Posts Tagged ‘Tanzania’

Do You Want To Volunteer Abroad In Tanzania?

Monday, May 23rd, 2011

The first time I volunteered abroad was when I was in Shanghai. I was studying at Fudan University and participated in the Foreign Students Volunteer Program. I taught English at a migrant school in and it turned out to be the most rewarding experience at Fudan.

I might be biased because of my experience but I always encourage everyone I meet to either study or volunteer abroad. If I could, I’d be volunteering abroad right now but I’m keeping these dollar bills as close to me as possible. Grad school tuition is guaranteed to drain my life savings.

I’m currently volunteering for Support For International Change (SIC), an organization that is dedicated to limiting the impact of HIV/AIDS in undeserved communities. We are looking for students and recent alumni who are interested in volunteering with us in Tanzania.

Our programs provide volunteers with an opportunity to live with a host family in Tanzania and directly impact rural communities by working alongside local Tanzanians. Each program begins with an intensive expert-led orientation where volunteers are educated about HIV, our organization and global health before beginning their field experience running an HIV/AIDS awareness campaign.

We currently have space available for our summer program starting July 20 – September 14 and our fall program starting September 22 – December 15. Click here if you’re interested in participating in this volunteer program and if you know of anyone who might be interested in working in Tanzania, please share this with them.

Seeking Brave Female Travelers For The 1 Peak 1 Week Kilimanjaro Challenge

Monday, April 11th, 2011

All rights reserved by xiaow3i

Who: Fearless female mountain conquerers. (Acrophobics need not apply.)
What: Scale the highest free standing moutain in the world, Mount Kilimanjaro.
Where: Tanzania, Africa
When: August 12-21, 2011
Why: To support Tanzanian women living with HIV/AIDS

Support For International Change has teamed up with The Peaks Foundation, an organization that organizes global mountain challenges for women who seek adventure and a sense of personal acheivement. Their work has directly impacted communities in Nepal, India, Tanzania, Congo, Kenya and South America.

The 1 Peak 1 Week Kilimanjaro Challenge aims to assist Support for International Change and their effort across northern Tanzania to reduce the impact of HIV/AIDS by providing education, economic and social support.

If the 1 Peak 1 Week Kilimanjaro Challenge fails to recruit at least 5 climbers in the next two weeks, this challenge will be pulled. Support for International Change will not be able to provide much needed resources for Tanzanian women living with HIV/AIDS.

Here is a brief one week itinerary on your climb up to Mount Kilimanjaro:

  • Day 1: Arrive Kilimanjaro International Airport – transfer to Arusha
  • Day 2: Half day with local organization, Game drive
  • Day 3: Day with local organization
  • Day 4-8: Kilimanjaro climb
  • Day 9: Kilimanjaro decent, celebration dinner
  • Day 10: Transfer to Kilimanjaro International Airport

Please pass on this post to friends, family, adventurers, mountain climbers and anyone who would be interested in scaling Mount Kilimanjaro. RTs and Stumbles is also much appreciated in helping to spread the word. It would be even more awesome if you can share this with your readers.

The more people who know about it, the more likely this challenge will be able to succeed and the more likely Tanzanian women living HIV/AIDS will have the resources they desperately need.

Now that we’ve got all the basics down, who amongst my fellow wanderlusters is brave enough to take on this challenge?

Do Good Thursday: Support For International Change In Tanzania

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Guest post by Dana from @SIChange

Support for International Change (SIC) is dedicated to limiting the impact of HIV/AIDS in under-served communities and training future leaders in global health and development. SIC believes that the HIV/AIDS crisis creates both an imperative to act and an opportunity to learn. We envision a world where HIV/AIDS no longer limits length or quality of life or reduces the social or economic development of communities, and where young people learn the skills to address the health crises of future generations.

Copyright All rights reserved by Support for International Change

SIC offers structured 8 and 12 week volunteer programs open to students from a variety of universities in the US and the UK. Each year, student volunteers bring new energy and talents to our work in Tanzania.

Prior to landing in the middle of nowhere, East Africa, our volunteers receive extensive training from previous SIC volunteers (Program Coordinators) as well as guest lecturers (often professors) during a series of seminars we call Prefield. Prefield not only provides our volunteers with the necessary information and skills they will need to be effective HIV/AIDS educators, but it also prepares them for life and work in a developing country.

