Monday, February 22, 2010

Give us your money (Act 1)

Good news! Good news!

I have completed my first project! So I am going to write this blog about it. Here is the outline of the following blog: 1) I will tell you about it; all the juicy details and such. 2) I will give you a link where you can find this project online. 3) I will unabashedly ask you to open your wallet and contribute.

Part 1
My work is somewhat complicated. I work for an NGO that works with Day Care Centers (DCCs) for disabled children. Here is their story: These state-wide DCCs were created by the parents of disabled children. As of now, the current paradigm is to seclude these children from daily village life. The objective of our NGO, in concert with these DCCs, is to create a society where these children can receive quality rehabilitative care and still participate in normal village life. We want them to find the help they need and allow them to become an active member in their community. One of the problems these DCCs encounter, however, is a lack of funding. They are completely volunteer driven and are solely reliant on outside funding sources. This is where my project comes in.
The project my counterpart, the leader of this particular DCC and I created is to build a subsidiary farm attached to the DCC. The local government confirmed one half hectare to be given to the DCC for crops. Behind the DCC is a small plot of land used currently for storage. By spring (when the snows stop), that place will be cleared and the field will be prepared. Our plan is to provide the seeds, seedlings, building materials and animals to begin a small farm. Community volunteers have offered to help the DCC plant the crops and maintain them throughout the year as well as build the animal shelters out back for chickens and rabbits.
Beyond this, the DCC will be creating a Farm Finance Committee to watch over the finances of the farm. My counterpart and I will be conducting a seminar to teach about the financing and preparing a ledger outlining the costs of the farm. Throughout the year, this committee will oversee the money earned from the animals as well as any money earned from the fields. The plan is to earn enough money to pay for next years costs to continue the farm. With good returns, the farm might even begin to grow or help the DCC build. On top of this, the farm can provide food to the children as well as provide an opportunity for them to learn vocational skills relevant to village life.

Part 2
http://www.peacecorps.gov/contribute
*The link function is not working. It is giving me an error message in Russian (of which I cannot read) so you will be forced to copy and paste. Do not give up! Please don't let this set you back!
If you go to this website, there are several ways to find my project. You can type in Kyrgyz and all the projects currently active from this country will come up. (If you do this, you can read the other projects and give to my compatriots efforts also!) You can also type in my last name, Greene. If you need a third option, you can search by the state I am from, FL. If you are unable to find it, that means the small amount of money needed to turn these people inside out with happiness has already been collected. Hooray!

Part 3
I apologize. I threw a statement in the last part that could be interpreted as an “unabashed” attempt to convince you to give some money. Truly though, give something. One dollar, five dollars, five hundred dollars, however much you can spare. Tell your rich friends! Tell your rich enemies whom you want to see lose money! And don't worry, if you miss the opportunity to contribute this time, Rachel and I will be coming to you again with a complete lack of shame begging for your money. I know your TV might still be talking about an economic crisis but that was never a good reason to stop giving money away.
Truthfully, there are many funding sources open to Peace Corps Volunteers and I chose this one for a reason. Through this avenue, I am able to connect these people with you people. I will post pictures and tell about how the project goes. This is a chance not only to just write a check to some good cause. This is a chance to have someone you know (or maybe only vaguely know) oversee it and watch it blossom. Just because you aren't here doesn't mean you don't have the ability to make a difference here. This is a request from strong, hard-working, determined people to help them build a farm so they can create a better life for disabled children. How many more heart strings can be tugged at in one sentence?

Ok. I am finished with that.

Life here is good. We saw the thermometer hit -20*C for about two weeks then a beautiful warm front cleared all that out in two days. It is now a muggy 2-6*C and all the snow has melted on our dirt roads to create a nice humid bog. Also, all the livestock traffic only helps make the mud more squishy.
And with that...

Seacrest out.

2 comments:

  1. Dear Thomas and Rachel,

    My name is Howard Cincotta, and I'm a writer with the State Department's Bureau of International Information Programs in Washington

    We're preparing an article on the Peace Corps in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan that will run on www.america.gov as early as next week, timed for Peace Corps week.

    I've enjoyed your blog and wanted to know if you would like to offer, briefly, any thoughts or observations about your experiences and work there.

    Or you could point to some previous discussions in your blog that you feel capture important points about your Peace Corps experience.

    (I will not cite or quote anything from your blog without your permission, of course.)

    If you would prefer to have this discussion off-line, I'd be happy to contact you through a separate e-mail address.

    Here are a few questions that you could consider as suggestions if you found time to send me any responses:

    1. Where are you from: home/school/work? Where are you working and what are you doing?

    2. What has surprised you the most in your Peace Corps experience so far? Nature of work .. the people ... physical surroundings ... cultural adjustment ... camaraderie or isolation?

    3. What’s been most rewarding in your work? What are the biggest challenges or problems?

    4. Do you feel you’re making a difference in peoples’ lives?

    5. Do you anticipate staying connected/active after your Peace Corps service?


    Thanks for any time you can spare. And best wishes for your great Kyrgyz adventure!

    Howard Cincotta
    State Department
    Bureau of International Information Programs
    hcincotta@cox.net
    703-573-0669

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello Thomas and Rachel.

    This is an interesting and informative blog. In order to create a network for the incoming group of volunteers (and their families) that arrived today, we are inviting all blog writers to join the facebook group: Any news from Kyrgyzstan?

    http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=112673818749885

    Please join and spread the word. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete