Friday, July 17, 2009

News from Amistad International

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Dear Friends of Amistad,


Has it been a tough economic year for you? It has for many of us. And when the economy suffers in the wealthy nations, those who live in poor countries suffer even more.

The recession has hit Amistad International hard. Our giving is down 35% from this time last year. We will reduce several programs, and as noted below, we were precariously close to closing Amri School/Kenya for the final school term, August-December, until an angel donor sent $3,000 of the $5,000 needed. Still, with your help we continue good work in Africa, Mexico and India and I thank all of you who have been able to continue helping us.

By the way, churches of several faiths have adopted specific Amistad projects and raised significant amounts of money through donations and fund-raiser events. If the place of worship to which you belong is looking for a project that has minimal administrative costs and provides lots of news about how your gifts are making a difference, please contact me. We'd love to personalize a project for your group.

If you'd like to send e-Notas to a friend, just send us an email. We'll be glad to add to our mailing list. Also, check out our Amistad Newslog, where you'll find our newsletter and other pictures and stories.

With deep appreciation,

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Zimbabwe:
Baby Found in Toilet Pit Recovers at Murwira Orphanage
Murwira Orphanage a spot of hope in a shattered country

moses-MurwiraZimbabwean authorities recently brought a nearly dead baby to Murwira orphange. The tiny boy had been found in the pit of an outhouse toilet, where he'd been intentionally abandoned. Police were able to pull him up by the handles of a bag he was in. He had maggots in his nose and mouth and was very ill. Initially he was hospitalized, but Paula reports that he's now drinking a rich baby formula and gaining strength. She feels confident that the baby, who they've named Moses, will survive.

Other news from Paula:

"Unemployment here is 94%. 7 million are undernourished, and are eating bark, wild plants and roots, and bugs and worms. We now have 37 orphans, seven of them under the age of two. Sometimes the children are quite near death when they arrive. Their recovery and healing can be dramatic.
 
"We have 12 women working in three shifts around the clock taking care of the children. Older children help with the work. Both boys and girls are learning to wash, iron, cook and clean. The older children take care of the babies and it is wonderful to see how they care for the little ones.
 
"A number of our children have been either emotionally or sexually abused before they arrive. Some are developmentally delayed, and even though we don't have professionally trained counselors, it is rewarding to see how they thrive with love and care."

Mature volunteers are needed at Murwira. Please contact Sandy Schultz for an application.

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Zimbabwe:
Tons of Food for the Hungry
A coalition of donors and volunteers sends food to Paula Leen's program

paula/orphansAmistad has participated in delivering nearly fifty tons of food from South Africa to Paula Leen's Murwira Orphanage from December '08 to June '09, to feed thousands of hungry people in the Marenge/Mutare area. The shipment contained maize, flour, peanut butter, cooking oil, rice, powdered milk, beans, baby formula, and a nutritional drink.

This was been a team effort involving Amistad International, ZOPOM of Australia, the Maree Noble and Elizabeth Stumpf Memorial Foundation, Agathos Foundation, and others. Adventist Women's Ministries of Washington state paid the shipping, and Feed My Starving Children Foundation donated and packed the 22 tons of chicken flavored soya, rice and vegetable meals. Marc Fulmer of Agathos Foundation, Pilgrim Foundation, and Amistad International all worked  together smoothly to get the food to Paula Leen's volunteers, who are now delivering it to the needy.

Thanks to the Noble/Stumpf Foundation another shipment of food will arrive in July or August.

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San Francisco:
Amistad Program Leaders from India named "Unsung Heroes"
Congratulations to Rajan Kaur and Urmi Basu

The founder/directors of two programs which Amistad International assists have been given awards as Unsung Heroes of Compassion from the Wisdom in Action Foundation in San Francisco, California, April 26, 2009.

urmiTibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama presented awards to Rajan Kaur of Varanasi, India who is the founder/director of Buddha's Smile School; and Urmi Basu (pictured at left), the founder/director of New Light in Kolkata, India. Rajan and Urmi and 47 other honorees were the guests at a reception of 600 who came to pay them their respects. These Unsung Heroes were selected because "they have set the course of their hearts toward truth and love. In doing so, they have become beacons, lanterns, mentors, inspirations and exemplars for us all. "

The Dalai Lama gently, and with a spark of humor, reminded everyone that like the 49 awardees, we too can do something for the world. We need not see the results in our own lifetime: we do good simply because it is the right thing to do.

Since returning to India, Rajan tells us she has never felt more peaceful. She feels that she has even more strength and energy to teach and inspire her students.

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Kitale, Kenya:
Pathfinder Academy a Scholastic Success

pathfinder academy sign 1Amistad is helping Pathfinder Academy in Kenya with strategic campus improvements, including building seven classrooms, kitchen and dining hall.

Pathfinder Academy is a school for 360 economically deprived students grades 1-8, many of whom are AIDS orphans, at risk-children, internally displaced children (from '08 political strife) and children who are heads of households. The school is one of the scholastically top ranked schools in their region. The students are also trained in sustainable agriculture methods which will enable them to grow their own food throughout their lives. (One of our partners in funding Pathfinder Academy has posted a video about it here.)

Pathfinder Academy has made good progress toward completion of seven ground level classrooms. Thanks to the generosity of an anonymous family, the slabs for the seven classrooms were poured, the walls raised, and a staircase built to reach a second floor library that will be completed when funds are available. The slab for the second story library was poured thanks to Jeannie and Terry Dietrich. 

