Education Fights AIDS International » nutrition http://efainternational.org The mission of EFA International is to promote the successful future of African children and youth infected and/or affected by HIV/AIDS through education and empowerment. Sat, 28 Apr 2012 16:05:14 +0000 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.8.2 en hourly 1 News from the Field: Rwanda and the Child Support Center http://efainternational.org/2010/10/news-from-the-field-rwanda-and-the-child-support-center/ http://efainternational.org/2010/10/news-from-the-field-rwanda-and-the-child-support-center/#comments Sat, 02 Oct 2010 03:39:18 +0000 Education Fights AIDS International http://efainternational.org/?p=1703 Dear Friends,

We are very happy to share with you some pictures of Child Support Center’s (CSC) activities.

After forming a group of the mothers of CSC kids, we asked the Women for Women [project] to train them in different skills such as tailoring, making peace baskets, making handicrafts in general, and how they can manage their income generating project.

You will also find the photo of the garden donated to CSC… we have cultivated and the different seeds are just starting to grow!

Thank you for your encouragement,

Enjoy all, and welcome again to our center.

Regards.
Leonce
Coordinator of CSC

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Education and nutrition program launched at Child Support Center http://efainternational.org/2010/04/education-and-nutrition-program-launched-at-child-support-center/ http://efainternational.org/2010/04/education-and-nutrition-program-launched-at-child-support-center/#comments Sun, 25 Apr 2010 16:11:57 +0000 Becca http://efainternational.org/?p=1421 Since February 2010, the Child Support Center (CSC) in Kigali, Rwanda has been providing educational and nutritional services to over thirty orphans and other vulnerable children in the community. Through the education program, CSC beneficiaries are provided with supplemental English language courses three days a week in addition to homework support and tutoring in Math and Sciences during other days. CSC began a partnership with Orphans of Rwanda (ORI), a competitive university scholarship program for vulnerable youth, where ORI students volunteer their time as teachers for CSC beneficiaries, while gaining practical job experience to help them in their future careers as teachers.

Child Support Center 2010

In addition to the education program, program beneficiaries receive hot meals on the weekends and other nutritional supplements during weekdays. All beneficiaries were also provided with health insurance during the quarter. In general, CSC has created a safe space where beneficiaries come even when formal programs aren’t scheduled, learning traditional Rwandan dance ,singing songs, or just passing time together. Next quarter CSC will also launch a mentoring and counseling program to provide beneficiaries with psychosocial support services.

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Rebero Orphan Center Reopens as the Child Support Center (CSC) http://efainternational.org/2009/12/rebero-orphan-center-reopens-as-the-child-support-center-csc/ http://efainternational.org/2009/12/rebero-orphan-center-reopens-as-the-child-support-center-csc/#comments Mon, 07 Dec 2009 21:13:31 +0000 Becca http://efainternational.org/?p=1295 ChildrenSince July 2009, the Rebero Orphan Center has experienced several administrative and managerial challenges that have begun to compromise the quality of services provided to the orphans and vulnerable children in its care. As a result of these problematic circumstances, and following a series of discussions with local government representatives, the decision was made to close the Rebero Orphan Center and to re-establish the center under a new name and in a new neighborhood with the intention of providing the same care and support services to the former beneficiaries of ROC. EFA has supported the program staff throughout this transition period as they assemble a new Board of Directors, file all necessary registration paperwork, and transfer to a new building. The Child Support Center (CSC) will open officially in December 2009, at which point all programs will recommence for the center’s beneficiaries.

The CSC’s primary programs will continue to provide education, health, and nutrition services to children at the center.

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In Memory of Magloire http://efainternational.org/2009/08/in-memory-of-magloire/ http://efainternational.org/2009/08/in-memory-of-magloire/#comments Fri, 28 Aug 2009 18:22:20 +0000 Rachel Hoy Deussom http://efainternational.org/?p=1189 I had the honor of first meeting Magloire in November 2005, when I was working as a Peace Corps Volunteer in northern Cameroon alongside the other founding members of EFA International. After months of working over the course of that year with Drew, EFA’s Executive Director, AJEPS became the first HIV-positive youth support group to receive support and training from EFA International.

I traveled to Maroua to interview and photograph AJEPS’ members to mark the debut of our work with such youth groups. The last day of Ramadan had just been celebrated and AJEPS members were proudly dressed in their best clothes as they arrived to the whitewashed compound that would become their office headquarters. Under the shade of the quartier’s neem trees, we sat on plastic woven rugs exchanging celebratory greetings in Fulfuldé and admiring everyone’s festive attire.

While a larger organizational meeting took place, I invited consenting AJEPS members to sit with me in a quieter corner of the compound, where I would ask them about themselves, learn the story that each wanted to share and take photographs. Magloire arrived in a red and white plaid shirt, his gaze timid but thoughtful. His smile came easily, but his face showed honest determination. Since learning of his HIV-positive status, Magloire told me that he had found solace in being part of AJEPS’ support group. He scooped sand from the ground, gently passing grains through his hand to the compound floor. He said that while he excelled at art and sculpture, his true ambition was to become a politician, “maybe even the President of Cameroon.” I congratulated Magloire for his ambitions, knowing that his participation in the group was essential to living positively: social support, helping one another follow the complex ARV (anti-retroviral) regime, and encouraging economic success through income generating activities. We were both grateful for what AJEPS could offer him and were hopeful for the future.

