Showing posts with label HELP Uganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HELP Uganda. Show all posts

Sunday, December 14, 2014

CELEBRATE Learning, Service, and the End of the Season This Week: LXI

Each week Ruth Ayres asks interested writers to celebrate their stories. The stories tie the community of writers tightly together as they weave their tapestry with air of positivity. My week was filled with learning, contrasts, and connections. 

My story unfolds around a trip to a state conference that took me away from my family right in the middle of holiday preparation time. Below you will see images captured during the week.
Can you guess what these images have in common?


All of the photos center around the conference that led to increased learning, service, and the close of the fall season. I celebrate these major components of my week by introducing a lead character, Mother Nature, who played her tricks with us. Mother Nature introduced Weather as her companion this week. Weather decided to make a grand entrance at the start of the four day conference. He created quite a stir. News stories and conversations centered around the snow that was reported to fall. Once the temperature dropped, Weather allowed huge snowflakes to fall and kept up the routine for a full 72 hours. While lovely to watch the flakes sweep the sky and dance their way to the ground, their full descent caused havoc. Roads iced over; buses had difficulty transporting conference attendees to the Cultural Education Center in Albany; delays to the start of the conference occurred on two different days. Mother Nature decided that she wanted Fall to exit in shocking white in the Capital region and indeed it did. I captured the storm in a photo and blogged about that at the beginning of the week. You can read about that here.  My week ended with a drive home to Long Island that sharply contrasted Albany's weather patterns. Long Island's temperature and no snow landscapes allowed for my outdoor holiday decorating to begin with ease. Mother Nature used her magic wand to change up scenes in two different locales I was in making me realize how powerful her reach is. 

While in Albany, I was present for NYS Education Commissioner John B. King's announcement to join the U.S. Department of Education as a senior adviser for U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. With the TV cameras rolling, Dr. King delivered a humble speech that was met with a standing ovation. Learning continued throughout the conference. The focus  was on backward planning to provide supports for all learners to be successful stewards of their own learning. While at the conference, attendees had the opportunity to visit the new exhibit on the Shakers in the NYS Museum. The collection was extensive and informative, shedding light on the Shaker community in NYS. My background knowledge was limited in scope, only knowing about the simple line of furniture that the Shakers created. After the tour, I had a broader body of knowledge to think about. As a participant, I was to move my thinking from being a spectator on a field trip to a fieldworker engaging in research. This move will be modeled for teachers so they can provide students with authentic learning experiences revolving around active research.    

Lastly, the conference afforded me the opportunity to expose the conference attendees to the global outreach work I am involved in that brings light to service learning and leadership. H.E.L.P. Uganda is an organization founded to bring hope, education, and sustainable living to mothers and children in Masese, Uganda. Through the selling of beautifully crafted jewelry and bags, a school for 500 children was built and continues to thrive as a center for literacy in the refugee town. You can read more about the fundraiser efforts that I am involved in through a series of blog posts, the most recent one being Giving Tuesday Offers Hope to Others

Now back at home after a long week, I can begin preparations to celebrate the Christmas holiday with my family. Here's to all of your celebrations-may they be merry and bright as Ruth Ayres reminds us to be. 

Discover. Play. Build.

Ruth Ayres invites us each week to celebrate our lives. 
Click over to her site, Discover, Play, Build, to read more celebrations 
by the community of writers. 

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Creating Hope from Paper

On Long Island, sound school systems, ongoing learning, and daily meals are the norm, so it is difficult to imagine places where these basics do not exist. But life without learning and food is a reality in many countries across the globe. Until we are connected in some small way to this unthinkable situation, we will not be able to understand the depth of the issue. It is with hope for better tomorrows for the children of poverty in Masese, Uganda that this blog post is written.



Four years ago the Garrity and Silon families, joining with HELP International, traveled to Uganda to visit the Masese people. There, they encountered the struggles facing the village people who were living in slum conditions near the Nile River in the town of Jinja. Poverty, disease, such as Aids, and distressing conditions were prevalent. Women without husbands and orphaned children raised by grandmothers comprised many of the households. With a strong desire to reach out and help, the Garritys and Silons channeled their energy to provide the Masese people with a sustainable living opportunity, schooling opportunities, and hope created from paper.


Through the efforts of these families, the Mothers of Masese, as they are now known, craft jewelry, belts, and bags created from 100% recycled paper that they roll by hand, dry in the sun, and weave together in bright visual patterns and shapes. 100% of proceeds from the sale of the jewelry not only support the women but have helped build the HELP elementary school, pay the salary of the Ugandan teachers, and provide breakfast and lunch during school days. A fence to safeguard the school is being built, supported through additional fundraising efforts. What grew from a school of 40 children to 500 children is an amazing feat of a humanitarian effort started by the Garritys and the Silons.


With one look into the eyes of the children of Masese, many images arise. May this poem about a journey that started with hope fill your heart with a desire to support this worthy cause, HELP Uganda, through the purchase of Bigger Than Beads products. 

Photo taken of Masese Child by Trish Garrity
My Eyes Speak


My eyes, dark and piercing, 
Speak of my village,
Impoverished and ill-equipped,
Hidden from other eyes
But real to me.
My eyes speak of a streaming tear,
Struggles to stay alive,
Education non-existent.
This is my Uganda, 
The land I know
But you did not.

Anticipating a connection-   
Your life to mine-
Across the deep sea,
You traveled
With hearts full of hope.
You came wide-eyed;
Scanned my tattered surroundings.

Bellies extended, ragged clothes
Did not push you away
But called you to help.
Because of this,
My eyes now speak- 
Whisperings of a dream, 
Housed in hope.

My eyes as deep 
As pools of reflecting light,
Visualize images of new life:
A school building bubbling with excitement,



Writing and drawing tools,
Hearty meals of warm food, 
Children engaged in learning,
Prideful work for Masese mothers.

And now, your eyes continue to meet mine,
In unspoken words,
Each time a bead is crafted, 
Jewelry and bags sold.
Beads upon beads
Stringing together a future-
An action beyond imagining
That gives Masese a renewed tomorrow. 

You and I can connect to the world of the Masese children through the HELP Uganda project and the purchase of the Mothers of Mases' beaded treasures, Bigger Than Beads. From the United States to Uganda and back again, the Garrity and Silon families brought supplies, shoes, and a pocketful of hope to the Masese villagers. You, too, can continue a tradition of giving back to the underprivileged. Hopefully, you will JOIN the fundraising efforts. 

Those on Long Island are invited to partner with Sportset Health and Fitness Club and Come Together Yoga
as they support "HELP Uganda" 
with a fundraiser to raise money for the HELP School

Fundraiser will be held at Sportset Health & Fitness Club
Rockville Centre, NY

You can also shop the collection at Bigger Than Beads at  http://biggerthanbeads.storenvy.com/


 

This post is included in Poetry Friday's May 23, 2014 edition, where you will find posts many other poems. This weeks' Poetry Friday is hosted by Violet Nesdoly from the "branches of the latest avian property."