Thanks to those who helped us to purchase of building materials for both the classroom complex and for roofing materials on Pathfinder Academy's new kitchen/dining hall, and to the Worthington, Ohio Seventh day Adventist church for their gift to provide chairs and tables for the dining/conference hall.  

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Kenya:
Amri School Needing Funds for Autumn Term


amri2The 150 students of Amri school in Kenya have been receiving not only an education but also one nutritional meal per day day, thanks to Amistad International donors. These are often children who are  in "child-headed households" (having neither parent), so there is little or no food at home.

We especially thank Don and Wanda Krein and Paula and Russell Owens who have  shared their blessings with this school and have helped keep open the doors of Amri school this year.

amri1Amri was in danger of closing their doors before the final '09 term (August-December) began until the Maree Noble/Elizabeth Stumpf Memorial Foundation donated $3,000 toward the $5,000 needed for salaries for teachers, principal, and cook schoolhouse rent, food for daily meals, books, and papers. We are still lacking $2,000 for the final term '09-contact me if you think you might be able to help.

If you are looking for a good place to get an excellent return on your investment, Amri School will pay rich rewards.

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From Amistad director Karen Kotoske:
Special thanks to Our Helpers!


  • thanksThanks to Maree Noble and Elizabeth Stumpf Memorial Foundation for your donation to purchase 30 brain shunts for hydrocephalic babies in Zimbabwe. We are deeply grateful to you for this compassionate aid for these children who'd otherwise not be able to receive surgery. Their generous gift included a one year grant of $5,000 for a nurse to monitoring the post surgery progress of the hydrocephalic babies.  
  • The Noble/Stumpf Foundation is also providing a July-August 2009 shipment to Murwira, including beans, rice, flour, soya, infant formula, soap, peanut butter, and yeast.
  • Thanks to Donna and Larry Peters for tremendous help to our projects in India. Donna and Larry not only assist in the day to day operations of Buddha's Smile School but have purchased a video projector, science videos and new uniforms for the children. They've also just purchased a washer and dryer for Soma Home, the New Light home for daughters of prostitutes in Kolkata.
  • SukdevThanks to all who contributed to the medical fund for Sukdev Saini, 37, husband of Buddha's Smile School director/founder, Rajan Kaur. Sukdev was struck by a hit-and-run driver on June 12 near the school necessitating his right leg be amputated. He remained in hospital for over one month due to complications of infection. We hope Sukdev will soon be able to be fitted with a prosthetic leg. (Sukdev is the owner and chef at Sarnath CafĂ© in Sarnath, India.)
  • We are especially grateful to Judith Steiner, Carol and Mahlon Hubenthal (and many of their wonderful friends), Hana Bagully, Karen Harris, Vipin Kothari, John and Inge Holman, Amy Symons, Mirian Sicherman,  and other angels who gave generously for Sukdev's hospital bill.
  • Thanks to Lotte Cherin for procuring and shipping laptop computers for Joel Amutabi, director of Amri School in Kenya, and Dr. Talent Maphosa, medical director of Marenge Hospital in Zimbabwe - both of whom had had their computers stolen. Lotte also donated laptop computers for Local Solutions, a community-based nonprofit in Mongolia.
  • Thanks to Norrine Keesee and an anonymous friend for providing the funds for 49 windows and the doors for seven new classrooms at Pathfinder Academy in Kenya. Norrine also knits cozy bright sweaters for Amistad babies all over the world.
  • Thanks to Yvonne Wyer and her city of Canberra, Australia. Yvonne opened her beautiful garden to the public to raise funds for Zimbabwe food shipments, and the people of Canberra responded generously.


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Sierra Huichol, Mexico:
Ivett, Malnourished and Abandoned, Gets a Mommy

ivetteMaria Luisa is an employee of Casa Huichol, a place of refuge for Huichol people who have to come to the city of Guadalajara. She does work of all kinds for the lodgers, for very little salary.

One day at Casa Huichol, Maria Luisa faced a difficult dilemma. A few months before a Huichol mother arrived at Casa Huichol, unwrapping a severely malnourished child. The baby's mother, thinking her child would soon be dead, then disappeared. (Sometimes Huichol people will abandon a starving or deformed infant with an agency or refuge thinking that probably the child will die anyway.) Maria Luisa took baby Ivett into her heart and began to give her tender love, along with the simple diet provided at Casa Huichol. Discovering that she had fallen in love with this tiny mite of a child, 25 year-old Maria Luisa, deeply impoverished, had to decide what to do. As a single woman who wanted also very much to be a mother, and no marriage prospects in sight, Maria Luisa decided to adopt Ivett.

When friend of Amistad, Kay Prins of San Luis Obispo (herself a mother of a grown adopted son) learned about Maria Luisa adopting tiny Ivett she asked what she could do to help.  Kay and her husband Steve are providing special pediatric nutritional supplementation and clothing for Ivett. Thank you, Kay and Steve!

Dagoberto Cirilo, Amistad's pilot for the Huichol project, writes, "Please remember Maria Luisa and her new adopted daughter Ivett. We're grateful for Amistad International's support for the Huichol air ambulance and clinic, that has helped hundreds of people over the last 29 years of service. God bless all the donors who have been a financial support for our work here."

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contactContact information:
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