Heifer Haiti Distributes Food to Hurricane Sandy Victims

Last Friday we posted about emergency efforts that were underway to help the people of Haiti affected by Hurricane Sandy.

Yesterday, Heifer Haiti’s Country Director, Hervil Cherubin, let us know that the food distribution was a success. More than 400 food packages were given out to families who needed help in the wake of the storm. Cherubin said Heifer Haiti also helped provide food to Haitians who are physically challenged.

The distribution took place in Solon (a community in Saint Louis du Sud) where Heifer Haiti has a rabbit project and various communities in Les Cayes where the office is located.

It was the first of Heifer Haiti’s planned efforts to provide emergency aid. While Heifer does not specialize in short-term relief but rather in long-term sustainable solutions, our Heifer Haiti colleagues and participants need your continued help. Please consider donating to our Disaster Rehabilitation Fund so we can provide the best assistance possible and help equip families with the means to help deal with future disasters.

Pass on the Gift of Health and Hope This Mother’s Day

If you want to honor your mother with a very special gift this Mother’s Day, consider the gifts that Heifer has to offer. When you give a gift like this, you’re giving something big−something that will touch your mother’s heart and truly make a difference in the lives of others.

What kind of difference? Education. Nutrition. Clean Water. Empowerment.

Gulu Women Dairy Farmers

Christine Akello, 47 years old, with some of the children she cares for in Peya village, Uganda. Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International.

Take a look at the Infographic below, which lays out a few facts and solutions your Mother’s Day gifts through Heifer could bring.

Women in Sub-Saharan Africa spend about 40 billion hours per year collecting and transporting water. The gift of clean water, irrigation systems, and conservation training can lighten the load and free these mothers to spend more time on other things, like spending time with their children and becoming involved in income-generating activities.

Girls, who suffer most from gender discrimination, are the ones denied the opportunity for education when resources are limited. And children born to educated women are less likely to be stunted or malnourished, so if these girls don’t go to school and become more educated women, the cycle continues. Your Mother’s Day gift provides livestock and training to families to earn more income and pay for all of their children’s school costs, including the girls, breaking the cycle.

Mother's Day Infographic

When you give a gift through Heifer International this Mother’s Day, you’re helping a mother  provide better nutrition to her family and education to her children. And it doesn’t end there. The economic success spreads throughout communities, children have more opportunities to thrive and prosper, and women become empowered to work and become self-sufficient.

It’s not just a present, it’s a gift for a better tomorrow.

 

Where Empathy Comes From—Us!


This is a guest post from World Ark contributing writer Jennifer Wheary, who is working on an article for a future issue about sharing communities.

puppy-fawnWe all need a little inspiration from time to time. Heifer, and especially its supporters, inspire me. There is incredible vision—meaning the ability to really see others and a way to help them—behind every donor’s contribution, large and small. I am proud to have written an article about Heifer’s work in East Africa for the current edition of World Ark.  I am also incredibly glad to have read this current edition, February 2013, cover to cover.

In this edition, Austin Bailey, World Ark senior editor, writes an excellent piece about Growing Kindness. I am a parent, and someone who struggles to be less self-centered. For me, Bailey’s reflections on how to sow the seeds of kindness and caring in her young sons hit home.

I read Bailey’s article with great interest, filed it somewhere in the back of my head, and moved on. A few weeks later, I came across an article on The Six Habits of Highly Empathic People while researching something for work. I immediately clicked. Or rather, things immediately started to click for me.

I had been researching something called collaborative consumption and was reading a wonderful online magazine devoted to the topic called Shareable.net. Shareable had republished (with permission of course) the empathy article (more on that later).

I quickly skimmed the six habits: “Cultivate curiosity about strangers,” explained the article. “Challenge prejudices,” “discover commonalities,” and “try another person’s life.” Listen to others, and open up about yourself. Inspire action and social change with an ambitious imagination. When I first glanced at the list, I must admit I saw it as a checklist. “How many of these do I get?” I thought to myself.  If I can check four out of six, am I empathetic enough?

As I was trying to tally my self-righteous empathy score, Bailey’s World Ark article on kindness came to mind. It was then I made an important connection. Empathy is not a competitive commodity. As the root of kindness, empathy is an ongoing, unfinished action. Put another way, the habits of empathy I was reading about were not a checklist, but an ever-present to-do list.

Though I saw it on Shareable, The Six Habits of Highly Empathic People originally appeared on the Greater Good website. Greater Good is the online presence of a science center at the University of Berkeley that “studies the psychology, sociology, and neuroscience of well-being, and teaches skills that foster a thriving, resilient, and compassionate society.”

