Monthly Archives: March 2011

Welcome to the Network, Project Education Sudan!


Did you know that only 10% of girls in Southern Sudan, ages 7-14, attend school? That rate is the lowest in the world and one that Project Education Sudan, She’s the First newest partner, is working to change. This fantastic organization is doing amazing things in Southern Sudan, where they support indigenous organizations that make primary, secondary and adult education available for all, especially girls and women.

This organization’s roots date back to the devastating twenty-year civil war between Northern and Southern Sudan when communities, hospitals, and families were destroyed. Thousands were forced to flee to refugee camps in neighboring Ethiopia and Kenya, including “Lost Boy” Isaac Khor Bher. Isaac later migrated to the United States, where he met Carol Rinehart. The two formed a lifechanging friendship and traveled back to Sudan to reunite Isaac with his family in 2005. Upon arriving, Carol and Isaac witnessed the wide-spread destruction left by the civil war. Not only was the region in dire need of clean water wells, electricity, and health care, but the villagers were also desperate for an education. From that point on Carol and Isaac made it their mission to help communities and schools rebuild and Project Education Sudan was born.

Almost six years later and PES has not only built the only all girls school in the region, Ayak Anguei Primary School, where you can sponsor a girl through She’s the First, but they’re also providing young girls and women with the opportunity to be the first female in their family to get an education. PES has implemented women’s adult education programs as well as training for teachers on how to become better educators.

The work of Project Education Sudan is guided by this powerful quote from a Sudanese children’s song: “I am the leader of tomorrow. I am the leader of my people. Tomorrow is my time.” Join us as we build a better future with our newest partner!

For those of you with access to Colorado Public Television (PBS) be sure to tune in on Wednesday, March 30th at 8 pm MST to watch a powerful documentary on PES and what they’re doing to help the people of South Sudan!

[Editor's Note: You can learn more and sponsor a girl at Project Education Sudan here.]

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She’s the First Spring Tweetup!

#CelebrateSTF Tweetups are quarterly events that She’s the First decided to host free of charge, starting last summer, to give our online following in NYC the chance to meet together offline. Why go on a bunch of little coffee meetings with you all if we could just bring you all together to have the creative sparks fly, and let the thought-provoking convo on girls’ education take us in new, unexplored directions?

We’re thrilled to announce our next Tweetup will be on April 6th, at MTV Studios, which donated use of a conference room, and we’ll feed our minds with Hummus Place treats, also a generous donor!

Since space is limited, RSVP here on Eventbrite, if you are 100% certain you can attend. There is a capacity of 40 people, and we’re already at 23, in less than 24 hours!

Even if you are not in NYC, you can participate in the discussion by following #CelebrateSTF tweets. You can even tweet in your own questions and comments, which our event leaders will share with our attendees.

Expect an evening of…

  • creative brainstorming for a National Poetry Month campaign in April that aims to sponsor a girl in Sudan
  • an up-close look at our She’s the First partner in Uganda
  • forming new friendships with go-getters who like to give back
  • a special preview of GIRLS WHO ROCK, the biggest fundraiser for She’s the First, returning this June!

 

Remember, if you live outside of NYC, you can host your own Tweetup for She’s the First any time! All it takes is a hash tag and online enthusiasm to get your friends and followers together offline for meaningful brainstorms on how you can support and fundraise for girls’ education.

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Win Free Books: Introducing the Ah-ha! Book Giveaways

She’s the First is continuing the success of our first book giveaway (congrats Natalie MacNeil; hope you’re enjoying your copy of The Blue Sweater) with the start of a new book giveaway series on Facebook & Twitter!

We’re calling these the
“Ah-ha! Book Giveaways” — these are books that will spark a light bulb in your head, give you new ideas. They’ll inspire you to lead, change the world, and create your own adventures.

We’re thrilled to start it off with 2 autographed copies of Zilch: The Power of Zero in Business by Nancy Lublin, the CEO of DoSomething.org and founder of Dress for Success (which she started when she was 23!). This book will fuel your passion, creativity, and innovation, whether you work on a not-for-profit or within a corporation. We loved her honest anecdotes and her advice is now integrated into the strategy of She’s the First…if you think the idea for the Ah-ha! Book Giveaway is creative, then I guess she did her job!

