On Thanksgiving Help Women in Action Move into Their New Home

Happy Thanksgiving Echoers!

We've recently received some good news that I wanted to share with all of you. 

When I last wrote, we were looking for funding to help Esther and The Women in Action Development Project move into a new building to continue running their school. The building that the the school had been in since 1994 was being sold and subsequently torn down.

With little warning, the landlord moved on the sale and evicted Esther and the Girls of the Women in Action Development Program. Esther called me very upset. I haven't heard her sound that defeated before. Here is a woman who operated her own school for vulnerable women and girls in the middle of a civil war. Hearing her in tears absolutely broke my heart. She also sent me images of the old building being demolished. 

he Old Building is Torn Down

he Old Building is Torn Down

We started thinking of ways that we could get her into a new space as soon as possible. We knew this was an eventuality, but the timeline was much shorter than we had anticipated. With the funds you donated, Esther was able to secure one floor of the eight story building that we showed in the last updates and reopened albeit in a limited capacity. Esther was proud of her efforts. She said that in addition to offering the landlord all that you had contributed, her and her students donned their uniforms and stood outside the building during school days to encourage the new landlord to give them at least one floor. Seems they were persuasive!

 

Students in a "protest" outside the new building

Students in a "protest" outside the new building

Esther is continuing to operate on the single floor of the new building. She doesn't have as much space as they had before, but because of your help, and Esther's tenacity, you have kept a school in Sierra Leone open despite all the challenges we've had these past years from the Ebola scare, to threats of eviction, to the demolition of the previous building. I cannot thank you all enough. You are a small community of donors. Each of you is a vital part of ensuring that Esther's work continues. 

Esther wants to move into the rest of the new building that she's in. The building is eight stories. She plans to use some for the school and to sublet the others as an income generating project to sustain and grow Women in Action.. Secondly, Esther has begun evening classes for adults. As a new initiative, Esther has been speaking to me more about the need to provide education to entire families in the community surrounding Women in Action. 

How we can best serve Esther right now is to raise the outstanding rent on the new building so that the landlord will release the other floors. Of the $7000US Esther needed, we're down to only $2000 left to go. I know we can easily make that happen. All of your donation goes abroad. The only overhead expenses covered by the Esther's Echo account that your donations go into is the $30CDN fee for the wire transfer abroad to the Women in Action account which we do about 3 to 4 times a year. Any of our other costs, such as the website's fees, we cover out of pocket. Also, a big shout out to the Teaching Support Staff Union at Simon Fraser University for their recent contributions and for asking us to come in and speak to their solidarity and social justice committee. 

On Thanksgiving, please stop to consider Esther and her students who work tirelessly in one of the most difficult places in the world to strengthen their community.

Help Women in Action move into their new home

Support Women's Education in Sierra Leone on International Women's Day

Hey Echoers!

It's International Women's Day! Today, across the globe, IWD celebrates the achievements of women in sciences, politics, and social justice while calling for gender equality. International Women's day has been observed since the early 1900's beginning with marches in New York. The reach of IWD has since crossed borders and boundaries. Esther herself writes me on IWD from Sierra Leone.

Women in Action also hosts a community of young children in their education program

Women in Action also hosts a community of young children in their education program

In our support of Esther's school, the Women in Action Development Project, and in recognition of International Women's Day in March, we are extending our donor matching campaign until the end of the month. In February, I promised to personally match any donations that came in as February marked the 20th anniversary of Women in Action's founding. 

This month is particularly important for us. Since December, Esther has been working diligently to relocate Women in Action. The new building has been found and Esther is hoping to secure the space by the start of April. The down payment for year's rent on the loation is $5000USD. With your support and with Esther's own fundraising efforts, we are now up to $3000! We're almost there!

I'm calling on you all to help us secure Esther into her new space. The new building will help us provide her project with new stability as Esther continues to radically change the lives of vulnerable women and girls living in one of the most challenging places in the world to be. 

For more on International Women's Day see this great article by the Telegraph that also talks about today's Google Doodle. 

Support Women in Action Today!



Donation Matching for Women in Action Day: Valentine's Day!

Hello Echoers!

Happy Valentines! February 14th is not only Valentines Day but also marks the founding date of the Women in Action Development Project! It's Women in Action Day!

In the midst of civil conflict, Esther Kanu, our community partner, founded Women in Action to ensure that vulnerable young girls and women had the opportunity to continue their education even in one of the least developed nations in the world, Sierra Leone. Women in Action has now been in operation since 1996 making this year the community organization's 20th anniversary! In total, Esther estimates that the over the 20 year period, Women in Action has graduated over a 1000 students. The organization keeps track of graduates through an alumni association it calls the "Old Girl's Club." I had the opportunity to meet some of these alumni with amazing accomplishments such as founding their own clothing businesses and another who was running a successful internet cafe in the capital of Freetown

Women in Action founded 20 years ago today

Women in Action founded 20 years ago today

Women in Action has struggled over the last few years and we have been making an effort, with your assistance to help. The ebola outbreak in West Africa forced the school to close for a time resulting in a shortfall in their regular fundraising activities and leading to the death of one of the "Old Girls." Women in Action has also been facing increasing rent rates leading to Esther searching for a new location for the school. 

Last week, Esther sent me a photo of the apartment that Women in Action is hoping to relocate to. It's not much to look at now, but I also saw what Esther was able to do with the current location in just a matter of years. Esther, the staff, and students turned the current building from a broken concrete shell in a colourful school with electricity. The wiring was installed by the students themselves following electrical engineering education they received through Women in Action in a partnership with a second engineering-based education project in the country. Unfortunately the increased rents make remaining in that location no longer an option.

Potential new Women in Action location

Potential new Women in Action location

Our goal now is to facilitate Women in Action's transition to the new location. Rent in Sierra Leone is typically paid on annual basis. For this location, Esther is looking to pay $7,000 USD for the first year. With your help, we raised just under $2,000 USD over the Holiday Season. Thank YOU! But I am really hoping we can close the gap. So, to provide incentive, and in light of Women in Action Day, I will personally be matching any donations that come in for the rest of February. Whatever you donate, I will double. 

To those who have donated already, thank you so very much. Special thanks again to Mulgrave Secondary School here in Vancouver for their "Action for Esther" campaign. I also want to send a special thank you to my friend Ellie Kaiser and her friends and family for the fundraising dinner Ellie hosted to bring in over $450 USD. I met Ellie at the Las Vegas Star Trek convention this past Summer while shooting a space-themed documentary. Ellie learned of Esther's story and organized the dinner for our holiday fundraising campaign.  I was so touched by your efforts, Ellie! Geeks for good causes! 

Esther's Echo fundraiser hosted by Ellie

Esther's Echo fundraiser hosted by Ellie

Once again, Happy Valentine's! Let's show some love overseas for Esther and the Women in Action Development Project!

-Matthew

Women in Action Donation Match Campaign



This Holiday Season, Help us "Tell A Different Story of Africa"

Happy Holidays Fellow Echoers!

Two years ago, my brilliant friend Marcos Moldes, an instructor and diversity educator at Simon Fraser University, showed me an incredible TED talk by Chimamanda Adichie called "The Danger of the Single Story."  (click to play video)  Upon arriving to Europe, Adichie recalls her struggle with being expected to reproduce a single narrative of life in Africa. She was chastised by professors who claimed her writing was not "authentically African" as if narratives that spoke of anything other than African poverty were somehow invalid.

I was guilty of carrying a "single story" when I first arrived in Africa. Still in the midst of my undergraduate degree, I entered Sierra Leone aware of the country's post-conflict history and expecting to find a dis-empowered and impoverished population in need of my help as a Westerner. I now recognize how arrogant my assumptions were. My thinking was constantly challenged while in Sierra Leone. I realized how my view of charity and development was ultimately patronizing. I also came to deeply respect the passion, ingenuity, and incredible resourcefulness of the local people who became my friends and colleagues in our work abroad. Rather than fulfilling the expectation of the single story of Africa, these individuals were working to rebuild their communities far before I - or many other international organizations - ever arrived in Sierra Leone. 

Of all those I met abroad, Esther Kanu served challenge my single-story-thinking most clearly. During the Blood Diamond war that tore Sierra Leone apart, most international organizations left the country. In the midst of the conflict, Esther Kanu founded the Women in Action Development Project, a vocational school which remained open whenever possible in the midst of war. She had no international support at the time and relied on colleagues and friends to serve as teachers supporting those who are most affected by war and poverty: women. 