I finished my Peace Corps term the following month but continued to correspond with AJEPS executive office members over the next two years as EFA International was officially established as a nonprofit in both the U.S. and Cameroon. I returned to Cameroon in June 2007 to host the Cultural Exchange with University of Maryland students. I am not sure who was more excited about the reunion: AJEPS members, the U. Maryland students, or me.

But perhaps it was Magloire that was the most energetic of all. He was in excellent health and his enthusiasm for the group and its activities with the American visitors could hardly be contained. Magloire, which literally means “my glory”, burst with eagerness as he ran errands and pick up supplies for each day’s activities. Since I’d seen him last, Magloire had started working at ACDEV (Action for Development), a local non-profit organization that educates the population about nutrition. In particular, they produce spirulina, a highly nutritious blue-green algae, to further support the health of malnurished children and those living with HIV. Magloire worked to produce and process the spirulina.

During this Cultural Exchange, Magloire led the group in stenciling t-shirts bearing AJEPS’ name and helped paint the colorful mural on the outer wall of their headquarters. I will never forget the smile that came to his face as he witnessed his artistic labor come to fruition: each of his peers, AJEPS members and U. Maryland students alike, proudly wearing the t-shirts that he’d painstakingly stenciled.

SparrowAt the end of the two-week visit, we all shook hands and wished each other well, saying “sey yesso” (see you later) and exchanging small gifts. Magloire presented me with a wooden bird that he had carved himself. He explained that this small sparrow represented hope. With many thanks and heartfelt words exchanged, we parted ways, not knowing when we’d see each other next.

I never saw Magloire’s timid smile again. He passed away this past March in Maroua. Despite the moral support that he received from AJEPS, it did not reach him soon enough. Despite the measures that he took to maintain his health: anti-retrovirals (ARVs) to slow the course that AIDS took in his body, antibiotics to prevent infections that his immune system could not fight, and healthy foods to keep his body strong, there were not enough resources at his disposition to prolong his life.

Magloire’s enthusiasm and energy will be deeply missed by AJEPS and all of us at EFA International. We express our deepest sympathy to his family and friends. EFA International continues to support groups like AJEPS so that promising youth like Magloire can build healthy and successful futures for themselves. This loss shakes us to our core, but it reminds us of the work that still lies ahead. We must strive to reach HIV-positive youth as soon as possible, so that they can access the resources that they need to disrupt the cycle of the AIDS epidemic and live longer, happier, more productive lives.

Que ton âme reste en paix, Magloire. May your soul rest in peace. And like a sparrow in the sky, may our souls continue to soar with hope for a brighter future for youth affected by HIV and AIDS.

-Rachel Hoy, MPH

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ABEPSA Sells Crops to Benefit Members http://efainternational.org/2009/08/abepsa-sells-crops-to-benefit-members/ http://efainternational.org/2009/08/abepsa-sells-crops-to-benefit-members/#comments Fri, 28 Aug 2009 17:21:38 +0000 Becca http://efainternational.org/?p=1171 The members of ABEPSA have created an innovative way to distribute harvests and earn money by individually selling crops at various markets around town. After all the crops have been sold, the member keeps a percentage of the profits for themselves and re-invests a percentage of the profits into the association. ABEPSA has also established a second income-generation activity, in which members raise and trade goats, sheep, and other domesticated animals.

chantier lagdo, November 2005The association uses these group profits to reinvest in their income generation projects and to subsidize association activities. For example, ABEPSA distributes surplus crops to members who need nutritional support during the quarter and identifies members who are in need of assistance with their medical costs.

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ROC Launches Education and Nutrition Programs for Children at the Center http://efainternational.org/2009/04/roc-launches-education-and-nutrition-programs-for-children-at-the-center/ http://efainternational.org/2009/04/roc-launches-education-and-nutrition-programs-for-children-at-the-center/#comments Sat, 04 Apr 2009 03:29:40 +0000 Education Fights AIDS International http://efainternational.org/wordpress/?p=179 During the first three months of 2009, EFA International worked closely with the Rebero Orphan Center to launch two new initiatives: an education program and a nutrition program based around a new community garden.

Education

In February, ROC paid school fees for all beneficiaries at the center. ROC also hired a dedicated full-time teacher who is now on hand every day to help the children with homework, to monitor their progress at school, and to provide supplementary classes in English, Math and Science. Curricula for the supplementary lessons were written with Rwandan National Curriculum goals in mind and were designed to support and expand upon lessons learned at school.

Nutrition

In January, representatives of Gardens for Health International volunteered their time to help the ROC staff to plant a new community garden at the center. As a result, ROC now has a large and healthy garden of cabbage, spinach, beetroots, carrots, tomatoes, onions, sweet potatoes, and peppers. Gardens for Health’s agronomist also led a series of educational sessions for the students about how to maintain the garden. A system is now in place to transplant the current plants into sacks (one for each child) and to distribute the produce, when it is ready, to individual children’s households. Since January, Gardens for Health has also been helping ROC to design a nutrition curriculum, which ROC’s teacher will be incorporating into the education program in the coming months.

Rebero Orphan Center community garden

Children are receiving clean drinking water every day from the Center, along with a protein-rich snack. In recognition of the community environment of ROC, nuts and bananas are bought from one of the mothers affiliated with the center. This is the first time that the children at ROC have had daily access to food and clean water.

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