Here’s how to get your copy free (you can enter both ways!) – you have THREE days to enter, March 29-31, and you can enter once per day, on Twitter & Facebook:

1 copy will be give away via Twitter:
Follow @shesthefirst & tweet us an idea for a creative fundraiser and tag it #zilch. One participating person’s name will randomly be drawn to win a signed copy of Zilch.

1 copy will be given away via Facebook:
‘Like’ She’s the First & post the link of a book that inspires you to make the world a better place. One participating person’s name will randomly be drawn to win a signed copy of Zilch.

Go for it…and good luck!

Rules here

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My 25th Birthday Gift is for a Girl in Guatemala

Birthday girl Lauren!

Just a few short months ago, She’s the First celebrated its first birthday. Today, I celebrate my 25th. In honor of that milestone, I decided to do something different this year.

Many people, myself included, often use birthdays as an excuse to buy yourself something nice. It’s my birthday, I want it, and I deserve it! While that can be fun for a while, all you end up doing is acquiring a lot of “stuff.” So as a way to celebrate the next stage of my life, I decided to offer the option of having a “next stage” to someone else.

This year I am sponsoring a girl through She’s the First’s Starfish One By One partnership. This girl will gain education, support, and the knowledge that she can accomplish things on her own. I was having drinks one night with Christen Brandt, She’s the First’s Executive Director, and she told a story she heard while visiting the school in Guatemala that shook me to my core. Not only is the education each girl receives benefitting her and her future offspring, but it’s going up to older generations too. A sponsored girl went to school and learned about sex education and how to prevent pregnancy. She then went home and told her parents, who already had eight children, that this is something that is possible, doable for them. Now her parents are working towards taking better care of the children they already have and not worrying about adding another mouth to feed.

This is what She’s the First is about for me: giving someone else a chance to grow and learn and teach that to others. Enable them to become the amazing women we know they can be. And so I ask that you wish the girl I will be sponsoring a happy first year on her way to achieving that dream.

Here’s to another quarter-century of fun and sponsorships!

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She’s the First*{Hofstra} Wins Over Campus

Chelsea and Gennifer speak

What better time to talk about girls’ education than during Women’s History Month? She’s the First*{Hofstra} Founding President Gennifer Delman, Vice President Kaitlin Cubria, Publicist Chelsea Tirrell, and Social Media Chair Lee Flemming, took on two different residential complexes to reach out to students about their newly established organization.

Both complexes held programs for their residents to raise awareness about the historic time period, and they invited She’s the First*{Hofstra} to speak.

Chelsea and Kaitlin with their cupcakes

We opened both programs up with a little background info on She’s the First, explaining the goals of the organization and what it had already done for girls’ educations in developing countries. We talked about the different campus branches and fundraisers they’d done to raise money and awareness and then told them about our great ideas.

But first, we handed out magenta and teal frosted cupcakes!

The program, appropriately called “We’re the First,” drew in about 30 residents who all wrote what they were the first to do on a poster board.

And then we told them why:

There are girls upon girls in developing countries who are unable to get the education they are so deserving and needing of. With an organization like She’s the First, girls are given the opportunity to be the first in the their families to get an education.

All too often, we take advantage of the provisions we’re given at school. We have great professors, safe buildings, and lessons that will last us a lifetime. And yet, we complain about homework, papers, and tests.

The response was overwhelming. Residents who belonged to different clubs on campus provided their contact information to establish partnerships for future fundraisers. Others provided their information just because they were excited about getting involved!

Show and tell goes a long way.

We told them about our purpose and how easy it is for them to get involved.

We showed them the impact they can have and the girls we’re helping (those adorable She’s the First postcards are quiet handy!).

By the end, we had students saying, “Getting involved without much effort? Awesome. Getting a free cupcake out of the deal? Even better.”

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Channel One Viewers: Want to Be Jancy’s Pen Pal?

In classrooms across the country, CBS’ Channel One News aired a segment about She’s the First for Women’s History Month! Tammy Tibbetts talked about how students who don’t have dollars to donate can still make an impact by corresponding with the girls we sponsor. Emails are pouring in from students asking where they can begin…it starts here!