Esther Kanu while visiting British Columbia, Canada

Esther Kanu while visiting British Columbia, Canada

Esther's story was what I wanted to tell when I returned from Africa; a story of empowerment and hope. Furthermore, I openly share how her efforts humbled me, a would-be rescuer from the West, to recognize the incredible initiatives that were already occurring abroad.  I often tried summarizing this paradigm shift but I lacked the eloquence until seeing Adichie's talk which inspired our slogan: "Telling a Different Story of Africa." 

Today, Esther's challenges are different. There is no longer a war in Sierra Leone, however Women in Action has been battling increasing rent charges from a landlord that took over their building in 2013. In 2014, your donations helped secure the school into 2016, but we know that eventually the project will have to be relocated as a sustainable solution. We are currently helping to raise $7000 which would cover the first year of rent on a new school building. Furthermore, Esther is working to purchase a plot of farmland that she is planning to use as an income generating project for Women in Action in the future. 

Lastly, Esther was recently sponsored to travel to the US. While she was in North America, she mailed us a USB key with photos and videos of the school over the last two years. Often it is difficult for Esther to send new media online from Sierra Leone because of poor internet connections so the mailed USB key is a welcomed opportunity to share more of the amazing work you are helping to support. I have posted some of the new photos on the Esther's Echo Facebook Page as well as some in the post below. 

This Holiday Season, please consider supporting Esther's Echo as we "Tell a Different Story of Africa." Even if a donation is not possible, we appreciate you helping to spread the word and tell the story to friends and through social media. From our team to you and your family, we wish you the Happiest of Holidays!

Sincerely, 

Matthew Cimone, Co-Founder

Donate to the Women in action development project
The new children's program at Women in Action is bringing in boys and girls from the local community so that parents can continue their education and find work during the day. 

The new children's program at Women in Action is bringing in boys and girls from the local community so that parents can continue their education and find work during the day. 

Students at Women in Action are trained in a wide variety of skills including tailoring, catering services, health, computer literacy, English, mathematics, and even electrical engineering. 

Students at Women in Action are trained in a wide variety of skills including tailoring, catering services, health, computer literacy, English, mathematics, and even electrical engineering. 

Staff and Students of Women in Action hold a "Thank you" sign for the Esther's Echo 2014 fundraising campaing

Staff and Students of Women in Action hold a "Thank you" sign for the Esther's Echo 2014 fundraising campaing

Students in class at the Women in Action Development Project

Students in class at the Women in Action Development Project

The beautiful batik and handicrafts created by students at the Women in Action Development Project 

The beautiful batik and handicrafts created by students at the Women in Action Development Project 

Donate to the Women in Action Development Project


Giving Tuesday!

Hello Echoers!

It's that time of year! Last year we were able to raise nearly $11,000 dollars for Esther's school, the Women in Action Development Project in Sierra Leone. Your generous donations not only helped to keep the school doors open during a conflict with the building's landlord, but you also helped the school weather the storm of the Ebola crisis. 

We have already started our annual fundraising campaign for Esther's Echo. Last week I was invited to speak at Mulgrave Secondary School for their "Action for Esther" campaign. Last year Mulgrave raised $2000 for The Women in Action Development Project, a huge portion of our fundraising goal of approximately $10,000. Last year we hit 11K! and I am confident that we can again this year!

Founder Matt Cimone speaking at Action for Esther hosted at Mulgrave Secondary School

Founder Matt Cimone speaking at Action for Esther hosted at Mulgrave Secondary School

This year, in anticipation of the giving season, we have also launched a page on the #GivingTuesday website where you can donate directly to our cause as we Tell a Different Story of Africa. 

Esther has two goals for her project now. She is hoping to purchase a plot of farmland outside of the city to create an income generating project for the school. She is also hoping to move the school to a new buiding. While prices for the land are still being determined, we know that the annual cost of rent on a new building will be approximately $7000. Not bad for an entire school building. Last year we raised nearly $11,000. With your support, I know that we can hit that number again!

Happy Giving Tuesday!