Thursday, March 31, 2011

BRAC Uganda Celebrates International Women's Day



In celebration of the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day on March 9, 2011, BRAC Uganda asked it's staff and program participants to think about the meaning of International Women's Day. Specifically, the initiative aimed to create awareness and explore widely held perceptions of International Women's Day. Broadly, the initiative sought to bolster BRAC's commitment to establish a gender sensitive working environment.

Altogether, 55 responses were collected from staff and members of the Empowerment and Livelihoods for Adolescents Program (ELA). While many responses highlighted the value of women's work, others focused on issues of empowerment, dignity and justice. Many respondents also emphasized women's rights as a matter of national development for Uganda.

The responses, which were compiled into a word cloud, reaffirm BRAC's commitment to achieving gender equity. Some of you may be wondering "with all this talk about International Women's Day, what about men?" In keeping with BRAC's gendered approach to addressing equality, BRAC Uganda will launch a similar initiative on November 19, 2011, International Men's Day. Stay tuned!

BRAC Uganda is also celebrating the expansion of a $45 million partnership with the MasterCard Foundation to scale BRAC's innovative microfinance multiplied model. Announced yesterday at the Skoll World Forum, this partnership will enable BRAC to expand its current network of 85 branches to 129 branches, benefitting more than four million poor Ugandans.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

BRAC and The MasterCard Foundation Announce the Expansion of their Partnership in Uganda

BRAC and The MasterCard Foundation today announced the expansion of a $45 million partnership to scale BRAC's innovative microfinance multiplied model in Uganda. The announcement, which was made at the opening plenary of the 2011 Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship, will enable BRAC to expand its network to 129 branches, benefiting more than four million Ugandans.



"The MasterCard Foundation aims to scale innovative microfinance programs in Africa to improve the lives of people living in poverty," said Reeta Roy, President and CEO of The MasterCard Foundation. "BRAC's holistic approach integrates microfinance and livelihood services to help women to become productive economically and build assets to benefit their families."

Today's announcement builds on an existing partnership with The MasterCard Foundation in Uganda, where BRAC's approach, which it calls "microfinance multiplied," increases the ability of poor clients to productively use microloans to augment their incomes and build their assets, as well as stimulate economic and social development within their communities.

"Through this expanded partnership with The MasterCard Foundation, BRAC will be able to deepen the outreach of our current microfinance and livelihoods program in Uganda and expand our network to 129 branches," said Fazle Hasan Abed, BRAC's Founder & Chairperson. "We will also be undertaking a series of long-term studies to assess impact of integrated approach to services on lives of clients, their families and their communities."

Uganda is a country of 30 million people. More than 60 percent of the population does not have access to financial services. The BRAC program will provide economically active women with loans, training and technical support to enable them to improve their livelihoods, particularly those in the agricultural poultry and livestock sectors. Additionally, the program will expand vocational and life-skills education for adolescent girls.

"The theme of the 2011 Skoll World Forum is Large Scale Change—ecosystems, networks and collaborative action," said Sally Osberg, President and CEO, Skoll Foundation. "This announcement by BRAC and The MasterCard Foundation is a great example of collaborative action, innovation, and entrepreneurship helping solve the world's most pressing problems."

Friday, March 25, 2011

Aarong: Crafting hope, weaving dreams


Artisans make products for Aarong, a fashion house that supports the lives and livelihoods of 65,000 rural artisans and handicraft producers. Photo: BRAC/Shehzad Noorani

Shondhya Rani Sarkar's eyes light up when she speaks of how well her son is doing in school. When Shondhya first came to the Aarong Production Centre in Manikganj, he was a year old. The self-assured Shondhya of today was then a desperate young widow with no means to feed her baby.

She joined a local microfinance group of the NGO Brac and was recommended for employment with a nearby Aarong production centre, where women like her could earn a decent living without endangering their dignity. That was 15 years ago.

Today, Shondhya is one of the most experienced block print workers at the centre, training new recruits. Working 8 am - 5 pm shifts, six days a week, she earns a steady income that could easily rival that of any men-lead family's in her village. Her life is not easy, but Shondhya gains satisfaction from the thought that she has provided for her son and ensured a brighter future for him -- one that fifteen years ago had seemed to her an impossible dream.

Shondhya's story is hardly exceptional, but it is in the slow and steady changing of the lives of thousands of Shondhyas across Bangladesh that we are brought face to face with the true impact of an organisation, which has so far come into the limelight only for its commercial success.

A lot of us grew up with Aarong. In homes around urban Bangladesh, it has become a household name. Yet, Aarong's true beauty does not lie in the air-conditioned confines of its outlets around the country with which we are all familiar. For all its business success and conquest of trends, Aarong's strength comes from a far more humble yet purposeful beginning, a history with which most of us remain unfamiliar.

Aarong began as a means to an end for a quiet organisation fighting to uphold the dignity of the marginalised. In 1976, when Brac first began encouraging sericulture for women in Manikganj, their only buyers were a few scattered retailers in Dhaka. Weeks, even months would pass between supply and payment, until Brac intervened. Aarong was born out of a need to ensure that these penniless silk farmers of Manikganj were paid for their goods on time, so that they could feed their families.

Today, holding steadfast to its original mission, Aarong supports the lives and livelihoods of some sixty-five thousand rural artisans and handicraft producers. Women like Shondhya make up half of its producer base -- that is more than thirty five thousand disadvantaged women who are now supporting their families. And since every woman who works in the Aarong production facilities also has access to Brac's multifaceted development programmes, the support they receive extends well beyond simply their wages.

