Friday, May 13, 2011

VISIT: IHF Bali Center, May 2011



I thought I should start with a picture of the rainbow we saw just before we depart from IHF center in Buitan, Bali for Songan Village near Lake Batur to show the mood of this Sunday, 8th May 2011. It was a cloudy day, with a bit of rain, and we saw a small rainbow from one end on the surface of the sea to the other end. It was definitely, a beautiful day.


Like many other NGOs, IHF stands to do good for the poor and unfortunate children. Run by volunteers, in Bali, it was amazing to find its well-built and equipped center at the end of a small road with nothing much in its surrounding. Thomas Mecliffe, the Co-director of the center, welcomed us outside the premise with his dark grey long sleeve shirt, black bermuda and slippers with his umbrella. Set like a home sweet home, the center is definitely a quiet home for some 200 children that lives around the regency. "It's hard to define what is poor", Thomas said. I guess the world is continuously questioned with this mystery "What is poverty?".


Though many perhaps have tried to measure what poverty is, it is always hard to decide what is the right way to measure it. I see poverty as a lack of knowledge for people to live a better life that could be lived because of circumstances that limits them to be open from the world outside those that they have seen. 


Our sponsored children were those who live in Songan Village, a small village on Mount Batur about 2 hours drive away from Buitan. We drove on some small 40 degree slope to reach the higher land with unfinished or spoilt asphalt road. There were small houses and huts every few hundred meters as we went up the mountain before we reach the school. IHF runs a 4 hour english class for the children in Songan in a classroom of a public local high school. Pak Komang, who seemed to work for the local National Department of Education, was a middle age Balinese man who taught about 23 students from age 9 to 15 every Sunday. Upon observation as we sat in the class for almost 2 hours, students seemed to be enthusiastic. 




It seems to be hard work for IHF to run a class in this village, due to accessibility of the school and the impact of poverty that runs in this village. We met Ketut Wati and Nengah Sari, the two sponsored children, who proved to be the two shiest girls in the class (Especially Sari). We spent private time in another classroom with the two girls, where we asked a few questions. Some questions were unanswered because it was difficult to get them to talk and some answers from them involved "I don't know". 






Wati is a more smiley girl than Sari, she was less shy and less timid to speak out. I had a curious question I needed an answer for, "What do you want to be when you grow up?". It was a question I had in mind for a long time for these children. It was a question of hope. I tried to get some answers from Wati, but I was unlucky. No, they're the unlucky ones. Unlucky for them to do not have chance to see the world outside Songan, outside the farming lives of their parents, outside the one hour walking up and down the mountain from their houses to the school. It was a kind of frustration to know this first hand. It wasn't surprising of course, but I can't help but to ask myself "What can I do to change this for children like them?". 


I realized that I was only in a small village called Songan, somewhere in the north of Bali. I realized that there are countless small villages like Songan in Bali, and that there are other Songans outside Bali all over Indonesia. This is poverty, the circumstances where people are shut from many possibilities and the limitation that lies between children and hope. 


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To share my own story, apart from the past five years, I spent all my life with the urban luxury of internet, various media, and experiences of a few different cultures that presented me with some knowledge that many home-grown Indonesians are not exposed with. For the past five years, I've been grooming many Indonesians to open their minds to the world outside this isolated village in Riau. I run a small factory that export products, and working closely with some of their Singaporean colleagues. Five years ago, I learned that our Singaporean colleagues underestimated our staff here, simply because they are born as Indonesians. I learned that many started with the mindset that Indonesians are less clever people, less educated people, less capable people. Four years ago, upon a departure of an expatriate employee, I decided to stop recruiting another expatriate and gave chance to our local employees. One by one, I tried to guide them to open their minds and tried to show that the world is full of possibilities beyond all that they know. For four years, we haven't been recruiting expatriates in the departments where we used to employ them and the departments are improving. I watched the transition of some people from lacking self-confidence to become full of confidence and become proactive by default. I observed some personnels who were once the true followers to now become the enthusiastic leaders. I realized that to help them, we have to start with the mindset that "they can". 


I wonder now, who create poverty? Who created the barrier for impoverished people to become richer as persons? Have those who try to help put together the right actions or push the right buttons? Can we create hope for the unlucky ones? Can we really teach them how to fish rather than to give them fish to eat? Can poverty really be demolished? Can we have faith in them and believe that "they can", they can open their hearts, minds, and eyes, and make it out of poverty regardless of life that has condition them to become who they are?


