Category Archives: Ethiopia

Ethiopian Fathers step in to help Gindo’s most vulnerable children

Written by Tawnya Pattie, Treasurer, Vulnerable Children Society

I was so inspired by the foundation being laid for these children, the commitment of the staff, the opportunities being created through teamwork at all levels, the innovative ideas and the respect for the family.

A highlight of my trip to Ethiopia was a visit to Gindo Town to visit the BEKA education project, funded by Canadian Humanitarian.  Accompanied by Bisrat Sime, the Ethiopia representative for Canadian Humanitarian and Abi, the representative from BEKA, we traveled a long, bumpy, dusty road to reach the town of Gindo. Vulnerable Children Society is partnering with Canadian Humanitarian to supply all the furniture, equipment, books etc. for the new, currently under construction, educational center.

The current BEKA centre/

We started by visiting the current location of the project, where 30+ kids were in attendance.

The devoted BEKA staff.

I had the fortunate opportunity to meet with the kids, ranging in age from about 5 to 12 years old.  The kids come to the center every school day and receive supplementary tutoring to fill the gap left by the government educational system.  There is also a childcare program for those children under age 5.  In addition, the children receive a hot meal, uniform, shoes, a regular shower, hygiene education and medical care.  The health of the children is monitored regularly, and home visits are completed regularly to ensure the overall health and well being of the children.  The children are supported emotionally and physically by providing a safe and supervised environment.

Children at the current BEKA centre – the new centre will enable more children to learn and thrive!

The children at the center are referred by the local government office.  Almost all the children are orphans, having lost their parents to HIV, and are being raised by guardians.  These children are the most vulnerable children in the community and need all the support they can get.  The center currently provides support for 50+ children each day, but many more are waiting to receive this valuable service.  Although the program is clearly successful, the current building is no longer suitable or adequate to fully meet the needs of the children.  After listening to a beautiful performance by the children, we proceeded to the new center under construction.

The new educational support centre.

The new location and building is fantastic!  The large plot of land was donated by the kebele (local government).

Getting the tour of the new centre…

The new building, when completed, will be one of the nicest buildings in the community and an inspiration for local residents.  There is plenty of space including several classrooms, proper washrooms, a modern and a traditional kitchen, a designated library/computer room, a dining room/common room, and a guest room for visiting volunteers/doctors.   The building features concrete construction and large windows allowing for plenty of natural light, and views of the garden and surrounding hillside.

The community garden is already providing crops for the Gindo community.

In addition to the support for the children, the center provides support to the guardian parents.  A very large garden, on land donated by the  local government, is bursting with produce that has been planted and maintained by the mothers.  Until now it has been largely the women, but the new location has a large plot of land dedicated for the fathers to maintain.

A “Foresight Father” at working helping his community in the BEKA centre garden.

Cabbage, beats, tomatoes, spinach, potatoes, garlic and carrots were growing in abundance.  The produce grown is split three ways: 1/3 provides food for the families, 1/3 is sold to provide a small source of income, and 1/3 is used at the center to feed the children.   The program for the fathers, called Foresight Fathers, is a new idea in rural Ethiopia.  Volunteerism in struggling rural communities is not a common practice, and the Foresight Fathers is changing that.

A bed made by the Foresight Fathers from recycled rubber tires. This bed will keep children and families off the ground at night and less susceptable to parasites and other disease.

The fathers volunteer for a variety of activities in addition to gardening that contribute to the family and the community – like building simple wooden framed beds, strung with recycled tire strips which are provided to families in need.  The men also dug a well to provide irrigation for the garden.  The children and the families are taught the necessary skills to grow and maintain a successful garden.

Please donate for us to furnish this amazing educational support centre for the entire community of Gindo!

To support the program, Vulnerable Children Society is providing the seeds and tools required to help make it successful.

What really struck me as I left Gindo, is the well rounded nature of the whole BEKA project.  Not only are the vulnerable children getting crucial physical and emotional support, the families are supplementing their diets with fresh vegetables, the families are earning a little extra income, they are building a stronger community by working together, and the fathers are getting involved.  I saw pride in the faces of the children at school, and the fathers working in the garden.   There was so much thought put into how to really impact these families in a long term, sustainable way.  I was so inspired by the foundation being laid for these children, the commitment of the staff, the opportunities being created through teamwork at all levels, the innovative ideas and the respect for the family.

Thanks to all of you who have already donated to this project.  There is still much funding needed – please donate to Vulnerable Children Society and help support this very worthwhile project that is making a difference in the lives of these children and their families.  Your money goes a long way to creating hope for the future for these families!

Please donate to furnish the Gindo education centre! Donate here!

Our last day in Addis! Meetings, sponsored children, and tibs at the bar…

Our last day in Ethiopia was packed full to the brim. We had a few meetings and then were off to visit Canadian Humanitarians’ BEKA project in Addis. Remember, Vulnerable Children Society is working in partnership with Canadian Humanitarian on a similar (but more comprehensive) project in Gindo.