Such a society sounds grand, and elusive, especially if it’s left up to limited people like me to create it. Fortunately it is not.

The point of the empathy article, of Bailey’s original piece in World Ark, and of the scientists studying how to build a thriving and compassionate world is that better behavior and an overall better place are actionable and achievable. Achievable now, in individual choices and small actions.

But it takes work, and it takes a lot of us working together.

If you delve into the Greater Good website at all (and I highly recommend you do), you will learn a lot about how and why to pursue this goal. One common theme underlying these efforts is the importance of paying attention and really seeing others. Heifer supporters show this incredible vision again and again.

Five Ways to Create Social Change This Easter With Heifer

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This Easter, create social change with Heifer International to help end hunger and poverty with these simple actions:

1. Switch your Facebook cover profile to support Heifer this Easter.

2. Switch your Twitter background to show how this Easter you will be putting an #AltGift in someone’s basket.

3. Switch your Google+ cover profile to show how Heifer is making a difference this Easter.

4. Tweet your support for Heifer by using the handle @Heifer and hashtag #AltGift.

5. Share our Easter video on Facebook and tag us by adding @Heifer International.

Every new voice adds to the joy and hope of the Easter season. Together, we can make a difference.

Heifer Cambodia Participants Are Finalists for “Half the Sky” Award

 

Ley Savorn, Heifer Cambodia, teaches women in a self help group.  She is a finalist for the Half the Sky Movement Students Rebuild Award.
Ley Savorn, Heifer Cambodia, teaches women in a self help group. She is a finalist for the Half the Sky Movement Students Rebuild Award.

Heifer International is delighted that two of our project participants, Ley Savorn and Krouch Souk, from Cambodia, have been chosen as finalists for the Half the Sky Movement Students Rebuild Award.

Both these young women are committed to improving and transforming the lives of others in their area. Now they NEED your vote! Please visit http://studentsrebuild.org/awards/vote to help them win $10, 000 so they may continue empowering women and girls in their communities.

Krouch Souk, from Heifer Cambodia, works to train community members about finances and literacy. She is a finalist for the Half the Sky Movement Students Rebuild Award.

Krouch Souk, from Heifer Cambodia, works to train community members about finances and literacy. She is a finalist for the Half the Sky Movement Students Rebuild Award.

I encourage you to view and vote all the remarkable award finalists from Sierra Leone, Cambodia, Somaliland, India and Kenya today through Friday, March 8th.

The judging panel includes America Ferrera, Olivia Wilde, Eileen Fisher, Jeffrey Sachs, Zainab Salbi, Sheryl WuDunn, Maggie Doyne and campus ambassador Shomira Sanyal of India.

Last Week to Pass on the Gift in Peru with Garnet Hill

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Over the last few weeks, we’ve told you about a unique chance take a special trip and Pass on the Gift in Peru with our corporate partner Garnet Hill. 

For nearly 30 years, Garnet Hill has worked with like-minded organizations to improve communities and better peoples’ lives. They are now providing an opportunity to send one lucky person and a guest to Peru to see Heifer’s work firsthand on the trip of a lifetime. You have until March 12th at 11:59 p.m. to enter Pass on the Gift with Garnet Hill.

So how do you Pass on the Gift in Peru? Check out our how-to enter blog here. 

Learn more about this amazing opportunity from Garnet Hill.

Note: The above link will take you to Garnet Hill’s website in a new window.

Double Your Impact In Guatemala

Double your impact on hunger now! Thanks to a generous benefactor and international partners, your donation to Heifer International will be matched dollar-for-dollar during March to support food security, better nutrition and women’s empowerment in Guatemala.

Double your impact for people like Virginia Jimenez Mateo, who knows firsthand how women living in rural areas can become isolated and marginalized. She lives in the remote village of Laguna Verde, Guatemala, with her husband Mauricio and their seven sons.

Virginia Jimenez Mateo, Guatemala

Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International

Before joining a Heifer project in 2007, Virginia seldom left her house since women do most of the farm labor and household chores. She rarely had the opportunity to get to know other women in her community apart from church activities. “The only time I left my house was to go to church and back,” she said.

Virginia primarily prepared beans, steamed broccoli or carrots for meals. They had to buy eggs from their neighbors and could only afford meat twice a month. She recalls that 14-year-old Mario had stomach problems.

Since joining the project, she has received training along with 10 chickens in 2007 and a goat in 2011. She especially likes Passing on the Gift®. “It would be hard for me to save enough money to repay a goat, but when mine (kid born on February 14, 2012) is big enough I can pass it on,” she said, having already passed on the gift of chickens in 2008.

