Have You Checked out World Ark?

The latest issue of Heifer’s magazine World Ark came out a few weeks ago, but we’ve had so many other things going on with Social Justice Day, our International Women’s Day series, and updating you about our history of working in Uganda, that we forgot to tell you about the other great stories we have. Donna featured Roseline Jean Pierre last week, but Katya Cengel’s article on Haiti takes a closer look at our work there in villages around the island country, particularly with the coastal village of La Savane where Heifer has provided fishermen with boat motors so that Haitian fishermen can reach the fish populations outside the bay that has fallen victim to pollution and overfishing.Frank Bures also takes a look at how Kenyans are coping with the rising cost of living, while Dr. Stephen Smith also tackles what is driving the cost of food prices up, and the subsequent effects on the poor.

Take a look at our online edition for all other features like book reviews and donor stories, too. And be on the look out for our next issue, due out in May.

Women Taking the Floor

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on Thursday, March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.

The seating arrangement at a Heifer training session in Fandene on a hot May day in 2010 was fairly typical for this rural region of a strongly Muslim country: men in the front, women in the back. Mame Penda Ndong, though, scooted her chair forward and sat boldly in the front row, keeping her eyes straight ahead so she doesn’t catch any of the disapproving glances cast her way.

“In Senegal, we don’t like women sitting in the front row, displaying themselves,” a male translator explained.

There were other things about Ndong that set her apart, too. Unlike the other women, Ndong left her head uncovered, and she embellished her short hair with shiny synthetic coils. In her lap she clutched a hot-pink leather purse, and a sassy purple bra strap peeked out from the neck of her anango, a traditional dress.

Ndong grew up in Fandene, and was lucky to get a much better education than most of her peers. She nearly finished high school, and her schooling earned her a job in the nearby city of Tataguine, away from the hot and sandy days of sun-up to sundown manual work, which the women who stayed in Fandene take on.

But Ndong clearly didn’t flee to the city, never to return. She comes home almost every weekend to help monitor the Heifer project she helped start. She brings along her two sons and one daughter, but her husband is far away, working in the United States. She’d like to bring the entire family home to Diarrere to stay if the Heifer sheep thrive, the improved seeds produce healthier yields and the project becomes successful enough to support more people.

After living in a city for years, miles away from the rigid gender roles that dominate village life, Ndong doesn’t hesitate to speak up or claim a chair for herself while the other women sit on the ground to leave the better seats for the men. Do the men deserve such respect and special treatment? It’s part of the Senegalese culture, but it’s a part that might be changing, she said. Encouraging other women to sit in the front row and take on leadership positions is taking some time, but Ndong said she’ll press on.

“Men speak a lot, but they don’t act much,” she said, nodding toward a cluster of men smoking and drinking tea nearby. Women are different. “You don’t see them speaking a lot, but you see them working a lot. If you look at the project here, you’ll see the women do more. If they don’t take the floor, they’ll be working on things they don’t decide.”

Link: http://www.heifer.org/media/world-ark/archives/2011/summer/women-taking-the-floor

Heifer’s Superstar Women

On the 101st International Women’s Day, we at Heifer International are celebrating several outstanding women who have transformed their lives and lifted up their communities using gifts of livestock and training from Heifer.

For the full story of each inspiring woman in the video, follow the links below:

As inspired by and proud of these women we are, it is also important to recognize that they are currently the exception to the rule, when you look at the bigger picture of women around the world, particularly rural women.
The nonprofit, Farming First, recently released an interactive infographic that helps tell the story of women in agriculture. Here’s an excerpt:

Farming First - Women in Agriculture

A large part of ur work at Heifer is to help reduce agricultural gaps between men and women, while we work to help all our participants improve their lives and livelihoods.

If you’d like to help us in our efforts to improve the lives of women, their families and communities, please take a moment to explore a couple of our women-focused projects still in need of funding:

Empower women like Mehrunissa in India
Help women in Cambodia become more resilient

Heifer’s Superwoman Going Strong in Tanzania

Editor’s Note: Acommitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’score values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Dayon March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who takethe gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary resultsfor themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, eachwoman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.