Then there are independent producers who supply to Aarong everything from coin purses to silver bracelets. Each of these small entrepreneurs is a success story with manifold impact.

Khodeza Begum, as a good example, has been with Aarong since the beginning. As a child, her interest in embroidery turned into a source of income during the early 1970s, when her husband's income was not enough to support their family. Her expertise with the 'Nakshikantha' caught the eye of someone at Aarong and soon orders followed. In no time, the orders reached sizes she alone could not handle. Starting first with the women in her family and then those in neighboring families and beyond, Khodeza trained a rank of Nakshikantha craftswomen who formed the basis of what has today grown into a successful small business working solely to supply Aarong.

Khodeza Handicrafts now employs more than 400 women in Jamalpur, Tangail, Kushtia and Narayanganj -- particularly depressed areas chosen by Khodeza, so her business can create opportunities for rural women similar to what Aarong has provided for her. When Khodeza speaks of her business or Aarong, it is with equal pride and an equal sense of ownership. For her they are one and the same. What matters in the end, she says, is, "What we are doing for our people."

Whether it is by direct involvement, or in a 'pay it forward' manner, Aarong as an organisation operates on what is known in the business world as the ideal 'double bottom line approach'. Creating positive social impact is its primary and fundamental goal, where business performance plays a crucial yet secondary role as a way to sustain and expand the breadth and scope of this impact.

Meanwhile, on the business operations end, Aarong has steadily groomed itself into a well-oiled machine, keeping a watchful eye on the other 'bottom line'. The kind of attention it puts into controlling the quality of its wares remains largely unrivaled by even the most consumer-friendly enterprises in the country. As a result, Aarong's products have secured the trust of even the most scrutinising buyer, at home and abroad. This, and the amount of energy and creativity expended in marketing, has imposed upon Aarong an aura of glitz and glamour.

To the naked eye, there is little connection between the organisation and the artisans that are its backbone. But that is because most of us have never been to Aarong's 13 production centres or 624 sub-centres spread across Bangladesh.

Bangladesh's handloom industry has enjoyed a rather intimate symbiotic relationship with Aarong. In areas such as Chapainawabganj and Norshindi, some weaver communities are entirely dependant on Aarong's fabric consumption for survival. Last year alone, this amounted to almost 6.45 million yards of hand-woven fabric.

Aarong's marketing strategies have also achieved something equally important: bringing consumer attention back to products and styles indigenous to Bangladesh. Just as interest in imported fashion was piquing, Aarong's blending of the traditional and the contemporary won instant consumer appeal, starting a revolution in trends that has now been taken up by countless other stores and boutiques.

Not many are aware of the role Aarong has played in protecting and promoting traditional crafts and designs from its inception. Perhaps part of the secret behind Aarong's success with setting new standards in fashion lies in the age-old patterns it has resurrected from Nakshikantha art and pitha molds -- designs that were otherwise slowly getting lost amidst the clamour for foreign products and imported styles. Many will be surprised to learn that Aarong houses an extensive design library where our rich craft heritage, be it Nakshikantha art or lost Jamdani pattern, have been widely researched and archived for present as well as future use.

But perhaps the most remarkable aspect of an organisation as visibly profitable as Aarong is that, as a support entity of Brac, half of its surpluses go directly into financing the NGO's development programmes. In the simplest of terms, after the in-house operating costs and overheads are settled, this retail giant functions as an income generating activity for Brac, helping to finance its fifty thousand schools, countrywide tuberculosis treatment programme or legal education classes.

Today, Aarong opens the doors to its flagship store, Bangladesh's biggest retail outlet, in Uttara. True to the Aarong tradition of continuously raising the bar, this store utilises state of the art layout and décor to create an unparalleled shopping experience. And while buying a sari from Aarong may still be a luxury for some of us, at least we can appreciate the fact that somewhere in Bangladesh, a woman travelled forty minutes on foot to put a hundred year-old kolka print on its aanchol. We will know that while one of Khodeza's women takes home some of the money that we pay at the counter, part of it also goes towards Shondhya's daughter's school books. As long as we can afford to keep buying Bangladeshi, as long as Aarong's business is booming, thousands of people will enjoy the luxuries of steady employment -- getting a decent pay on time, going home to healthy, educated children.

The next time we are at Aarong looking over their candles or cushion covers, we might stop to take pride in what is a truly remarkable Bangladeshi institution. Buying something at Aarong might be a better shopping experience knowing that it is a luxury we can afford to feel good about.

Q. Pushpita Alam

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Fight Against Tuberculosis: The Afghan Front!

Tuberculosis is a disease we have known for centuries and it is completely preventable. Yet millions today suffer from it and we still see the faces of misery and pain. Even today, tuberculosis (TB) is the cause of many deaths. Prevalent myths that TB is not curable and death is inevitable still exist. In Afghanistan, the situation has been grave. Decades of human conflict and displacement has had a severe impact on the health sector of Afghanistan. High vulnerability to natural disaster, limited safe water supply, poor standards of hygiene and sanitation and restricted access to health care for women have become important features of the health situation in Afghanistan, exacerbated by difficulties of geographic access.

