Rice Beats “The Time of Famine”
About the Malawi Project, Economy of Malawi, Be The ChangeAid is Shifted When Tsunami Strikes Southeast Asia
Arriving ahead of the famine the first segment of a planned 250 trailers of rice started arriving in Malawi in late 2007. The agreement to bring the rice was put in place between the government of Taiwan, Nourish the Children, Feed the Children and the Malawi Project in late 2005 when a request was issued to a Taiwan delegation for the assistance. The delegation carried it to the government of Taiwan and action was soon under way to help Malawi, an important trade partner with Taiwan. The ice was planned for arrival in Malawi in 2006 but was interrupted when the tsunami in Southeast Asia called for the aid to be shifted to the stricken area.
Groups Share Responsibility For Cost of Distribution
By mid-2007 the plan was again in place for the government of Taiwan to donate the rice and pay for shipping it to the African coast. At that point Feed the Children would supply the funds to get the trailers to the truck docks in Blantyre and Lilongwe. At this point the Malawi Project and various other agencies, including the Malawi offices of Feed the Children, would share the cost of distribution to village sites where harvests were insufficient.The plan is now being carried out with the first of four shipments having been given to Feed the Children, Malawi. The arrival of the next portion of the shipments has not yet been scheduled. The Malawi Project now has sufficient funding to handle the portion of the distribution that will be assigned to the Project.
Hopelessness Seen During An Earlier Famine
Famine is never far from the minds of people in Africa’s sub-Sahara. Seen on the face of the old woman on the left is the hopelessness that can be seen when the "time of famine" arrives in Africa and there is no hope of expectation of aid being available.















The Dzidaure Project is another in a series of new programs being instituted throughout Malawi by
with his focus on his mission to help the handicapped of his nation. In this case where a major disability slowed his life since childhood George is a real life example of someone who has turned lemons into lemonade. George has taken his own disability and turned it into a life long commitment to helping his countrymen."
Fire personnel noted that in less than 5% of the cases where they make a run to a complete cardiac arrest situation do they revive the patient successfully. They accorded the success of this particular situation to the quick action by Suzi Stephens when the man suddenly fell to the floor.