Wednesday, May 10, 2017
Mighty Moms!
In this video, Edna revisits her previous daily journey to collect water. It is for moms like Edna that Water.org created WaterCredit. As a result of WaterCredit, Edna was empowered with the funds needed to construct a water tap at home. This meant more time in her day to work. Now, she can afford to send her daughter to school. Soon, Sarah will graduate high school. Sarah looks forward to being the first in her family to ever attend college
Monday, May 8, 2017
Support Sport
Baseball: An Alternative to Gangs in Nicaragua from Outreach International on Vimeo.
If nothing else, kids in the
United States and Nicaragua have one thing in common: they love baseball.
That's right, America's pastime is also the official national sport of
Nicaragua. And what's not to love? When baseball season rolls around each year,
it brings warm weather, fresh air, exercise and comradery with it. Even as a
spectator, it's hard to complain about the perks of hotdogs and peanuts at the
ballpark.
In Nicaragua, it's common to
see kids playing baseball with sticks and rocks. (When you don't have enough money
for equipment, you get creative with your resources.) It's no surprise that
hurling rocks at one another is a dangerous way to spend an afternoon, but for
the love of the game, they keep playing.
On May 21, my daughter Kelly
and I are running in the LIMA Marathon in Lima Peru to support and fundraise
for Outreach
International.
This great organization is completely
transparent, effective, and efficient in their use of funds. Our family has
been supporting their work since the mid 1980’s. Staff and volunteers are
involved in causes that share our own passion and compassion.
Running a race on their
behalf is such a small thing. Yet, with your help and support, my waddling
along can make a BIG difference in the lives of children, women, men, villages,
communities across the globe!
Empowering Women, Enabling Health in Nepal
From HealthEd Connect: “Being
a health worker in Nepal is no easy task. In addition to the challenging
terrain, Maoist threats, and tough living conditions, women must find time to
serve as volunteers in their communities. Many heroic women, however, do just
that.
Sandwiched between China and India, the tiny Himalayan country of Nepal is listed as one of the poorest countries in the world. At the community’s request, Health Worker training was initiated in Kathmandu in 2000 with women coming from villages high in the Himalayas to attend the sessions. Most of the women were Hindu; a few were Christian. All, however, were resolved to bring better health care to their communities.
At the end of the first training, one of the attendees who had been especially attentive came up to express her appreciation. She had only 2 years of formal schooling, not an unusual occurrence since half of Nepali women are illiterate.1 It was apparent from her calloused hands that she was no stranger to guiding plows behind water buffalo in the rice fields. Her simple but profound statement was this: “I can’t believe that someone with my low-level of education has been entrusted with such valuable information.” She expressed well the seriousness with which most women take their volunteer roles as health workers.
The community health worker (CHW) program is now registered with the government as Hope for the Himalaya. The CHWs provide first-line primary health care in remote villages, many of which are located several hours from the nearest road, by weighing and monitoring babies and pregnant women and arranging transportation to the hospital for those who need more intensive care. The health workers make the trek to Kathmandu every two months to deliver reports regarding their health activities.”
My daughter Kelly and have friends in Nepal. Two years ago, in running the Stockholm Marathon I supported the work of Heart to Heart in their efforts to provide relief for the devastating earthquakes in the area at that time. Supporting the efforts of health focused organizations around the world is so important in working to alleviate extreme poverty. Kelly and I are supporting HealthEd Connect by running in the Lima Peru Marathon May 21. If you would like to support the work of HealthEd Connect, donate here.
Edita
From water.org “She seems unassuming; however upon
conversation with Edita one will discover the quiet confidence that drove her
to bring her family to a place where they could access both good schools and
running water.
Edita and her husband
started their family in a small village deep in the Andes Mountains. Together
with their children, they lived a difficult life. Each day held the need for
long walks for water and laborious domestic chores. There were no nearby schools.
Edita believed that somewhere, somehow, a better life awaited her family.
With hope and determination,
Edita and her husband moved their family to Concepcion Village. Comprised of
mostly indigenous Incan people, who largely speak the ancient language of
Q’eqchi’, the family felt right at home speaking their native language, among
their people. Of even greater benefit – the poor yet developing community
offered schools and running water. So close to achieving what they wanted for
their new life, next was to find a way to establish a water connection in their
home. They didn’t have to look far.
Water.org’s work around the
world includes removing the financial barriers that separate the poor in
Concepcion Village from accessing the municipal water lines running just under
their feet. We empower families like Edita’s by helping them access small,
affordable loans that enable them to install household water connections and
toilets.
Goal in reach, it was only a
few short weeks before Edita turned the knob on her very own tap. And within a
few short months, she and her husband will repay their loan with money earned
from farm work available to them in Concepcion.
It was with hope and
determination Edita moved her family to a better home, and it is with access to
safe water she is more empowered than ever to change their world."
This next week, my daughter Kelly
and I will be in Lima Peru running in the Lima Marathon supporting women like
Edita to change her own world. If you think water.org is worthy of your
support and want to cheer Kelly and me on, give here : http://give.water.org/fundraiser/4948/#.
THANK YOU!!!
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