Copyright All rights reserved by Support for International Change

Upon arriving in Tanzania, each program begins with an intensive, expert-led orientation. A week into orientation, volunteers move into a homestay with a host Tanzanian family. Our programs focus on teaching community members and school children how to protect themselves from HIV and how to care for those who are already infected by AIDS as part of an awareness campaign within a partner community. In addition to these responsibilities, we urge volunteers to take the lead on other projects related to our work. Volunteers are also encouraged to see the effects of the AIDS epidemic first-hand, through regular visits to the home of an AIDS patient and trips to local orphanages.

“[My experience with SIC] gave me the confidence and the courage to keep traveling and living abroad.” – SIC Volunteer, 2005

“SIC gave me enough exposure to global health to know that I want to go abroad again in the future and I want to focus my research on issues that affect developing countries.” – SIC Volunteer, Summer 2004

“Working with an international group of students – including Tanzanians who, in addition to being some of the most talented people I’ve ever met, are so dedicated to help their country and people – was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life.” – SIC Volunteer, Fall 2008

“In the face of a devastating, insurmountable challenge of AIDS, SIC is always hopeful.”  – SIC Volunteer, Summer 2006

If you have a strong desire to help others, a willingness to adapt to new challenges, and the ability to work hard with a team of like-minded people, we would love to hear from you: The deadline to apply to our Fall program 2010 has been extended to August 15th! Click Here to find out how to apply!

For more stories (and poems!) directly from our volunteers in the field, please click here, join us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter!

Photo Collection: Faces Of The Future (Part 2)

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

This is for everyone who found joy in the first collection of Faces Of The Future and for those who wanted to contribute their photos. I hope these photos brings a smile to your face because I couldn’t get rid of my Kool-Aid smile while I was putting this post together.

I received a large number of submission for this photo collection and I am very sorry to say that I was not able to use every single photo that was submitted. Please don’t hate me. Look at the babies instead!

Misones, Argentina

Michael Tieso

Michael Tieso started Art Of Backpacking with a vision of sharing cultural knowledge to the world and inspire more people to travel. He left the cubicle life to travel the world in May 2009 and he still continues the journey to this day with no end to it. He loves adventure, food, and music. Follow him on Facebook and Twitter @djskylab.

Guatemala

Photo by Halle Hughes, aged 10 traveling near Lake Atitlan, Guatemala. Halle was on her first trip overseas with her 2 sisters and parents and said the best part of going to Guatemala was doing Dog Meets World and meeting other kids.

Costa Rica

Photo by Kathryn Rouillard, a Peace Corps volunteer in Costa Rica took pictures in Playa Panama and said that practicing DMW was "one of the highest highs I have experienced thus far as a PCV in Costa Rica.

Dominica Republic

Tanzania

Haiti

Taken by Carolyn Lane, founder of DMW in Lacul, Haiti in a village along the sea. None of the children had ever had their photos to own!

Carolyn Lane

Carolyn Lane is the founder and president of Dog Meets World, nonprofit organization seeking to put a photo in the hand of every child in need in the world.

The Caribbean

Taken at Grand Anse Beach, Grenada, Caribbean

Maharasthra, India

Taken in Ellora, Maharasthra, India

Cairo, Egypt

Taken at an engagement party held on the street, Cairo, Egypt

Connie Hum

Connie HumConnie Hum is a bit of a loose canon. She gets an idea in her head and she just goes with it. After making the decision to live the life she’s always wanted, Connie left her amazing apartment in New York City and job at an international consulting firm in February 2009. Since that time, she’s lived in Istanbul, sailed in the Mediterranean, slept in a Bedouin cave in the mountains of Petra, bellydanced her way through Cairo, drank afternoon tea in London, danced with young Buddhist monks in Burma, learned the art of Vipassana meditation in an ashram in India, trekked the Himalayan mountain range in Nepal and sunbathed in the gorgeous beaches of Thailand. And this is only the beginning! You can follow her travel (mis)adventures on www.connvoyage.com or on Twitter at @connvoyage.

Sapa, Vietnam

Hmong girl with baby brother

Little Hmong girl carrying her baby brother. Click on the photo for the story.