To refresh your memory, here is the segment, framed by Jancy’s story and how education transformed her life:

Now here is part of an essay Jancy wrote about her life in India. It was published in The Huffington Post today! This is your task, Channel One viewers! Read Jancy’s story and then in the comments of this blog post, write back with a question, and tell her what your dream is, what your school day is like, or what your family is like. We will send her your notes, publish her response, and then email you when you can leave your next round of comments. Maybe a new friendship will form!

My name is Jancy. I am 16. My mom is a single parent and I have two older brothers. I was born in a small village in the Hassan district of the Karnataka state, in India.

When I was three and a half, I joined Shanti Bhavan, a non-secular residential school for socially and economically disadvantaged children. Shanti Bhavan is a unique institution, where we are given not only a quality education, but taught globally shared values, such as humility, generosity, and acceptance. Joining Shanti Bhavan was perhaps the most significant, life-changing event in my life.

I have stayed at Shanti Bhavan for almost 13 years now, and it is like my second home. Here, I have the biggest family ever; we are all bound by our love for one another. There is something about Shanti Bhavan that is special — almost divine — and difficult to express in words.

Shanti Bhavan is a part of me. Sometimes, I wonder how I am going to handle it when I wake up one morning and realize I have graduated.

After all, it is here that I have learned everything from the alphabets in the English language to the literature of Shakespeare. It is here that I received my first toothbrush, my first warm bed, and my first shampoo. It is where I tasted pancakes for the first time.

All of the students at school are taken care of by our housemothers. Our teaching staff is comprised of Indian teachers, as well as volunteers from various parts of the world and all walks of life, who greatly enrich our education and broaden our perspectives.

We are taught from a very early age not to discriminate against one another. We respect all religions and are free to practice our own. We have the freedom to voice our own opinions. And, furthermore, we are asked to have opinions on world issues.

I am almost a senior now, and grateful to everyone at Shanti Bhavan who continues to inspire me each day to move forward. I am studying Accounting, Economics, and Commerce and preparing to take the ISC exam next year, considered among the most challenging in India.

To me, education is the key to the many doors I want to open. I want to be the first girl in my family to go to college. I want to get my Master’s degree. I want to combine the fields of business and fashion someday. I want to find success to improve the status of my family. I want to continue the Shanti Bhavan dream.

Ready, set, comment! :)

Posted in Press News, Shanti Bhavan | Tagged , | 28 Comments

5k Race for Education by She’s the First*{Notre Dame}

Who will be the first to cross the finish line, so that she can be the first to get an education? The cheesy slogan for the most recent She’s the First fundraiser at Notre Dame was a play on words expressing our organization’s mission, as participants raced to be the first to finish the race. Of course, it wasn’t all competition at the She’s the First*{Notre Dame} 5k Run and Fun Walk. Even for those not running, the event drew attention by blasting ‘90s boy band music from the middle of the quad. Music and delicious granola bars donated by Luna (nutrition for women, how fitting!) made the event a great break for a Sunday afternoon. The race raised a total of $210 that will be put toward the year-long collection by the ND Junior Class Council to benefit Shanti Bhavan in India. (The Junior Class Council Philanthropy Committee previously hosted a Holiday Bash, also to benefit Shanti Bhavan).

Runners at the starting line for the She's the First*{Notre Dame} 5k Run and Fun Walk.

Interested in hosting a race for a She’s the First fundraiser on your campus? Here are our tips for success:

1. Team up with existing clubs or groups on campus (like the Junior Class Council Philanthropy Committee) to help with organization and staffing on race-day.

2. Advertise early! Colorful flyers like this poster help draw attention to the event and the cause.

3. Free food…it’s how college students function.

4. Make T-shirts so participants continue to spread the mission even after the race is over.

5. Have a great race-day play-list, borrow speakers from the student union, and have a blast while helping a girl have her chance to go to school!

Check out our photos in the She’s the First*{Campus} Flickr album!

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Our Tanzanian Kisa Scholar Becomes a Huffington Post Author!

As you may have seen from our proud tweets and Facebook posts, one of the Kisa Scholars in Tanzania, sponsored by GIRLS WHO ROCK, is now a published author! Elizabeth David was featured in The Huffington Post‘s Greatest Person series on Friday, publishing her own words about education and her role models. Check it out here!

She’s the First commends our partner AfricAid, and especially its Founder/Executive Director Ashley Shuyler, for creating a technology program like The Kisa Project that makes achievements like this possible!

Below is a chain of emails where we tell Elizabeth about her published article and her reply. Please leave a comment or question for Elizabeth (she asks about your hobbies!) — we will send this to her in our next email exchange!

Hi Elizabeth!

I have some VERY exciting news for you!! Are you ready? You are now officially a published author! The Huffington Post loved your essay and published it online on Friday. (this is one of the biggest news websites in the US) I took a picture of how it looks on the computer screen to show you too – it is front and center on the page! I showed this to Ashley, and her mom Nina, too, and they are incredibly proud also. Everyone at She’s the First is! Most importantly, I think you mom will be VERY proud. What a special recognition you gave to her, and we know she must be a great woman to have raised you.

I wanted to tell you more about The Huffington Post – it is named after Arianna Huffington, the founder, one of the most influential women in the media industry. Arianna is an authority in the media and politics world, with many achievements, but the one that I admire the most is the book she published called “On Becoming Fearless….in Love, Work and Life.” She writes, “But you have to do what you dream of doing even while you’re afraid.” The GIRLS WHO ROCK team relates to this a lot, because that concert was – and continues to be – something we try to bring to life from our dreams. We believe “Music is Universal, so Education Should be Too”—and we think people can have fun while changing the world. So that is what we are trying to do, and even though there is room for failure, we stay determined. Arianna’s book is very inspiring, and one that we think the Kisa Scholars would all love and learn from, so I’m going to send a copy over to you – the volunteers traveling to Arusha in May should be able to bring it! (The She’s the First and GIRLS WHO ROCK team wishes we could come on this trip, but we aren’t able to travel at the time, since it’s right before the concert – but we do very much hope to visit you and Tanzania. I know it will happen someday!)

What is a rally competition and Arsenal? Tell us more, it sounds like fun! [a reference to her last message]

Thanks for all your letters, Elizabeth, and for sharing your thoughtful words to all of us. Your writing helps us all see how we can become leaders and set a good example for others, and proves that education makes anything possible!

Love from She’s the First!
______________________________________________

I’m so very happy about the news you gave me. You really made my day.Thank you so much for the book that you’ll be sending me,I love reading books and I’m sure I will love the book.

A rally competition is a car racing competition and arsenal is one of the biggest football club in England.I love arsenal because it has many of my favourite players.

How was your weekend?What do you like to do for fun or your hobbies?I must say one of the things I enjoy doing is writting and hearing from you guys.I must be very lucky to have you guys as my sponsors.

With lots of love,
Elizabeth.

Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project, Press News | Leave a comment

Welcome to the Family, Mbithe!

Mbithe Pius (m-bee-thay - but the "th" is hard, almost like a "D")

She’s the First*{Syracuse} is thrilled to announce that we’ve been matched with a student to sponsor at the Kibera School for Girls in Kenya. We’d like to welcome kindergartner Mbithe Pius to the She’s the First family! (Isn’t she adorable?!)

Funds for Mbithe’s sponsorship are coming from the prize money we received from Vivanista’s Parties for a Purpose contest. We are so grateful to Vivanista for the $1,000 prize, and we’ve chosen to put $800 toward Mbithe’s education. This will sponsor her for more than two years.

We’re putting the other $200 toward covering the costs of holding a benefit concert next month at Funk ‘N Waffles, a popular venue near Syracuse University. We figured that putting a little bit of money into a big fundraising event, to then sponsor more girls, would result in a greater return on our investment.

We’re looking forward to receiving our first letter from Mbithe, and we can’t wait to share it with all of you. In the meantime, feel free to leave a welcome message for her in the comments section, and we’ll pass them along when we send her a letter in response!

Posted in Kibera School for Girls, Syracuse University | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Huffington Post: Greatest Person of the Day

“In Her Own Words: A Young Tanzanian Woman Working Towards Success”

This month, we’re covering women making change — big and small — around the world. Today, in partnership with She’s The First, we’re featuring a letter from a young Tanzanian woman, Elizabeth David. Below, she shares her story, goals and role models.