Photos by Dave Anderson
In my first blog post about Huruma Mhapa while still on thetrip in Tanzania in 2010, I dubbed her “Heifer’s Superwoman” with this introduction:
I dare you to find a Heifer participant who has done morefor her family, her village, her Heifer dairy cows and farm educationthroughout her country and Africa than Huruma Mhapa of Ibumila village in theNjombe district of Tanzania.
In July 1993, after living in poverty in a small mud hutwith her family, she received one dairy cow from Heifer International and itspartner, the Anglican Church of Tanzania, and was trained in the zero-grazingmethod. Today, she’s a regular lecturer at the Sokoine University ofAgriculture in Morogoro, farms 11 acres and cares for four dairy cows, alldescendants of that first cow.
From 2002 to the present, she has trained more than 4,000farmers directly, including those from Heifer projects in other countriesincluding Malawi and Kenya. Many thousands continue to visit her farm to learnabout zero grazing and organic farming.
In 2011, Mhapa won Heifer’s top honor for Women in LivestockDevelopment for all of Africa and was profiled with all the other globalwinners in World Ark magazine.
“The cattle project brought love in our family, improved ourlivelihoods and allowed our three children to go to school. If the cows alsocherish their lives in their new shed I will be very grateful,” Mhapa said. “Iconsider these cows as part of my family. I wake up at 4 a.m. At that time, mychildren are not yet awake, so the first ones to be greeted by me in themorning are the cows.”
Mhapa is a leader, a technical expert in the zero-grazingmethod of dairy farming and organic crop production, and an innovator and communitychange agent. “I can say that the way the men in this village perceive womenhas changed,” Mhapa said. “They see us, the women, as very important and theynow cooperate in increasing the income of our households.”
Her story is not about the one gift of the single cow she received in1993. Instead, it is about what she has done since with her own hard work and business savvy to make the most of that smallopportunity.

Always There for the Women of Nepal

A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.


Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee
Sita Poudel counsels women in the village of Belsi.
If a leader can be measured by the achievements of those she guides and inspires, then the record of Sita Poudel’s lifework is already off the charts. She received two goats in 1993 and has worked with Heifer International ever since. She started her own nongovernmental organization, the Women’s Group Coordination Committee in Chitwan, Nepal, which works with nearly 500 women’s groups in the country. Her warm heart and perseverance show how far two goats and a passion for helping others can take you.
Meena Chaudhary, of the Prakash Women’s Group in Belsi, said Poudel would not take “no” for an answer when she came to offer help to thelower-caste group of women. Even after being turned away dozens of times from the once extremely poor village, Poudel kept coming back.
“We are where we are today because of Sita’s guidance and support,” Chaudhary said. “We have learned from her that money is not the only thing that helps people. It’s the intention to do good and to help others.”
Poudel continues to raise goats, getting up at 4:30 a.m. daily to care for the animals and prepare breakfast for her family before spending all day, six days a week, working side by side with the women her organization supports. She said her reward is watching the transformation of the women she helps.
“When they smile at me and invite me into their houses and show me the life they have today because of all my hard work and theirs, it makes me want to go into a new place tomorrow and start all over again,” Poudel said.
Read more about Poudel in this World Ark article.

A War Widow I’ll Never Forget

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on Thursday, March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.
I’ll never forget Sadie Kameri. Never.
Sadie’s story affected me so deeply that I feared I’d never be able to adequately convey each emotion that I felt hearing her tell it. It’s so tragic, so haunting and yet so hopeful.
My hope is this video gives you an idea of how remarkable Sadie is—how remarkable all of the women of Kosovo are—and explains just why I’ll carry the war widows I met with me for the rest of my life.

For a fuller picture of Sadie’s life after the Kosovo war, read “Those Who Remain” in the Holiday 2009 edition of World Ark.

