News and Events

News and events from our Travel Buddies!

  •  

     

    ORPHANAGE PROJECT

    A family can exist without children, but a child cannot exist without family. In the last two decades the population of Ecuador has doubled with growing incidences of abandoned children and teenage mothers in the streets or hospitals.
    The orphanage volunteer program is located in a safe area on the outskirts of Quito, more or less 30 minutes by bus from the capital’s old town or new town. Children end up at the orphanage because they come from drug-addicted families or parents who are in jail, or because they are orphans, street children or other children in a difficult situation.
    The orphanage provides foster children a home house run by a very small staff. The house has a children’s home, an elementary school, a bakery, a small carpentry area, a sewing room and a small farm land. With the exception of the school, all the activities had to be stopped during the crisis of 2001.
    For this critical project, there is a need for volunteers who are willing to share their efforts and love for children, and perhaps help these underprivileged children by teaching basic English or Spanish. (Depending on the school’s needs, other subjects such as computers and physical education may be taught.)
    Volunteers can also help by feeding, caring for, and simply playing with these very young children. Without this affordable orphanage project, many of these children would be abandoned and homeless. Volunteers also help in developing creative programs in art, music, dance, sports, etc. On some days, additional help with homework, sanitation, cooking, and administration might be requested.
    This project offers you a most wonderful and important volunteer opportunity: the chance to work in an orphanage and share your love, skills and efforts with poor children.

     

    YOUNG MOTHERS PROJECT

    Volunteers may help by caring for the children, as well as assisting with educational workshops for the young mothers, teaching English, and/or participating in recreational activities. Past workshop themes included gender communication, self-esteem and sex education. Volunteers are encouraged to teach workshops. This is a great opportunity to bring the required materials and show off your skills.Teen mothers come to the shelter for a place to stay and to receive food to eat. The purpose of the shelter is to give the mothers hope by teaching them about childcare and the realities of motherhood. The shelter also has a small workshop area where the mothers produce artisan products. The skills learned in the workshop help them to build skills for when they leave the shelter and the products created are sold to raise money for the upkeep and running of the home. This outstanding project focuses on a shelter that provides a home for as many of these girls and their unborn children as possible. In this shelter, these adolescents are shown a different life path; one that could lead to a more productive life than they would have ever known possible without this opportunity. It is not uncommon for such desperate girls to drift into the sex trade industry or the world of drug use; further blighting their lives and potential to contribute meaningfully to society. Many teen mothers abandon their babies due to lack of support, or simply because they are overwhelmed and under-prepared for the experience of motherhood.These abandoned pregnant, adolescent rape victims (adolescents), often only thirteen or fourteen years old, face a dismal future. They are without money, support, homes or any job prospects. Most worrying of all, these adolescents are carrying for an unborn baby, who will enter a world where education will not be available to them and their options for a self-sustainable life non-existent. One expects a reaction from the mother, but not the sort of reaction that is so common here in Ecuador. As a result of the rape, the mother feels shamed and often times jealous. It is likely that the mother will abandon her own daughter who is then shunned from the family. This leaves the daughter without the comfort of additional family members for should be there proving support.In Ecuador, it is not uncommon for women to raise 5 or more children, each with different biological fathers. A sad reality is that it is also common for the mother’s latest companion to rape the eldest daughter, often resulting in pregnancy.

