Projects in Ethiopia 2023
- Forestry for Life
- Life Changing Technology
- Life Scholarship Fund
- Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia
- New Hope & Livelihood
- Sagome Scholarship
- Shalom Alamata
- The Mushroom Project
Forestry for Life
CHALLENGES! They keep coming at us. We just keep coming back. 2022 and 2023 were challenging years for the Forestry Project due to war in 2022 and insecurity in the project area for 2023. The Central government decided they wanted to disarm the local militia in the Amhara region. Instead of pursuing dialogue and a peaceful agreement, they resorted to armed conflict. This resulted in mass arrests and even corruption and extortion. Feru, the project leader was kidnapped and held for extortion with the threat of death if he did not pay. Miraculously God freed him from the clutches of evil men. It still is not safe for him to return to the area, however he has managers on the ground in both Tere and Shewa Robit where he is able to keep the project going. He also has administrative assistants to manage the funds, maintain contact with the local managers, and keep statistical reporting. They exceeded their goals and objectives for 2023 in spite of Feru not being available. He is able to manage the projects remotely. They are the only project in entire region as all other NGO’s and organizations, including government have left the area because of insecurity. Forestry For Life has survived, thrived and presses forward.
Life Changing Technology
Life Changing Technology has made some great progress toward placing their first computers into computer labs in schools in Ethiopia. This is particularly good news for those schools because after the Ministry of Education implemented a brand new curriculum, unfortunately textbooks weren’t available. The textbooks will be downloaded on all computers for students to use along with University entrance exams practice questions and Farming God’s Way.
LCT is going to partner with Camara Education to purchase, install, provide tech support and training for teaching staff to enable a smooth and effective transition for schools. See Camara.org
We look forward to providing stories soon of students utilizing technology to help improve their learning. Life Changing Technology.
Life Scholarship Fund
The Life Scholarship Fund aims to empower students from impoverished backgrounds in Ethiopia by providing essential support for their education. Initially targeting 30 high schools within the Gojjam Region, the vision is to expand nationwide. Spearheaded by Tessema Bitew and his colleagues, this initiative addresses the financial barriers of Preparatory School (grades 11 and 12) that prevent many talented students from continuing their education. The fund has successfully increased the number of scholarships each year, supporting 200 students in the previous year alone, with many achieving top scores and progressing to university.
Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia
Click the arrow or the project name for more information.
Busajo
Busajo provides boys and girls, who were previously living on the streets and left extremely vulnerable, with many significant, impactful and life-transforming supports. Whether it be within their residential setting, with their educational supports, life skills development initiatives, skills training or family support and reunification, Busajo transforms the lives of the children in their care.
Mothers with A Heart For Ethiopia has always been so thrilled to be able to support this project with its many diverse initiatives as the impact of extreme poverty on children and families is immense and far reaching. With the supports of Busajo, 85% of the children are reunified with family members and for those where reunification is not possible, Busajo works tirelessly to create a life and a future for those individuals.
Girls Empowered Through Soccor (GETS)
In Harar, Ethiopia, fifty girls receive soccer uniforms, equipment and training three times a week. There are two teams and several of the girls from both teams play also on a select team. Four coaches not only provide training but also life skills training and emotional support to the girls. Ten of the girl’s families receive monthly food support as they were struggling to meet the basic needs of the family.
One of the girls whose family receives monthly food support told us that before receiving food support, she would argue with her grandmother. Her parents are both dead and her grandmother took her in. She was the top of her classroom before she started to receive food support but now that she has food regularly, she doesn’t argue with her grandmother and her marks have gone up by 10%.
Girls whose families are not able to afford a school uniform and school supplies are also provided this financial support. All girls receive a healthy snack after practice three times a week and meals for special occasions are provided to all 50 girls and the coaches. Girls develop confidence, interpersonal relationship skills, friendships and the knowledge they can do anything boys can do.
Girls Gotta Run
Mothers With a Heart for Ethiopia has sponsored 23 girls from grades 5-8 and 28 girls in secondary school, providing them with education, athletic training, life skills instruction, a hot lunch every day, school uniforms, school supplies and a snack after running practice three times a week. This program is located in Soddo Ethiopia.
Girls Gotta Run introduced a Mothers Group teaching 40 mothers of the girls in the program how to save and reinvest. Financial teaching and empowerment will help to sustain the whole family of the girls in the GGR program.