Finding Strength in India

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on Thursday, March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.
I met Mehrunnisa on a blisteringly hot day in April 2010. It was my second day interviewing Heifer project participants in rural Rajasthan, a state in northwestern India, and I was only just beginning to grasp what being a woman in this area of the world meant.
The Heifer India staff had prepared me well, so I knew what to expect when I talked to the women: That they were probably married at the impossibly young age of 13; that they have little to no status in their families, let alone in society; that they are refused education and are instead confined to their homes.
Mehrunnisa was no exception to the rule. At 29, she was responsible for caring for her three children, her husband, her husband’s parents and brother, their one water buffalo, the family’s wheat crop, and all other household duties.
At that age—my age, I kept thinking—she hadn’t considered a life outside the home. No woman is even allowed to consider that.
But Mehrunnisa was determined to change her future. Though wary about what her husband and family would say, she approached them about joining a Heifer project for women she had heard about from others. When they agreed to let her go, she never looked back.
Mehrunnisa dedicated as much time and energy into the group as she put into her family. She immediately took a loan from the group to pay off her family’s debts, attended all trainings and is now spearheading an effort to teach women sewing and embroidery skills, which would allow them to not only make more money, but to work outside their homes.
I knew I’d hear amazing stories from my time in India, but I never expected that a woman my age could teach me more about strength and determination that I hadn’t already learned. I was wrong.

Read more about the women in Mehrunnisa’s self-help group in the Fall 2010 issue of World Ark.

Brains and Brawn

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on Thursday, March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.

Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee


Thirty-year-old Clarice Tine has biceps Madonna would die for, plus she’s got her hands on the money.

Tine is the treasurer for the Fandene community group near Thies in Senegal. Her group is working with Heifer to bring brawnier breeds of sheep and pigs to their village, where need grows each year as the weather turns drier and less hospitable to traditional crops.

Women’s lib is slow to catch on in rural Senegal, but Fandene embraced Tine as the obvious choice to be the money man.

“What they are looking for is someone who is fair and honest. If you give the responsibility to a woman, you will have that,” our translator Mbouille Diallo explained.

The vice chairman of the group in Fandene is also a woman, although the leadership in most neighboring villages is solely male. A junior high graduate and trained seamstress who earns extra money doing intricate embroidery work, Tine had the education credentials and work ethic to take on a leadership role. And she lived for a few years on her own in the raucous capital city of Dakar, proving she had savvy.

Tine’s awesome arms come from toting around her sons, ages 5 and 2, and fetching water at the well each day. Both of these jobs are considered women’s work in Senegal.

But here’s the thing. Schlepping toddlers and hauling dozens of buckets of water up from a well 40 feet deep apparently result in gorgeous arms and shoulders unmatched by any of the men we spied nearby. Madge, take note.

Haiti Mother Never Gives Up

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on Thursday, March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world.

A refrigerator was hurtling toward Roseline Jean Pierre whenshe jettisoned her 7-day-old daughter Jessie out of the third floor of aPort-au-Prince apartment building during the 7.0 magnitude earthquake thatrocked Haiti on Jan. 12, 2010.
By the time Jessie was tossed into the hands of waitingneighbors, the third floor was more like a first floor, the two floors belowhaving already collapsed. Jessie’s 5-year-old sister made it next, followed byJean Pierre, who jumped just before the rest of the building collapsed intorubble.
“God saved me,” said Jean Pierre, sitting in a field in ruralHaiti a year and a half later.
After losing their home, Jean Pierre and her daughters fledsouthwest to Cance, where her father’s family is from. She received a gray andbrown calf in July as part of a Heifer partnership with the farmingorganization CAPAS.
She and her family are living in the farming organization’soffice for now, but Jean Pierre plans to use the income from selling milk tobuy another cow and eventually hopes to earn enough to build a house.
Though she’s a city girl at heart, she’s adjusting to rurallife and will do whatever it takes to provide for her family. Resilience anddetermination saved her and her daughters once already. Her continued strengthin the face of adversity and change are an inspiration to women everywhere.
Read more about Jean Pierre in the February 2012 issue of World Ark. To donate to the Haiti REACH project, click here.
Story by Katya Cengel
Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Beatrice Biira Shares Gifts and Passion in Her New Role with Heifer

Editor’s Note: A commitment to empower women is embedded in Heifer International’s core values for sustainable development. In honor of International Women’s Day on March 8, this week we’re sharing the stories of Heifer participants who take the gifts of animals and training and run with them to extraordinary results for themselves and their communities. Through hard work and innovations, each woman secures her rightful place in the family, the marketplace and the world. One of Heifer International’s ‘greatest successstories, Beatrice Biira, today begins a new chapter in her and in Heifer’s effort toengage more individuals in the campaign to end hunger and poverty.