Heifer’s training improved life in the community. Training provided opportunities for the local women to get to know each other. “No one can take away the knowledge we received,” she said. Thanks to the gender training, the men have started participating. With more help around the house, Virginia’s family started to thrive.

Edwin Gonzalez Jimenez, Guatemala

“Part of the training was teaching my children than they can do anything a woman can do,” Virginia said.
Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International

The biggest benefit for her family, Virginia said, was their improved diet and nutrition. They raise their own chickens, so they no longer have to buy eggs and can now afford to buy meat once a week. “Now we have more variety,” she said. She noticed that they aren’t as sick as before. She credits drinking goat’s milk for her improved health and less aches in her joints.

Better nutrition means her sons have more energy to focus on their school work. Miguel, age 19, and Carlos, age 16, received scholarships to attend a Catholic school. “The knowledge and ethics they are receiving are important,” she said.

This kind of impact happens every day in Heifer projects. Stretch your dollar this month and double your impact to help provide the training and livestock needed by families like Virginia’s to help put more food on the table.

To maximize this match, we need to raise at least $831,000 from generous supporters like you.

Click here to donate.

Double Your Donation to End Malnutrition in Honduras and Guatemala

Right now, the rate of malnutrition in Central America is staggering. In the Alta Verapaz region of Guatemala, 60 percent of the population suffers from chronic or acute malnutrition. Six out of 10 children struggle with malnutrition in the Lempira region of Honduras. These communities face an infant mortality rate of 28 deaths for every 1,000 births. That’s almost five times worse than the United States. But, we can do something about it.

During the month of March, your gift to Heifer International can be matched dollar-for-dollar thanks to a generous benefactor and international partners, every dollar raised for three new projects in Honduras and Guatemala will be doubled. Stretch your dollar further and double your impact to help provide the training and livestock needed by families to help put more food on the table.

Cary Rubelse and Eduardo Najera Gonzalez, Guatemala

Cary Rubelse and Eduardo Najera Gonzalez can drink goat’s milk to increase their nutrition.
Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International

In Honduras, Heifer is working alongside communities in Lempira to improve health and nutritional food security by 2016. Training in areas like micro-enterprise initiatives, gender equity and sustainable farming practices will help improve production and full inclusion in the community. Farming and income diversification will be impacted by the placement of cows, goats, poultry and bees.

Heifer has started two projects in the Alta Verapaz region of Guatemala to help families to produce more on their family farms through the use of stronger livestock, seeds and improved agroecology.

Gifts of livestock and training provide improved nutrition and additional family income along with the chance for vulnerable children to grow up healthy and strong. In addition, these kids will have the opportunity to break the cycle of poverty by attending school.

Elmer and Lisbe Gonzalez

Elmer and Lisbe Gonzalez now have the opportunity to attend school.
Photo by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International.

In order to maximize this March match, we need to raise at least $831,000 by generous supporters like you. These projects cannot move forward without your help. Right now, any gift made to this project will be matched dollar-for-dollar. Click here to find out more or to donate.

Help Us Make Cows Fly

We at Heifer International are excited to invite you to join in When Cows Fly, our new online portal that allows participants, donors and others to share your stories of engagement.

When Cows Fly

The new online experience allows everyone who believes in Heifer International’s goal of ending hunger and empowering families to become part of the online community that “gives wing” to more cows, more goats and chickens and pigs. When Cows Fly provides first-person storytelling opportunities—a chance to express what it means to give or to receive. Each story can be amplified further through users’ social networks.

When Cows Fly

“When Cows Fly is an exciting way for Heifer International to connect our community of supporters,” said Cindy Jones-Nyland, Heifer International’s executive vice president of marketing and resource development. “We are inspired every day by the creative and touching ways that people spread our mission. This digital engagement effort serves as a wonderful mobilization and stewardship platform to further engage our supporters and connect our global community.”

When Cows Fly

When Cows Fly allows users to contribute their own stories or photos and explore Heifer’s work around the globe. The platform creates a culture committed to creating greater opportunities for the struggling families who need Heifer International’s help. It’s a place where all people can connect, join in and share their thoughts about and reasons for supporting founder Dan West’s outlandish dream—a dream that will end poverty and hunger forever through shared passion and commitment.

When Cows Fly

Every voice is important–from donors, volunteers, congregations and schools to project participants and partners. Each story connects one more person to the solution to the scourges of hunger, poverty and environmental degradation. Each story reminds us that we can make a difference. Be part of a great idea taking wing; visit www.heifer.org/whencowsfly.

Win a Trip to Heifer Peru!

