Archive for the ‘Social entrepreneurism’ Category

Let’s Help Fellow SalaamGarage Volunteer, Simon Cordova!

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Last week I blogged about SalaamGarage and their wonderfully altruistic voluntourism endeavors.  Well, they haven’t gotten out of my mind.  I’m infatuated with their organization!  And I want to do what I can to get the word out to help them with their endeavors.  (After all, that is the goal of Enchanting Challenge: to connect the volunteer dots across the universe!!)

I think one of the coolest things SalaamGarage does is offer advice about how to raise money for their adventures.  There are so many organizations out there that offer altruistic and exciting travel packages, but so often it seems impossible as to how one can afford such an under-taking.  SalaamGarage breaks it down and reminds you that you can raise money, a little bit from a lot of different sources, to help you get on your way

In my last post, I also mentioned Simon Cordova, a SalaamGarage volunteer who is taking part in their September 2009 voyage to India.  Simon has under-taken quite an endeavor: not only is he embarking upon the voyage to Rajasthan, India and taking a nose-dive into some serious service work there, but he is also taking on a MAJOR citizen journalist project once he returns home to Los Angeles…Let me explain the full monty here.

Meet Simon: simon

An LA resident and photography guru, Simon will be working with the KARUNA mobile education van this September in India through the Vatsalya nonprofit.  KARUNA is basically a school on wheels that drives to the slums in Jaipur, India to help educate children who are too poor to be sent to school.  KARUNA has the best intentions, but not the best funding, and thus it can only make this educational voyage once every five weeks.  Simon’s goal is to accompany the KARUNA operators on their voyage this fall, and to document their efforts.  He will use this documentary to raise money so that the van can make the trip more often than only once every five weeks; his goal is to get the van to the slums ONCE A WEEK.  It’s a big goal, but reachable with outside help.

simon2

But, Simon is VERY ambitious and doesn’t plan on stopping hiw work when he leaves India.  Nope, he’s got more in mind: when he returns to Los Angeles, Simon plans to put his photography to work, to let the picture tell the story.  He is scheming to put on a photography exhibit of the photos he took while in Vatsalya to further spread the word and raise more money for the KARUNA van.  I think this is SUCH an amazing idea, and one that could turn his potential into reality.  BUT, he needs funds.  He says it best when says, “Though I have plenty of drive, and the desire to make an impact with the KARUNA effort, I lack the necessary funding to do so.”  So let’s get the word out there and help Simon however we can.  With a lot of helping hands, a little bit goes a long way.  Simon needs a total of $5000 to make this trip happen (flight, project amount and fee’s).  To carry this dream to fruition, he’s begun the penny collecting journey and is at $150 right now in donations.  To donate yourself, click here:  http://www.vatsalyaproject.com/donate/.  To spread the word to others who may be interested, you can read Simon’s words on his blog here, check out his photography here, or follow him Twitter here.  Volunteers like Simon bring such hope to the world, and that hope is contagious.  If we all help Simon a little bit, we can all be a part of his work, and the further work that his work creates, and help spread that wonderful feeling of hope…

simon3

Must-See Green News Programs

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

I know I’ve mentioned before that the news sites I choose to read often lean towards good news, so that I sometimes feel like there is no bad in the world at all (that is, until, I pick up a normal newspaper!).  Which I know is not a very good strategy, as it is what the Ethical Man deems as seeing pregnant women everywhere.  Okay, let  me explain–in a post made in March on his wonderful blog, the Ethical Man talked about how when his wife was pregnant, they suddenly noticed all the pregnant women around them.  It seemed like pregnant women were everywhere, but it was really that they were just acutely aware of anyone and everyone pregnant.  So now the Ethical Man says he is doing the same with good green news–because it is HIS job to track green goodness, he suddenly notices the good news everywhere, so that he thinks that all news is good green news. 

We know that can’t be the solution, and we need to be careful to be fair and balanced.  However, a hefty dose of good news is good for the soul, and I want to cheer up all my readers today with sharing some emerald gems of news programs that you should really check out to perk up.

