In the News
The Positive, Creative Power That Emerges When Ideas Are Shared
Huffpost
“Tell me and I forget.
Teach me and I may remember.
Involve me and I learn!”
-Benjamin Franklin
This is a guest post by Michele Ostertag, co-founder and director of Rafiki wa Maendeleo Trust.
What an amazing trip! Thanks to our partner Segal Family Foundation and their Active Partnership Learning Visit Program, a few of us from Rafiki wa Maendeleo Trust recently had the opportunity to visit similar organizations that have effective working relationships with their local communities. At Rafiki, we coordinate a holistic range of programs to improve the lives of children in the Rarieda sub-County of Kenya. Though we’ve been working with the guardians of orphaned and vulnerable children in 35 villages for nearly ten years, we’re always looking for ways to improve our model.
We chose to visit fellow Segal grantees Lwala Community Alliance in Homa Bay County and Organic Health Response on Mfangano Island, not too far off the shore in Lake Victoria. Our three grassroots organizations have a lot in common: we are embedded in our communities, covering a similar geographic size area, similar populations, and similar holistic understanding of community needs especially when tackling some of our most pressing challenges, including HIV/AIDS, poverty, and education. During our visits, we spent a lot of time sharing experiences, challenges, successes, and local solutions that have worked for each organization.
WASH Demonstration Site: Lwala has set up demonstration sites for agriculture and WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Health) at the entrance to their health facility. Both serve as valuable opportunities for the community to visualize different low-cost hand washing, pit latrine, and rainwater catchment options and to choose which is the most relevant for their home and lifestyle. At Rafiki, we have set up hand-washing units at our local schools, but Lwala’s display inspired us to extend our initiative so that we engage our local health facilities to install similar demonstration sites. We also hope to set up a WASH demonstration site next to our agriculture demonstration gardens.
Youth-Friendly HIV Testing & Counseling: Organic Health Response’s youth HIV program is integrated with its cybercafé. Several thousand youth on this island are part of this program where they have access to free, high-speed internet access and large-screen TV for sports under one simple condition: all members must check their HIV status every six months with a professional counselor. What a cool way to educate youth on HIV awareness and to keep them aware of their status! We saw this as a big opportunity for us to attract more youth in Rafiki’s facilities, like the Rarieda Training & Resource Center. We can even extend this through our weekend movie matinees.
Bicycles for Humanity: Organic Health Response enjoys a unique partnership with Bicycles for Humanity who trained them to become a bike workshop—providing employment, skills, training, business, opportunity, and economic development for the Mfangano community. Their Bicycle Empowerment Centres is a self-sustaining entity. Looking at this model, the Rafiki team was prompted to research non-profit organizations who can compliment or fill gaps in the various training and business programs we run.
Originally published in Huffpost
Browse
Featured Stories
Gender Based Violence Awareness
According to the World Health Organization, one third of women worldwide have experienced violence; the high prevalence of violence is linked with higher rates of HIV infection.
Klaris Awino Achieng
Klaris is a widow from Lusi village and a member of the pioneer cohort of Street Business School. A year after graduation, she is operating a second business of selling fish, made possible by her savings and borrowings from her local VSLA group.
The Solar Power Difference
Somewhere in Masala Got stands a grass thatched house, surrounded by the most beautiful natural stone landscape. Inside the house await three giggling siblings and their mother.