     

    CHILD CARE PROJECT

    Other activities will also be required, such as organizing the classroom or any other special needs. The volunteers will also get involved with the children in various games and learning exercises to better allow them to develop their own physical health and attain their growth potential. Your work will be so much appreciated!Do you have a special skill? The children would be delighted if you would share your and knowledge and experience in music, dance, painting or any different activities that would help with their stimulation. Your volunteer work can help resolve some daily necessities. For example, you will take care of them with their first steps, and by playing, feeding, watching their social abilities and making handcrafts. Basically, you will help with your heart and your open arms.Other activities will also be required, such as organizing the classroom or any other special needs. The volunteers will also get involved with the children in various games and learning exercises to better allow them to develop their own physical health and attain their growth potential. Your work will be so much appreciated!Do you have a special skill? The children would be delighted if you would share your and knowledge and experience in music, dance, painting or any different activities that would help with their stimulation. Your volunteer work can help resolve some daily necessities. For example, you will take care of them with their first steps, and by playing, feeding, watching their social abilities and making handcrafts. Basically, you will help with your heart and your open arms.The child care is often equipped with minimal resources and is underfunded, understaffed, and poorly managed. As a result, the community loses confidence in child care centers, failing to make use of its resources. Mothers and children receiving services are provided with little or no attention and care.The child care school has been designed for children with lower economic resources, typically range in age from 1 year old to five years old. Many of the children come from very modest backgrounds where their family members are largely illiterate; the school is the only place they can be while their mothers work during the day, and also it is their only source of reliable nutrition throughout the day.This volunteer project is located in a child care school started primarily to serve single working mothers in a rural area. Here, mothers have been working together for their own benefit and for all the mothers who don't have a place where their children can stay while they are working.

     

    CHILDREN WITH SPECIAL NEEDS

    Eco Volunteer UP welcomes any volunteer that has skills suitable for such a project or wants to learn. But the skills need not be very advanced. For example, some experience in yoga would be very helpful. We are really looking for those with an interest in working with these kids. Volunteers interested in this project must especially have affection for being with these children. Although it is very upsetting to see the way these illnesses have affected such young lives, it is immensely rewarding to offer them care and attention and to see them respond to assistance and love. Volunteers will help the therapist in many areas. Additional work includes caring for the children through feeding, washing, playing and teaching.The school has around 30 children with 5 therapists. The children practice motor skills, receive physical, language, musical and psychological therapy, and one time per month hippo-therapy. The children also receive a snack and lunch. The voluntary project aims to help the children by offering them physical therapy, stimulation and care.This volunteer project is a school for children with few economic resources who are affected by cerebral palsy, or reduced motor or speech skills. Some of the children are not capable of controlling their bowels. The school is the only place where they can learn to adapt on their own because they are often kept at home without adequate care or attention, and in some cases they are even locked in their homes while their parents go to work.You love spending time with children...and would thoroughly enjoy giving disadvantaged children something back through your time and efforts. Put a smile on their faces.

     

    ELDERLY VOLUNTEER PROJECT

    If you would like to turn this volunteer experience into an internship, there are opportunities to work with doctors or nurses in fields such as occupational therapy or rehabilitation. Volunteers will help by reading, cooking and playing with them, doing exercises, taking a walk with them, massaging, helping to feed, teaching bakery, doing handcrafts, and more. Volunteers can also assist through their own research in areas like health and human science. The elderly come to the center to receive medical attention or occupational therapy, or simply to have a good time with other people and to make friends. The Elderly project is a center that gives care to elderly people, who have been abandoned, and are otherwise living and begging on the streets, often selling cigarettes and snacks. It is also for those who have special needs including mental problems. This volunteer project was created out of the need to assist the many poor elderly people who have become sick and abandoned by their own families who have neither the time nor the money to take care of them.

  • The Tandana Foundation

    NEWS RELEASE * For immediate release
    2933 Lower Bellbrook Rd., Spring Valley, OH, 45370

    Media Contact: Anna Taft, Executive Director, at 937-848-2993

     

    2012 Mali Volunteer Vacation a Success for The Tandana Foundation

     

    Spring Valley, Ohio - Eleven Tandana Foundation volunteers have returned home after spending two weeks in Mali, December 31st to January15th, participating in a successful Volunteer Vacation. They worked with local villagers on projects to improve community life while immersing themselves in the culture of Mali's Dogon Country, a designated UN world heritage site located near the country's eastern borders. The highlight of this trip was the time spent the villages of Sal-Dimi and Kansongho.

