(Emily's voice)
I just finished reading the incredible and inspirational book "Stones into Schools" written by Greg Mortenson (author of "Three Cups of Tea") given to me at Christmas this year. The book is his story about building schools in the most remote areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan, with the goal of educating women. The book is written beautifully and is full of absolutely incredible stories about the hardships the people of these areas live with, as well as the struggles it took to bring literacy to them. I highly recommend this read!
There are huge benefits to educating women, especially in the most removed, impoverished and war-torn nations of this world. Here is an excerpt from Greg's book about the returns of girls' education:
Income Growth:
Girls' education leads to increased income for the girls themselves and for nations as a whole. Increasing the share of women with a secondary education by 1% boosts annual per-capita income growth by 0.3%. That's significant, since per-capita income gains in developing countries seldom exceed 3% a year.
Educating girls also boosts farming productivity. Educated farmers are more efficient and their farms are more productive, which leads to increased crop yields and declines in malnutrition.
(Information from The World Bank and The Council on Foreign Relations)
Maternal and Children's Health
Educated women have smaller, healthier and better-educated families.
The better educated the women in a society, the lower the fertility rate. A 2000 study in Brazil found that literate women had an average of 2.5 children, while illiterate women had an average of 6 children.
The better educated the women, the lower the infant mortality rate. "The mother's education is often the single most important influence on children's survival...Educated mothers learn how to keep their children healthy and how to use health services, improve nutrition and sanitation, and take advantage of their own increased earning capability. Girls who stay in school also marry later, when they are better able to bear and care for children."
(Information from UNESCO, The Council on Foreign Relations)
Women's Empowerment:
Educated girls and women are more likely to stand up for themselves and resist violence. "In poor areas where women are isolated within their communities, have little education and cannot earn much, girls are often regarded as an economic burden and women and girls sometimes suffer deliberate neglect or outright harm."
(Information from The Council on Foreign Relations)
If you are looking for a great read and want to feel that there are some positive changes happening in the world, then look no further! Go get yourself a copy of "Stones into Schools" or just call me and I will lend you mine!
Also, check out Greg Mortenson's website for his organization "the Central Asia Institute." https://www.ikat.org/
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Challenge Update
(Emily's Voice)
I realized today that we haven't written about how our challenge is going and whether or not we have been sticking to the rules. So, let me update you a little bit.
Most of the rules were put in place to allow us to have some freedom as we go about our daily lives and so it hasn't really been that hard to follow them! We have both cheated - Matt with buying a book about basketball and me buying a pair of running tights in anticipation of the upcoming running season! But, Matt wanted to add a rule about spending money on sports and sport-related things (see post about dodgeball purchase) and so we have tried to justify these purchases.
About that: before Matt and I even started to think about this challenge, I would always get him to ask me to justify my purchases. I told him that I was only allowed to buy something if I could give him 3 reasons why I needed it - and they had to be 3 good reasons, not just "it's cute, I look great in it, and it's only $20." These are not good reasons. I found this to be an extremely effective tool to curb my shopping for unnecessary items (but it only really worked if Matt was with me during the purchasing)! I often could only come up with 1 good reason to buy something, and a lot of the time I couldn't come up with any reasons. Geez, I'm starting to make myself sound like I have a problem (shop-a-holic, much?).
On the bright side, we watched a show called "Hoarders" last night and it made me feel really good about how much I buy (which is not much) and what I am willing to part with. If you feel like grossing yourself out just look for it on youtube.
Part of our challenge has also been to raise awareness to our friends and family about global poverty and what we can all do to help (hence this blog). I think in this we have been very successful. This past Christmas we asked our family to take the money they would have spent on gifts and give it to the WFP. In my family there is a lot of resistance to this idea, just because gift-giving has always been such a huge part of our tradition. But, this year, they fulfilled our request and gave their money away (thanks again everyone)! This also opened up many opportunities for discussion, as well as the receipt of an interesting little book called "Scroogenomics," which touches on why we should not give gifts at Christmas.
Part of our success has also been in the completion of our "fistula fund." A few days ago I received the certificate pictured above in the mail. It now lives on our fridge and is a daily reminder of how a little money put in the right places can do a lot of good.
So, in short, the challenge has been going very well and we are having little successes every day. We don't feel like we are lacking ANYTHING, and we are going to be able to give the WFP a significant amount by the end of this year. Now, how am I going to justify buying the rats each a torture ball to roll around in?
ATTENTION ATTENTION ATTENTION!!!!
The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) is matching donations made to UNICEF Canada for the Haiti relief efforts!
Give now to UNICEF and your donation will double!
Just click on link shown on side bar to the right and help the people of Haiti in this great time of need.
Give now to UNICEF and your donation will double!
Just click on link shown on side bar to the right and help the people of Haiti in this great time of need.
Friday, January 15, 2010
What the World Eats
(Emily's Voice)
A very wise woman recommended that I check out a book called "Hungry Planet: What the World Eats." It is a photographic journey around the world, looking at what an average family eats in one week. There are also photos of typical grocery stores/markets that these people shop at. I went online to see if I could find this book somewhere and I found that some of the photos have been published on the TIME website (www.time.com).
Check it out, you will be amazed (just click on the link below)!