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Join Me on My Quest, Thanks to The Aspire Foundation

 

Dictionary.com defines quest as “a search or pursuit made in order to find or obtain something.” On the verge of my 25th birthday, and almost 3/4 of the way through my graduate program, I find myself searching in many different aspects of my life. In this quest, I have found that it’s not necessarily finding the answers immediately that is important, but making sure that you are asking the right questions.

Maisy, in a weaving class with girls from the Starfish One by One program, on her recent STF 360 trip to Guatemala

I came across the Heroine’s Quest when reading a blog post by Carla, one of our She’s the First Ambassadors, who recently traveled to London. While she was there, she met the long-distance mentor of She’s the First, Michelle Aland, whom we’ve been matched up with through The Aspire Foundation. This UK-based foundation provides mentoring between women in business and women in charity and the non-profit sector, specifically those dedicated to female empowerment. After I searched around The Aspire Foundation’s website, I found the Heroine’s Quest. This is exactly what I needed!

Growing up, I was heavily involved in sports. I played soccer competitively for 11 years and one thing that always made a difference in my performance on the field was a knowledgable, supportive coach. Now into week three in the Heroine’s Quest, that is how I equate this online program. This journey is becoming one of the great coaches in my life, but it’s helping me to figure out something far greater than blocking penalty kicks. The Heroine’s Quest is guiding me to ask myself those appropriate questions and challenge myself to achieve my dreams. I am excited about attending the virtual events and completing my assigned weekly “on-the-road” tasks throughout this discovery of my inner-heroine. The road less traveled has always been the more appealing route to me. It’s the way that trails are blazed and firsts are achieved. I look forward to sharing my Heroine’s Quest with you, as many of you are probably journeying along your own, whether it be formal or informal. Tweet me at @maisypage, follow @AspireWomen, and let @shesthefirst know how you’re doing!

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DIY World Improvement Radio Show Features She’s the First!

A couple weeks ago, we had the pleasure of being one of the first guests on the new radio show “DIY World Improvement,” created by Cathy Carlozzi. Cathy is a communications pro with nearly 30 years of experience, with a specialty in speech writing. She serves on the New York Women in Communications Foundations Board, along with our President/Founder Tammy…Tammy and Executive Director Christen Brandt both received NYWICI Foundation scholarships in college (it’s how they met, before She’s the First was even a sparkle in the eye!). We are honored to be part of this interview not only because we’ve known Cathy for several years now, but more importantly, because we are big believers in “DIY World Improvement” — if you want to see change in the world, you’ve gotta be it!

Below you can listen to the full interview, in parts. Part 1 features Tammy and Part 2 features the wonderfully articulate and passionate She’s the First Ambassador Kaitlin Davis, along with tireless leader Ajit George, US director of our India partner school, Shanti Bhavan Children’s Project.

Hope you enjoy, and we encourage you to subscribe to DIY World Improvement on YouTube and like the Facebook page to check out Cathy’s many inspiring interviews!

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Albino Student in Uganda Beats the Odds, Rises to Top

Penninah in a photo with AAH Founder John Wanda

When you hear the statistics that millions of girls are out of school in the world, it can easily numb your mind. But then there are the stories of individual girls that pierce your heart with so much feeling…the girl who overcame the odds — and Peninah is one of them. The founder of our Uganda partner program, Arlington Academy of Hope in Uganda, highlights her incredible rise to the top of her class:

When Peninah Kituyi first came to the Arlington Academy of Hope in 2004, she had lost hope in education. A lanky eight-year-old at the time, she had already attended three schools, leaving each one in quick succession as hostile students taunted her and called her names because she was an albino. In class, she couldn’t see what her teachers wrote on the blackboard. Seated at the back of the classroom, all she could see was a blur. She could not write, and she had difficulty identifying objects in a room. And like all albino girls, her skin often erupted in painful blisters. School for her was torture, and she was ready to give it all up. After all, in each of the classes she had attended, she was consistently at the bottom. There seemed no future for her in education.

