Rice Beats “The Time of Famine”

About the Malawi Project, Economy of Malawi, Be The Change
                 Last year’s harvest is nearing an end and the new crops are still months away. It will soon be "the time of famine" and it arrives somewhere in Malawi almost every year between January and April before the new harvest can be gathered from the fields.
 
Aid 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.

  

Handicapped Help Change Facility Image

About the Malawi Project, Be The Change

 Kuthandiza Osayenda Disability  Outreach Receives a Facelift

    Recent assistance from the Malawi Project has helped improve the image of the Kuthandiza Osayenda Disability Outreach in Salima, Malawi. In August the Project extended a grant to Mr. George Chimpiko Banda in order for him to improve the image of the offices and work area of the Center. During 2006 a donation of 100 wheelchairs to the facility and their well-organized distribution had made a positive impression on the Project team. In 2007 Chimpiko and the Kuthanbiza were included in a number of new programs being assisted by the Malawi Project. Funding was made available in order to paint and improve the outside of the facility after an on site inspection was conducted, and then after estimates for the project were submitted and approved by the Project’s Board of Directors in the States.

    Handicapped members of the Center took on the task to clean and paint both the outside and inside of the facility. Samantha Ludick who owns the lakeside resort Cool Runnings reports on the success of the program, "By using the handicapped instead of an outside contractor George was able to take the funds that originally would only cover the outside painting and lettering of the building and made it stretch to doing not only the outside but also to cover the inside as well."
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Dzidaure Community Development Agency

About the Malawi Project

Phot of AmbulanceThe Dzidaure Project is another in a series of new programs being instituted throughout Malawi by the Malawi Project.

    Near the sties that are currently under evaluation the Lintipe River rambles aimlessly through the area near the Trading Center that carries its name, but it offers only minimal assistance to the habitants of the region. Most of the year it ambles as near as 18 - 20 kilometers to the prosperous Dedza Trading Center, then it rambles away like a prodigal child, never giving but only taking. During the rainy season the river rushes off toward the big lake without even an embarrassed look back, carrying with it the life saving ingredients needed for life.

    In recent months a small group of visionaries from Malawi have come together to focus on helping the people in the tiny villages near the river. Most of these villages have little or no resources, no transportation, no nearby medical facilities, and no way for the people to make a living outside of the small family gardens that provide a meager food supply.

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Kuthandiza Outreach Receives A Boost

About the Malawi Project, Wheelchairs, Medical, Be The Change

       The Malawi Project continues to enlarge its programs of assistance in other districts of Malawi. One of the program additions is the Kuthandiza Osayenda Disability Outreach in Salima, Malawi.

          The Kuthandiza program was started because of the disability of its director, Mr. George Chimpiko Banda who was born with disabled feet and legs. His lifelong struggle with his disability has spawned a focus on helping others who suffer from similar disabilities. George reports, "This conviction caused me to start sacrificing some of my resources to reach out to these people in the form of village to village visits, provision for some second hand cloth, wheelchairs, and tricycles to enhance mobility." George also comments about his assistance to his clients in their spiritual life, as well as a limited amount of aid in cash, and his help in HIV/Aids counseling.

         Richard Stephens, Executive Director of the Malawi Project notes, "We started working with George in 2006 and we were immediately impressed with him and 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."

        As word of his activities spread George reports that the resources he had available could not keep up with the demand, so he started soliciting funds from some well wishers. As the work continued to grow it called for bigger facilities and more funding. The Outreach organization (KODO) was started and facilities were rented on the east side of the main road near the Salima Trading Center in Eastern Malawi.

        The organization has seven trustees and ten committee members, and its outreach is beginning to spread into all three regions of the country.

         In 2006 the Malawi Project, through a partnership with the Free Wheelchairs Mission in southern California sent 100 wheelchairs to George for distribution to people he was working with. Today the Malawi Project is supplying the resources to paint and re-letter the front of his building, and plans are under way to give him additional resources and wheelchairs for his work.

Board Member Credited With Saving a Life

About the Malawi Project, Be The Change

Trotwood, Ohio … At the regular monthly meeting of the City Council for Trotwood, a suburb of Dayton, Ohio Commodations were extended to the Trotwood Fire and Rescue unit and Suzi Stephens RN, the Medical Director for the Malawi Project. The plaque and letter was given to Mrs. Stephens as a result of her life saving assistance to a 48-year-old heart attack victim on July 7, 2007 when he experienced full cardiac arrest. The emergency took place during the wedding reception for the man’s nephew  married only a few hours earlier. As a result of the seriousness of the heart attack, the victim, spent 12 days in Good Samaritan Hospital in Dayton and experienced a number of continued cardiac complications before being fitted with an internal defibrillator.

    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.

    The Mayor of Trotwood presented Mrs. Stephens with their congratulations and awarded her a plaque in recognition of her efforts. He commented that if he were to fall victim to a heart attack she was the person he wanted standing next to him. Local NBC television affiliate Channel 2 covered the event, as did the local newspaper.  At the ceremony the man met and thanked Suzi in person for saving his life.  He is expected to fully recover from his near death in July.