Rwanda Radio Project for Orphans

Radios for Rwanda

Summary

Provide solar powered, wind up Lifeline radios to orphaned families in Rwanda. Radio programs help teach disease prevention, increasing crop yields, and advise children about their rights. progress reportread updates from the field

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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

As a result of 1994 genocide and deaths from disease, Rwanda has more than 101,000 child headed households. 75% of the heads of household are girls. Eriminata, who is now 20, has been looking after 6 younger siblings since she was 14. She has never attended school. The Lifeline radio is her constant companion and surrogate ‘teacher’. She has learned so much from the radio about child care, nutrition, HIV/AIDS and peace and reconciliation.

Activities

Robust Lifeline radios operate on solar or wind-up energy. Children don’t have to worry about buying toxic batteries. They can access educational broadcasts 24/7.Given its excellent sound quality, 40 children can listen at one time.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $16,965
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $15,534
Total Funding Goal: $32,500

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

Orphaned child heads of households are among the most isolated in the world. Community radio broadcasts help them to integrate with their villages and, most important, to develop vital life skills that can improve their quality of life.

Project Message

“The most important thing I had was my goat, but now it is my radio. I listen to the news to learn, since I cannot attend school.”
- Mukakrimba, Head of her household in Rwanda since age 10

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Bhavna Malkani
Fundraising and Communications Officer
Freeplay Foundation
71 Gloucester Place
London, W1U 8JW
United Kingdom
+44 (0)207 935 5350
Email:

Project Sponsor

Freeplay Foundation

Organization

Freeplay Foundation
71 Gloucester Place
London, United Kingdom W1U 8JW
United Kingdom
+ 44 (0) 207 935 53
http://www.freeplayfoundation.org

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in RwandaRwanda and can also be found under ChildrenChildren.

For more information about Rwanda, read the Human Development Report on Rwanda or the Wikipedia entry for Rwanda.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 10, 2009.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on June 15, 2004

Latest Update from the Field

A Sense of Hope - 11 Years Of Progress In Rwanda

By Bhavna Malkani - Digital Marketing and Fundraising Manager, November 10, 2009 04:02 PM

Bugasera is an area in Rwanda where prior to the genocide, the population was 64,000, after wards 2,000. We spoke with 30 (50/50 female/male) child heads of households who had received our Lifeline radios 6 months ago. Between the ages of 12 and 20, they had walked up to three hours to come.

Our first visit was in 1999, there were pockets of ‘feral’ children - hundreds of child-only families living in round mud and thatch houses. Children wore rags showing their distended stomachs, trying to eke out an existence by subsistence farming with little or no adult guidance. Water had to be collected from a swampy area at the bottom of the hill an hour’s walk away. It was impossible to imagine that children would have to live like this. Understandably, they seldom smiled or laughed.

We asked a series of questions to only girls and only boys and then together. We wanted to learn about what they listen to, what they’ve learned or do differently since having the Lifeline radio.

To sum up their comments, all said that they listen to ‘amakuru’ – the news. They want to know what is going on not just in Rwanda, but they’re curious about what is happening in frontier states and beyond. Girls cited programmes about health, AIDS, abuse, and women and children’s rights as most important.

Betty, 20, said that “they were learning from the radio that it was not acceptable to abuse girls and women and that they now had laws to protect them”. Before she had her radio, she didn’t know this. Given the rates of rape during the genocide and in the refugee camps, her comment is not surprising.

Boys also said that they want to listen to sports, to follow the national and international soccer teams and they liked agricultural and livestock programmes, citing Imbera Heza, a radio programme that the Freeplay Foundation funds on Radio Salus.

Today, thanks to your support, the children have a sense of hope – mainly from listening to President Kagame on the radio. They felt strongly that he had brought peace and stability to Rwanda and with that had comes development. They felt that before they had no future but now believe that he will lead them to a better one.

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