: with Board members and general members to tell them about program so far.
Showed pictures and banner of program.
22 women attended meeting (women only)
- pleased with program; thanks; gave advice on program and agreed to program as conducted

4 Feb 09
Advisory Group meeting: After finishing awareness program in border area organized a meeting to discuss trafficking project, grant proposal to Global Women’s Fund, and new awareness programs in local migrant community


- 9 local women attended meeting
- plans for awareness lecture on Saturday through Micro-finance women’s group
- talked about target group of migrants to Kathmandu as high-risk group

6 Feb 09
Sunil Pant, MP meeting: meeting with local activist Politian on trafficking initiatives by government and local groups
- ideas for working with women who have been trafficked
- organizations not working at roots level so our community approach needed
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7 Feb 09
Women’s Micro-finance picnic and AGM: speech on trafficking project by Kunti Chapagai
- support for new group from teachers, health workers in micro-finance
- awareness of new anti-trafficking group to 150 women



What are the differences between the beginning of the project and now? In July when the project first started we didn’t have a group, we had no concrete plans, and we knew about the problem of trafficking in the border areas but didn’t know how to provide services.
Now we have a formal group, we have plans for working in anti-trafficking, we have community support (local political leaders, lawyer, teacher, women’s micro-finance group, former police officer in rural area). We have undertaken several types of awareness programs so we know the cost and effectiveness. We have received support from Rose Charities Canada with the start-up grant and assistance from Rose Charities Volunteer Consultant, Linda Roberts in grant writing and program development.

Plans for the next year: Things we would like to do:

Rehabilitation Program for women who have been victims of trafficking
Small, skill training for women and girls so they have some income and are less likely to be trafficked
Informal education programs for girls ages 10-20 years old, the high risk age, in rural and migrant communities of Kathmandu
More street dramas and more wall paintings (billboards)
Awareness activities like producing a pamphlet, school lectures, and lectures in the community
Advocacy on human rights for women