Mothers With a Heart for Ethiopia was able to do some on the ground evaluation during a trip to Ethiopia in the fall of 2022. Many girls reported that they benefitted most and enjoyed the life skills training they receive on Saturdays. They feel more confident and have developed relationship and communication skills that help them every day. The girls report that they have developed friendships within the program and that they did not have friends before.
With the economic crisis in Ethiopia and the cost of food going up as much as 4 times, the hot lunch the girls receive six times a week is a big help to not only the girls but to their families. The girls also receive soap and hygiene products and are able to have a shower at the school.
The girls reported feeling physically and psychologically stronger than girls not participating in the program. They felt able to set goals and plan for a future that would provide them with greater opportunities. Their families were grateful their daughters were receiving nutritional benefits from the program as well as educational supports.
Group Home
A home, food, medical care, clothing, schooling, school supplies and most importantly a family to belong to is provided to two young men, a teen and the group home mom. One of the young men is taking a masters of project management program and the other young man is in college studying media and information technology. The youngest in the group home is in elementary school. The purpose of the group home is to provide a supportive setting in which the young men can learn, develop confidence and to set goals for the future that will help to make a difference in their country.
Prolapsed Uterus Surgeries
The prolapsed surgeries project continues to change the lives of women in the area of Soddo Ethiopia! An amazing development is that women are hearing about the availability of this surgery and are travelling for days to come to the Soddo Christian Hospital for assessment and surgery.
Our organization has now funded just under 650 surgeries which has made a huge difference in transforming the lives of the women who struggled with a prolapsed uterus.
We are grateful for the ongoing commitment and dedication of Dr. Mark and Dr. Nate to these women.
Tesfa’s Shelter
Tesfa, a volunteer who personally knows the realities of living on the streets as a child, provides shelter, food, clothing, medical care, education, psychological care, a family and love for all 94 children at his shelter. Located in Harar, Ethiopia, this home is providing a safe refuge filled with love for children ages 3-23 who have been living on the streets, were abandoned or who have faced unthinkable realities due to extreme poverty and/or trauma. Mothers With a Heart for Ethiopia has been providing nearly 100% of the shelter’s financial needs since the beginning of the pandemic, civil unrest in Ethiopia and their economic crisis.
In the fall of 2022, Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia developed and introduced a sponsorship program called Team Tesfa which is unique and ensures that all of the children are treated equally regardless if they have a sponsor. Sixty-six children out of the 94 now have sponsors!
The children do not know if they have a sponsor but rather, all of the children at the shelter know they have a large group of Canadian friends who care about them and support them. Each month, all children who celebrated a birthday are honored with cake, special treats, a small gift and party with all of the children. Each month, a team of volunteer writers write a letter to the children which is read by Tesfa to all of the children. The letters help the children to learn about Canada, our traditions, foods, culture and will provide life lessons and encouragement. In turn, the children decided to write us and we are learning from them as well.
Team Tesfa Awards are given once a year in many categories to recognize the hard work, compassion, athleticism, volunteer work, leadership abilities, academic achievements, etc. to children in different age categories.
Tesfa’s shelter is a very special place of love, provision, family and guidance. The Team Team Sponsorship Program is unique and respectful and we encourage anyone interested to become a sponsor.
WRAPS
WRAPS (Washable Reuseable Affordable Pads) provides hundreds of girls each year with a WRAPS kit to help ensure they do not miss school while they are having their periods. Keeping girls in school helps to reduce early marriage, educate and empower girls through education and help to make lasting change in their communities.
WRAPS also provides employment to women who were living in extreme poverty. Now, these women are able to support themselves and their children. The employees at WRAPS are all encouraged to attend school in the evenings with some women starting back at school at grade 2. A few of the employees have graduated from college while working at WRAPS.
Just over two years ago, the WRAPS Café opened on the grounds of the Soddo Christian Hospital where another 20 women are employed. The food is delicious and the Café is very well supported by the staff at the hospital, visitors of patients and community members.
The WRAPS Café will not only allow for women to be employed but it will help to fund the WRAPS factory where the WRAPS kits, dolls, headbands and backpacks are made.