That year, however, the Arlington Academy of Hope opened in neighboring Bumwalukani, about three miles away. It was a private school, charging as much as 85,000 shilings a term at that time, but Peninah was able to convince her dad to try and enroll her there in one last attempt. Her dad obliged, but was pessimistic. Could this school be any different from the other schools Peninah had attended?

Peninah’s dad’s doubts were dispelled almost as soon as they reached the new school. Although the school was barely finished and had little to its name, the teachers on staff were welcoming. Peninah was welcomed warmly, and when the teachers realized her disability, they put her in the front of the classroom so she could see better. They also contacted the school’s founder in the US, John Wanda, to see if he could find some special help for the little girl. John Wanda was able to find a donor, Linda Watkins, who gave money to buy the girl special lotions and clothing. She was also taken to an eye specialist in Kampala who fitted Peninah with prescription glasses. Peninah came back a transformed girl. For the first time, she could see clearly. At school, she took everything in that the teachers taught. By the end of that first year, she had risen to the top of the class, easily beating the other 30 boys and girls and showing that she had talent and capability.

In the seven years that Peninah has spent at AAH, she has been a model student. She was an avid reader, topping her class in books read each year. She also sang in the School Choir, and was one of the students who represented the school and the region in the National Music Competitions. While her eyes continued to bother her, she never let that interfere with her education. There were occasions she misplaced or lost her glasses, but she still managed to figure out how to read and remember what her teachers taught. The school takes her for periodic eye tests to ensure that the glasses work well. Everyday she walked the 3 miles to AAH as if in a hurry – school meant everything to her. Her parents saw the blossoming of their girl and were grateful for the opportunity AAH had given to her.

Last year, Peninah sat her PLE. Although she knew she would pass, no one expected her to pass as highly as she did. She led all the girls in her school, and in the district of Bududa, by obtaining 8 aggregates. For a girl who was on the verge of dropping out of school, Peninah had become the best girl in her district. Life could not be better.

Because of her performance, Peninah will receive a full scholarship from AAH to attend any secondary school of her choice. AAH will pay for her all her tuition and boarding fees, uniforms, textbooks, and anything else required by the school. All students from AAH who obtain 8 aggregates or better get this offer. This year, 8 students performed at this level. The remaining 30 students who sat PLE at AAH will get scholarships, but they will be required to contribute a nominal amount of 75,000 shillings towards their education. This comes to about 10% of the cost for each student in their first year. AAH scholarships have helped hundreds of students afford a quality education in some of Uganda’s best secondary schools. And for Peninah, it is a dream come true. She beat all odds to reach this far.

Here at She’s the First, we’re all about beating the odds and helping girls like Peninah to achieve their dreams. To learn more about Arlington Academy of Hope, the program that Peninah participated in, visit www.aahuganda.org, and think about what kind of fun fundraiser you can do with friends to sponsor a girl there for all or part of a year!

Posted in Arlington Academy of Hope | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Greetings from She’s the First*{Syracuse}

Hello from Syracuse University! Did you have an inspiring International Women’s Day?

Fittingly, the SU chapter of She’s the First held a meeting on the special occasion, and it was a great one! We welcomed new members Arianna, Yohanna, and Yuki, and came up with some new fundraising ideas. We also discussed the details of our benefit concert, which we hope to hold in conjunction with Vivanista’s Flash Fundraising weekend.

Kibera School for Girls

In the weeks leading up to the concert, we’ll be tabling in our student center, posting fliers around campus (we already have some designs), and searching for the best and brightest musical acts that Syracuse has to offer (trust us, there are plenty!).

In addition to all of this planning, we celebrated our victory in Vivanista “Parties With a Purpose” contest by choosing the Kibera School for Girls as the beneficiary of our prize money.

We closed out the meeting by recording a video message for all STF supporters!

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A Social Media Story for #IWD!

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She’s the First*{Hofstra}

Hofstra University
Location: Long Island, NY

Founded: Fall 2010

@STF_Hofstra

Read their headlines in the Aspire blog!