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We would like to thank Thomas and the volunteers of IHF for the time and opportunity to see Songan and its children, as well as the hard work you've done in Bali as an effort to open doors of possibilities for these children of Bali. It was a memorable trip to see what life and people is like in these villages, and it was a fun, adventurous ride to go up the mountain and we can't imagine what life is like for the inhabitants to walk on foot for hours to go from one place to another.


It's trully a great thing you do there. Well done IHF!


International Humanity Foundation website: http://www.ihfonline.org

Meng Liu giving quiz to the class, giving exercise books and pencils to students with the right answers

The unsponsored class in Songan

Observing the class

Volunteers observing the village surrounding

The road access to and fro Songan Village


Wednesday, May 4, 2011

International Humanity Foundation

Half of IHF's mission is to educate the poor and the other half is to educate the world about the poor. 

"Our vision is to strive for a world of leaders and citizens who have interacted with, and are truly knowledgeable about the world's poor. We believe in a "pass it on" philosophy where education is free and available for all who seek it. Those of us who have received a free education pass it on by helping others less fortunate by teaching, interacting and learning. With just a few hours a week, our volunteers, children and sponsors are changing the world we live in. 

IHF is a non-religious, non-political, non-profit organization that strongly believes in an equal opportunity for all and in preserving the cultures, traditions and beliefs of the marginalized communities it works in" 


IHF has various programs open to the world including Orphan Sponsorship, Tiny Tots Orphan Sponsorship, The Education Program (TEP), Medical Sponsorship, Class Sponsorship, Famine Feed Program, Survival Program, Medical Clinic Program, and Tribal Peace Farm.

At the moment, IHF works in Kenya, Indonesia, and Thailand. 

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The Education Program

The TEP sponsorship program was created to assist impoverished children who can not afford the costs of public schooling. 

Unfortunately, public education is not free in most developing countries where students are required to pay for their tuition and if not direct tuition then they are required to pay for "teacher special fees" or "desk fees" or mandatory replacement uniforms or books, exams, and graduation and other ceremonies. These fees are why the poorest children are never able to attend. Instead, they work in sweatshops and rice fields, perpetuating the family's poverty. Sponsors are encouraged to communicate with each child thereby forging links between people of varying cultures to learn about each other and grow together.
TEP embodies IHF's "Pass It On" philosophy, a philosophy that encourages people who have received a free education to pass it on to others. For only USD $10.00 per month a TEP sponsorship allows a child to attend public school with 100% of the money going towards the children's school costs. 

IHF verifies that all TEP applicants are actually the poorest of the poor by sending volunteers to the children's homes and, in order to insure that all donated money is only spent on schooling, TEP recipients are required to obtain a principal's or director's signature for all expenses. 

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As I live amongst the poor people of Indonesia, I come to realize the importance of education in anyone's lives. Educate! Educate! Educate! Not only as far as qualification goes when one is to look for a job, education is an important part of one's core mindset as one progress through life, both professionally and personally. 

IHF mission to educate about the poor is certainly one that I fully support.


Sunday, May 1, 2011

Yati's Tikar

YATI'S STORY


Yati is our maid. Together with her sisters Ina and Ema, they dropped out of school since primary school to work as maids in our home to help their parents to pay for their 3 other younger brother and sisters' school needs. Yati loves her family, and hope that her younger siblings could have better live than her.

Yati's father works in someone's farm and her mother stays at home and make these Tikars. They live in a small village called Bunian in the wet lands of East Sumatra, an area that is considered poor and the communities are still undeveloped.

These tikars are made from Pandan leaves. During the making, each leaf is carefully handcrafted by a loving mother of 6, Yati's mother.
 
To help Yati, CHARITYWAREHOUSE sell these tikar based on your custom request for the size and colors. All sales will help Yati's family, and her younger siblings to earn the school they deserve. Please help.

Sample Picture
Material: Pandan leaves, ungarnished (garnish based on request)
Colour: Blue, Purple (others available, based on request)
Size: 110 x 210 cm (size customizable, based on request)
Rollable and foldable.
Price: Rp 50,000/piece (excluding shipping costs)

 
Ideas of use
Floor mat for minimalistic living room interior decoration, small ones for table mats, traditional Indonesian "lesehan" dining flooring.

To help Yati by ordering her mom's tikar, please email to charitywarehouse@gmail.com, or visit http://charitywarehouse.multiply.com for more information.