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The Goodletter

This week's feature: Victory Over Poverty



Thursday, February 21, 2002
Stories, actions, and ideas that connect us.
www.goodthings.com

A few favorite goodthings from Angela Veleda Bueno of Brazil:

"Pitanga ice cream. My work. The color of the autumn sky in Rio. Long dresses. Galaxies. Laughing with my son. Summer rain. Cooking for my friends. Angel's paintings. Ivan Lins' music"

[ What are YOUR favorite goodthings? ] Read more

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In this week's issue:
[GoodLetter] Victory Over Poverty
[Favorite GoodThings 2001 Spotlight] Favorite Poverty Solution: The Robin Hood Foundation
[Good Gravy] Samba Bossa Nova; Lotus Lounge Volume 2 -- The Mission -- Seal Press' The Unsavvy Traveler
[The Upshot] Brazil's Instituto Terra
[Housekeeping] Subscribe/unsubscribe


Victory Over Poverty
When you consider the impoverished circumstances of over a billion of the world's people, it becomes remarkably clear that figure-skating is nothing more an insignificant game. But in the Olympic spirit of peace and justice, a group that first made its presence known after World War II is still giving people the tools they need to rebuild their lives.


Dear GoodLetter readers,

Half a century ago, millions of heavy cardboard boxes filled with food and supplies -- known as CARE Packages -- helped families in Europe and Asia survive during the lean years following World War II. Those parcels provided sustenance for the body and salve for the spirit as people began to rebuild their homes, their communities, and their countries.

Since then, one thing remains constant: the non-profit aid organization CARE is still changing people's lives. But what we're doing today is substantially more complex than delivering crates of food and blankets. Through agriculture, education, health, and small business development programs, CARE works with entire communities to address the underlying causes of poverty, not just its symptoms. CARE has joined the United Nations and others in an effort to reduce by half the number of people in the world living on less than $1 a day -- currently 1.2 billion -- by 2015.

I work for CARE at its Atlanta-based headquarters. My trips around the world to see the actual work CARE does and witness the effects of global poverty are like splashes of ice-cold water to the face, stark wake-up calls about the daily challenges faced by nearly half of the world's people. Yet, wherever I go, people's resilience and kindness seem like such a contrast to the images of hopelessness we see on television. I recently visited communities in Peru, South America's second-largest country, and was again reminded that my work with CARE is important. I wrote the following journal entry during the last night of my trip:

The past couple days, I have been visiting with a group of 185 community health volunteers living around the northern town of Otuzco, population 12,240. Before heading back to the capital Lima, my last stop was in the small community of Los Angeles, just one of many across the country where one in five children dies from a preventable disease before they turn five.

Today I made the rounds with one local volunteer, Teodora Reyes, a 38-year-old childless widow born and raised in Los Angeles, a potato farming community of 50 families set in the highland clouds. Every morning, Teodora gets up with the sun, maps out her actions for the day from behind her small wooden desk, and sets out on foot with the goal of saving lives through health education.

The morning air was brisk as we walked to her first of five stops of the day. We heard whispers from inside the ancient two-story home made of hardened mud and wood. A rattle and creak broke the silence as the young mother of five opened the front door and stepped out onto the narrow porch with a smile. A few months ago, Teodora had referred her to the local health center where a doctor safely delivered her baby. Teodora continually monitors the health of this mother and her children. Her message today was about the prevention and treatment of common childhood illnesses like diarrhea and pneumonia.

"We take our work very seriously," Teodora said to me on our way to the next visit. "Before the project started five years ago, five women died every year from at-home pregnancies gone wrong." Since volunteers like Teodora started their weekly home visits, no Los Angeles mothers or children have died in pregnancy or from preventable disease.

Six years ago, CARE started this pilot project in partnership with the Ministry of Health. Now, there's a health center in Otuzco, and volunteers like Teodora have been trained with basic health skills and armed with information. And last year, CARE stepped back and handed over the project to the health center and the community volunteers, who now manage it successfully on their own, an approach that the Ministry of Health plans to replicate nationwide.

As I left Los Angeles, Teodora said: "It's easy to say you are going to do something for your community without pay. It's another thing to do it. The best pay is a mother's thanks for helping her children."

The night I returned to Lima, I spoke with Ana Maria Robles, manager of CARE's New Horizons for Girls' Education project, who told me that the health project is only a part of the solution. For example, as the child survival rate increases, there still aren't opportunities for children to look forward to, especially girls in rural areas who usually are forced to drop out to do household chores or because their parents cannot afford to keep them in school. This lack of education hinders girls' ability to develop skills and confidence.

Since 1998, Ana Maria and her staff have been fostering awareness of issues associated with girls' education and spearheading the creation of FLORECER, a solutions-oriented network of 25 government ministries, local and community organizations, and international donors and a model for other developing countries. She spends a lot of personal time on advocacy efforts and relationship building at the highest levels of government, it's paying off. This past October, Peruvian lawmakers gave the war on poverty a major boost, approving a bill that will ensure universal enrollment for girls in quality basic education by 2006.

CARE's work in Peru mirrors our work in more than 60 countries. It's a different approach to development that involves shared responsibility, not traditional charity, by helping people solve their own problems and score lasting victories over poverty.

:: Allen Clinton

Allen Clinton has worked for CARE for four years and says he might have the best job in the world. Based in Atlanta, Georgia, he often travels and documents CARE's emergency response and self-help development programs. He was a Peace Corps volunteer in Honduras and has an M.A. degree in International Studies.Click here to see his favorite goodthings


(Thoughts on Allen's GoodLetter? Inspired by what you've read? E-mail us -- don't forget to tell us your name, where you're from, and if we can use your words in a future GoodLetter or on our Web site.)