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Poetic Tribute to Mom — from Preetha at Shanti Bhavan

I come from the dull brown of my mother’s eyes
Watching over me while my eyes seek darkness,
Her warmth throwing me back to reality,
I come from the love of my mother’s tight, long embrace,

I am the answer for her pain,
That increases the lines etched upon her face,
These lines that spill her sufferings out during her troubled, restless nights,
These lines that push me further to lift her hunched shoulders,
Lift her bowed head toward my never fading light and ease her pain,

I am the shooting star,
I am the soaring chariot,
I am the sparkling dust of a falling star,
I am the unstoppable racer,
I am who I am because of her.

One day I will wipe from her face the waterfall of hopelessness,
And replace it with the river of hope and salvation.
I’ll make her dip her bruised, scarred body in it and make her forget her troubled past.
One day I will show the world I am that girl
Who shoots bullets into the sky,
And makes doorways of freedom, hope and relief,
Not only for my mother but for all those out there who are in need.

Shanti Bhavan is a partner of She’s the First, where you can sponsor a girl, for all or part of a year…see our Directory and write us at info@shesthefirst.org if you’re interested!

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She’s the First Meets Across the Pond

Michelle and Carla at the Royal Albert Hall

Hi, She’s the First readers! My name is Carla and I am a new She’s the First Ambassador. I am excited to join the team and discuss our passions for helping young women worldwide.

I recently took a trip to London and had the pleasure of meeting with Michelle Aland,  Head of Sponsorships & Corporate Partnerships for the Royal Albert Hall. As Tammy mentioned in a post last week, Michelle is a She’s the First pro bono UK mentor through the Aspire Foundation.  Michelle has been Skyping with Tammy for the past couple of months and I was lucky enough to meet her face-to-face this February!

Michelle gave me an overview of the history and vision of the Hall. The Royal Albert Hall is one of London’s leading concert and event venues. It was started to fulfill King Albert’s vision of a central meeting place that celebrates the arts and sciences in London. More than 350 events happen each year in the Hall ranging from concerts, operas, to even fashion shows and tennis matches! Needless to say, it is an impressive space. Walking around the Hall, I saw ‘A’s etched into the staircase and outside to remember Albert’s vision. It was clear that the Hall works with standards of excellence and will continue to work to bring the arts and sciences to the British people!

Michelle was kind enough to give me a tour of the Hall, including the Royal family’s seating and waiting area. We sat down for a lunch where I learned more about her career and work she does in sponsorships for the Hall. Michelle has worked in sponsorship and marketing roles in both NYC and London and is a wealth of cultural knowledge.

We are so grateful for all the guidance she’s provided She’s the First and GIRLS WHO ROCK. Thanks Michelle for being a supporter of girls’ education and She’s the First!

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Shanti Bhavan Children’s Project

The Program | Sponsorship Breakdown | Type of Sponsorship | Photos | Videos

FAST FACTS:
• Location: Baliganapalli, Tamil Nadu, India
• Annual Sponsorship: $1,600
• Grade level: Pre-K to 12

Donate here!

Program:

• Shanti Bhavan is a home and exceptional school located in rural Tamil Nadu, India, for the region’s most socially and economically disadvantaged children.  The school follows a completely unique and innovative model of combating poverty, educating the poor and fighting social injustice.  Admitting students at the age of four, Shanti Bhavan provides a holistic, high quality education until the age of 17 free of cost, and subsequently funds college education for its students. No other model of educational intervention commits the same level of long-term and quality investment in the lives of the children it serves, or holds more promise for their futures and those of their families.

• Shanti Bhavan’s mission is to adequately develop the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children of India’s “dalit” – or “untouchable” – caste by providing them a world class education and instilling globally shared values to enable them to aspire to careers and professions of their choice.

Sponsorship Breakdown:
Education related: $600
Residential care: $240
Boarding & meals: $375
Clothing & footwear: $110
Medical: $55
Recreational: $60
Miscellaneous upkeep (utilities, transport, accounting/audit, laundry, etc.): $160
Total: $1600

Type of Sponsorship:

When you sponsor a girl at Shanti Bhavan, we’ll receive a photo and letters from the student twice a year. Following sponsorship of a student, we’ll also receive at least one video message via email. She’s the First will notify you when new letters arrive, and you can correspond with the student on our site. Alongside their sponsorship of a student, sponsors may choose to send gifts for a student’s class.

