Friday, October 30, 2009

BRAC's Efforts in Relieving Food Insecurity

Last week The New York Times reported on concerns among the global scientific and development communities that the world is losing its battle against hunger. While an effort is underway to increase food production by 50% over the next two decades, many believe this goal is not feasible relative to projected population growth and the amount of fertile land available.

The number of hungry people around the world rose to 1.02 billion this year, or roughly one in seven people, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. Over half of the world's hungry live in Asia and the Pacific regions. Augmenting the problem are uncertainties as to what effect global warming will have on food production.

With its innovative and holistic approach toward poverty alleviation, BRAC is addressing this urgent problem by improving the harvests of poor farmers. BRAC targets mostly landless and marginal land owning households in Asia and Africa as prospects for programs in agriculture and livestock rearing. It strategically engages low-income women in agricultural activities that include poultry and livestock rearing, vegetable production, and livelihoods in the fishing, sericulture, crop farming, and social forestry.

BRAC provides training and technical assistance to its microfinance borrowers as well as improved inputs: chickens that lay 6 times as many eggs, cows that produce 3 times as much milk and rice seeds that have a 20% greater yield. BRAC has also created social enterprises that spans the value chain, from a bull station that provides semen for villagers to employ themselves by impregnating cows to a dairy that purchases milk from rural villages to process and sell on the market.

To date, over 2.1 million people in Bangladesh have participated in BRAC’s agriculture and livestock programs. These efforts have proven so effective that the government has adopted a similar livestock development model for widespread implementation.

In addition to expanding food production, these activities provide empowering opportunities for poor women while promoting organic agricultural farming, all of which contributes to the global imperative to fight hunger with an eye toward sustainability.

Click here to read The New York Times article.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Nicholas Kristof Advocates Schools Over Troops in Afghanistan

BRAC is referenced in Nicholas Kristof’s October 28, 2009 New York Times Op-Ed column “More Schools, Not Troops” as a Bangladeshi civil society group that has not only led the charge in Bangladesh for female education and empowerment, but has utilized educated Bangladeshi women to achieve its development goals.

In this column Kristof specifically explores the benefits of investing in education versus military buildup in Afghanistan. He states:

“…there is still vast scope for greater investment in education, health and
agriculture in Afghanistan. These are extraordinarily cheap and have a better
record at stabilizing societies than military solutions, which, in fact, have a
pretty dismal record.”
Since 2002, BRAC has established 3,627 community based schools that currently enroll 94,543 students and have graduated nearly 143,000 students. BRAC has also established 131 Adolescent Reading Centers to provide educational materials and training to over 3,400 adolescent girls after they complete BRAC Afghanistan school courses. Moreover, BRAC trains its own teachers and develops its own teaching materials, which are provided to students free of charge.

In the spirit of the on-going transformation in Bangladesh, BRAC remains committed to working with the Afghan Ministry of Education and other NGOs to continue improving the quality of education and in the process prove that Kristof's plea for schools is a truly effective means for creating change.

Click here to learn more about BRAC's work in Afghanistan
.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Water World: Is a coastal catastrophe approaching, and what should we be doing about it?


According to PBS NOW reporter Maria Hinojosa, 20% of Bangladesh could be under water by 2030

Watch this segment on PBS's NOW to learn more about the challenges that BRAC members in Bangladesh are facing.

Look for the cameo appearances of former BRAC Intern and Blogger, Maher Sattar, who worked on the NOW production team.

When Cyclone Aila hit Bangladesh's low-lying coastal belt and parts of eastern India on May 25, 2009, we had a preview of the disasters that climate change will bring to the country. Sea (saline) water inundated a large part of the region and will take an estimated six to seven months to recede completely.

BRAC is using this as an opportunity to help the victims rehabilitate their livelihoods through the adoption of new technologies and to learn how to respond to similar events in the future.

Salt Tolerant Rice: BRAC has distributed 15,000 kg of two types of salt tolerant high yield variety of rice seeds.

Fish Cultivation/Crab Fattening:
BRAC determined that a special variety of tilapia cultivation and crab fattening could help to restore the livelihood of the Aila-affected population where the agricultural lands are still inundated. The beneficiaries were given a grant of Tk. 15,000 ($219) each to cultivate fish (e.g. Genetically Modified Farm Tilapia-GIFT) and culture crab in pens (about 1,000 sq ft or 110 sq m) in their submerged rice lands. These farmers cannot grow rice, as their lands are inundated by saline tidal water. It is one of our objectives to explore whether we can utilize the brackish water as a resource and address food security and restore livelihood through this field demonstration / experimentation. Those who do not possess any land for rice cultivation, crab fattening or fish culture, were given an opportunity to make the pens for fish/crab culture to sell to farmers and fishers in their commmunity. This training was given to 110 people .