Win a Trip of a Lifetime to Peru from Garnet Hill and Heifer International!

I’ve been there; trust me, you want to win this!

Trip for Two Includes Visit to Heifer’s Alpaca Projects Near Cuzco

Win a trip to Heifer Peru

Photo by Jake Lyell, courtesy of Heifer International

Life Changing Chance to Live and Learn for Seven Days in Ancient Peru

Garnet Hill and Heifer International are proud to announce the Pass on the Gift® in Peru Sweepstakes, which will award one grand prize winner with an all-inclusive trip for two to the ancient Incan Empire capital of Cuzco. For seven days, they will work hand-in-hand with Heifer to foster sustainable development in the community while experiencing the country’s colorful culture through exclusive guided tours. To learn more or to enter the Pass on the Gift® in Peru Sweepstakes, please visit garnethill.com. Visit the site every Wednesday through March 12 for a chance to win a $500 Garnet Hill gift card, and earn up to five extra entries toward the grand prize.

Win a trip to Heifer Peru

Photo by Cindy Jones-Nyland, courtesy of Heifer International.

“We have designed a trip that will be inspirational and transformative, not only for the vibrant and historic culture of Cuzco, but also for the opportunity to work alongside and break bread with a Heifer International family. The winner will participate first hand in one of Heifer International’s projects in Peru that, like all of the organization’s global initiatives, aims to significantly improve the livelihoods of families and communities,” said Marleen New, Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations for Heifer International.

Win a trip to Heifer Peru

Photo by Jake Lyell, courtesy of Heifer International.

The trip includes an introduction to Heifer International’s alpaca projects in the Andean region near Cuzco. The winner will participate in and learn about all facets of alpaca care including feeding; tending to pasture; and the business associated with the sale of their exceptionally soft wool to make blankets, ponchos, hats and carpets, which ensures a sustainable way of life for struggling families.

For Heifer International, development is about creating a world free of hunger and poverty, where families in need thrive under their own energy and entrepreneurial spirit—on their own terms.

Win a trip to Heifer Peru

Photo by Cindy Jones-Nyland, courtesy of Heifer International.

Wendy Thayer, public relations manager for Garnet Hill, added, “This really is the trip of a lifetime. It’s a remarkable opportunity for the winner to play a role in helping to end hunger and poverty for a Heifer family. Garnet Hill is thrilled to offer such an authentic way for our customers to engage with our partner in Cuzco.”

Heifer International began activities in Peru in 1963 and continues to support urban and rural communities and small-farmer organizations to improve their quality of life. Peru’s diverse cultural patterns are based on solidarity and reciprocity. Thus, Heifer’s approach to sharing resources is a key element to achieve just and sustainable development. Today, Heifer Peru works in Piura, Lambayeque, Cerro de Pasco, Lima, Junin, Huancavelica, Cuzco, Apurimac and Puno, and has assisted more than 40,000 families. Heifer’s partnership with Garnet Hill began in 2009.

Win a trip to Heifer Peru

Photo by Jake Lyell, courtesy of Heifer International.

To learn more or to enter the Pass on the Gift® in Peru Sweepstakes, please visit garnethill.com.

Who would you take? Tell us in the comments section!

Heifer Board Gives 100%

The Heifer International Board of Directors has achieved a 100 percent personal giving level for fiscal year 2013. We are excited for and proud of our board’s fundraising committee, and especially the committee chair, Francine Anthony, for this accomplishment!

Board giving

We must all work together. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee, courtesy of Heifer International.

From Francine Anthony:

My dear committee members all know how fond I am of using quotes, so in keeping in character, I leave you with the following from the late, great Arthur Ashe – “From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life.”

Thank you each and every one of you for contributing to Heifer International’s ability to “make a life” for so many unfortunate others across the globe.

If you’re not a member of a nonprofit board or staff, it may be difficult to know why this is such a big deal. Here are some reasons, from BoardSource:

  • Board member giving is a public commitment to the organization’s work;
  • Board members might pay increased attention to the nonprofit’s mission and financial health when their own money is engaged;
  • Many other donors and institutional funders will not give to organizations that don’t have 100 percent board participation as current donors

Despite all of these great reasons, 100 percent board giving is in the minority. According to a survey by BoardSource (summary here), 68 percent of nonprofits surveyed have a policy requiring board members to donate to the organization; average board participation is 74 percent, and only 46 percent of nonprofit boards had 100 percent participation.

Our board reaching 100 percent personal giving is exciting, because they are publicly demonstrating how committed they are to Heifer International’s success.

Are you part of the nonprofit sector? How do you feel about the importance of board giving? Tell us in the comments section below.