We really enjoyed our visit… Besides swapping stories and advice with the country representative, we also got to tour their project and meet a young lady that I have been sponsoring personally for several years. What I found especially interesting was their approach to older students that are in grade 10 and ready to graduate out of their program. They bridge this time with a semi-independent scholarship program… Something we might consider in the future with our older House 2 House kids.

We also traveled around the city and took in the sights, such an an Orthodox festival and holy day, and even fit in a visit to a tef and other grains mill. Very very interesting.

Our last event was to visit the restaurant owned by one of my students’ mom… Elsa’s! It’s a bar that served the BEST beef tibs. And she treated us like royalty our last night in Ethiopia.

We are on our way home, but we’ll have many more stories to tell…. Stay tuned!

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Fun in Adama: Seeing children, shiro lessons…

Our third day in Adama was full of fun. Of course, we did some work, going over financials and doing some planning with Faya Orphanage, delivering packages and taking pictures of House 2 House kids, but we also packed in some fun as well.

Meseret and Sintayehu’s younger sister, who looks remarkably like my younger sister! is a fabulous cook withher own restaurant. We had been treated to amazing door wat and shiro the day before, and this day she came over to give Tawnya and I shiro lessons. No wonder my shiro always turned out so powdery and yucky.. I was doing it all wrong! The result.. Delicious! And the kids ate our shiro for a morning snack.

My mother Rita, who does the updates for the community kids, interviewed Sintayehu for hours to get all the info on the children who are now in the orphanage, as well as the kids in the House 2 House program. So our next set of updates will be more comprehensive…

Later that afternoon, we were off to Addis for more meetings… And shopping!

The two background pictures are of the mosque and street leading to the new Faya house.

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House 2 House in Adama and Wonj

Yesterday we finished up our visits to all the children in Wonji and Adama. Even though these communities are side by side, they are totally different places with different needs and different programs.

Wonji is a rural community of approximately 20,000 residents. It’s a much wealthier rural area than Guder or especially Nakemte; however, appearances can be deceiving. There is a sugar cane factory in the community that’s as many decent paying jobs. Any family who isn’t supported by the factory is at a serious disadvantage, though, since they are competing for the food resources, without a good income. In others words, the economic gap is deep.

House 2 House in Wonji is a community program enabled by Vulnerable Children and implemented by Faya Orphanage in cooperation with the local HIV clinic and the kebele (neighborhood government.) The children are referred by the HIV clinic based on their HIV status, their guardians HIV status, if they are orphaned, their family income and their body mass index. The same man that I met with works at both the kebele office and the clinic, so he is the go-between.

The cool thing about the Wonji program is that it has an organized support system attached to it. The kebele has donated a room in a house across the street form the office where families struggling with HIV meet to discuss treatment, stigma, and just to share experiences. The room is stocked with a buna coffee set… All you need for prolonged discussion in Ethiopia!

With e official, I discussed many things… How they started giving a certain amount of stipend but then decreased it because people were migrating from another organization to ours. They have tried some gardening in the area (the other org) to deal with the dominant food issue, but due to lack of training it failed. We also discussed the possibility of group-based community lending as a wa y to get people up on their feet and out of the programs. I ink we are all on the same page, and it wil be interesting to see how the program evolves over time.

While I was meeting wi the official, Tawnya and Rita were having fun handing out gifts from sponsors and from us. Every child we met got a small toy, a soccer jersey or school supplies! Thanks to all the generous donations we brought with us.

The program in Adama is much more labour intensive, because it is organized directly by the orphanage and the children and families are spread all across the urban city. Adama (formerly know as Nazret during the Red Terror) is a gorgeous, laid back city full of flowering trees, fun shops and cobbled stoned streets. The children live all over the city in the poorer slums and orphanages.

We had a chance to meet with all the families in Adama and Wonji, due to the May day holiday, which was awesome. Sponsors can expect nice update pictures in their August updates!

Sponsors.. Know that your money is being well spent! The dollars are stretched because the vast majority of our sponsored kids are in programs that cooperate with local government AND. Other NGOs… A smart strategy for sure!

So now we are off to Addis again. We have lots of meetings with other NGOs, and will meet with our new Ethiopian Vulnerable Children staffer as well. Enjoy the pictures of our visits with House 2 House, as well as some gorgeous pictures of the area!

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Faya Orphanage in Adama – question for Faya Child sponsors


Yesterday night we arrived in Adama, a few hours south of Addis Ababa. Waiting for us were all the children at Faya Orphanage, decked out in their best white clothes.

Today, we spent several hours at the orphanage, meeting with orphanage director Meseret, and playing with the kids. Meseret kindly brought us up to date on their organizational costs, and we learned many more details about the administration of the organization. We started to do some future forecasting and strategizing about how to deal with escalating inflation, a changing adoption scene, etc. She is such a professional and it was great to learn, and connect with her again. I think we all have a lot of mutual respect for each other… She and Sintayehu are so committed and accomplish so much for some of Ethiopia’s poorest of poor children.