Developing BRAC’s Emergency Response Capacity In Bangladesh: This month BRAC launched a new initiative to build its capacity in Bangladesh to respond to emergencies effectively, save lives, mitigate losses, empower communities to prepare and be first responders to disasters, and give people the tools to move more quickly into recovery mode.

Planning for a lifetime: the gift of education for BRAC Scholarship program students, Part 1/5

There is a Chinese Proverb that says, “If you are planning for a year, sow rice; if you are planning for a decade, plant trees; if you are planning for a lifetime, educate people”.

BRAC’s holistic approach to poverty alleviation is a function of such beliefs, and BRAC’s education program in particular, is an example of a development tool that promotes advancement over a lifetime. Education can be a means of transcending social class and economic boundaries as it has the power to lift future generations out of poverty and disenfranchisement. Within BRAC’s education program, is a relatively new and exciting initiative known as the BRAC Scholarship program or the Medha Bikash program.

Medha means “merit” and Bikash means “development”, thus Medha Bikash roughly translated means “promoting merit or talent”. The Scholarship program resulted from BRAC’s recognition that there are a significant number of intelligent students that come from poor backgrounds. These students are typically high-achievers, attaining grades of at least 80 percent in the Secondary School Certificates (SSC) and a grade point average of at least 5.0. However, financial pressures often hinder their academic performance and restrict their ability to pursue higher education.

The BRAC Scholarship program was created to address these barriers. The program first provides financial support. For example, students receive funding for admission fees, private tuition, books and other education materials. In addition, female students receive a stipend for transportation and incidental expenses. The program’s creators also had the foresight to appreciate the significance of technology and foreign language proficiency in the modern world and have integrated specially designed training modules to help develop student confidence and skills in computer studies and English.

The English language course has been designed to help students learn more advance aspects of the English language that are often not covered in the traditional curriculum. With the general standard of English language teaching being rather poor in most secondary schools, especially due to a reliance on rote learning, the English course is fundamental in helping students’ English language proficiency move to the next level.

The Information Technology training program covers the elementary skills that are essential to carryout common office tasks, including basic competency in Microsoft Word and Excel. For students who do not even have the luxury of electricity in their homes - many study by the light of a simple kerosene lamp - this valuable computer training would not have been available without BRAC’s assistance.

This blog post introduces a 5 part series, in which the stories of three of this year’s BRAC Scholarship program students will be presented by BRAC volunteer Nilopar Uddin. Each student, with BRAC’s support, has succeeded in securing a place at India’s top Rajastan University and is preparing to embark on an exciting and ultimately life-changing journey, led by the power of education.

Nilopar Uddin assisted in fundraising and awareness-building activities at the BRAC USA office as a volunteer and also spent a couple of months in Dhaka, providing legal consultancy services to BRAC International. Nilopar is an English qualified lawyer and spent almost three years as a Capital Markets Associate working at Allen & Overy LLP's London and New York offices before joining BRAC.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Founder of Fonkoze, Fr. Joseph B. Phillippe visits BRAC Bangladesh

Fr. Joseph B. Philippe is best known as the founder of Fonkoze, Haiti’s first microcredit bank for the poor. Since 1994, the bank has helped spread the concept of solidarity and has been lending to the furthest reaches of rural Haiti. BRAC first partnered with Fonkoze, more than three years ago. Over the last few years BRAC has been providing Fonkoze technical assistance to Fonkoze for its economic development program for the ultra poor, Chemen Lavi Miyo (CLM). Fr. Joseph recently visited BRAC in Bangladesh to hold talks of further partnership between BRAC and Peasant Association of Fondwa (AFP) in Haiti.

Fr. Joseph provided some insights into the proposed collaboration between BRAC and AFP. He said, “BRAC’s philosophy, mission and vision match with those of APF: to empower the rural poor. I am very impressed with the quality of work BRAC has already done in microfinance, healthcare and education. With BRAC’s participation, our vision of empowering the poor will be strengthened and we could then expand our experience throughout Haiti."