I was reading about a story of a 14 year old Afghan girl called Fazilla. She had started complaining about pain in her legs. The doctors said it was rheumatoid arthritis. They gave her medicine but it didn’t help her pain. There were more tests and more prescriptions. X rays revealed a serious scoliosis of the spine. After a point she was unable to sit properly. In 2006, she was finally diagnosed with a very rare form of tuberculosis, known as tubercular spondylitis. She was put on standard treatment for tuberculosis. After nine months of treatment she was tested again, this time results were negative for tuberculosis. Unfortunately, her spine was permanently damaged. But she is still alive. On the downside, she has lost three years of schooling and her good health. It is sad as we know if she was diagnosed on time, all of this was preventable.

Afghanistan is one of the 22 high TB burden countries, and TB is a major public health problem. As per the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, each year 37,313 to 42,593 new cases of TB occur in Afghanistan, with more than 10,000 people dying from TB each year. Furthermore, over 32,500 TB cases are women, a highly vulnerable group, which accounts for 65% of all cases of TB presenting to public clinics.

To fight tuberculosis BRAC piloted community based Directly Observed Treatment Short Course (DOTS) in Jabul Siraj district of Parwan province in Afghanistan in 2004. The pilot provided us with the inspiration. The case detection rate in the district improved from 18% to 69%. We scaled up our intervention to five provinces in 2006 and 9 provinces in 2007, with the technical and financial support of The Union (International Union of Tuberculosis and Control programme).

Today the detection trend in Afghanistan has greatly improved. Our advocacy and social mobilisation through awareness campaigns in television, radio, and billboards has raised social awareness on TB. We trained 6,700 community health promoters to implement TB DOTS. Training for service providers and private practitioners proved a success. BRAC has also ensured procurement and regular supply of Anti-TB drugs through Global Drug Facility (GDF). We have worked closely and organised meetings with BPHS implementers and NTP personnel at the provincial, national and regional level to strengthen our stance against TB.

Today we have renewed hope as TB is being defeated. The World Health Organisation introduced DOTS to treat TB in 1993. In 2001 there were only 36 health facilities applying DOTS and now in 2011, there are 582.

We saw Fazilla suffer because she was not detected in time. Today, we can talk about a better, brighter situation. The latest statistics by WHO published in 2011 are encouraging. In 2001, the detection rate of TB was only 26%. After the hard work of many, today 66% of TB cases are detected, and more than 85% of the cases are treated successfully. The graph below shows the progress in the last ten years. Only 34% TB cases remain undetected now compared to 74% in 2010.

We can draw inspiration over the results of the last ten years and move forward to successfully detect and treat all tuberculosis patients in the future. We can hope for a world free of the misery and pain caused by tuberculosis to the countless Fazillas and see healthy smiles on their faces in the near future.

(Story of Fazilla: From the book Tuberculosis: Voices of the Unheard by the WHO in 2008)

- Faisal Rezwan, BRAC Communications

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Health Promoter & Entrepreneur in Sierra Leone


I met Margaret on my most recent trip to West Africa. Margaret is a BRAC Sierra Leone health promoter in Grassfield, south-east of central Freetown. In only three months after joining, she is already very active in health education in her community. "I first learned about many health topics from BRAC - importance of breast feeding, TB, Malaria, personal hygiene, safe drinking water, and more." She is noticing changes in the level of cleanliness and hygiene maintained by members in the community that she covers.

We ask Margaret "can you treat someone with Malaria?" She replies "There are 2 types of malaria. For complicated malaria, the patient must be treated at the hospital. If I diagnose less complicated malaria, I use knowledge learned from BRAC and treat that person with medicine."

As we prepare to bid goodbye to Margaret, it starts to rain very heavily. Margaret offered us shelter in her front porch, covered by the tin roof of her small house. We noticed a large horizontal refrigerator in the living room behind us. It took up more than half of the space in her living room. "Why do you have such a large refrigerator?", we ask. To our pleasant surprise, we learn "I started a business of selling cold, packaged water. I bought this refrigerator with a [$170] microloan from BRAC."

Margaret is a microloan client and a microfranchisor. With a BRAC loan she started her business of selling packaged water and cooking charcoal. As a BRAC health promoter, she earns additional income from selling health commodities to the 200+ households she covers. Last but not least as a health promoter, she educates her community on every pressing health issue in Sierra Leone that she learned about from BRAC, planting the seeds for awareness, treatment, and prevention. Margaret is an example of the multiplier-effect at work from BRAC's holistic approach to poverty alleviation.


-Malik Rashid

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Bangladeshi Rural Artisans adopt Japanese 5S Methodology




Last week at a BRAC rural manufacturing facility located in Manikganj, Bangladesh, which is two hours north of Dhaka, artisans were introduced to the Japanese 5S methodology. The artisans are part of the Ayesha Abed Foundation (AAF), Aarong’s manufacturing arm. Aarong is a BRAC social enterprise that has enabled livelihood opportunities for 65,000 artisans across rural Bangladesh.

The 5S methodology is part of a Japanese system of continuous improvement called Kaizan. The five components of 5S are: Sort, Set in order, Shine, Standardize and Sustain. The 5S method is instrumental in workspace organization ultimately leading to a clean, safe and an efficient work environment. Large manufacturing companies such as Boeing and GE have used Kaizan successfully to enhance productivity. In an effort to build the individual capacity of each artisan, 5S is among a series of initiatives that the artisans will be introduced to in coming months.