BeatriceBiira, whose life was forever changed by the simple gift of a goat from HeiferInternational, as told in three videos produced by Dick Young Productions andin the best-selling children’s book, “Beatrice’s Goat,” by Page McBrier, isbeginning a new chapter of her life—as a Community Engagement Officer for thehunger and poverty ending organization.


“BeatriceBiira is one of Heifer International’s greatest success stories,” said Pierre Ferrari,Heifer’s president and CEO. “Her path, from her village in Uganda to hergraduation from Connecticut College and The Clinton School of Public Service,in Little Rock, Arkansas, and now back to Heifer International is, for us, atrue homecoming.


“Andthough many of us who work here can recount the stories we have experienced inthe field, few of us can tell them as Beatrice can, as one who lived it and nowhas the chance to give back, to help other girls fulfill dreams,” said Ferrari.

Photo credit: Robert X. Fogarty,
“Dear World, Write Our Future”

Asa Community Engagement Officer, Biira will support events in New York City andthe greater New York area to help increase awareness of Heifer Internationaland its work and to engage and nurture volunteers and volunteer groups. Shewill also represent Heifer International at public and private events, andengage with major donors and other audiences of influence.



“I am so pleased by my new role with HeiferInternational,” said Biira. “My journey began with Mugisa (which means Luck inLukonzo language), the goat my family received, but it was Heifer’s trainingthat gave me the tools I needed to make my own way. Moving from the village school in Kisingavillage to Gayaza High School in Kampala helped fulfill my dreams. Heifer friends supported me in every part ofthis journey. My first experience in theU.S. was attending Northfield-Mt. Herman School for a transitional year. It was so rewarding that after thateducational experience I was admitted to many colleges in the U.S.”

In an interview with the CBS news show, “60 Minutes,”Biira once said her dream was to see herself helping others, “maybe a farm withcows or goats, and giving those children milk. And I’d love to see them gethealthier, all by my work.” Now, she says, “I can do that, I can live thatdream.”

When Biira first learned about Heifer International, shewas a young girl performing adult chores and responsibilities in her village ofKisinga. She had little to eat and little hope, but she yearned to go to school,to learn, but her family could not afford the school fees. And school, at thetime, was largely exclusive to boys.

Then, Heifer gave 12 goats to 12 families in Kisinga, andBiira’s family was fortunate to be among them. Soon, Biira’s mother was able tosell enough goats’ milk to send her to the local school.
From there, she won a scholarship to a high school inKampala, Uganda’s capital. Then, she went on to earn her Bachelor’s degree fromConnecticut College, and her Master’s from the Clinton School.

Heifer supporters first met Beatrice at the 1998Conference on World Hunger when Dick Young premiered “The Promise” andintroduced “the little girl in the red dress.’ It was not long after the conference when she was asked by Simon andSchuster to do a book tour for “Beatrice’s Goat” and she visited 13 states anddid 128 presentations in 40 days, including an interview with Charlie Gibson on“Good Morning America.”

The last query from Gibson was “Beatrice, I understand youlike pizza?” “I do,” she replied, “but Ilike goat’s milk best.” Hercommunication gifts are well known and in March 2011 she was a keynote speakerat the Harvard Social Enterprise Conference on Sustainability.

Prior to joining Heifer International, she worked with TheMillennium Promise Alliance Inc., a nonprofit dedicated to ending extremepoverty through implementation of the Millennium Development Goals,international development goals adopted by the United Nations and a host ofinternational organizations to eradicate extreme poverty, reduce childmortality and prevent disease epidemics. She was the Program Associate for the Connect to Learn Global EducationInitiative.

Biira’s story has been featured in TheNew York Times and People magazine, and on The Oprah WinfreyShow. She is also featured in the book “Half the Sky,” byNicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn, as well in several of Kristof’s columns in The New York Times.

“No one better understands the power of Heifer’sCornerstone of Passing on the Gift than Beatrice,” said Ferrari, referring toHeifer’s requirement that a family that receives an animal pass on the firstfemale offspring of that animal, along with training in its care, to anotherfamily in need. “Now, she is fulfilling that promise, passing on her own gifts,with us at Heifer and with the families we help.

“Itis the perfect fit.”