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.

Giving Tuesday is Coming Soon

Are you all geared up for Black Friday? Cyber Monday? How about Giving Tuesday?

It’s just two weeks from today, so it’s time to plan your holiday spending to include charitable holiday giving. I may be biased, but I’d certainly recommend checking out the Heifer International online Gift Catalog. Many people already give nonprofit gifts at the holiday, but this year we’re taking it to a new level.

Giving Tuesday 2012

We’re excited at Heifer International to be a Giving Tuesday partner. We have a unique calculator in development, which will allow you to calculate the savings you scored shopping Black Friday and Cyber Monday, so you can decide how big a philanthropist you want to be this year.

You can participate in Giving Tuesday, too

Stay tuned here on the Heifer Blog for more ways to participate.

Celebration of Living Gifts Coming to Heifer Village

Come to Heifer Village’s Celebration of Living Gifts on December 1

Get your holiday shopping done early. We have something for everyone on your list.

Celebration of Living Gifts Flyer-HV

Can’t make it to this Celebration of Living Gifts? Donate online now.

Don’t Know What to Give this Holiday Season?

Are you at a loss for what to give family, friends and colleagues this year? Tired of giving the same old thing?

What to give? Not this.

What to give? Not this. Photo credit: TheUglySweaterShop used under Creative Commons license

Here’s my philosophy on how to know what to give for any occasion: If you know exactly what to buy – that perfect gift the recipient will definitely love and use – go for it. If you’re headed to the stores to hunt around for something your friend will, at best, marginally appreciate, give to charity instead.

Sure, you can Google “Gifts under $30″ and order your boyfriend a bearded ski mask or your sister a couch pillow that plays music from an iPod.

Or you could head over to Heifer International’s Gift Catalog online and pick out the perfect gift. A flock of geese, a goat or some honeybees show you care for your loved ones and want to honor them this holiday season with a gift that really gives back.

What to give? This!

What to give? This! When you give through Heifer, your recipients will receive this year's beautiful Honor Card. Image courtesy of Heifer International.

For each gift of $10 or more, you can request an Honor Card for your recipients.

This year on the Heifer Blog, we’ll be highlighting many of our Gift Catalog items so you can get a deeper view of what these gifts will mean to the ultimate recipients: the impoverished families around the world, whose lives Heifer sets out to change. I hope you’ll follow our What to Give series and that you’ll find the perfect gift for everyone on your list.

Already know what gifts you’re giving this year? Tell us your favorite in the comments section below.

Subscribe to our What to Give series today!

WATCH: Heifer Haiti Hurricane Sandy Relief

As Annie reported yesterday, Heifer Haiti provided more than 400 relief packages to families affected by Hurricane Sandy.

Help Heifer provide emergency relief in times of great need by donating to our Disaster Rehabilitation Fund.

Heifer Haiti Emergency Efforts Begin

Editor’s note: The following update on Heifer Haiti’s Hurricane Sandy recovery efforts comes from Heifer Haiti Country Director Hervil Cherubin.

Today Heifer International’s Haiti country office team will be distributing emergency help to 400 families affected by Huricane Sandy. Each one will receive a kit (bag), containing rice, corn, sugar, milk, beans, flour and cooking oil. The distribution will be 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.

Some of the kits will be distributed to a group of people with handicaps (many as consequences of the 2010 quake) in collaboration with the Haiti office for the Integration of the Handicap in Society. It is worth mentioning that being handicapped here in Haiti is very complicated and stigmatized. We will be helping 100 families.

Photo by Jason Woods, Heifer International

At 2:30 p.m. we will go to a very poor community named Sous Roche, which is close to the ocean and a river, to help 150 families. These people were hit hard by the storm because of their location. Their houses were flooded. Later we will go to small communities (Pelerin and Fond Fred) to distribute kits to 50 families each.

Tomorrow morning we will go to Solon to distribute kits to 100 families. This community was devastated by the storm. Many houses were flooded and crops destroyed. It is very sad to see all these plantain and pigeon bean plantations completely wiped out by the water.

All these activities are in coordination with the local emergency committee, Centre d’Operation d’Urgence (COU), on which Heifer is a sitting member. They work with partners to assist different communities. The communities Heifer Haiti is helping today and tomorrow have not yet received any help.