Aided by external consultants, the Aarong and AAF management prepared for the program launch by creating power-point presentations, posters and various visual aids. The launch included an interactive presentation through which the 5S methodology was communicated to a group of 52 artisans, mostly women. The consultants and management will work with the artisans at the Manikganj facility over the next few months, ensuring that they can leverage the 5S techniques and sustain them in the long-term.

Tamara Abed, Aarong’s director, is a proponent of innovation in craft design and production techniques. She participated in the presentation explaining the merits of the 5S methodology, and how it can aid in enhancing productivity, ultimately helping the artisans to increase their income.

-Richa Agarwal

Monday, March 21, 2011

PRESS RELEASE: Libyan unrest displaces thousands of Bangladeshi migrant workers; BRAC appeals for humanitarian response

NEW YORK – March 18, 2011 – BRAC, the world’s largest development organization, has issued an urgent call for support to assist the thousands of Bangladeshis displaced from Libya due to the ongoing violence there. Donations will enable BRAC to provide supplemental emergency assistance to the returning migrants and their families, who often have no money, and now have no livelihood.

Nearly 70,000 Bangladeshi nationals were residing in Libya as migrant workers when violence erupted last month. As the conflict intensified, thousands fled to neighboring countries, where they face congested borders and overcrowded refugee camps and airports. Thus far, only 20,000 migrants have been able to return to Bangladesh – most of them heavily in debt and with no ready means of earning a living.

Founded in 1972 in Bangladesh by Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, BRAC has been working to prevent trafficking and human rights abuses through its Safe Migration Facilitation Center. Now, at the request of the Government of Bangladesh and in partnership with the International Organization for Migration, BRAC is providing emergency food and creating a database of the returning migrant workers to link them with immediate relief and link them to future opportunities to start generating income for themselves and their families.

“Donor support is urgently needed for these displaced migrant workers. The trauma they have experienced in the last few weeks may only be the beginning for some who face financial quicksand upon their return. Following the Government’s lead, BRAC is supporting people during this challenging time, providing emergency relief now, and providing them with opportunities to earn a living upon their return to Bangladesh, cushioning the inevitable challenges they will face,” says Susan Davis, President & CEO of BRAC USA. She added that “100% of all donations will go directly to support these migrant workers.”

The unintended consequences of this unfolding tragedy in Libya underscore the evacuees’ desperation and the severe poverty they may face upon their return to Bangladesh; many have sold their homes and mortgaged their own lives for the opportunity to provide for their families by earning income overseas.

Supporters can donate on our website at http://donate.bracusa.org or text “BRAC” to 20222 to donate $10 to help Bangladeshi migrant workers fleeing violence in Libya*.

“Our struggle will not make it into the history books. We have to survive, somehow,” says Abdul Malek, a migrant worker attempting to return to Bangladesh. “Give us some work, so we can survive.”

Through Facebook and other means, Bangladeshis are volunteering and donating to assist these people who are important sources of remittances and the country’s economic strength. BRAC appeals for solidarity from all people to support those caught in Libya’s political struggle for democracy. “This is an opportunity for each person to make a difference and do something to help another in their hour of need,” added Ms. Davis.

About BRAC

BRAC is a global development organization dedicated to alleviating poverty by empowering the poor to bring about change in their own lives. BRAC’s holistic approach aims to achieve large scale, positive changes through economic and social programs that enable women and men to realize their potential. BRAC was launched in Bangladesh in 1972 and today reaches more than 138 million people in Africa and Asia through its programs that address poverty by providing micro-loans, self-employment opportunities, health services, education and legal and human rights services.

*A one-time donation of $10.00 will be added to your mobile phone bill or deducted from your prepaid balance. All charges are billed by and payable to your mobile service provider. Service is available on most carriers. Donations are collected for the benefit of BRAC USA, Inc. by the Mobile Giving Foundation and subject to the terms found at www.hmgf.org/t. Messaging & Data Rates May Apply. All donations must be authorized by the account holder. You can unsubscribe at any time by texting STOP to short code 20222; text HELP to 20222 for help.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

BRAC Girls Clubs in Tanzania celebrate International Women's Day


On March 8th, women and men across the world celebrated International Women’s Day with marches of solidarity in support of women and girls. BRAC Tanzania staff and girls’ clubs joined the global celebration with a rally, a discussion of women’s issues, and a culture festival. BRAC Tanzania’s participation recognizes of the achievements of the girls in the Empowerment and Livelihoods for Adolescents (ELA) program.

The ELA program, which began in 2008, provides girls aged 13 – 20 with safe spaces to socialize and participate in group activities as well as a forum for talking about issues in their lives. Many of the older members who are out of school have taken training in income generating skills. This program is designed to financially and socially empower disadvantaged girls by combining life skill training, age-appropriate microfinance and girls clubs.

BRAC has 100 of such girls clubs across Tanzania to date. You can create more of these girls clubs in Tanzania by supporting this effort on Global Giving or learn more about the program by visiting our website.