Please note it may take up to a month for a sponsorship to process.

A typical day in the life of a student at Shanti Bhavan, 6th-12th grade

6:00 – 6:30 AM Get ready in the dorms.
6:30 – 7:30 AM Attend morning physical education (basketball, soccer, bikes, etc.)
7:30 – 8:00 AM Return to the dorms to shower and get ready for the day.
8:00 – 8:30 AM Eat breakfast in the main dining hall; usually a traditional South Indian breakfast.
8:30 – 10:45 AM Attend morning classes.
10:45 – 11:05 AM Eat morning snack in the main dining hall.
11:05 – 11:20 AM Attend assembly, where the entire school gathers for the school prayer, singing of the national anthem or school song, recitation of the daily virtue, and news report.
11:20 AM – 12:50 PM Attend classes.
12:50 – 1:20 PM Eat lunch in the main dining hall.
1:20 – 3:35 PM Attend classes.
3:35 – 4:00 PM Eat an afternoon snack before heading to evening activities.
4:00 – 5:00 PM Take music lessons or practice instruments; participate in extracurricular activities.
5:00 – 6:00 PM Take part in community service, helping clean up the campus or tidy the dormitories.
6:00 – 7:30 PM Study and do homework during the evening study hall; participate in choir practice on certain days.
7:30 – 8:00 PM Eat dinner in the main dining hall.
8:00 – 9:00 PM Study and do homework during night study hall.
9:00 – 9:30 PM Get ready for bed.

Photos:

Videos:

 

Want to learn more? See our blog posts here!

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Posted in India | 2 Comments

Selamta Family Project

The Program | Sponsorship Breakdown | Type of Sponsorship | Photos | Videos

FAST FACTS:
• Location: Bethel, a suburb of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
• Annual Sponsorship: $360 to $800
• Grade level: K-12

Donate here!

Program:

• In Ethiopian Amharic, “Selamta” means “be at peace.” The goal is to help orphaned children regain the sense of peace they lost when they lost their family. Selamta Family Project protects Ethiopian orphans, vulnerable children, and marginalized women by establishing permanent, stable family homes and providing access to continuous education, medical care, and social safety nets. Loving families build strong citizens, so Selamta works to maintain the cultural connections that sustain healthy families, neighborhoods, and communities.

• Selamta has 11 family homes located in Bethel, a suburb of Ethiopia’s capital city, Addis Ababa. To reduce the stigma that often plagues orphans, homes are dispersed throughout the neighborhood, allowing kids to be integrated in the larger community with ease. Each family is organized around a permanent, stable Selamta-trained mother, who will assume parental duties and provide respectful, loving care for her nine children. The Selamta staff is supportive to the mother in every way to ensure her successful parenting, and the staff is responsible for sustaining her healthy living arrangement.

• All of the school-aged kids receive a stellar education at the Alpha Keranyo School, a private school located in the Bethel neighborhood. After-school tutors provide extra support to help children succeed. Despite the fact that many children could not attend formal school before joining the Selamta Family, many kids are at the top of their class and excelling.

Sponsorship Breakdown:

Option 1. Complete Care: $800
Continuous education at a rigorous K-12 private school
After-school tutoring programs
Sports and soccer registration fees
Summer enrichment programs
Birthday and holiday celebrations
Small savings account each child
Wholesome food
Clothing and shoes
Medical coverage
A comfortable home
Stipends for Mom and Auntie

Option 2. Leadership Development: $360
Continuous education at a rigorous K-12 private school
School supplies including uniform, backpack and notebooks
After-school tutoring programs
Sports and soccer registration fees
Summer enrichment programs
Small budget for birthday and holiday celebrations
Small savings account each child

Option 3. Daily Necessities: $440
Food
Clothing and shoes
Medical coverage and dental care
Stipends for Mom and Auntie

Type of Sponsorship:

We’ll receive letters and photographs from the sponsored child at least twice a year and a report card annually. We’ll notify you when we receive new letters, and you can correspond with the student through our site.

Please note it may take up to a month for a sponsorship to process.

Photos:

 

Want to learn more? See our blog posts here!

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Posted in Ethiopia | 1 Comment