First: The PBS Program Planet Forward.  Planet Forward is a web program that collages ideas regarding the energy future of our planet.  The program features interviews, commentary, brainstormed ideas, and discussions.  It is a great discussion forum, and very interactive with its community of viewers.  Check out today’s interview with Van Jones, the founder of Green for All, and the Special Advisor for Green Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation at the White House Council on Environmental Quality.  Check out the interview here!  Van Jones on Planet Forward

THE program

THE program

the man, Van Jones
the man, Van Jones

Second: The Ethical Man, the BBC’s global warming correspondent.  He’s STILL at it, and he is inspiring!!  He is totally tireless as he traipses across the US interviewing people on their green initiatives.  You can read his blog here and you can join his Facebook fan group here.  ALSO, you can watch his BBC episodes online here!  Check it out asap, it will make your day!

ethical-man

Third: The Carrotmob movement.  The Carrotmob movement is an organization of like-minded people who vow to support local business within their community.  If you visit their website, you can see how carrotmobs are sweeping the globe!!  You can see how you can get involved with the carrotmob closest to you, taking part in all their cool endeavors!  If it just so happens that your community does not have a carrotmob, their website can help show you how to start one!  So go to it, visit their site and check out their awesome welcome video!  It will convince even the staunchest cynic. 

Fourth: The new amazing documentary, FRESH.  Fresh is a powerful documentary about where the majority of our food comes from.  It is frightening, but it is also very hopeful, in that Fresh also documents the rapidly-gaining steam movements spreading from coast to coast to promote natural, toxic-free, and local food.  In the creator, Ana Sofia Joanes’s own words,

FRESH celebrates the farmers, thinkers and business people across America who are re-inventing our food system. Each has witnessed the rapid transformation of our agriculture into an industrial model, and confronted the consequences: food contamination, environmental pollution, depletion of natural resources, and morbid obesity. Forging healthier, sustainable alternatives, they offer a practical vision for a future of our food and our planet.

Check out their website today to become informed.  I promise it will empower you!

fresh

Okay, troops!!  That reading/viewing material should keep you busy for a little while!  Please let me know if you check out any of the sites–give me your thoughts, feelings, and personal endeavors!!  And if any of these sources motivate you to make your own personal green goals, don’t forget to list them on http://www.enchantingchallenge.com to open up the dialogue and spread-the-word!!

Despite the Crisis, People Keep on A-Givin’

Monday, May 4th, 2009

kiva

An introductory note about Kiva.org: From the website, “Kiva is the world’s first person-to-person micro-lending website, empowering individuals to lend directly to unique entrepreneurs around the globe.”

Last week on my Twitter feed I saw the Kiva.org tweet that April had been Kiva’ biggest month ever in terms of receiving donations for loans!  I thought that was amazing, and very impressive seeing as the world is in the midst of an economic crisis.  I followed the link on their tweet, and it brought me to their beautiful blog called Inside Kiva.  And what I learned there blew me away.  Check out the facts:

  • In February, Kiva lenders gave $3.8 million
  • In March, Kiva lenders gave $4.3  million
  • In April, Kiva lenders gave more than $4.4 million

This means that Kiva lenders gave 103 big ones every minute of April…And there is a global economic crisis happening!  Can you believe it?!  I thought it was the most inspiring news ever.  With so much suffering all over the globe, people seem to realize that suffering can be alleviated through community action, and they are giving like never before.  I think the Kiva blog summed it up beautifully:

What does this tell us?  That people care.  That people want to support others in their businesses and that people believe in the ability of the poor to pay back a loan…What we see…is that the Kiva community has been unstoppable.  At the start of every month hundreds of loans flood the site for funding (over 950 right now) and by the end of each month every single loan has been fully funded.  We think this person-to-person stimulus happening on Kiva.org is giving us all the stories of hope that we need.

And it is.  The more people that give, the more other people are inspired to give–because they see that it makes a world of difference.  The Kiva lenders are instigating a domino-effect of goodness.  I am lucky enough to know a kiva-fellow (volunteer) that has been working in Honduras and in Bolivia since 2008.  She is inspiring and unstoppable in her quest to help.  During her stay in Honduras she mastered Spanish and reached out to boat-loads of people in need of just a little start-up cash to help fund their entrepreneurial endeavors.  She was able to fulfill so many of these potential entrepreneurs’ needs, and they were able to fulfill their potential and become entrepreneurs.

In Bolivia, she did the same, and even managed to begin learning the indigenous language, Ayamara, spoken by many Bolivians.  Her story, like so many Kiva-fellow stories, is beyond amazing.  She has written about her experiences here in her blog, and I promise you that reading it will change your life. 

So now it is May, and let’s all hope and lend if we can so that May is the biggest month ever for Kiva, for the fourth month in a row!! 

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Afghanistan

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Afghanistan

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Mali

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Mali

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Paraguay

Kiva-sponsored entrepreneurs in Paraguay