“BRAC has an ongoing formation program for staff which is very good. They have several impressive training centers to develop their staff. Most BRAC employees work with high dedication, commitment and professionalism and I believe this is because they are well-trained and the social benefit package for the employees is also quite good. I want to emulate this approach so that the people we are training turn out to be as professional and motivated as the BRAC staff.”

He further added, “BRAC, unlike other international [Non-Governmental Organizations] NGOs, was organized by the poor. This gives BRAC invaluable insight and direction about their work. Moreover, most other NGOs don’t care about sustainable development but BRAC does. This is why we want to work with them.”

Fr. Joseph has been a leader in the struggle to promote economic opportunity for Haiti’s poor majority for more than two decades. He was involved in transforming his hometown of rural Haiti into a model for sustainable agrarian development. In this process, he started the Peasant Association of Fondwa (APF) in 1988.

With an ambitious and visionary mind, Fr. Joseph also founded the University of Fondwa (UNIF), Haiti’s first and only rural university. UNIF specializes in training young people from rural Haiti in Agronomy, Veterinary Medicine, and Management, encouraging them to return to their home communities and become leaders in sustainable development efforts.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Internship Opportunities with BRAC USA

Are you interested in international development, and want to learn from BRAC, one of the world’s largest and most effective anti-poverty groups?

Do you work well in a dynamic, start-up environment? Do you have an interest in marketing and fundraising? Are you currently pursuing an advance degree in business, public policy, international development or a related field?

If so, an internship with BRAC USA is a great way to put your learning into action!

BRAC USA is currently seeking motivated interns for the Fall and Spring semesters. Interns will assist with a variety of projects and initiatives related to BRAC’s programmatic areas (including microfinance, livelihoods, health, education, and human rights), and also work on creating public awareness about BRAC in the US, strategy and program support, fundraising, grant administration and grant making strategies.

Click here to learn more about the internship opportunity and instructions to apply.

Friday, October 16, 2009

F. H. Abed Meets His Holiness the Dalai Lama at Vancouver Peace Summit




F.H. Abed, founder and chairperson of BRAC, and Susan Davis, President and CEO of BRAC USA, participated in the September 27-29th, 2009 Vancouver Peace Summit organized by the Dalai Lama Center for Peace and Education.

The Summit was centered around dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama and brought together luminaries like former Irish president and UN High Commissioner for Refugees Mary Robinson, religious scholar Karen Armstrong, First Lady of California Maria Shriver, and Nobel laureates Jody Williams, Mairead Maguire, and Betty Williams.

On the second day, Abed was asked to speak at a private retreat with the Dalai Lama on how to generate more positive action in the world. For the occasion, Abed shared his personal story and that of building BRAC.

When The Dalai Lama was being interviewed on the final day, Maria Shriver posed the question of what he had learned over the course of the Summit.



His Holiness described being extremely impressed by Abed: How the evolution of his work and the organization he started exemplified the process by which “real change must start with individuals, then family, then community.” He also expressed admiration for how the organization is now able to export decades of expertise to other countries in need.

Susan moderated the closing panel of the Summit, which focused on Women and Peace Building. This panel included His Holiness The Dalai Lama, Dr. Abed, former Canadian Prime Minister Kim Campbell, Dr. Swanee Hunt of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Ela Bhatt- the founder of Self-Employed Women’s Association (SEWA), Emmy awarding winning musician and co-chair of the NoVo Foundation Peter Buffett.

The discussion focused on the vital, often unrecognized role women play in advancing peace, with participants sharing unique perspectives and experiences related to the issue, and urging greater investment in girls and women. Peter Buffet, spoke for the group when he described girls as “the undervalued asset of society.” The closing panelists also urged for greater participation of women in political office, for education that integrates emotional and social learning for boys and girls, and greater visibility of stories on how women are building peace.

The Women and PeaceBuilding session opened with a moving musical performance by composer and singer Peter Buffett and cellist extraordinaire Michael Kott. One of the original songs, Set Us Free, was inspired by a visit to BRAC's program for adolescent girls. It was accompanied by a video shot and edited by Peter Buffett and can be seen on youtube as well as this blog.

Click here to see the panel discussion on Women and Peace Building.

Click here to learn more about The Dalai Lama Center.

You can read more about the Vancouver Peace Summit on Jocelyn Ling's blog and in The Vancouver Sun.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Join BRAC in Commemorating World Poverty Day

BRAC invites all friends and supporters to commemorate this year’s World Poverty Day by focusing on children’s plight to forge pathways out of poverty.


