| 100 Friends Project Field Report
December 2007
Greetings
From Thailand
Dear Supporters of the 100 Friends Project,
So far this year I have been using your
donations for humanitarian projects in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam,
Nepal and Indonesia. The project is also supporting projects in The
Philippines, Gaza, Guatemala and Sri Lanka. In the remaining two months
I am in Asia more projects will be carried out in Thailand and
Cambodia, Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, and Kham (Eastern Tibet).
When I started the 100 Friends Project 19 years
ago I raised $2,200
from my friends (100 of them, in fact). In 2004, we raised $18,300, in
2005, we raised $40,465, and in 2006 we raised $73,518.
So far, in 2007 we have raised about $110,000!
You can view photos individually or in a slide
show format related to
all the activitites described below by clicking here:
View
Slideshow
Here are ten humanitarian activities that have
been achieved with the
help of your generosity:
1. Afghanistan: The school 100 Friends committed
to build in
Afghanistan is almost 50% complete! This is the first school funded by
100 Friends. We will fund at least one new school every year.
2. Iraq: The $10,000 that 100 Friends committed to
help children in
Iraq has been raised and delivered. If you'd like to read the report on
exactly how it was utilized, send me an email and I'll send it to you.
The funds were administered by an organization called War Child. This is a quote
from one of the street children, a
10 year old girl named Alama: "I felt that I have never been a child at
any day of my life." Street children from Iraq received counseling,
outreach materials, food, medicine, shelter, clothing, books, school
supplies and many other services. Your donation has been well spent!
3. Cambodia: Last year 100 Friends supported eight
children rescued
from the Steung Meanchey Municipal Garbage Dump in Phnom Penh. This
year 100 Friends donors are supporting twelve children. These kids are
all privileged to live at the Center
for Children's Happiness. To see a video about the rescue of
children from
the dump in 2005 click
here.
Reports are available by email upon request. It costs $800 per year to
sponsor a child. The project is also providing support to several other
orphanages in Cambodia and an anti-trafficking campaign. We are also
providing food, education medical expenses and supplies for the Peace
Orphanage and NACA Orphanage in Phnom Penh (cost approximately $3,000
per year).
4. Cambodia: 100 Friends has hired a young man in
Cambodia named
Ravuth. His mission since last June has been to find elderly people who
do not have the usual extended family to look after them. Rauth goes on
his motorbike delivering food, cash, medicine and other items to the
elderly in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. He also helps them to solve problems,
holds their hands, cleans their houses and takes them to the doctor. A
new young person has been hired to expand this worthwhile program.
5. Bali: 100 Friends has paid for medical
operations for three children
in Bali, Indonesia. I found a wonderful organization that has been
helping the poor on Bali (and there are many!) for about 25 years. They
are the John Fawcett Foundation.
The three children
are named Dwipayana, Yogik and Kutut. Dwipayana has Down's Syndrome and
he has an imperforate anus. 100 Friends is paying for his surgery and
there are photos of him in the attached slide show. Kadek was born
without a left leg below the knee and we are helping to pay for a
prosthetic leg. About 18 months ago little Ketut was terribly burned in
an accident involving petrol. It left him with horrific scars and he
cannot attend school because some of the children tease him
mercilessly. 100 Friends is paying for home schooling for at least the
next 12 months.
100 Friends is also supporting a blind boy named
Putu and a little girl
who has never walked, all living in Bali.
6. Vietnam: 100 Friends provides yearly support
for Blue Dragon, an
outreach program for street children in Hanoi. We are
also helping rural children in various communities. We visited Quan,
the boy with a neurofibroma resulting in an extremely large extension
of his jaw. He has had two surgeries and is looking more and more
normal. 100 Friends has offered to pay for his education all the way
through university if he wants to complete his studies.
I visited the National Pediatric Hospital, bought teddy bears and other
stuffed animals, toy trucks and musical instruments for all 42 children
on the medical wards. 100 Friends will pay for operations for 3 or 4
children. This is all bring done through Humanitarian
Services for
Children. They took me to the countryside where
100 Friends has been sponsoring 10 families. I met 5 of the ten
families and the support will continue for at least another year.