BRAC USA joined the Women for Women International march, “Join me on the bridge” to mark the occasion in New York as well! View photos of the march across the Brooklyn Bridge here.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Bangladeshi workers from Libya return home to an uncertain future

Scene at the Hazrat Shahajalal International Airport in Dhaka

“Apney to okhon ashchen, amra bhor choy-ta theika boisha asi, okhono ailo na” (You’ve just come, but we have been waiting here since 6 am and he still hasn’t come) said Polash’s mother. It was almost 10.30 and I was waiting for half an hour outside the airport for my colleague to bring an entry pass. I didn’t know the lady sitting on the floor with two small children - Polash’s mother and his siblings – who came and waited there everyday from 6 am till the last flight arrived in the hopes of seeing her son. She last spoke to him about a week ago, when he said he was waiting for his turn to get a seat on the much coveted charter flights being arranged for the Bangladeshi workers living in UNHCR refugee camps at the Tunisian border. She said to me, “everyday, before leaving for the airport from my home in Dholai khal, I cook Palash’s favourite dishes because he is only getting a single meal each day at the camps”. There was little I could say to comfort her, except tell her to hold on to her faith and patience. I gave her the phone numbers of my colleagues who were working round the clock inside the airport.

Walking into the airport was an other-worldly experience for me. A large area had been cordoned off and at a glance it seemed a thousand men were waiting in long queues to get registered, collect transport fare from the government and the food packet from BRAC with the help of the Bangladeshi Bureau of Manpower Employment and Training (BMET), BRAC and IOM volunteers. I was reminded of previous flights I’d taken to Dhaka from Middle-Eastern countries, which were always full of groups of lively Bangladeshi workers coming home on holidays. This same airport would be filled with their hustle-bustle, loud phone conversations to happy relatives and lively chattering and laughter. But today, the scene was so very different – even with so many more of them gathered together, the atmosphere was lifeless. A flight with a few hundred workers had arrived just before I reached, and the volunteers were busy directing the new arrivals into queues so the formalities could be completed quickly and they could start off for their journey – towards an uncertain future.

I went there to observe the situation and to talk to a few passengers, try to find out what they required so that we could develop interventions for their rehabilitation. But I didn’t know where to begin. I was so lost. How do I start? The crowd was widely varied – young and old, frail and strong, quiet and outspoken. But they all shared a tired, dejected and broken disposition.

I approached three little girls, the only females visible in the crowd, sitting and looking happy. They said they had come from Libya with their parents. I then moved to talk to a young man on his way to the immigration counter. When I asked him where he was headed, he replied “Gaibandha. Kintu ki korum bari giya?” (Gaibandha district. But what will I do at home?) I didn’t have an answer. He didn’t know how to face his family – he still owed 140,000 takas of the money he borrowed to pay for his travel to Libya and the local moneylenders were already harassing his parents for the money. One hundred twenty thousand, forty thousand or eighty thousand – it was the same story all around. It took about 250,000 takas for the workers to get to Libya. Selling assets or borrowing from local moneylenders were the only ways for these skilled and semi-skilled workers to migrate. Most people I talked to had left a little over a year ago and the majority had not received their full salaries as yet. Many came back with only the shirt on their backs, as their belongings were lost while crossing the border. Now the so called “promised land” had not only taken away their dream of a better life but back where they had started, in Bangladesh, jobless, landless and in a sea of debt.

They had suffered for several weeks, trying to escape the violence with their lives, struggling in overcrowded camps for days with no food or water. But on the faces of the hundreds of workers at the Dhaka airport who had supposedly escaped death and endured weeks of near-starvation, there was only a numb weariness. They had all gotten used to being victimized. First, by the corrupt system that exploited their poverty and their struggle to leave in search of a future their country did not provide. Then, by the gluttonous companies that thrived unchecked on their cheap sweat. And now, thrice the victims, soon to be lost amidst the more expedient casualties of political warfare.

Abdul Malek is one of the several thousands workers brought back this week. He had been working in Libya as a cook for barely 22 months before the conflict began. All the big bosses and the company foremen escaped with their families, leaving Malek behind without his passport and papers and without paying him 4 months salary. After several days of hiding from the gunfire, with food supplies dwindling, Malek realized he needed to escape. He and his fellow Bangladeshi workers sold their phones, their clothes and anything else they had on them that was of value to buy transit to the Egyptian border. They were among thousands of refugee who were fleeing the escalating violence and spent 17 gruelling days in the dessert with very little food or water. Twenty two months ago, Abdul Malek left his wife, four sons and daughter and his aging parents to travel to Libya on borrowed funds of 250,000 Taka. Four months behind on his salary, he is far from paying back his debt. With not a cent to his name, he is forced to take the money being given out by the government at the airport just to pay for the bus ride back to his home in Noakhali. What now? “Our struggle will not make it into the history books. We have to survive, somehow”, he says, “give us some work, so we can survive.”

[Interviewed by Shaikh Mojibul Huq, BRAC Advocacy]

For more information on BRAC's campaign click here

-Tasfiyah Jalil, BRAC Communications

Building local momentum to focus on maternal and child health

GAIN – the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition – organised a partnership discussion "Innovative Partnerships to Improve Maternal and Child Nutrition in Bangladesh" on 13th February 2011 in Dhaka. The conference was held to fight against maternal and child mal-nutrition by working together BRAC and GAIN aim to use their partnership to "fight against maternal and child mal- nutrition" (Executive Director for Gain March Van Ameringen). The discussion was attended by representative of various government ministries, international organizations, NGOs and educational institutions. Its focus was on a local initiative- "Pustikona" a vitamin & mineral product produced by Renata Ltd. and distributed by BRAC, which enabled more than 50% children of Bangladesh to access vital nutrition supplements. BRAC is covering all 64 districts in Bangladesh with its network of 80,000 health volunteers and 7,978 health workers, who are working tirelessly to improve Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health by distribution holistic health care services.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

109 Members of BRAC Adolescent Groups Win Youth Elections in Uganda


While the world has been closely watching the Ugandan Elections, there has been another democratic process unfolding in Uganda that BRAC has been monitoring. Youth, who make up around 22 percent of Uganda’s population, have also been electing their representatives in all levels of Government. This process started off in December 2010 with the election of village youth committees and will conclude with the youth parliamentary elections in March 2011.

