Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Staff Member Tours Heifer Tanzania Projects

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Our own Tonya Toney is on a study tour in Tanzania visiting Heifer International projects that are helping families become self sufficient through education, training and livestock. She will be posting her thoughts and photos from the field during the coming week.

“What an amazing first day of project visits, I’m still processing all that I saw, heard and felt. The people have such a beautiful spirit.” – Tonya Toney

In this photo, Tonya is in the Nambala village with four siblings who are now able to attend primary school thanks to their parents involvement with Heifer’s life-changing work.

Tonya In Nambala

Farmer Zadock and his wife in Nambala Village

In the Nambala village, Zadock, a farmer, and his wife received Heifer goats and now have a variety of livestock, more fish ponds and practice organic farming. Zadock now trains other farmers in surrounding villages. They have now been able to send their four children to school (they are in the above photo with Tonya).

Mama Ana churning butter

Mama Ana demonstrates butter churning. The Agape women’s project, in the hills of Mt. Meru, has shown women how to process milk to make all types of cheese and butter that they can use to improve nutrition and sell in their communities. The profits from this successful project has helped build primary and secondary schools and a health clinic for the community.

The Thais That Bind, Pt. 2

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Experience in Rural Thailand Tribal Village Evokes Shared Humanity

by Shannon Boshears

(This is part two of a series that started last month. To read part one, click here.)

We sang through each verse featuring a different animal in each one. We mimicked the cow, the chicken and the pig, and with each verse, we followed it with the animal sounds we had learned early in life – “moo, moo,” “cluck, cluck” and “oink, oink.” With their nods and smiles, they seemed to enjoy our song and afterwards our interpreter explained to them about what we were singing. He turned to us and asked, “tell us again what sound you say the cow makes?” We said, “moo moo.” And now that the villagers understood what we were saying, they all exploded in laughter. But what they were really laughing about was how it didn’t sound like a cow at all to them.

So, the interpreter then asked one of the village men to demonstrate, “so, how do you think the cow sounds?” And the man immediately made a groan that was very realistic to a real cow. Of course, our group fell out laughing because of his interpretation, which was very authentic compared to our “moo moo.” Needless to say, we went through the same process with the chicken and the pig. Our “clucks” and “oinks” sounded nothing like their animal sounds did, as theirs were very authentic. The laughter between the two groups swelled in waves like a great ocean and the banter between us was back-and-forth like a tennis match on center court at Wimbledon. It was a most poignant moment for us. We were two completely different worlds coming together and sharing a common ground not through our own language but the language of animals.

That night, we slept in sleeping bags on pallets under mosquito nets in our host family’s house. We knew we would have an early meeting the next morning and we went to sleep exhausted, yet energized by our surroundings and experiences so far. But at 4:30 a.m., we were jolted awake, like a sharp stabbing pain demanding our attention, by the hair-curling crows of the roosters under our house. We all lay there listening and anticipating as they barked out their calls again and again for hours. We became so tickled by trying to muffle our laughter that none of us ever went back to sleep that morning. At one point, I even pulled out my iPhone, started my audio recorder application and recorded several minutes of them crowing while we are in the background breaking up into laughter. Since then, we’ve discussed making the “rooster recordings” into audio ringtones for our phones.

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The Thais That Bind

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

Experience in Rural Thailand Tribal Village Evokes Shared Humanity

by Shannon Boshears

(This is part one of a two part series that will conclude next month.)

We were about three miles from arriving at our first project visit in the mountainous region of Northern Thailand when the fear caved in on me like an emotional avalanche. I was abandoning life as I knew it – never having been without electricity, running water or Western facilities, and surviving on a simple and fundamental existence in an extremely remote area. I was as far from the world I knew as I could get without purchasing a ticket on the next NASA space mission.

After a 25 hour plane ride, and driving six hours on the road from Chiang Mai to Pai, Thailand (notorious for its 762 hairpin curves), I braced myself in the passenger seat of a small cab truck with a driver who spoke no English, while traveling down a road that was as bumpy as the ravaged face of a 13-year-old pubescent boy.

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Heifer Cameroon Trains Leaders For A Brighter Future

Friday, March 20th, 2009
Photobucket
Cyprian’s mother (left) and these orphans have both benefited from the dairy project in Vekovi.

An elderly woman in a brilliant pink blouse handed me a photo of herself that was taken when she was recovering in a hospital bed. This gift was her way of thanking Heifer for her life-saving operation. Her son, Cyprian Lukong, had struggled for years to make a living wage to care of his family, just as his mother had battled dehabilitating stomach problems time and time again.
Cyprian’s involvement with Heifer Cameroon’s dairy initiative proved to be a turning point, not only in his life, but that of his mother, his wife, his children, those that now work for him on his farm, and the many orphans that he provides milk for and helps counsel.