There are a few facts about the orphanage care that I can share that you readers might find interesting. Faya currently has four full time caregivers. They work 13 days in a row (then one day off!) and live at the orphanage day and night with the kids. These dedicated ladies sleep on mattresses in the kids room at night, cook for the children, care for them, and provide a lot of love.

Faya Orphanage serves many functions. It has three mandates: to house children on a permanent or temporary basis, to facilitate children towards adoption, and to contribute to the community through the House 2 House program.

Our Faya Child sponsors will know that when we send out update on Faya children every six months, it is more common than not that they are switched to sponsoring a different child. The reasons are simple… Sintayehu and Meseret do their best to, first, enable children to return to their families and communities. We have had several children rejoin their families in the last few months… Even long term residents I met 2.5 years ago. We got to see all of those four kids today and in Ambo, and it was wonderful to see them. Some children have also been placed for adoption, most recently to Norway.

There are also children who find a temporary home at Faya Orphanage. For example, when we went to Ambo, I was surprised to learn that one of the children I personally sponsor had gone to live at Faya orphanage with her twin brother for a few months, as her family could not care for her temporarily. There is a picture of me enjoying a visit with her, doing “sharuba” braids on a doll we brought. What a sweeteheart. We expect she and her brother will return to their family in a few weeks time. There are other children that come to the orphanage for daycare, and other temporary reasons.

Sponsors… Your money is being well spent! And truly, the organization is doing a fabulous job of all those three purposes. Without you, these children would not be so well cared for, and wouldn’t have the opportunity to grow and thrive. Thank you!!

We are interested in hearing from you the sponsors of Faya kids, about the sponsorship structure.

Currently, multiple sponsors are assigned to one child… All the sponsors together enable the funding of this organization. (It takes a lot of money to care, and to care well, for multiple children 24/7.) The assigned child usually changes every six months for the reasons explained above, but we TRY to ensure that you receive new information about the child assigned. Because children are transitory, sometimes the assigned child is gone before we get an update completed, or are too new.

Alternatively, we could restructure these sponsorships to be orphanage sponsorships instead of child sponsorships. In this alternative structure, Faya Orphanage sponsors would receive an overall update on the orphanage… How many children there are, etc., and pictures of ALL of them at the time of the update. We could also profile one child each update.

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Do you like the current “FAYA CHILD” structure even though the child is always changing and we may not have complete information, OR, would you like us to reframe the sponsorship as a “FAYA ORPHANAGE” sponsorship as proposed above? (Either way, the money is all being spent the same way, but the structure would change what you as sponsors receive.)

We’d love your feedback… What do you sponsors think? Please leave a comment!



Sunrise Women’s Enterprise Association

When we were visiting our House 2 House families in Guder, we also met with two women, the secretary and treasurer from the local Sunrise Women’s Enterprise Association.

The two women had come to the Woreda Women’s Affairs office to tell us all about their community lending program, and to ask us if we were interested in partnering with them. We had previously spoken to Sintayehu and had indicated that we were interesting in a micro lending program, and after he met this enterprising group of women, he thought we would like to meet them too.

There are approximately 35 women currently involved in Sunrise’s community lending circle. Almost all the women have young families, often with many children.

Each women contributed 3birr (that’s about 20 cents) to join the association. Each month, a woman’s name is chosen by lottery to receive a loan of 100 birr. She has one month to return the loan with 5 birr interest. The loans are intended to help the women start very small businesses, such as selling tomatoes at the market.

Interestingly, each borrower has a guarantor within the lending circle, so if the borrower cannot repay, her guarantor steps in. After two years, they have cycled through all their members twice, and not one loan has gone delinquent.

It was awesome to see such enthusiastic young women taking leadership in their community to change their lives. All of us were very impressed with their professionalism and passion. When we asked what support they were wanting from us, they basically said they needed a capital infusion. The loans were often helpful to get the women out of difficult situations, but were not really large enough to have a long term impact and bring them out of extreme poverty.

As an example, the secretary of Sunrise Women’s Enterprise Association wants to have a herd of 5 sheep. With that many sheep, she can sustain her young family. She is looking for a loan to purchase the first two sheep, so that they could have offspring and establish a herd.

The association is supported by the local Woreda office. In fact, three of the staff members were there at our visit, and two sat in on the meeting to support the two young women. Once again I was struck by how well the local government is connected with the nonprofit and community groups.

We asked the secretary and treasurer to put together a little proposal with all the names of the women in the association, and other information, such as the appropriate new business loan amount, the total amount of capital investment, etc.

In May, we will meet as a board and one of the many items for discussion will be the Sunrise Women’s Enterprise Association proposal. Vice-president Dacia Douhaibi has been doing research into different kinds of micro financing models and will also be shaping our discussion.

We’d be interested in hearing from you, as supporters and sponsors… What do you think? Is community lending an area you think we should get involved in? Please leave your comments on this blog post.

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For some reason, comments don’t seem to be working and I can’t fix it from Ethiopia. So you can leave comments here: http://rowanfamilytree.com/2012/05/03/sunrise-womens-enterprise-association