BRAC has been closely following the engagement of adolescent club members in these elections. These adolescent clubs are the very core of the Empowerment and Livelihoods for Adolescent (ELA) programme implemented by BRAC. There are currently 690 clubs set up by the programme across Uganda. Through these clubs, BRAC is working with adolescent girls to create a safe environment, where they can develop skills to become empowered, confident and self-reliant individuals who are active agents of social change in their families and communities.

In December, a total of 180 club members ran and 109 members were successfully elected to represent the voice of youth at various positions in the village level committees. The posts that they for which they were elected includes Chairperson, Vice chairperson, Treasurer, General Secretary, Secretary for Finance, Secretary for Labour, Secretary for Female and Youth Affairs, Secretary for Students’ Affairs, Secretary for Sports and Culture, Publicity Secretary, Representative for the Disabled and Representative for NGOs. Some club members also ran at the recently organised sub-county and parish level elections and 19 of them have been elected.

“I am very excited to have joined politics. I have always wanted to be a leader. This is a great opportunity for me. I joined these elections because I wanted to be a voice for my fellow girls in the youth committee. Besides I want to be an example to all girls, especially club members, in my village.”

This was the view of 22 year old Nankyanzi Agnes, from Miti adolescent club in West Uganda who has been a Mentor for the club for nearly 3 years. She was elected as Secretary Finance at village level, and then elected as Secretary for Female and Youth at sub county level. Agnes learned of the elections through the ELA programme.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Celebrating International Women's Day


On Tuesday, March 8, the BRAC USA team joined thousands of people in a march across the Brooklyn Bridge as a part of the global "Join us on the bridge" solidarity campaign on the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day. The walk across the Brooklyn Bridge, co-sponsored by Google and Women for Women International drew an energetic crowd of women and men alike. The BRAC USA magenta t-shirts also drew a great deal of attention. The beautiful weather and the shining smiles of attendees made the day a truly special occasion.

Attendees were there to celebrate the achievements of women globally over the last decade but were also cognizant of the task that lies ahead in achieving true gender equality. In her speech, Zainab Salbi, founder of Women for Women International emphasized that equality will not be achieved unless women are brought to the negotiating table. The walk concluded in Manhattan with a celebratory party with music and dancing in City Hall Park. Speeches were made by many notable figures who support women's efforts in the developing world such as Russel Simmons and Lauren Bush.

As Zainab Salbi, said, "Let's make this century for women!"

Friday, March 11, 2011

BRAC USA President & CEO reviews her recent trip to Haiti

I must commend BRAC Haiti for its steady progress and accomplishments. This is certainly one of - or perhaps our most - challenging operating environments and I think the BRAC team in Haiti is finding creative ways to overcome those challenges.

I think the Limb and Brace Center has made excellent strides in serving 237 people with top quality service and building a cohesive team who see a new career in this highly specialized field. I think we have the makings of a strong group of Haitians that can take "ownership" of the Center and be a stellar example to other Haitians. The staff spoke beautifully about their work, and I hope they can inspire other Haitians to pursue careers of service to people.

It is heartening to see so many of our patients making referrals to our center as well as Haiti's top orthopedic surgeons. We have developed a good reputation and this can open to doors to other areas in health sector. There is much to do.

The other programs have also gained traction. The permanent housing program has now got real momentum with 79 homes built/underway and over 160 people trained to construct them. They will move much faster now. Haven, an Irish NGO is now trying to learn from our model which is lower cost ($3,500 for a 28.5 sq meter total home) vs theirs at $4,200 home. This is still a huge problem in Haiti - a million people are still in tents - so it's important that we keep forgin ahead and making progress on this front.

Agriculture has a firm base. The team set up 150 micronurseries and 60 vegetable farmers and now 400 livelihood enterprises will be created in partnership with Caritas Austria.

The Education program has received support from Digicel for a pilot school and livelihood training program. Hopefully this pilot will serve as a model for the program to grow and scale up.

I left Haiti with a feeling of hope, that we can overcome the challenges and build back better.

Best wishes,
Susan Davis

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Updated: See BRAC on Good Morning America on Saturday!

Saturday morning, Good Morning America will feature BRAC's partnership with Visionspring as part of ABC's year-long series on global public health, Be the Change: Save a Life. The segment will highlight how this innovative partnership is bringing the transformational power of affordable eyeglasses to poor communities across Bangladesh. With an inexpensive pair of eyeglasses, an individual can restore her sight, her ability to work and lead a dignified, independent life.

BRAC and VisionSpring have partnered to train and equip BRAC's health workers in Bangladesh to sell VisionSpring's eye care products in their communities. VisionSpring is an international non-profit that delivers affordable, high-quality eyeglasses to low-income individuals in the developing world.

In January of 2009, BRAC and VisionSpring agreed to formally scale this program throughout BRAC's network of Shastho Shebikas, or community health workers. In the coming years, all 80,000 of BRAC's Shastho Shebikas will be trained to distribute eyeglasses. Together VisionSpring and BRAC will sell millions of eyeglasses throughout Bangladesh - restoring the sight and thereby the productivity and independence of poor individuals across the country.