We started the process yesterday morning after receiving emergency funds from Heifer International headquarters. Yesterday afternoon we bought the goods, and with the help of some volunteers we put together the kits. We stopped at midnight, and this morning we started again to get them ready by noon.

These are the first of our emergency assistance plans. We will also assist many of our beneficiaries who lost their animals and crops with replacements and seed for the next planting season. These activities will happen in the coming days as things get back to some kind of normalcy.

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.

Hurricane Sandy to Cause Food Shortages and Cholera in Haiti

With the immediate aftermath from Hurricane Sandy passing for Haiti, the longterm effects on the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere begin to sink in.

Hurricane Sandy Heifer Haiti

Photo by Bryan Clifton, courtesy of Heifer International.

The two greatest concerns now: food shortages and cholera.

Hurricane Sandy Destroyed Crops

According to this BBC story, more than 70 percent of crops, including staples like bananas, plantains and maize, were destroyed in southern Haiti.

In a country with 80 percent of the population below the poverty line, a 40.6 percent unemployment rate and 18.9 percent of children under 5 years underweight, this is extraordinarily bad news.

Heifer Haiti project families were not exempt from the storm’s path. Hundreds of animals were killed or remain unaccounted for, including 361 goats, 183 fowl and 91 sheep. There was significant crop damage, one fishing boat was lost and nearly 300 homes in project communities were damaged and another 42 destroyed.

Hurricane Sandy will Likely Increase Cholera

Floods and unsanitary conditions will probably worsen the cholera epidemic that has already claimed the lives of more than 7,500 people since 2010. Haiti has the second-lowest life expectancy (62.51 years) outside the African continent, so an increase in cholera cases will only further devastate this island nation.

Haiti’s Hurricane Sandy Survivors Need Our Help

Unlike the United States, where Sandy’s victims can look to government, through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, state and local officials for help, as well as churches, community organizations and aid groups, Heifer’s Haitian project families depend on the generosity of Heifer donors to help them rebuild and recover.

Hurricane Sandy Heifer Haiti

Photo by Bryan Clifton, courtesy of Heifer International.

More assessments are needed to fully understand Sandy’s impact on Haiti and on Heifer project families, but the need is already apparent—families need help getting back on their feet, restocking livestock and replanting fields. Only through a dependable diet, income and assets can they begin to rebuild their and their family’s future—ensuring medical care against cholera, that their kids remain in school and they build back better and stronger against the next storm threat.

Heifer International has a Disaster Management Fund to provide life-supporting aid in the wake of a natural disaster or event. Families in Haiti need this help now.

You can contribute to Heifer’s Disaster Management Fund here. Our friends and neighbors in the Northeast need and are getting help. Let’s be sure that families in Haiti have the same chance for a better future.

Living Gift Market Coming Soon

What do you buy the person who has everything?

How about a goat, some chickens or rabbits?

Come to the Living Gift Market in Hot Springs Village, Arkansas, and learn how animals like these can provide sustainable livelihoods for struggling families. You’ll have the chance to purchase an animal for a family in need, take pictures with our animal guests and buy gifts from around the world in our “mini gift shop.” Bring your family for a day filled with the spirit of giving to others.

Living Gift Market

Living Gift Market

Hot Springs Village, Arkansas
Coronado Center
November 10
10am-2pm

Brought to you by the Heifer International Hot Springs Village Volunteer Group.

Can’t make it to the Living Gift Market event? Donate online now.

7 Things About Mt. Kilimanjaro

Recently I accompanied several employees of corporate supporter Elanco as they climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro and raised money for Heifer International. The trek was challenging and magnificent. Here are a few things that other sources may not tell you about climbing Kilimanjaro.

1. It’s not the climbing, it’s the altitude. So walk verrry sloooowly.climbing Kilimanjaro w Heifer

When someone asks if Kilimanjaro was hard, I don’t know what to say. Because, while walking up a rocky path for hours each day isn’t easy, the routes were not very difficult and the segments not long – until the summit day. My lungs complained much sooner than my legs did. No, the tough part was re-learning my body’s capabilities at altitude.

