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.

Serve Today for MLK

Are you serving today in observance of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service?

MLK Day 2013

From The Corporation for National & Community Service’s website:

Why Serve on MLK Day of Service?

Dr. King believed in a nation of freedom and justice for all, and encouraged all citizens to live up to the purpose and potential of America by applying the principles of nonviolence to make this country a better place to live—creating the Beloved Community.

The MLK Day of Service is a way to transform Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s life and teachings into community action that helps solve social problems. That service may meet a tangible need, or it may meet a need of the spirit. On this day, Americans of every age and background celebrate Dr. King through service projects that strengthen communities, empower individuals, bridge barriers, and create solutions.

The MLK Day of Service takes place the third Monday in January each year. It’s the only federal holiday observed as a national day of service – a “day on, not a day off.” It’s a day for Americans to turn their day out of the office or classroom into a day to make an impact in their communities.

Heifer Cameroon

Heifer Cameroon participant serving others. Photo by Jake Lyell, courtesy of Heifer International.

Strengthening communities is a key part of Heifer’s work around the world. It is only within healthy, vibrant communities that hunger, poverty and environmental harm can truly be ended.

How easy is it for us to go about our everyday lives without taking our own communities into consideration? If for only one day each year you lift your head and take notice and action, I urge you to make it today.

Dr. King once said, “Everyone can be great because everyone can serve.” Where will you serve today? Tell us in the comments section below.

Help Worldbuilders Fundraiser Reach Goal for Heifer

Fantasy author Patrick Rothfuss’s yearly fundraiser for Heifer International, Worldbuilders, is quickly coming to a close on January 21, 2013 with a goal of $500,000.

Worldbuilders

Rothfuss has a broad following of gamers, sci-fi fans, comic-book collectors and fantasy lovers; and he cheerfully urges this fanbase to give through lotteries, giveaways, auctions and product sales. Worldbuilders, started in 2008, has raised more than $1 million for Heifer International. As of this morning, Worldbuilders raised an impressive $310,854 and counting, but hopes for a big push this week to reach its goal.

In 2008, Rothfuss wrote to his blog readers, “If we raise a couple thousand dollars for them, it will make peoples’ lives better. A couple thousand dollars means little kids get milk to drink. It means families get sheep, which means wool for warm blankets and clothes. It means better wells, so moms with babies can have clean water to drink. I think this is something we can all get behind, can’t we?”

To help him reach his goal this year, Rothfuss is offering the chance to play Dungeons & Dragons with him and other authors, or spend a weekend this spring with him and some of his staff at Heifer Ranch, or even a cameo appearance in an upcoming book. Check out Rothfuss’s blog and his eBay auction site for more information on how to support Worldbuilders, or donate straight to the cause on the Worldbuilders Team Heifer page.

Explaining why he chose Heifer International, Rothfuss said, “Heifer International is my favorite charity. It helps people raise themselves up out of poverty and starvation. All over the world Heifer promotes education, sustainable agriculture, local industry, and clean water. They don’t just keep kids from starving, they make it so families can take care of themselves. They give goats, sheep, and chickens to families so their children have milk to drink, warm clothes to wear, and eggs to eat.”

If you are interested in being a part of this fundraiser and helping Worldbuilders reach the $500,000 goal, or for more information, go to www.worldbuilders.org.

Haiti Earthquake: Heifer’s Work Continues

It’s not news: the world’s poor are the most vulnerable to natural disasters. The 2010 Haiti earthquake highlighted this truth to a shocking degree. There are many factors that contribute to the dire poverty that exists in places like Haiti. Heifer International’s work is to help farming families build resilient livelihoods, making them less vulnerable to natural disasters, economic changes (like rising commodity food prices) and political shocks.

What does a farm family with a sustainable and resilient livelihood look like? They:

Haiti earthquake survivor

Jean Pierre jumped out of a third-story apartment just before the building collapsed into rubble, one of many destroyed during the 7.0 magnitude earthquake that rocked Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010. She is photographed here, sitting in a field in Cance, in rural western Haiti, a year and a half later. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee, courtesy of Heifer International.

  • Have stable and diverse sources of income
  • Own secure and productive land
  • Have savings and can access formal financing (banks, loans, etc.)
  • Can meet their food needs all year, both through their own production and by affording supplemental food from other sources
  • Have access to health, education, water, energy, transportation and communication services
  • Have a strong voice, especially the women, through cooperatives and associations

Heifer’s Rural Entrepreneurs for Agricultural Cooperation in Haiti Project (REACH) is making the above a reality for more than 100,000 Haitians. It’s our largest project in Haiti to date, and it will help participating families and communities far less vulnerable to events like the Haiti earthquake of 2010, because they will have the resiliency to bounce back with minimal assistance.