New Hope & Livelihood
This project continues to work hard to help break the cycle of extreme poverty and bring freedom and hope to people trapped in incredibly difficult and discouraging circumstances. This is done through 2 programs: New Hope, which forms, trains and funds VSLA groups, (Village Savings and Loan Associations), who learn to self-administer and take turns taking loans from a grant provided to get them started. This group and grant enables them to start and grow small businesses and also to take loans for emergencies – like the need for medicines. Newlivelihood, provides vocational training to help young women learn a skill, such as hair-dressing, food preparation and tailoring in order to find employment or start a small business to be able to provide for themselves and their families.
In 2023, New Hope was able to form, train and fund 20 new VSLA groups – which means about 400 more impoverished women got a chance to start a small business and begin to change their lives’! Newlivelihood was able to train 80 young women (and some men) in hairdressing and tailoring, giving them the chance to learn a life-changing, employable skill! In addition, Newlivelihood is now up to 23 orphan sponsorships.
We are so thankful for our supporters who gave to help enable women in need to find hope and start a new life.
Above: 1) Fanta’s store business. 2) New Hope VSLA members working in their wholesale shop. 3) Ansha, a New Hope VSLA member working at her business of making and selling baskets products.
Above: 1) Yabsira working as a barber after graduating from Vocational Training. 2) A hairdressing trainee in the Newlivelihood Vocational Training Program.
Sagome Scholarship
As a not-for-profit private school in Wolkite, Ethiopia, the Sagome Learning Center has classes ranging from kindergarten to Grade 8. It offers affordable tuition and also provides scholarships for low-income students and girls, with help from Sagome Scholarship, a project of DevXchange International.
For the 2023-24 school year, the Sagome Scholarship program provided the equivalent of 65 full scholarships, with students receiving either full or half funding.
Over the years, the school’s enrolment has increased steadily, with 841 students enrolled in 2023-24. That steady growth has put great pressure on class size and classroom space.
For that reason, the Sagome Scholarship program launched a campaign in 2023 to help to construct a new two-classroom building. Base funding for that project was raised and work was expected to begin.
Construction was delayed by unrest in the area in the fall of 2023. Disruptions are expected to settle in 2024 and the school hopes to start construction of the new building.
As well as raising funds for scholarships for the 2024-25 school year, Sagome Scholarship hopes to help complete the new classroom project. The school’s administration and the school community will finance finishes and furnishings for the two new classrooms.
Shalom Alamata
The city of Alamata is part of an area of northern Ethiopia that was not only in the conflict zone of the Tigray War, but is also part of the disputed territory that is continuing to experience some level of conflict. The Shalom Ethiopia Project invested $500 in initiating Children’s TEFL through the local partner, the Alamata Ethiopian Kale Heywet Church. One person was sent to a training in southern Ethiopia and came back and provided weekly English teaching for about 24 children for about it four months. Uncertainty created by conflict terminated the work. The TEFL teacher has since moved on.
Tim Jacobson, Project Lead
Mushroom Project
In 2023, The Mushroom Project made significant strides towards addressing food insecurity and poverty in Sululta, Ethiopia. The project successfully launched a Mushroom Production House, laying the foundation for forthcoming mushroom cultivation starting in 2024. Additionally, the initiative began nurturing 100,000 seedlings of fruit and flowering trees, poised to provide diversified nutrition and environmental benefits to the community. These pivotal steps mark a promising trajectory towards enhancing food security, promoting sustainable practices, and fostering economic empowerment in the region.
Another noteworthy moment this year was that the land we were given by the government to start this endeavor of the mushroom production house and seedling site also promised a water source- that was damaged- but could be fixed. We happily took the plot of land knowing we would have to get this water pump fixed. Donors pitched in right at the end of the year and got the $500 water pump fixed -within the same week we asked for help- which is now watering our seedlings and even providing water to the community as its the closest source and we are happy to share.
For the water, we are able to charge a small fee to some and to those who desperately need it, we give it. This water pump alone has really helped bring people to our project site and learn about mushrooms while they are there for water. We plan to set up a small storefront with the water tap and sell mushrooms and other food. We also plan to partner with larger establishments who need large quantities of mushrooms. Everything is going well so long as we continue to receive the support of donors to get this going. We built the wheel and now we are slowly turning it, and as we pick up speed, we will become a self sustainable project helping thousands of people in Ethiopia!