    "We formed friendships and became fully immersed in the culture of Mali's Dogon region while providing aid for truly sustainable projects; And most importantly we worked right alongside with the community in the finishing of such projects, truly a collective effort allowing us to weave lasting friendships. The appreciation and welcome we received from these communities was like none other I’ve ever experienced!" said volunteer Kelly McCosh.

    The volunteers spent two days in Kansongho helping the villagers with several projects. They watered the trees in the orchard and helped the villagers start to build the community’s first latrine. They also helped teach the village women how to spin cotton, using spinning wheels and carders that the volunteers brought with them.

    The volunteers participated in a soap making class, which was requested by the villagers and paid for by Tandana. They observed a literacy class for the village women, which took place in the cotton bank, which Tandana volunteers helped build on a previous Volunteer Vacation.

    After their time in Kansongho, the group stayed in Sal Dimi for five days and helped the villagers construct a grain bank. The grain bank allows the villagers to have access to their staple food millet year-round at an affordable price. The volunteers also visited the community school and inspected a well that will be repaired in the coming months.

    As well as working in Kansongho and Sal Dimi, the volunteers had many fun cultural experiences in the communities. They joined in Dogon style dancing in both villages. In Kansongho, the villagers organized a traditional Dogon wedding for two Tandana volunteers who were recently married. In Sal Dimi, the villagers created a play based on a Dogon wedding and allowed the volunteers to visit the mosque.

    Before and after their stays in Kansongho and Sal Dimi, the group toured Mali's rich countryside and saw some of its landmarks. They were invited to lunch in the capital city of Bamako by the American Ambassador to Mali, Mary Beth Leonard. They also visited the city of Djenne where they saw the world's largest brick mosque and learnt how to make their own mudcloths (bogolan). The trip was capped off with a two-day overnight pinasse trip up the Niger River.

    The next trip The Tandana Foundation is organizing is a Health Care Volunteer Vacation to Ecuador. The dates of this trip are March 10th to the 18th. The next Volunteer Vacation to Mali will be in January 2013.  For more information on any of the Foundation's sponsored trips or activities, please visit http://tandanafoundationorg/

    The Tandana Foundation is a non-profit organization that offers cross-cultural volunteer opportunities, scholarships, and funding for small community projects in highland Ecuador and Mali's Dogon Country.  Tandana coordinates service projects and volunteer vacations that offer visitors to Ecuador or Mali the unique opportunity to be guests rather than tourists, to form cross-cultural friendships, to experience a rich indigenous culture, and to make a difference in the lives of new friends.  Its scholarship program allows rural Ecuadorian students to continue their secondary education.  Its community projects help villagers in Mali and Ecuador realize their dreams of improving their communities

    For more information about The Tandana Foundation, please visit www.tandanafoundation.org.

    ###

  • In this Global PeaceMakers program, volunteers from the Dominican Republic, the US, and more will collaborate with local community members to build a Model Classroom in La Represa. Service For Peace has been working in the partner Community of Peace of La Represa since 2006. The community has grown so much over the last few years that they are in desperate need of a new schoolroom--and we will work with them to build it! Volunteers will live in a house within La Represa, giving the opportunity to really enjoy the local life!

    Global PeaceMakers projects bring together young adults from nations throughout the Americas and the world in an effort to offer models for intercultural cooperation through service.

    The GPM is a service-learning project with a special focus on building personal leadership and peacemaking skills through service. Also woven into the schedule is time to see and experience the local culture and beautiful landscapes of the Dominican Republic--a fascinating culture that is sure to leave a mark on your heart.

    Join us for a transformational experience in peacemaking, with participants from different cultures and traditions coming together as one family.

    Want to know more? Contact Janna at jgullery@serviceforpeace.org for more info!

    To apply online visit our project list.