Laos

Hmong girl from Laos

Hmong girl from Laos

Hmong girl from Laos 2

Another Hmong girl from Laos

Belaga, Borneo

Kayan mother and child

Kayan mother and child

Theodora Sutcliffe

Theodora Sutcliffe is on a longterm round the world journey with her nine year old son. Since leaving London in January 2010 they’ve visited Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines and Malaysia: next stop Indonesia Visit www.travelswithanineyearold.com for more travel pics and stories.Theodora is a single parent from London, England traveling around the with her son Z. Follow her on Twitter @Mummy_T.

Bangkok, Thailand

From a train ride from Bangkok to the border of Cambodia. It was a 5 hour train ride on wooden benches and cost 50 cents so we were the only foreigners on the train and no one spoke English. Unlike in North America where we'd never give our children to strangers, we were greeted warmly by the people on the train who offered their baby to hold. Although we didn't speak a common language it was one of the most memorable events of my trip.

Baby on the train from Bangkok to Cambodia 2

Ayngelina Brogran

Ayngelina left her job, apartment, boyfriend and friends to travel solo. You can read about her adventures at Bacon is Magic, as she eats her way through Latin America and beyond.

Granada, Nicaragua

Guatemala

Mexico

Lainie

Miro and Lainie (mother 43 and 11 year old son) share their adventures from the road of life, discussing issues of humanity, global citizenship, slow travel and living in the moment as they backpack through the world.Stay up to date with them on their blog & podcast at RaisingMiro.com which chronicles their nomadic adventures, Raising Miro on the Road of Life.

Cambodia

She was just a cutey. She has a huge smile on her face in every, single picture we have of her.

A couple of the younger boys just thought it was hilarious to use me as their own personal jungle gym. It got quite tiring after a while, and of course everyone wanted to try when they saw these two, so the next thing you know, I had 15-year-olds not much shorter than I trying to hang on me.

This is my boy again. It started pouring rain, and they all wanted to go out and play. In typical SE Asia monsoon season weather, it just POURED down buckets of rain, and they all had a blast.

You obviously can't tell it from this picture, but this little guy was the most surly and mad looking for the first couple hours after we arrived. Once he warmed up to us, he was like he is in this picture. Adorable.

This was the youngest girl, Nita, who was about 2 years old and as you can see, simply beautiful. Everyone was her bigger brother or sister, and they all took care of her and watched over her.

Adam & Megan

Adam and Megan set off on a year-long RTW trip in October 2008, touching down in eleven countries and ninety cities over three continents. Now back home in St. Louis, Megan is back at her career as an attorney, and Adam is trying to bust into the travel writing business. You can check out Adam’s brand new site, still a work in progress with new content being added daily, at www.worldtravelforcouples.com, or you can follow Adam’s journey to become a travel writer at www.journeyofatravelwriter.com. Adam and Megan also kept a blog of their RTW trip, at thewanderyear.com. They are both on twitter, @aseper and @wanderyearmeg.

15 Ways To Volunteer In Africa

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Guest post by @BorderJumping

If you have a personal story, volunteer resources, tips and advice you’d like to share for Do Good Thursday, please email me at monica@apairofpantiesandboxers.com.

15 Ways To Volunteer In Africa

15 Ways To Volunteer In Africa

Our Journey began in October 2009 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — when we left to visit nearly every country in Africa. At every stop we are meeting with farmers, community organizers, labor activists/leaders, unions, non-governmental organization (NGOs), the funding and donor communities, and local press

All we hear about Africa in the United States are stories about conflict, famine, disease, HIV/AIDS, and hunger. The news tends to be so negative that it desensitizes people from the problems, makes people feel powerless, hardens us from doing something about it, and even scares them from visiting Africa (beyond a packaged tour safari).

Our goal is to highlight the stories of hope and success on the ground in Africa. We are visiting and profiling projects and innovations that are working (in sustainable ways) to alleviate hunger and poverty and spotlight things that are working on the ground that could be replicated or scaled up. We blog everyday on our personal site called BorderJumpers.

We want to highlight some ways for travelers to see Africa while helping cool initiatives on the ground by volunteering.

Here are 15 interesting options for you to consider (thousands more are out there….):

For Students….