We need help fulfilling our fundraising goals, and you can give directly to REACH today. What will your gift do? This:

  • Start family-run breeding centers that will improve the local economy by creating jobs and training participants to provide for improved livestock breeds– something that has never been done before in Haiti.
  • Improve Haiti’s soil so it will produce better crops, increasing crop production and quality, and ultimately growing enough food that farmers can use to sell for income and build businesses.
  • Train Haitian farmers in disaster preparedness and teaching them  how to protect their biggest assets–their livestock.
  • Protect the environment by placing animals where they are complementary to the crops, and train participants techniques such as zero-grazing, which protects ground cover and makes collecting manure for organic fertilizer easy. Our goal is to leave the environment better than we found it.
Post Haiti earthquake rebuilding.

A Haiti REACH goat breeding center. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

We cannot predict the next time a major natural disaster like the 2010 Haiti earthquake will strike. Through REACH, however, we can help ensure at least 100,000 Haitians will be less vulnerable.

Give to REACH now to become part of this important work.

A New Beginning With Heifer in Milot, Haiti

Editor’s note: As we approach the third anniversary of the earthquake that devastated the lives of so many Haitians, we are asking for your help in raising funds to continue the important work of rebuilding livelihoods in post-earthquake Haiti. Visit www.heifer.org/reachout to learn more and give.

Author’s note: In 2012, I traveled to Haiti to spend a couple of weeks visiting projects with Heifer Haiti staff. For previous posts on my trip, see my page.

Toussaint Christophe lives just off the road that takes travelers to nearby Milot, Haiti. There, he earns money by breaking limestone and selling it as construction material.

Toussaint Christophe

Toussaint Christophe and his goats in Milot, Haiti. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

But not too far from his house, Toussaint also cultivates yams, bananas and beans and takes care of four goats and a cow–all of which came from Heifer through the From the Ground Up project. The crops and livestock will supplement both his diet and income.

“Since I was a young man, I’ve seen people with cows,” Toussaint said. “This is the first time I’ve had one.”

Goats are a more familiar sight to Toussaint. His parents raised and bred goats, and he began helping the effort as soon as he was able. At age 14, he received his first goat. Shortly after, Toussaint’s family was robbed of all 15 of their goats, and he, his parents and six siblings had to rely solely upon selling bananas and yams to the market.

Compounding the situation, the family’s house burned down a few years later. The fire killed one of his brothers and left another paralyzed. Toussaint’s family never found out how the house burned down, but they suspect it was arson. Around the same time, four of his siblings became ill with asthma problems.

After the fire, Toussaint dropped out of school to help support his family.

“The first time I went to school, I was 17 because my parents were not supportive of that kind of thing,” he said. “When the house burned, we lost everything. (My parents) wanted me to work.”

Toussaint Christophe 2

Toussaint Christophe near his home in Milot, Haiti. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

Toussaint’s children, however, are getting the opportunity he never had. Both of his sons, who are in their mid-20s, are in secondary school in Cap Haitien, about 12 miles away.

And Toussaint’s informal education has continued through Heifer trainings.

“I have had many trainings… (including) techniques for dividing yam roots and goat production,” he said. “I can now treat some of the kinds of diseases that goats have. In the past, I (would have) to pay a veterinarian for everything the goats needed. Now, I can give a first examination or first aid to the goats.”

The project with Heifer marks the first time Toussaint has owned goats since his teenage years, and this is not something he takes lightly.

“I take care of (the goats) as well as I would a person,” he said. “I like to see them right.”

Toussaint Christophe 3

Toussaint Christophe smiles near his home in Milot, Haiti. Photo by Jason Woods, courtesy of Heifer International.

Take Advantage of Generous Gift Embedded in “Fiscal Cliff” Vote!

Editor’s note: The following is an important message from our CEO and CFO. It originally posted Friday, January 4. Because of its timeliness, we have chosen to repost it. Thank you!

Dear friends,

After all the brinksmanship around the so-called “fiscal cliff,” it turns out there are a couple of “gifts” embedded in the agreement, including one very significant charitable contribution nugget!

Fiscal Cliff

Photo by Dave Anderson, courtesy of Heifer International.

It’s a variation on the Investment Retirement Account (IRA) charitable rollover provision, which now allows seniors 70 1/2 and older to transfer as much as $100,000 from your traditional IRAs into a gift to Heifer International or some other 501(c)(3) organization. But it’s a time-limited opportunity that expires on January 30, 2013.