  • PAW logo

     

    P.A.W. Animal Sanctuary cares for all animals in need. We primarily care for cats but our doors are open to all animals requiring care and assistance. Our mission is as follows:

    • - To advocate in the interest and welfare of animals for government policies and laws that will promote humane animal treatment, responsible animal care and ownership and investigate and enforce laws pertaining to animal cruelty thereby creating meaningful changes in communities.

    • - To educate the public regarding policies and laws and to help foster strong human-animal bonds that will result in less animal suffering, and a community where the relationship with animals is guided by compassion and respect for the intrinsic value of all animals.

    • - To protect all animals from neglect, abuse, and exploitation.

    • - To reduce the homeless stray animal population by:

      • - Conducting TNR (trap,neuter & return)

      • - Offering low or free sterilization

     

     

    Why not make your next vacation a worthy cause and come help the animals here at P.A.W. For a small program fee & 5 hours of volunteer work you will be provided with accomodations in our Jaguar Beach Cabana on the sleepy fishing village of Caye Caulker where you will enjoy excellent diving, snorkeling, alligator and manatee watching, plenty of sunshine, white sand and tranquility.

     

    To find our more, please contact pawanimalsanctuarybelize@yahoo.com

  • Luzmila in Canada

    Luz Mila Castro Velasquez, a 16 year old girl from Honduras, grew up surrounded by extreme poverty, still can't believe that dreams do come true. But I know from experience that there are always good people who can help make sure these wishes are fulfilled, as a Canadian family has recently done for Luz Mila.

    After nearly a year and a half, with the help of many close friends and colleagues who all wanted to see this amazing young girl's dream come true, Luz Mila arrived in Canada on December 3, 2010. Brought to Canada to continue her dream of attaining the best education she can, with the hope that with this, she could break the cycle of poverty she was born into. This is the story of a girl who has survived incredible hardships as a child and yet has always fought with determination to one day become a school teacher and help other kids just like her.
    We heard about his amazing experience by Daniel Collins, Executive Director of All Access Volunteers, a Canadian volunteer organization who work in partnership with many grassroots non-profit organizations throughout Latin America.
    Daniel wrote to me after arriving back in Canada with Luz Mila. He said, "I would like to share an inspiring story and
    incredible determination..." We called immediately to Vancouver to speak with him, eager to hear more of this incredible story. As excited as a proud child of a large
    achievement, he told us that everything began in 2007 when he traveled to Honduras as a volunteer teacher with the NGO 'Helping Honduras Kids'.
    "I'm not a teacher by trade, I majored in business management at Ryerson University in Toronto, but I loved working with children, "he explains.
    Upon arriving in Honduras in October of 2007, his passion was ignited quickly, and what originally was a four month committment, soon turned into a year working in a tiny one-room schoolhouse on the side of a mountain off Honduras' Caribbean north coast. 
    "There I met this girl, then 13 years old, named Luz Mila Castro Velasquez, who would soon change my life forever, "he says while maintaining the excitement in his
    voice.
    Luz lives in the mountain town of La Ceiba, an 8 hour drive from Tegucigalpa, the capital of the country. Collins says that the house of the family of Luz Mila is nestled on top of a mountain in the Pico Bonito mountain range. It is a modest wooden house with a tin roof, where she lives with her five brothers and sisters, her mother Lorerna and her father José.
    For years, the morning began at 3 am, when together with her brothers and sisters, they took care of morning chores before setting out, often barefoot, down a tiny dirt path carved out of the side of the jungle mountain at about 4:30. The trail would eventually lead them to the "Jungle School". Established in February of 2007 by 'Helping Honduras Kids' this school provides free education and a daily meal for more than 90 students each day. The students come from all over the impoverished mountain range. 
    Often on empty stomachs, they walked two hours to school, her younger brother with a gun his hands on alert for the possibility of encountering prowling jaguars in the early morning darkness.
    Collins says the only thing that ever stopped the Castro family from attending classes was a torential downpour during the rainy season, as the dusty jungle trail would become dangerous and impossible to traverseAt school, Collins was not only impressed by the persistence of Luz Mila, but also her leadership and the example she set for her younger classmates. She excelled in academics, and graduated at the top of her grade 6 class in 2009. Unable to attend highschool as it would add another hour to her already extreme two hour trek, she jumped right into teaching at the start of the following school year in February 2010. 