Normally, when I hike, I move at a good clip. So I was startled, within the first few minutes of the trek, to be told to follow behind the guide at a pace that I wouldn’t use for window-shopping at the mall. But as the days go on and I heard my breathing deepening, I became comfortable with going slowly. By the day of the summit attempt, I was grateful to climb at a speed that could be surpassed by my 85-year-old grandmother pulling a sledge of iron ore.

Heifer Kilimanjaro climb camp

Marta and Gail bundled up at campsite

2. You’re cold.

Many nights on the mountain, I slept in a sleeping bag with liner, and long underwear, pants, fleeces, a jacket, and ski socks. And a stocking cap. And foot warmers. I lost all memory of what it might mean to be warm. On the morning of the summit, the water in our Camelbak tubes froze during the walk, and my toes went bitingly numb. Cameras often freeze up at the top. Afterward, the skin on my hands and windburned face became dry and tough.

 

3. And dirty.

dirty hands on Kilimanjaro Heifer climb

A typical state of affairs

In this weather, I didn’t mind not bathing for seven days. But I would’ve liked to get the grit out of my teeth. At the end of the dry season, when we climbed, the dust from the trail and campsites creeped into everything. Washing our hands twice a day was a lovely experience – until we grasped the zipper to enter a tent, and they were filthy once again. Applying sunscreen became, at some point, just an exercise in smearing dirt over your face.

4. You have to pee a lot.

To fight altitude sickness, it’s necessary to drink about three liters of water while climbing, in addition to plenty of hot teas and soups at every meal. This means that nearly every hour, like an anxious spaniel, I needed to rush behind a bush or rock to answer nature’s call. I thought a person would only experience this sort of inconvenience in pregnancy, but I was wrong. Continue reading

Help End Poverty With Heifer International

Today is the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty. In 2000, world leaders created the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which if achieved would dramatically reduce poverty all over the world by 2015. The End Poverty 2015 Millennium Campaign today wants you to donate your social media profiles and has a handy tool for you to highlight some or all of the MDGs in an effort to help end poverty.

Help end poverty with Heifer International

Photo by Jake Lyell, courtesy of Heifer International.

Since 2000, there have been significant gains in ending poverty. From the United Nations’ website:

Extreme poverty rates have decreased in every region of the world. Over 39 million more children attend primary school. Access to clean water has increased to 89 per cent.

While today is a great day to celebrate the gains made, if we want to halve poverty rates by 2015, we have to keep doing the work we know is effective.

Heifer’s approach of

  • living gifts of livestock, seeds, training and education
  • Passing on the Gift model
  • agricultural methods that protect the environment
  • animal care guidelines reinforced with training for local animal health workers
  • deeply rooted community involvement

has been proven to help end poverty in communities over more than 68 years.

Do you want to help end poverty? You can!

Help Heifer International, through our extensive project work, contribute to the fulfillment of the Millennium Development Goals.

Ways You Can Help End Poverty

  • END HUNGER: For $20, a flock of chicks can provide families with protein-packed eggs that can make a huge difference in a family’s diet and income.
  • UNIVERSAL EDUCATION: For $275, you can help a family increase their income so they can send their daughters to school.
  • GENDER EQUITY: For $72, you can help women start a self-help group where they can learn to read and will receive the livestock and training that will empower them in so many ways.
  • CHILD HEALTH: For $300, you can provide the gift of clean water, which is critically important in rural areas where many children die from a lack of clean drinking water and proper sanitation.
  • MATERNAL HEALTH: For as little as $10, you can help provide a dairy goat to a family. Goats are small in size and provide nutritious milk for pregnant and lactating mothers.
  • COMBAT HIV/AIDS: For as little as $50, you can help provide a dairy cow to a family. Cow’s milk help provide the better nutrition needed to help the effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy for people living with HIV/AIDS.
  • ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY: For $150, you can provide an irrigation pump, allowing families to more easily grow organic crops on their land.
  • GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP: Every single one of our projects works in partnership with community-based organizations, local governments and others. Give any amount to our Give Where Most Needed Fund, and you’ll be supporting our collaborative work around the world.