Where Be There Dragons1. If you are looking for something next summer and curious about Madagascar – we fell in love with the capital city Antanarivo – you might want to check out Reef Doctor. You can get free diving training and certification and conduct hands-on marine research, all while working with local fishing communities in the third largest coral reef system in the world.

2. If you are looking for a study abroad, WorldTeach runs a terrific semester program in Namibia. You can teach a number of different courses for elementary and high school children, including English, math, science and computer studies. At the end of the experience, make sure to hang out in Africa a bit longer by taking the Intercape bus company to Cape Town for winter break.

3. SIT Study Abroad offers a program called “Social Pluralism and Development” based in Cameroon’s political capital, Yaoundé.You will stay with a family for five weeks and spend a couple of weeks living in a northern village, with additional visits to western and coastal Cameroon. With more than 200 ethnic groups, local languages and dialects in the country, the program explores development theories, gender, art and cultural expression, and history.

4. Carpe Diem Education program integrates travel, volunteer work, and academic studies. In Uganda, you will live in the village of Junja working with an NGO that is building school houses in Uganda and then move to another village working with an interfaith coffee cooperative learning to grow and pick fair trade coffee. In Tanzania you will work with a health clinic as a volunteer with a medical NGO, while studying Swahili. Afterwards you head on a four day safari in through Tarangire National Park.

5. The Rhythm of West Africa Semester organized by Where There Be Dragons begins in Thies, Senegal, where you spend five weeks in a town about an hour from the capital city of Dakar. Students will meet with various NGO, taken intensive French lessons, attend guest lectures, and volunteer with local schools. The program continues as students hike overland into Guinea, visiting villages and integrating themselves in rural life and concludes with a three week home stay and volunteer project in rural areas of Senegal.

6. Doane College offers a really neat program for those looking to really jet-set across Africa — seeing, studying, and volunteering in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya, Malawi, South Africa, Tanzania, Swaziland, South Africa and Lesotho.

For a Volunteer Vacation…

African Impact7. Africa Impact offers a wide variety of ways to volunteer such as conservation work in Swaziland, chimpanzee and wildlife care in Zambia, pre-school orphan teaching in Mozambique, HIV/AIDS awareness in South Africa, and lion rehabilitation in Zimbabwe.

8. Volunteering in Africa has programs in Ghana that include volunteer work in the area of orphanage assistance, teaching, health care, journalism. You can participate for 1 to 26 weeks and volunteer ages run from 16 to 70.

9. Marine Conservation offers a program in Seychelles where spend your time scuba diving upon the amazing reef while providing much needed data to local organizations and government.

10. The Center for Cultural Interchange offers projects in Benin that enable you to work at a center for troubled youth, at a hospital, participate in a social action project, or to teach at a nursery school in a community village.

11. The Global Volunteer Network places people in Uganda working on an organic farming project. Volunteers work along side Ugandans digging and maintaining demonstration gardens. Activities include raised bed and double-dug farming to best utilize soil and make planting, harvesting, and fertilizing easier.

For Seniors…

Cross Cultural Solutions12. GapYearForGrownUps offers some terrific short and long term volunteer projects in twelve African countries. Some of the types of volunteering include animal conservation, child development, mentoring youth, teaching reading and writing, and wildlife research. Programs last from a couple of days to several months.

13. Cross-Cultural Solutions provides a program in Tanzania for boomers who are 50-plus working side-by-side with local people on community-led initiatives. Programs last from 1-12 weeks.

14. At Global Volunteers volunteers teach conversational English and other basic subjects, caring for at risk youth, assisting with health care, building schools and community facilities and much more. About 50 percent of volunteers are older adults, drawn primarily from the U.S. and Canada.

15. Earthwatch Institute, is an international nonprofit organization with volunteer field researchers engaged in scientific and social science research around the world. With a strong emphasis on sustainability, it presently supports about 140 projects in 48 countries, including Africa. Forty percent of participants are older adults.

Border Jumpers

BorderJumpers began in October 2009 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia — when Bernard Pollack and Danielle Nierenberg began a journey to visit nearly every country in Africa. At every stop they are meeting with farmers, community organizers, labor activists/leaders, unions, non-governmental organization (NGOs), the funding and donor communities, and local press. Follow them on @BoarderJumping, @WorldWatchag (Dani) or @BernardPollack (Bernie) for the latest update.