    Collins went on to describe; "The past academic year, from February to November 2010, Luz continued to go to school, but this time as "teacher" of the kindergarten class. I saw in her, an insatiable desire to learn and I knew that she understood that the education was the ticket to take her out of the poverty in which she was born."

    Becoming a teacher was not only something Luz Mila was passionate about, but it could be a way she could contribute financially to her family and help other children like her.

    Moved by his growing relationship with Luz Mila, her family and the rest of the children of the school, Collins returned to Honduras in 2009, this time with his girlfriend,
    Lisa, to work exclusively with Luz Mila.
    "After school, we taught her English. We would bring her to the city to stay with us on weekends to immerse her more in the language. We would watch television and go to the movies, all in English" says Collins.
    In April 2009 before they returned to Canada, Collins and his girlfriend decided to talk to Luz Mila and her parents to tell of their intent to help Luz Mila fulfill her dreams by assisting with her continuing education.
    "Our goal was to bring her to Canada to continue high school and eventually, college or university.

    He went on to state; "However we needed the blessing and consent from her parents."

    Thrilled at the thought their eldest child could have such an opportunity, they agreed without question.
    "There, began a process of almost two years to bring this wonderful girl to Canada, "says Daniel.
    And on December 3, 2010, that dream came true.
    Luz Mila has come to live with Gord and Cathy, the parents of Daniel Collins, who are now Luz Mila's legal guardians while she is her continuing her studies in Canada. They will serve as her host parents at their home in Binbrook, a small town near Hamilton, Ontario. Luz will soon be attending her Grade 8 class at St. Matthew's Catholic Elementary School in January, where she can begin to prepare to enter Bishop Ryan Catholic Secondary School, in Hamilton, where he will begin classes in grade 9 in September 2011.
     

    Luz arrived at the start of a Canadian winter, and didn't waste any time getting aquainted in the snow. She has now been to places like Niagara Falls and even attended a hockey game. So far she's adapted faster than expected to her new life here and has already made many friends. Although she accepts that she misses her family, especially her mother, with the assistance of Helping Honduras Kids, they will occasionally communicate via Skype.

    Luz Mila hopes to return to Honduras one day to be the teacher that guides other kids like her, in their quest for a life filled with opportunities. 
     

    You can help ...
    Access All Volunteers (AAV) volunteer placement organization, created with the vision of helping prospective volunteers find volunteer opportunities throughout Latin America. With partner organizations across Central & South America, AAV will assist individuals looking to volunteer an opportunity to do so within a multitude of areas. Projects include building, teaching, health care, environmental & wildlife conservation, community development and working with children.
     

    For more information about their projects and the progress of Luz Mila, contact the Director of AAV, Daniel Collins at: info@allaccessvolunteers.com or by calling 1-800-779-2528.

Visit D.C. With Volunteer Global!

Visit DC with Volunteer Global!

Volunteer and travel with us in our nation's capital this April—learn more and sign up here!

Connect With Us!

Volunteer Global on FacebookVolunteer Global on TwitterFollow us on YouTube!Volunteer Global on Flickr

Your Guide to Volunteer Travel

New eBook for sale! Download Your Guide to Volunteer Travel on Amazon or Smashwords today, only for $.99!

Your Guide to Volunteer Travel - new eBook by Volunteer Global

Amazon: Download here.

Smashwords: Download here for Nook, iPad, BlackBerry, or other device.

Connect with us!

Travel Insurance. Simple & Flexible.

Policy type