Monday, December 10, 2012

Ethiopia- Marijke's Story: An inside look at an Ethiopian home


Marijke, one of Engage Now Africa's staff members in Ethiopia, shares one of her favorite memories from this year's Ethiopian expedition. Her story gives us a wonderful inside look at an Ethiopia home. Her story is below...  


"My favorite memory of the week we spent working in Gerbichu is our visit with the leader of the women’s group.  She’s a single mother with two children.  She lives in a simple, rectangular home on small fenced-in plot.  A partial wall and a curtain divides the interior into two rooms. 


When we visited her home to discuss where to put the drip-irrigation vegetable garden we planned to construct, it started to rain.  She offered us shelter in her small home.  So we all crowded into the one room and sat on small stools, low benches, and two stacked bags of grain. The room was dark.  The house had no glass in the window, so she closed the metal shutters and door to keep the rain out. 


After the rain passed, we thanked her and left, but not after having admired the pictures she had on her walls: pictures of her children, and of herself with her children.  Pictures of a more efficient cooking stove design.  Pictures of a drip irrigation garden.  She was building that stove next to her house.  She was getting that garden – we built it later that week.  She’ll show both to others in Gerbichu.  She will teach them how to construct their own.





Life has not been easy for this woman.  But she takes every opportunity to learn about something new.  She is eager for anything that can make life better and to share that knowledge with the other women in the village.  Leadership is sharing knowledge and ideas.


 It was very humbling to receive the gift of shelter from the rain.  Even more so, because she seemed to happy to be able to offer it."
                                                   -Marijke








Thursday, October 11, 2012

Sierra Leone- Lyn Maternity Health Center

We are excited to tell you about Engage Now's Lyn Maternity Health Center in Bo, Sierra Leone!

 
Engage Now Africa has funded the maternal clinic since it officially opened in 2007. Over the past five years it has become the fourth ranked maternal clinic in all of Sierra Leone due to its professional and sanitary environment that provides excellent midwifery and maternal care.
 
The Lyn Clinic is proud to have already provided quality maternal care to over two thousand women over the past five years. The clinic continues to deliver 30-35 babies a month with a very low maternal death rate compared with Sierra Leon's average of 2,100 deaths per 100,000 live births, one of the highest in the world.

The Lyn Clinics maintains careful antenatal care and specific post natal care as its core objectives.

Antenatal care Includes:
1. Pregnancy diagnostics, clinical examination and pregnancy t est kits
2. Follow up of pregnant women: diagnostics of risk pregnancies, and monitoring of fetal growth
3. Screening, prevention and treatment of malaria and anemia
4. HIV/AIDS screening of mothers
5. Link with government HIV/AIDS program to supply kits for rapid test screening
6. Counseling and HIV/AIDS support of mothers.

Post-natal Care Includes:
1. Follow up and monitoring of mother and baby.
2. Infants growth and health charting
3. Immunizations
4. Screening new born for HIV/AIDS
5. Refer them to HAART Clinic
 

We are in the process of organizing HIV/AIDS education programs for young girls, targeting the youth before they are sexually active. We are also fund raising to be able to fulfill expansion and improvement needs which continually grow as the demands on the clinic increase.
 
The Lyn Clinic is a warm and happy place always filled with pregnant women and their children were been born there and is one of the many services Engage Now Africa is proud to provide to the women of Sierra Leone!


 
 
 

Friday, August 24, 2012

Ethiopia- 2012 Expedition Recap & Highlights


What a wonderful expedition we had in June, 2012!
 
      We had 15 participants that worked very diligently in a village called Gerbichu outside of Debre Zeit about 90 minutes outside the city of AddisAbaba Ethiopia.
 
     Our main project was to build on to an existing school by creating two additional rooms, floating cement floors, plastering and painting the walls bright,vivid colors, and building desks. The group also put together many school bags for students and providing a variety of school supplies to decorate the walls. One of the highlights of working at the school, was holding class each day for children at 10 AM and 2 PM. We provided various lessons from topics from English to math, colors and animals to shapes. The children are so eager to learn, and they waited in the schoolyard for hours until it was time for their class. I am sure that this is a memory that they will always cherish. A highlight for me is always to put a fresh, bright, clean T-shirt on each boy, and a skirt or dress on each girl. It's like having our own little Christmas. They're so happy to have one thing that is new and so proud to be walking home with their school bags. The children truly radiate love kindness, and goodness. They are why I go back again, and again.
 
     One of my favorite activities of the week was providing all of the supplies for a wonderful art and craft project. The children learned how to use watercolors, glue and glitter, feathers, colored pencils, and to be creative with the Myriad of supplies. It was so touching to watch each child leave the school building with their own personal work of art. We know these pieces of art will be hanging in their huts for years to come.
 
      We also worked with the mothers group and providing menstruation kits, and instructing them how to use them for themselves and for their teenage daughters. This will truly be life-changing.
 
     Thank you to everyone that helped with the family gardens, and other special projects on some of the neighboring farms. The village people are always so appreciative of the different things that we have the opportunity to teach, and to share with them.
 
     I hope that you can join us next year for your own life-changing experience. Come to Ethiopia and feel the love!!
 
                                                      Kimberly Woods
                                                      Expedition Co-Leader
 


Please enjoy some pictures and highlights of the Ethiopia 2012 Expedition...
Gary Coleman (Board Member for ENA) and expedition participants painted the interior in one of the additions to the school, as well as a mural on the outside of the school.

Expedition participants each helped to teach many school lessons to children in the village.

Diana Bingham (Director for Engage Now Africa) building and staining desks for the school.


Larry Bingham (Board Member for ENA) coordinating the school building and painting project.

Kimberly Woods (Expedition Leader and Board Member for ENA) playing with school children while they lined up and waited for school to begin.

Expedition participants helped hand out new school clothes and backpacks to all of the children in the village.

 Expedition participants helped install a garden in the village using an irrigation system.