What the World Eats, Part I
These pictures really illustrate the cultural food differences of people on the planet. Not only is the food different but the cost is incredibly revealing of the economic times that we live in. The cost of a week's worth of food for a family living in a refugee camp in Chad costs $1.23 and looks like it mostly consists of grains. Meanwhile, a family living in North Carolina spends $342 on a week's worth of food, which looks like it mostly consists of junk. I really enjoyed looking at these pictures and comparing the amount of fresh food that people either choose to buy (or not buy) or have available to them. In a place like North Carolina, people have access to a wide range of fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, dairy, grains, etc. And yet the only fresh foods (and by fresh I mean not processed beyond recognition - like the mushrooms on the pizza don't count) we see displayed for the North Carolinian family's week are grapes, tomatoes, salad in a bag, vacuum-sealed meat, and milk in a jug. Ugh. How can a family stay healthy eating so much trash?
Now, from these pictures, it looks as though the North Carolinians aren't the only ones who buy a lot of processed food and drink a lot of pop. Look at the picture of the family from Mexico, where 12 Coca Cola bottles are on display for 4 people's consumption (that is assuming the small child in the arms of his Dad doesn't drink it yet) for one week. And we wonder why Type 2 Diabetes is rampant!
On a different note - I told my coworkers today about this book and how incredible it is. I made the statement that it was so interesting to look at how different cultures eat different foods (something that we've all known but is so poignant to see in a visual comparison between nations). My supervisor, who always has an opinion and has the uncanny ability to retain random knowledge, agreed that food is a cultural vehicle. He told me a story about a place where all the people were starving and the aid organizations sent them huge quantities of wheat. These people lived in an area where they didn't grow wheat or know how to process it. So, they had a giant warehouse filled with food and yet they were starving. He continued to say that it would be like if there was some disaster here and we were all left for starving and the UN World Food Programme sent us truckloads of jellyfish. Do you know how to eat a jellyfish? And it is so true! What would we do? But, if those trucks were sent to a community in, say, northern Japan, they would be whipping up some fried jellyfish served over rice!
A very wise woman recommended that I check out a book called "Hungry Planet: What the World Eats." It is a photographic journey around the world, looking at what an average family eats in one week. There are also photos of typical grocery stores/markets that these people shop at. I went online to see if I could find this book somewhere and I found that some of the photos have been published on the TIME website (www.time.com).
Check it out, you will be amazed (just click on the link below)!
What the World Eats, Part I
These pictures really illustrate the cultural food differences of people on the planet. Not only is the food different but the cost is incredibly revealing of the economic times that we live in. The cost of a week's worth of food for a family living in a refugee camp in Chad costs $1.23 and looks like it mostly consists of grains. Meanwhile, a family living in North Carolina spends $342 on a week's worth of food, which looks like it mostly consists of junk. I really enjoyed looking at these pictures and comparing the amount of fresh food that people either choose to buy (or not buy) or have available to them. In a place like North Carolina, people have access to a wide range of fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, dairy, grains, etc. And yet the only fresh foods (and by fresh I mean not processed beyond recognition - like the mushrooms on the pizza don't count) we see displayed for the North Carolinian family's week are grapes, tomatoes, salad in a bag, vacuum-sealed meat, and milk in a jug. Ugh. How can a family stay healthy eating so much trash?
Now, from these pictures, it looks as though the North Carolinians aren't the only ones who buy a lot of processed food and drink a lot of pop. Look at the picture of the family from Mexico, where 12 Coca Cola bottles are on display for 4 people's consumption (that is assuming the small child in the arms of his Dad doesn't drink it yet) for one week. And we wonder why Type 2 Diabetes is rampant!
On a different note - I told my coworkers today about this book and how incredible it is. I made the statement that it was so interesting to look at how different cultures eat different foods (something that we've all known but is so poignant to see in a visual comparison between nations). My supervisor, who always has an opinion and has the uncanny ability to retain random knowledge, agreed that food is a cultural vehicle. He told me a story about a place where all the people were starving and the aid organizations sent them huge quantities of wheat. These people lived in an area where they didn't grow wheat or know how to process it. So, they had a giant warehouse filled with food and yet they were starving. He continued to say that it would be like if there was some disaster here and we were all left for starving and the UN World Food Programme sent us truckloads of jellyfish. Do you know how to eat a jellyfish? And it is so true! What would we do? But, if those trucks were sent to a community in, say, northern Japan, they would be whipping up some fried jellyfish served over rice!
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Disaster in Haiti
(Emily's Voice)
A huge earthquake has rocked the island of Haiti leaving thousands feared dead and many thousands more injured. The World Food Program has mobilized to assist with this emergency by providing food assistance for the thousands of people left homeless and hungry after this disaster.
"WFP is asking the international community for urgent help to assist Haiti, a country where 1.8 million people were already food insecure before the earthquake and it is also the poorest country in the Western hemisphere." - Haiti: WFP Mobilises To Bring Food Relief After Devastating Quake, www.wfp.org
Interested in donating to provide relief? Copy and paste this link into your browser window https://www.wfp.org/donate/haiti
A huge earthquake has rocked the island of Haiti leaving thousands feared dead and many thousands more injured. The World Food Program has mobilized to assist with this emergency by providing food assistance for the thousands of people left homeless and hungry after this disaster.
"WFP is asking the international community for urgent help to assist Haiti, a country where 1.8 million people were already food insecure before the earthquake and it is also the poorest country in the Western hemisphere." - Haiti: WFP Mobilises To Bring Food Relief After Devastating Quake, www.wfp.org
Interested in donating to provide relief? Copy and paste this link into your browser window https://www.wfp.org/donate/haiti
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)