7. One story I have been following for years is
the plight of women in
places like Pakistan who have had acid thrown in their face, usually by
their husbands. Nearly 280 women were killed and 750 were injured in
2002 from acid attacks. Acid burns rarely kill but result in serious
disfigurement and suffering which confine women to their homes leading
to social isolation and depression. They call it "tezab," sharp water
in Urdu. Normally used for agricultural purposes, nitric and
hydrochloric acid are easily obtainable and all too often turned into
weapons for men against women and their families. Sometimes the
attacked women are seeking a divorce or the husband is seeking a second
wife over the objections of the first wife. Sometimes the triggering
event can be as trivial as an argument over grocery money. 100 Friends
donated $1,000 to November 11, a group that supports these women via
photographer Stephanie
Sinclair. I have seen shockingphotos of numerous women who
have had acid thrown in their face but I
am not displaying them on the web site.
8. In response to the crisis and subsequent brutal
crackdown by the
ruling junta in Myanmar (Burma) 100 Friends has participated in three
initiatives: (1) In October 2007 I went to the Mae La Refugee Camp on
the Thai/Myanmar border where 60,000 people live under very difficult
conditions. It was heartbreaking to see so many people who cannot
return to their own country and also cannot live freely in Thailand.
When I asked them what they wanted most they all said, "Freedom". A
report with photos is available to anyone who expresses an interest.
Funds were to support children, families and the elderly. (2) I have
been assisting my dear friend Tu Lu from the Living Waters Center.
She is a Burmese social worker living in
Bangkok who has been helping Burmese migrants for more than 14 years.
Her main areas of work with children who in the jails, detention
centers and shelters. She also runs several schools for migrant kids
near the borders and these children would miss out on education
entirely if not for her. (3) I was honored to meet and assist Nay Tin
Myint. He spend 17 years in Burmese prisons for being part of the
student democracy movement. He was tortured repeatedly and now he
manages a small house in the Thai city of Mae Sot for those fleeing the
current crackdown (about 40 people are there). Photos and a report are
available upon request.
9. Nepal is still trying to recover from the civil
war. 100 Friends
played a small role in the recovery process by helping the elderly,
orphans and prisoners. I went 1 hour from Kathmandu to the Mathatirtha
Old Age Home were I met about 24 frail and elderly ladies living in
very difficult circumstances: crowded, no heat, unclean, not enough
medical care, little money to run the place, inadequate food, etc.
Donated $500 for food, doctor visits and medicine. Also visited an
incredibly poor orphanage called Bal
Griha with 26 children living in squalid conditions. Donated
$1400 for
supplies, food, rent and other expenses. These kids are "rescued" from
remote mountain villages. I went with the house mother on a shopping
trip and purchased blankets, sweaters, shoes, beds, kitchen equipment,
and food. I also went to three prisons and donated educational
materials, art supplies and water purifiers to the prisoners.
10. In November 2007 100 Friends purchased and
distributed several
hundred insecticide-treated mosquito nets for use in Kompot Province in
Southern Cambodia. We were greeted by hundreds of local villagers,
television crews, the Cambodia Daily newspaper and the local governor.
This area is infested with malaria and this effort alone could protect
up to 1000 people from malaria and dengue fever.
Future plans:
On December 2nd I will go with a professional
photographer (Mark
Tomaras), a documentary film maker (Lisa Safarik) and a journalist
(Andrea Blum) to Chengdu in Sechuan Province near Tibet. During next
three weeks we'll be traveling throughout the region in bitter winter
weather with Dr.Tsultrim Dargye and a Tibetan driver in Kham Province
(incredibly poor area). I'll purchase about $7,000 worth of medicine,
school supplies, first aid kits, medical supplies, vitamins, blankets,
toys and warm clothes. It will be freezing but amazing and I'm told
we'll save some lives for sure.
Next year another school will be build, this time
in Nepal.
We have plans starting for a mission in 2008 to Niger, Malawi and
Rwanda in Africa, three of the poorest countries in the world. We will
build schools, drill wells, develop various livelihood projects, and
provide medicines and malaria nets and much more.
I cannot do it alone, I need your help! All
donations are tax
deductible.
How to Donate:
Donate by check (Preferred Method):
To avoid the fee charged by the credit card
companies or Paypal, write
a check payable to 100 Friends and send to:
Marc Gold/100 Friends
1125A Guerrero Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
Or donate online:
Go to www.100friends.com/donate.html
Warm
regards,
Marc
Gold
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