TALK ABOUT IT
CARE is one of many organizations, companies, and people waging a war on poverty around the world. What solutions-oriented efforts to end poverty are you aware of? Share your stories and ideas.

LEARN MORE ABOUT IT
:: More about CARE and its programs in Peru

:: Read a story on CARE's work in Peru in Earth Times

:: Get more information on why improved girls' education in Peru is important

:: Find out about girls' education efforts in other parts of the world:
UNICEF
American Institutes of Research

DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT
:: Invest in a better world and donate directly to CARE

:: Learn about the CARE Corps Volunteer Program and make a difference when you travel the world

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Favorite GoodThings 2001 Spotlight
Did you know that CARE was one of the 25 honorees in our Favorite GoodThings 2001 campaign? We recognized their humanitarian efforts, as well as the extraordinary work of other organizations, companies, and people doing innovative things to make the world a better place. The profile of CARE and our other honorees have a special home on our Web site -- check them out and be sure to let us know what you think.

This week, in keeping with this week's GoodLetter about fighting the war on poverty, we're happy to feature our "Favorite Poverty Solution":

The Robin Hood Foundation
The Robin Hood of medieval lore was considered an outlaw who took from the rich and gave to the poor. The New York-based Robin Hood Foundation accepts the generosity of the compassionate and, in turn, offers much-needed support to those made desperate by poverty. And since September 11, the Robin Hood Foundation has worked to ensure that adequate relief has reached the families of lower-income victims of the World Trade Center attacks. By late November, Robin Hood had raised $48 million, 100% of which has gone directly to organizations reaching out to the needy: emergency services organizations, employment assistance agencies, and groups working to bring relief to those unable to otherwise access the relief funds and goods. The Robin Hood Foundation reminds us that even at a time when we all need something, there are always those who need more.

:: Learn more about the Robin Hood Foundation.

We love to hear from you about anything: ideas or situations that are inspiring you or challenging you to think, as well as organizations, programs, and people that contribute to your community and the world everyday. Please drop us a line.

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The Upshot
If you had all the tools in the world at your disposal to do something profound for your hometown, what would it be? Brazilian photographer Sebastio Salgado -- renowned throughout the world for his powerful, humanizing images of suffering people and places across the planet -- decided to dedicate much of his life savings to breaking the cycle of poverty near the place he grew up in coastal Brazil. In the process, he wanted to create a program of local economic self-reliance and education that would not only stop but reverse the trend of deforestation of Brazil's dwindling Atlantic Forest. While the eyes of the world have focused saving the Amazon rainforest, the Atlantic Forest has been reduced to only 7% of its original size -- an area of overwhelming biodiversity twice the size of Texas.

Salgado and his wife Lelia Wanick Salgado formed the non-profit Instituto Terra in 1998 and began the long, hard struggle to return the Atlantic Forest to some semblance of its former glory. Ongoing projects at Bulcao Farm in southeastern Brazil are providing local people with on-the-job skills in ecology and sustainable agriculture. With the guidance of Instituto Terra, they're understanding what has been lost and all that can be gained.

Get details about Instituto Terra's projects on Bulcao Farm.

Learn about Sebastio and Lelia Wanick Salgado and their photographic exhibit, Migrations: Humanity in Transition (1993-1999).

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Good Gravy
Please click through to our Web site to see what we're reading, watching, and listening to and, while you're at it, let us know what we're missing.

Music
Great New Music!
Samba Bossa Nova Various Artists (2002).
Lotus Lounge Volume 2 Various Artists (2001).
Two new collections of world music -- one of contemporary Brazilian music, the other tinged with techno -- promise to broaden horizons. Read the reviews.

Movies
Great Movie Rental! The Mission (1986). Robert DeNiro and Jeremy Irons compete for the hearts and souls of Brazil's indigenous people in this film full of life lessons. Read the review.

Books
Great New Book! The Unsavvy Traveler: Women's Comic Tales of Catastrophe Rosemary Caperton, Anne Mathews, Lucie Ocenas, eds. (2001). These delightful tales of traveling misadventure help us to learn to look on the bright side of life. Read the review.

GoodThings on Public Radio
Have you been checking out our favorite public radio stories? Here are some of our favorite pieces on public radio this week (a link to the full summaries on our Web site is below):

:: Apologizing for Past Wounds -- Author Ken Wiwa suggests that in Congo and other African countries, an apology is worth a thousand colonial wrongs.

:: The Father of Black History -- Black History Month is a national institution because of the dedication of the Harvard-educated son of slaves.

:: New Face of Indian Politics -- In spite of an entrenched caste system, India's shunned eunuchs may be in better favor than corrupt politicians.

:: Afghanistan: The Next Generation -- A Washington DC collective of Afghan-American professionals may be the future hope in the land of their parents' birth.

:: Dance Music for Kids -- Grammy Award-nominated Cathy and Marcy make the kind of music that appeals to the increasingly sophisticated tastes of children.

:: Art for the Shopping Masses -- If public funding for the arts is going to continue to be the source of absurd political firestorms, it's time, says one commentator, to put art on TV.

:: The Joy of Traffic -- One Lagos, Nigeria traffic cop puts a smile on his face and is making daily congestion just a little more bearable.

Visit our site to read full summaries of these stories and listen to your favorites.


Talk to us:
What's the best public radio story you've heard this week?

Housekeeping
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