This one-time gift from Congress, which allows you treat your donation as if it were made December 31, 2012, gives you the chance to offset 2012 income from your IRA’s required minimum distributions and at the same time, help give a struggling family a hand up to a life free from hunger, from poverty, and to leave a lasting legacy of change by joining with Heifer to build communities of help and hope.

There is a restriction. You must have received your IRA distribution in December 2012.

As a nonprofit, Heifer won’t have to pay income tax on withdrawals from these accounts, and though you won’t receive a tax deduction for your gift, the contribution won’t be included in your adjusted gross income (AGI), so you won’t face percentage limitations on charitable deductions and you may even be able to avoid certain penalties that come with a higher AGI, such as higher Medicare premiums.

Time is short and the need is great, so please take advantage of this limited-time opportunity to help yourself and others—families who without your support face a lifetime of hunger and generations of extreme poverty.

This “embedded gift” will change lives now and for generations to come as families use the animals, tools and training to improve income, nutrition, homes, to pay school fees and to pass on their gifts—the first born female offspring of their animal, along with all they have learned—to another family, creating an ever-widening circle of opportunity.

This is a one-time gift from Congress to create true change, but we need your answer and your gift by January 30. Will you help us, please?

Joining you in working for a better world.

Pierre Ferrari and Bob Bloom
President and CEO, and CFO, Heifer International

Congress Embedded A Generous Gift in “Fiscal Cliff” Vote! Act Now!

Dear friends,

After all the brinksmanship around the so-called “fiscal cliff,” it turns out there are a couple of “gifts” embedded in the agreement, including one very significant charitable contribution nugget!

Fiscal Cliff

Photo by Dave Anderson, courtesy of Heifer International.

It’s a variation on the Investment Retirement Account (IRA) charitable rollover provision, which now allows seniors 70 1/2 and older to transfer as much as $100,000 from your traditional IRAs into a gift to Heifer International or some other 501(c)(3) organization. But it’s a time-limited opportunity that expires on January 30, 2013.

This one-time gift from Congress, which allows you treat your donation as if it were made December 31, 2012, gives you the chance to offset 2012 income from your IRA’s required minimum distributions and at the same time, help give a struggling family a hand up to a life free from hunger, from poverty, and to leave a lasting legacy of change by joining with Heifer to build communities of help and hope.

There is a restriction. You must have received your IRA distribution in December 2012.

As a nonprofit, Heifer won’t have to pay income tax on withdrawals from these accounts, and though you won’t receive a tax deduction for your gift, the contribution won’t be included in your adjusted gross income (AGI), so you won’t face percentage limitations on charitable deductions and you may even be able to avoid certain penalties that come with a higher AGI, such as higher Medicare premiums.

Time is short and the need is great, so please take advantage of this limited-time opportunity to help yourself and others—families who without your support face a lifetime of hunger and generations of extreme poverty.

This “embedded gift” will change lives now and for generations to come as families use the animals, tools and training to improve income, nutrition, homes, to pay school fees and to pass on their gifts—the first born female offspring of their animal, along with all they have learned—to another family, creating an ever-widening circle of opportunity.

This is a one-time gift from Congress to create true change, but we need your answer and your gift by January 30. Will you help us, please?

Joining you in working for a better world.

Pierre Ferrari and Bob Bloom
President and CEO, and CFO, Heifer International

Ending Violence Against Women Through Social Change

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In our hometown paper here in Little Rock, Ark., news of murder and rape charges against five of the men accused of gang-raping a 23-year-old woman aboard a moving bus in India made the front page today. The attack and subsequent uprising and cry for change is front and center in thousands of newspapers and online news sites around the world. If you aren’t paying attention, it’s time to start. This is an unprecedented moment in India’s history and in the cause of women’s rights around the world.

Protesters in New Delhi take part in a silent march to demand justice for the 23-year-old woman who was raped and killed. ZUMA/Rex Features/The Guardian

A report in The Guardian quotes Ranjana Kumari of the Centre for Social Research as saying “Can this grief, this anger at the brutalization and murder of a young woman result in positive change? What we are seeing on our streets is a defining moment of our democracy. … For decades, India’s endemic violence against women has been a defining issue for women’s groups and the rights movement, but for the first time the crime of sexual offense and rape has been taken up by the people themselves.”

Rapes have become frequent in India, with complaints increasing 25 percent from 2006 to 2011. More than 220,000 incidents were reported in 2011 alone, according to Indian government statistics cited in a CNN report. What’s notable is that now, finally, the issue is getting the global attention it deserves, though at the horrible cost of the brutality endured not just by the medical student who died of her injuries but also of the scores of women who bore the pain of such an attack in silence.

The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette article cites Kishwar Desai’s opinion piece in The Indian Express that said the gang rape illustrated to some that “a certain class of men is deeply uncomfortable with women displaying their independence, receiving education and joining the workforce. The gang rape becomes a form of subduing the women, collectively, and establishing their male superiority.”

He goes on to say “the answer lies in correcting the manner in which families value men and women, and the emotional disconnect between them.”

Author Ranjana Kumari said “for decades, NGOs, women’s groups, human rights organizations have been pushing against this wall of institutional sexism; now a part of that wall has broken down and we must seize this moment.”

Heifer International includes gender equity training in its projects around the world, many of which include traditional cultures that limit the rights and freedoms of women. Special trainings just for men explain the value of women’s contributions and help them understand that working together will improve the lives of all, men, women and children. Women have their own sessions and organize in self-help groups to pool savings and start small businesses.

In Bangladesh, one of the gender equity trainings for men led Mohammad Huzzatullah, a man who had returned from work outside the country with means to make a difference, to sponsor his own women’s group. Read more about his story in World Ark here, or in our digital edition on iPad and Android tablets.

Every day, Heifer’s investment in women and training in women’s empowerment change lives. In just one example, in Nepal, Heifer participant Ganga Khanal once suffered abuse from her husband and believed herself that women and girls were not as important as men.

Ganga Khanal shows off her Heifer goats in her family’s pen in Jirouna, Nepal. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

“I used to be guilty as well in believing it was more important to educate or provide for my sons than for my daughters. But the trainings changed all that for me. Today, my daughter is in the army. She has made me realize and understand that girls are no less than boys.”

Her 17-year-old son Sudip learned that same lesson. “Looking at my mom, I have changed my view of women, and I have so much more respect for them and confidence in them. I used to laugh at them sitting in their groups and thought they would never do anything good. But just seeing them grow through the years through the project and seeing them buy land, build community buildings, form businesses, it’s just been so overwhelming.

“I have so much respect for these women who have created opportunities for people like me,” Sudip said. “The future looks bright for us because of our moms.”

Development organizations, women’s rights groups and governments should all take this moment in history at its full weight. Change is already happening. Please add your voice to the chorus and speak up for women’s rights. Write us at worldark@list.heifer.org or comment on this post. Please click here to contribute to Heifer’s women’s empowerment projects.

Today’s article in The Lancet medical journal wraps it up best, “The greatest respect we can give to the memory of the Indian student who died on Dec. 29 is by protecting and strengthening the political and social rights of women worldwide.”

Give $10 on Facebook to Make a Huge Impact

Are you one of the nearly 100,000 Heifer Facebook Fans? If not, head on over and become one now (Heifer International on Facebook). Better yet, check out our new Facebook app, Heifer $10 Impact, and donate $10 today to help us reach our $1,000,000 goal for 2013. Curious what that kind of money can do in just one year? Check out the infographic below.

Heifer $10 Impact

New Tablet for Christmas? Try This Free Download

World Ark on iPadWere you one of the lucky ones to receive an iPad mini or Google Nexus tablet from Santa this year? As you’re exploring all the fun options for your new tablet, search for World Ark on the App Store or on Google Play to enjoy your first, free digital magazine experience. We promise you won’t be disappointed!

Watch the video below for a glimpse at all the digital magazine offers, including original content and field stories from Heifer projects worldwide.

Download your version today from the App StoreSM on your iPad or from the Google Marketplace for your Android tablet. Email our magazine staff at worldark@list.heifer.org to let us know what you think and what’d you like to see featured here for future issues.

Happy exploring!

Ryan Bell Gives Gift of Transformation

Ryan Bell

Ryan surpassed his $25,000 goal on December 14. He's currently at $27,705. Let's help him get to $30,000.

I have to admit, I was skeptical. When I wrote and blogged about the second of the two stories on Ryan Bell, I fully expected it to take much longer before he reached his goal of raising enough money for a $25,000 Gift of Transformation.

But this remarkable young man proved me wrong. Again. Ryan reached his goal lofty goal late last week, and his Team Heifer page continues to bring in money. I’m truly grateful to have been able to tell his story; to have gotten to know Ryan and his family.

But the best part of all of this? Ryan isn’t done. He’s not satisfied with reaching his goal years before he expected to. When I contacted Ryan’s mom, Laura, last week, she was going to text him at school to tell him the news. He was thrilled, she said. Their conversation went a little like this:

Laura: “It made his day!  So, that afternoon we looked up the new total and I said, ‘You know, at this rate you might be able to add a camel to your goal.’  You know my son by now… He said, ‘Mom, I think we should add an Ark!’”

Right now he’s more than half-way to reaching his NEW goal of adding $5,000 more to his remarkable total. If you want to help Ryan, you can go to his Team Heifer page and donate.