Tune in or set your DVR to Good Morning America on ABC on Saturday to watch the community health workers in action - and learn how you can get involved!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Courage in the Heart: The story of how women in rural Bangladesh are radically changing the fabric of their society

Photo by Annie Escobar


The below post was written by BRAC intern Annie Escobar and originally published on the NYU Reynolds Program Blog.


This past summer, as part of our Reynolds Program Internship program, Patricia Schneidewind (a fellow Reynolds scholar) and I traveled to Bangladesh for nine weeks to document BRAC, the world's largest development organization's social justice initiatives. Today, on the 100th anniversary of International Women's Day we are launching Courage in the Heart, an online storytelling platform featuring the stories of 12 women who are radically changing the consensus about the value of women by organizing to demand their rights. Visit the site here: www.brac.net/courageintheheart

Mussamat struck us with her beauty from the moment we saw her. She greeted us with a brilliant smile, making me second guess if she was the woman we would be interviewing. I didn't expect someone who had acid thrown on her face (by her husband after he insisted her family pay a higher dowry) to be so full of life. BRAC is now fighting her case in court to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Her interview was like many others. After convincing the inevitable crowd of interested neighbors to give us some space, we sat, just the three of us, in her courtyard. Ruhul, our good friend and translator, gave basic instructions about what our project was and then basically just told her to talk and then left (the women felt more at ease without the male presence).

Mussamat began speaking. She spoke quietly at first and then her voice developed a strength and a rhythm. For long moments she stared into the distance, letting a loud heaviness settle into the spaces between her words. My limited Bangla meant that I could only understand bits and pieces, but it was as if my body could feel it all. So much is communicated through the face, the voice, and the breath. My heart felt compressed and breathing became difficult. When she was finally done, half an hour later, we quietly shut the camera off and all held each other and cried. And then, in a moment that is still profoundly humbling, Mussamat took her scarf and slowly, gently wiped the tears and sweat from my face. It is a moment I draw strength from every day.

Suddenly, a feeling of lightness came over us and we all started cracking up. We laughed and danced in that courtyard until it was time to leave.

The last image of her in my mind is of her beaming, holding her daughter, sending us away with a giant wave. As we drove away, I asked Ruhul if he heard her say how old she was.

"22," he answered.

The same age as Patricia.

When we left her house that day I made myself a promise. That I would make sure that we were not the only ones carrying that testimony.

To me, our experience in Bangladesh was a testament to the power of solidarity and connectivity. With the help of the BRAC staff and Ruhul, we approached these women and incredibly, they let us into their lives and revealed with intimacy some of their most painful and proud moments. The compassion we tried to bring to our interviews hopefully contributed to the trust with which they revealed their stories, but I also think it was something else too. The last words that Julekha, a mother in Mymensingh whose daughter was raped and murdered, said to us were, "When you leave, tell everyone that you heard my story. I have told you everything. I want to feel justice." Many of the women seemed to see the camera as an amplifying tool for their testimony and they spoke out to their imagined audience on the other side of the camera. Now that audience is there, listening.

Today, a year after launching this project, Mussamat's, Julekha's and others' stories will be passed on. My hope is that these women and their stories can give others the inspiration to believe in their own strength and courage to confront injustice.

Visit www.brac.net/courageintheheart to see these stories. Carry them with you. And please, share this project with anyone you can.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

BRAC celebrates International Women’s Day with launch of Courage in the Heart

BRAC joins the 100th anniversary celebration of International Women’s Day on March 8, 2011 with the launch of Courage in the Heart.

Courage in the Heart is an online storytelling platform that features the stories of women in rural Bangladesh who are changing the fabric of society by shifting the consensus about the role of women. Courage in the Heart creators Annie Escobar and Patricia Schneidewind traveled to Bangladesh in 2010 to profile the lives of women who have transformed their lives through BRAC’s pioneering programs.

According to co-creator Annie Escobar, this program “is meant to build solidarity in the fight for women’s empowerment. We hope to create ‘BRAC ambassadors’ by connecting people in the United States to BRAC’s work and further its effort to empower people in situations of poverty, illiteracy, disease and social injustice.”

This platform shares the accounts of women like Rupa, a young woman in Bangladesh, who after being widowed at fifteen changed her life by becoming a community advocate through BRAC’s Human Rights and Legal Services program. Rupa says of her transformation: "before, I was not aware of the legal system, but now I teach a lot of people about the law."

One additional story will be released each week for six weeks following the launch of Courage in the Heart.

Please join BRAC in celebrating women’s achievements on Tuesday, March 8th for International Women’s Day by visiting Courage in the Heart.

To learn more about Annie and Patricia’s project, read Annie’s blog post here.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Statement from BRAC on the recent controversy about Grameen Bank

On behalf of BRAC, I am expressing my concern at the recent development concerning Grameen Bank. Grameen Bank is an extremely important institution serving almost 8.3 million of Bangladesh’s most underserved population. The welfare of these borrowers and the continuous progress of the institution must be given the highest priority for any decision affecting the organization.

The role of microfinance in ensuring financial inclusion and improving people's lives are well documented. MFI organizations like Grameen Bank, BRAC and various local MFIs that are supported by PKSF have played a very important role in Bangladesh in ensuring this access to finance and enterprise development. BRAC has also played its role by providing additional service support in various other areas such as health, education and agricultural support services through a multi-pronged approach towards tackling poverty.