If you're in Bangladesh this Friday, October 16, we invite you to join us at the historic grounds of Central Shahid Minar, Dhaka University. BRAC is organizing a series of events in Bangladesh with the theme of “Children and families speak out against poverty,” involving children, family members, educators, artists, photographers, media personnel and many others.

Over 300 Bangladeshi students from all backgrounds will come together to draw their respective visions of an ideal world fit for all children, free from poverty. Through this experience, BRAC seeks to inspire a mutual curiosity and respect for each other among the children. The event will also include musical and dance performances by the children and a closing ceremony attended by eminent members of civil society.

The celebration will also include a mobile photo exhibition, Portraits of Change, which depicts images of people from all across Bangladesh working to overcome poverty. The photographs were taken by students at Pathshala, the South Asian Institute of Photography. The exhibit will also be on display at several other prominent locations around Dhaka, Bangladesh during the following week.

Not able to attend the events in Bangladesh? You can still show us your support: All you need to do is draw your own picture of an ideal world fit for all children, free from poverty. Then scan the drawing and either email it to us at michelle@bracusa.org or fax at 1-212-808-0203. We'll publish a selection of drawings we receive on our blog.



The International Day for the Eradication of Poverty was first observed on October 17, 1987 to honor the victims of extreme poverty, violence and hunger. According to the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, poverty is a violation of human rights and affirms the need to come together to ensure that these rights are respected. Since then, people of all backgrounds, beliefs and social origins have gathered every year from October 16-18 to renew their commitment and confirm their solidarity with the poor.

We hope that you'll join us in speaking out against poverty, either by attending the events in Bangladesh or sending in your own drawing of a world free from poverty.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

BRAC Chairperson Participates in 2009 Clinton Global Initiative Panel on Finance

Fazle Hasan Abed, Founder and Chairperson of BRAC, was a panel participant in the 2009 CGI plenary session: Moving From Crisis to Opportunity: Financing an Equitable Future. The session was moderated by CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo and Mr. Abed was joined on the panel by Sheila Bair, Chairwoman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; James Dimon, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, JP Morgan Chase & Co; and Peter Sands, Chief Executive Officer, Standard Chartered PLC.




(from left to right) Peter Sands, Chief Executive Officer, Standard Chartered PLC; James Dimon, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, JP Morgan Chase & Co; Sheila Bair, Chairwoman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; Abed and Maria Bartiromo, Anchor, CNBC

The hour long session, featuring voices from across the financial continuum, focused on ways to move beyond the current economic and financial crisis to tap innovative sources of financing that can provide stable, ethical, and scalable funding for organizations addressing the world's most challenging problems. The panel also discussed ways to align interests of public, private, and philanthropic capital to build solutions for a more equitable world in which the financial system is effectively working for all.

Sheila Bair, Chairwoman, FDIC and Mr. Abed

Mr. Abed complimented his fellow panel members’ extensive for-profit and regulatory finance experience with his own microfinance and development perspectives. Mr. Abed also issued an important challenge to development organizations such as his own, by asking every organization to be more ambitious and pursue even larger scale projects.

A webcast of the plenary session is available here.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Scaling Up Microfinance in Africa: Lessons from BRAC Uganda

Scaling up microfinance in Africa - Learning from What Works: The Story of how BRAC grew to become one of the largest microfinance institutions in Uganda in less than three years

Join Mr. Arif Islam, the Country Head of BRAC Uganda, for an intimate discussion on the scaling up of microfinance in Africa. Mr. Islam played a critical role in establishing BRAC as one of the largest microfinance institutions in Uganda in just three years.

When: October 6, 2009 6:00pm-7:30pm
Where: The Puck Building, Rice Conference Room / Newman Reception Area
295 Lafayette Street, New York, NY 10012-9604

Click here to register for the event. Space is limited!

Friday, October 2, 2009

Creating Hope and Opportunity in Haiti for Extremely Poor Women and their Families

At the end of August, BRAC’s founder F. H. Abed, the head of BRAC International, Aminul Alam and I visited Haiti to explore ways we could deepen our work there.

Only 680 miles off the Florida coast, Haiti is considered the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere with approximately 80% of its 9 million people living under the poverty line and 54% in abject poverty. Saddled with multiple development challenges including political instability, high unemployment and illiteracy rates, food insecurity and vulnerability to devastating natural disasters, Haiti is a beautiful country with a vibrant population. In spite of these challenges, the people we met and programs we visited left us feeling very hopeful for the country’s future.