In the village of Vekovi, Cyprian was just one of many who had taken the livestock training, various agricultural instruction, and Heifer’s Cornerstones of sharing and caring and vigorously applied it to their lives to make a better future.

To most Americans these people would have nothing, but they are doing better than they ever imagined. Their homes are made of mud bricks with tin roofs, dirt floors and no indoor plumbing or appliances. But through their involvement with Heifer they are now able to provide three healthy meals a day for their family, pay for the children’s school fees, books and transportation, and even reach out to help AIDS/HIV orphans and ailing members of their communities.

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Heifer Mozambique: Confirmation Of The Mission At Hand

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Group

It was an opportunity to travel outside of the country for the first time, and, more importantly, experience first hand the life-changing work of an organization dedicated to ending hunger and poverty.

Pat Brower, human resources manager for Heifer Foundation, traveled to the east African nation of Mozambique in October of 2008 for a study tour through the projects of Heifer International, an organization with a mission of ending hunger and poverty through education and livestock. “It reinforced how I feel about Heifer, how I feel about the Foundation, and what we are doing,” she said. “Seeing it first hand I can tell people: I’ve seen it, I know it’s working and I know it’s right.”

One of the most exciting and surprising aspects of the trip, Pat said, was the variety and diversity of the projects that they visited during the two-week journey. “We got a real overview of the Heifer projects and the model, what it takes to get one started, and how long and drawn out it can be,” she said.

Pat said there was considerable poverty in the cities, but once they traveled into the countryside the poverty became even more prevalent. However, the first project they visited, which was one of the very first projects in Mozambique, demonstrated what Heifer’s mission could mean to the lives of a group that worked hard for a few years in the project programs. “All the people in that village had matching polo shirts and women had matching kampulanas,” she said, which was very different from the dress of the projects that followed.

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Heifer Mozambique: A Personal Story Of Connecting With The Past And Present, While Working For A Brighter Future

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Dorothy&Kids

It was the barren dirt yards dotted with small patches of flowers that brought Dorothy Graham back to the Delta of her youth. Mozambique is more than 9,000 miles away from her childhood home in Marvell, Arkansas, yet the living conditions brought back a flood of memories and established for her an instant connection with the people and the land.

“They use hoes to cut their grass, so their yards are nothing but dirt because they cut all the grass out plus the children playing in it,” she said. “And I can remember growing up, that’s the way my mother did our yard.” Dorothy Graham, the planned charitable giving officer for the nonprofit organization Heifer Foundation, had traveled to Mozambique in October of 2008 to take part in a study tour of the projects of Heifer International, an organization dedicated to ending hunger and poverty through education and livestock.

Boy with goat

Finding home an ocean away

“I was thinking about my childhood a lot when I was traveling in Africa because I’m from the Delta,” she said. “Anyone familiar with the Delta knows that it is poor. Growing up, I realized I was poor, but it wasn’t until after I graduated and moved to Little Rock that I realized how poor I actually was.”

Dorothy was quick to point out that while she was considered poor growing up, it was still nothing like the challenges and conditions faced by many of the people she visited on her journey. “Poverty is different here in the United States than it is in the third world countries,” she said. “Even with the poorest people here, it’s just not the same. They have nothing. We at least have the government to assist us. They don’t have that because their governments are so poor.”

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Heifer International’s 2008 Women in Livestock Development (WiLD) Award Winners

Monday, December 8th, 2008

WiLD-Maine

WiLD is a Heifer International program that trains women around the world in livestock care as well as helping them work together to overcome social and cultural barriers and, ultimately, assist them in moving toward self-reliance.

WiLD-Cameroon

Award Category 1: Grassroots Achievements

Africa
Callista Kadzere of Zimbabwe was selected as a winner. Callista stood out from all the candidates of her region because of her community leadership and her dedication to the empowerment of her fellow women. Her creativity and assertiveness enabled her to negotiate with authorities in a rather strict culture for her fellow women to have access to land for gardening. She organized and led women’s groups for economic self-reliance. Her dedication to building the self-confidence of women and to win men’s support in a non-confrontational way makes her outstanding. She is a role model for her community, especially for women.

Asia/South Pacific
Sonam Yurden of China was selected as a winner. Sonam has shown extraordinary endurance in bringing herself and her family above a poverty line. Beginning with very small input, she used her creativity to diversify her family’s livelihood. Her agricultural and weaving skills enabled her not only to establish her family economically, but also helped others to escape from poverty. Sonam is a strong and dedicated community organizer. She enabled many families to manage and organize a weaving project while simultaneously promoting women’s economic empowerment. Her leadership makes her a great achiever.

Central Eastern Europe
Anush Ghazaryan of Armenia was selected as a winner. Anush has a moving story as a true agent of holistic community development. She encouraged and mobilized older and younger generations equally for community development. Her work as a trainer and counselor for youth has opened up opportunities for many to actively participate in community development and caring for their own environment. Her leadership in initiating and implementing organic farming as an approach to sustainable food systems is remarkable. Her commitment to support her fellow women in balancing domestic and farm work, her dedication to the Cornerstones, especially self-reliance and sustainability made her stand out.