We must understand that microfinance institutions like Grameen Bank are different from traditional organizations. A big capital of such organizations is the intrinsic community level trust that they have earned. This trust element must not be underestimated. If this trust is lost, then there may be delinquencies, intentional refusal to repay loans or large scale withdrawal of savings by the members -- in effect potentially bringing the organization’s future in jeopardy.

A sudden exit of the founder and the managing director of Grameen Bank and a legal battle between the board and the government may potentially cause a loss of confidence among its borrowers putting the organization’s future in doubt. For the sake of the millions of its members, we must take utmost care in not letting this happen. A carefully planned succession for Dr. Yunus can help a smooth transition and give the organization the stability that it needs to ensure the welfare of its members.

We hope that for any steps concerning Dr. Yunus or Grameen Bank due process will be followed -- keeping in mind the integrity of the institution concerned and also how lack of due process may affect the reputation of our country globally.

We must remember that development organizations play a complimentary and supportive role to the Government in national development. Recent dramatic decline on maternal mortality rate is a great example where such complimentary work can prove tremendously beneficial for the entire country and in effect globally improving the image of the country. Government and the NGOs must continue to work together to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) for which our Prime Minister recently got acclaimed internationally.

Sir Fazle Hasan Abed,
Chairperson,
BRAC

Friday, March 4, 2011

Celebrate International Women's Day with BRAC

Next Tuesday, March 8th, is not only International Women's Day, but the 100th International Women's Day!

So come celebrate BRAC's 39 years of giving women the tools to be agents of change in their own lives and the lives of their families and communities.

If you're in New York, come join the BRAC USA staff as we walk across the Brooklyn Bridge in celebration of International Women's Day. Click here for details and to RSVP.

You can also hear BRAC USA President & CEO Susan Davis speak at a panel on working with women at the Asia Society. Click here for details and to RSVP.

If you're in London, join BRAC UK and the Diaspora Volunteering Alliance for an evening celebrating women in Volunteering, Science & Entrepreneurship. Click here for details and to RSVP.

If you're in Dhaka,
March 8th: You can join the BRAC staff in Bangladesh to participate in a discussion session hosted by the Government of Bangladesh.
Time: 9:00 am – 1:00 pm, Venue: Osmani Memorial.

You can also attend a cultural show with performances from our ADP (Adolescent Development Program) members in the evening at the plaza.
Time: 4:00 pm- 5:00 pm, Venue: BRAC Center

March 9th: You can join in to participate in a seminar hosted by the Government of Bangladesh.
Time: 9:00 am – 1:00 pm, Venue: BIAM (Bangladesh Institute of Administration & Management) Memorial

March 1st – 7th: BRAC wide petition signing to make amendments in the Bangladeshi law regarding gender inequality.
Venue: BRAC Center

March 16th: You can join in on an open discussion forum to talk about women’s issues.
Time: 10:00 am - 12:00 pm, Venue: BRAC Center

If you are in Islamabad, Join conference and discussions to highlight the importance of women's contribution in BRAC Pakistan's programs.
Time: 12:00 pm, Venue: Central Office

If you are in Kurunagala, Join BRAC staffs and members to celebrate women's day.
Time: 2.30pm, Venue: Area Office, Kurunagala

If you are in Sierra Leone, Join discussions session program.
Time: 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm, Venue: Coutry Office, Freetown

And from anywhere in the world, you can join our launch of Courage in the Heart, which features the stories of 12 women in rural Bangladesh who are, each in their own way, changing the very fabric of society by shifting the consensus about the role and power of women. Six women's stories will be released with the launch of the site on March 8th. Click here to RSVP and be the first to know when a new story is released.

We hope to see you (in person or online) on Tuesday!

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Recognition for BRAC on International Women’s Day

photo copyright www.womendeliver.org

BRAC staff also has another reason to celebrate tomorrow. BRAC Chairperson Sir Fazle Hasan Abed was named one of the hundred most inspiring people who have delivered for girls and women by lifting millions of them out of poverty in South Asia. The following came from the New York based organization women deliver.

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of International Women’s Day, Women Deliver is announcing the “Women Deliver 100,” their list of the hundred most inspiring people who have delivered for girls and women. This list recognizes women and men, both prominent and lesser known, who have committed themselves to improving the lives of girls and women around the world. Honorees derive from the fields of health, human rights, politics, economics, education, journalism, and philanthropy, and represent a great diversity of geographic and cultural backgrounds. The 100 honorees were selected from among hundreds of potentials and feature some of the most intrepid, committed, and results-driven people in the world.

You can see the complete list of people in this website

39 years of work in the health care by BRAC is paying off for the people. Two weeks ago, a national survey showed the dramatic fall in the maternal mortality rate in the last 9 years. You can see the detailed report here.

Also in the news,

Dr. Afsana speaking on Consultation Day at the NGO CSW, New York
Dr. Kaosar Afsana, Associate Director, Health Programme, BRAC has received the Woman of Distinction Award 2011 from the NGO Committee of the Status of Women, New York in recognition of her leadership in developing countries for empowering women through education, training, science and technology. This event took place in New York on February 22, 2011. Dr. Afsana was invited to deliver a speech as a guest speaker on February 21, 2011 at the NGO CSW, New York Consultation Day on using mobile technology for empowering women.

You can see more details on this innovation through this video here