Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Happy New Year from CHABHA

To all our friends, near and far, many thanks for your donations to CHABHA.

Your generosity means that the children and leaders of the projects CHABHA supports will continue to benefit.

Happy New Year to all,

Susanna Grannis
Executive Director

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

What your gift will accomplish


A GIFT OF $25 WILL PROVIDE...
• One goat for a child-headed household
• School costs for one primary school student

A GIFT OF $50 WILL PROVIDE...
• School materials for 3 secondary students
• Gas for CHABHA vehicle for a week

A GIFT OF $100 WILL PROVIDE...
• Fifteen emergency food packets
• A micro-finance loan for a family

A GIFT OF $150 WILL PROVIDE...
• Two week stipend for a project assistant

A GIFT OF $180 WILL PROVIDE...
• Cost for training one student in Project Independence

A GIFT OF $200 WILL PROVIDE...
• School costs for one secondary student

A GIFT OF $500 WILL PROVIDE...
• Fifty home visits to bring solace and support to children in need
• A training workshop for leaders

A GIFT OF $1000 WILL PROVIDE...

• Life Skills Workshop for 350 children

Saturday, December 19, 2009


Welcome to the new CHABHA, Children Affected by HIV/AIDS, website/blog!

We invite you to take a few minutes to learn about our work. For example, you can click on the film below on the left to be introduced. Or, by clicking on one of the buttons just above this message, you can learn what we do, who we are, the individual projects, and more. We have included links to similar projects on the left. Our Board of Directors members and staff are listed down on the left as well. Check us out and, please, if you can, click on the Donate button to help this work continue. Your gifts help CHABHA support grassroots projects that support orphaned children's development and ultimate independence.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Picture Galley


One of the participants in the workshop.

Many young women will stay home from school during their period because of the lack of proper menstrual pads. This pattern of missing school regularly leads to dropping out all together for many young women.




Young members of the AMAHORO and AJESOV Associations learning to make reusable sanitary femine hygene pads with CHABHA volunteer Mim Shafer that visited Rwanda for 6 weeks in the fall of 2009.






Text here











Projects



CHABHA supports three associations of children and a vocational training program in Rwanda and one association of children in Burundi. The associations have several activities in common, activities that combine into the “CHABHA model”. The common features are:

• Young adults leaders from the community
• Weekly gatherings for singing, dancing, games, and lessons on important matters like HIV prevention
• Home visits to ascertain family needs, to give advice, and to show concern and care
• Life Skills Workshops to build community, to teach about growth and development, to discuss HIV prevention, to have fun
• Health cards purchased (Rwandan projects only)
• School costs
• Emergencies







Each project has unique features:

AGAPE
is in the Kicukiro section of Kigali, Rwanda. 8 percent of the 300 children are HIV +. This project is faith-based, and the children hear Bible stories and sing songs at their gatherings.

A group of boys began a rabbit farming enterprise in 2008. They give baby rabbits to other children in AGAPE, and they sell some. They have raised money for shoes, school, and their families.

AGAPE has playground equipment at their gathering place, thanks to a fund raising drive at Northfield-Mt. Hermon in 2007.

AJESOV, Association of Volunteer Youth Helping Orphans Affected, includes very poor children. Of the 263 children, 8.8 percent are HIV+.

The children live with remaining relatives, in child-headed households, or with friends of their parents. A micro-finance program with the heads of families has had a constant return rate of over 90 percent. Each family has received a goat, and most have had several kids that the families sell. In 2009 new leaders were elected, and all are busy helping as much as possible.

Begun in 2000 AMAHORO Association is the oldest children’s association in Rwanda. It is also the longest in partnership with CHABHA -- since 2003. In addition to CHABHA, the Global Fund for Children has granted support to AMAHORO for school costs, home visits, and leadership training. The new leadership group has several former beneficiaries.

The AMAHORO offices are in the house, IWACU (Our Place), shared with the CHABHA-Rwanda staff. There are spaces for meetings and school work. A Resource Room has many children’s books in English (Rwandan schools now use English.), crayons, and paper; there is wool for knitting. An electric sewing machine is used for making goods to sell. Children can wash themselves at IWACU.

In 2008-2009 many families were dispersed from their homes in Kucyiro, a section of Kigali, out into the hills and mountains. While some have been found, even in 2009 the leaders are seeking former members. The leaders found many children with family members in a village high in the mountains above Kigali, Bumbogo. The model of providing holistic support to children by young adults was applied to this village, and the AMAHORO group there is thriving.

Mubafashee (Help Them) is the name of the small association in Bujumbura, Burundi. 63 very poor children from outlying areas of the city gather weekly and receive school support from CHABHA. A Weyerhaeuser Family Foundation grant will provide the association with funds to fully implement the CHABHA model. It will also include funds for much needed food and medical care, as most of the children are malnourished.



The fifth project is Project Independence, the vocational training program. Begun in 2006, local business leaders agree to take on interns for periods of training. The interns come from the associations (above) and learn trades. CHABHA is constantly modifying the program and encouraging new enterprises.


What We Do


People in C
HABHA projects work closely with one another. Our relationships are very important.






We children...
• Go to primary school
• Get health cards
• Go to weekly gatherings
• Attend Life Skills Workshops - learning
about responsibility and HIV prevention
• Talk with the leaders during home visits
• Come to the office and get help
• Have fun with our friends


We older youth...
• Go to secondary school or
• Become a Project Independence
student and learn a trade
• Maybe become one of the leaders
• Maybe start a new business




We leaders..
• Help the children in our association
• Learn about how to do our work in
workshops and with CHABHA staff
• Make home visits
• Organize gatherings
• Plan and teach in Life Skills workshops
• Work together so that everyone prospers


We CHABHA staff and volunteers in Rwanda
and the US and the Board of Directors...

• Keep close to the projects and people
• Are at work in Rwanda and Burundi with the leaders
• Are at work in the US to raise funds, teach folks about the
children’s needs and CHABHA’s work