We were hosted by our partner, Fonkoze, the country’s largest microfinance institution, which runs an economic development program for the ultra poor, Chemen Lavi Miyo (CLM). Over the last few years Fonkoze has piloted the CLM program with technical support from BRAC, and the organization is now preparing to scale the program to include up to 5,000 participants.

In 2002, BRAC initiated its innovative ultra poor program which is designed to meet the needs of extremely vulnerable and food insecure women who are unable to access and benefit from mainstream poverty reduction programs in Bangladesh.

The program improves the livelihoods of participants through free assets, enterprise training, special health services, social development, subsistence allowances, and specialized microfinance loans. Today it covers the poorest districts in Bangladesh and has benefited over 150,000 women.

Given the program’s success and impact, BRAC is now providing technical assistance for similar projects in Ethiopia, Honduras, India, Pakistan, Peru, Yemen and of course Haiti.

In Haiti I set out to meet with new members of the CLM program, to hear their stories and also witness the successes and challenges of the pilot program. Natalie is 18 years old. She has 7 brothers and sisters, but she is an orphan. Her mother died in child birth 7 years earlier and her father died two years ago when she was 16. I asked her where she was living and how she earned money for food. With a desperate look on her face, she explained that she now depended on her boyfriend who she had been living with for the last 2 years. After her father died, she needed to find a way to feed herself. Now she has a baby and tries to do whatever she can to earn income. She’s never been to school a day in her life but would love to learn. Natalie said that she was eager to participate in the CLM program.

We met another very thin woman whose name and face I will keep confidential. She is a mother of 4 but has only 3 at home now. She gave up her oldest daughter as she couldn’t afford to feed her. In Haiti, this means her child is working in someone else’s home, often under slave-like conditions. (There is a book about the estimated 300,000 child slaves in Haiti called Restaveks by Jean-Robert Cadet, a Haitian American and former restavek, who explains this phenomena and promoting a campaign to end the practice.)

This woman has resorted to prostitution to support her family (a Creole term that means ‘staying with’). I noticed a burn on her youngest child’s forehead that looked like it was becoming infected. She explained that she didn’t have the means to see a doctor. It was troubling to think the burn required only a simple treatment, but without it had the potential to become a significant health issue. She was also eager to join the CLM program.

At a focus group meeting for potential new CLM participants, I met 4 more women and their families. Each of these women had between 5 and 10 kids and most were only eating 7 to 9 meals a week. In fact, Melanne, the 12 year old daughter of one of the women, had not eaten all day and it was already late afternoon.

I met with two other children: a daughter who was already pregnant and a son who was working as a day laborer – the only job he could obtain without a proper education. I asked them both what they wanted to be when they grew up, but unlike BRAC school kids in other countries who were quick to talk about becoming teachers and doctors, they both seemed uninspired by the question, as they had little focus on their futures.

As difficult as these encounters were, I know that the CLM program offers a bright side. After living in Bangladesh for over 4 years and now working with BRAC, I have witnessed firsthand the impact of its ultra poor program on the most vulnerable women and households.

Before entering the program, the targeted women have often been abandoned by their husbands and even children. They have been isolated and ignored within their communities and each day is merely a struggle for survival. A sense of self-worth or optimism for a better future has completely disappeared. However, the program’s highly targeted training and support more often than not produces a drastic change.

These same women, who one or two years earlier were too shy to look me in the eyes when introducing themselves, are transformed into confident, self-sufficient and even ambitious persons that have earned the attention and respect of their communities. After 2 years of support – asset transfers, skill training and social linkages – over 90% “graduate” into becoming successful microfinance members. Together, Fonkoze and BRAC are blazing a new pathway out of poverty.

Last week, BRAC, Fonkoze and others made a commitment at the Clinton Global Initiative to break the cycle of poverty in Haiti. Click here to see the announcement and click here to read the full press release.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn on Oprah Today

Also be sure to see the authors write up about BRAC in

Husband and Wife Pulitzer Prize winners Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn will be on the show discussing their book Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide (Knopf). The authors feature BRAC as an organization facilitating progress on this vital goal:

"...BRAC, the largest antipoverty organization in the world, worked with the poorest women...and Grameen and BRAC made the aid world increasingly see women not just as potential beneficiaries of their work, but agents of it."

The shows airs at 4:00pm on WABC, Channel 7, in the NYC Area

Find out when and where the show will air in your area, kindly check out: http://www.oprah.com/locallistings