Award Category 2: Meritorious Award
Tran Thi Kim Oanh of Vietnam was selected as a winner of the Meritorious Award. She is an incredible community development agent, who is dedicated to the success of others. She is an excellent organizer, trainer and encourager. She is committed to Heifer’s work to the extent of sacrificing her weekends to help communities and the self-help groups to establish and to build their capacities through training. Even though she works for the government, her voluntary work with Heifer is out of dedication to community empowerment. As a woman, as a mother, and as a professional, she learned how to balance worklife and family. She has become an example for many women in her communities.

Support the work of Heifer International’s WiLD programs by contributing to the following Interests:

WiLD Interest

Rosalee Sinn WiLD Interest

Mildred P. Lynan WiLD Interest

Heather DePaolo-Johnny Gender Equity Interest

Albania: Greenway Women’s Issues Interest

Heifer Americas Project Updates

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Urban Projects2


Illinois – Fair Food Project: Building Capacities for Community-Based Food Systems

Despite Illinois’ role as a major agricultural producer of commodity crops, half a million people in northern Illinois suffer food insecurity every year. In Chicago, one of the nation’s largest and most prosperous cities, an average of 88,000 residents per week seek emergency food assistance.

The Fair Food project will involve partnerships with seven community-based organizations that are committed to urban garden projects that will serve low-income youth and adults. With resources of training, seeds, livestock and small-scale infrastructure, this project will result in seven communities transforming the way 1,290 families access healthy food, generate income and reinvent regional food systems.

Here is an Interest that supports Heifer International’s urban agricultural projects:

Rector & Neill Families Urban Agri Interest

Heifer Honduras

A new project will strengthen rural micro-enterprise in Honduras. Heifer’s intervention in favor of small farmers sparked the beginning of rural microenterprises that market surplus production and added value products. Led by small farmers, these rural enterprises lack the skills and resources to become successful, innovative businesses that support families and communities.

This project will strengthen nine rural microenterprises born from Heifer projects. These cooperatives will improve the nutrition and income of 883 families by generating jobs and marketing added-value products from honey, dairy, organic manure, seeds, pork, fish and weaving.

The following Interests provide long-term support for Heifer International projects that provide small farmers the training and tools to lift themselves out of poverty:

Honduras Country Interest
Honduras: Sarita Irias Interest
Honduras: Tim & Gloria Wheeler Interest
Honduras: Carrie & Robert G. Whitfield Memorial Interest
Honduras: Sievert & Peterson Interest

Heifer Ecuador

Unsustainable farming practices in the provinces of Los Rios and Guayas in the southern coast of Ecuador have severely affected local farmers’ ability to make a living off agriculture. Monocropping, indiscriminate water use and intense chemicals deteriorate the local environment at a rapid pace. Rural and urban families struggle to afford local healthy and nutritious food.

A new project working with small farms and promoting local markets will involve 290 families who will learn about farm diversification and water management to improve nutrition; generate surplus produce to increase household income; and build organizational capacity through leadership training for 120 community leaders, who will then share their knowledge with 1,200 people.

These Interests provide sustainable support for new projects that will improve the nutrition and earning ability of small farmers in Ecuador:

Ecuador: Eduardo & Nancy Sotomayor Interest
South America Country Interest

Ecuador2

Aspire to Inspire: the Catie Curtis Endowment

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Catie Curtis understands how the gift of an instrument can forever change a young person’s life. When Catie was 15-years-old, growing up in a small town in southern Maine, she was given a guitar with the only catch being that she had to learn how to play it.

Now, in the midst of a musical career that has seen her travel all across the U.S. and Europe, release nine studio albums to critical acclaim – including a 2006 International Songwriting Competition Grand Prize – Catie has a desire to give the same gift she once received. Catie has created one of Hope Equity’s newest Interests, the Catie Curtis Aspire To Inspire Endowment, to provide continuous, ongoing funding for the ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers) Foundation so that guitars can be given to budding young musicians that can’t afford to buy their own.

“My passion is to put guitars in the hands of aspiring young musicians. They can use it as a vehicle to create a life for themselves, if they so choose,” Catie said.

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International Charity Creates Site to Build Endowments

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

By Nicole Wallace via philanthropy.com

The Heifer Foundation, in Little Rock, Ark., is looking to the Internet to extend the reach of its charitable endowments — and to make giving to an endowment more accessible.

“Typically when we think of endowments, it’s kind of an intimidating term,” says Greg Spradlin, a vice president at the foundation.

Many people, he says, think, “Well, that’s for the mega-wealthy, and that’s for hospital wings and that sort of thing.”

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