Sunday, July 12, 2009

WWM have a website!

Yes, we do. We'll no longer be posting to this blog - all new blog entries, and previous ones for that matter, can now be found at www.mywwm.org. Along with a host of other information, which we hope will stimulate some discussion and need for more information. We look forward to welcoming you to our new site and thank you for your continued interest and support. :)

Bronwyn, Rosanne & Kylie


WWM take on Chonburi Handicap Project


The Chonburi Handicap Project was started by Rosanne in January 2008 after the Governor of Chonburi Province in Thailand, where Rosanne lives, asked the public for assistance for the many handicapped people living in Chonburi who live in housing conditions unsuitable to their special requirements and who receive only B500 (USD15) per month to live on.

Working together with the Redemptorist Center of Pattaya (under the Father Ray Foundation) Rosanne has been able to visit the worst cases over the past year or more and help make a difference in the lives of 45 handicapped men, women and children by providing medical care, wheel chairs, hospital beds and building or repairing existing homes. Funds were raised with the help of local clubs, organisations and private citizen to make this possible.

The Chonburi Handicap Project has improved the lives of many Thai families who live in poverty and have the added responsibility of supporting a handicapped spouse, child or grandchild in our community. Women With a Mission is proud to continue the work of Rosanne and the Redemptorists and bring this project under our ‘umbrella of activities’.


Monday, July 6, 2009

Catching up on the blog, again...

Wednesday was our last day to visit some of the learning centres (schools) under the BMWEC umbrella. Our task - to talk to them about expansion of the mushroom house project and a visit in September this year with a group of Friends of WWM. Our first learning centre visit was to the big centre of 700 children, Hsa Thloo Lei. We needed to organise video footage for a short film about the school for a sponsor in the UK. We watched the filming of both the junior and senior assemblies. The little ones sang us some songs and we, of course, sang for them. Note to selves - need to improve our performance! We also saw the senior students harvesting mushrooms and working in the vegetable garden.

From here we headed off to Hway Ka Loke Learning Centre and boarding house, a half hour from Mae Sot, which in our notes from from 18 months ago was noted as having 130 children and now has over 320 students. We talked with the assistant headmaster who agreed the centre and boarding house would benefit greatly from a mushroom house, talked to the children and some volunteers who are helping at this centre and visited the boarding house where the little children were in 'kindergarten'. Carrying in tins of biscuits was a sure way to disrupt the proceedings... and we were glad we did. Little children dressed in rags, with no shoes, needed something special to brighten their day. Committing to revisit this school in September to spend some time and do a few activities, we left to then visit Nam Tok Learning Centre.

While the children of Nam Tok had a day off for parent teacher meetings, which were to include discussion of swine flu, we talked to the head master about locating a mushroom house here . He had already heard that his Centre may have one, so bingo... the location was already marked out! We enjoyed his enthusiasm and assured him we'll do our best to ensure a mushroom house is built at his school. He also shared with us other 'income generating projects' set up to assist the learning center, such as a leaf used for consumption of what we think is, or at least similar to, betel-nut. The leaf will be sold to the community to generate funds to subsidise the income for the Learning Center.

Continuing on to Future Garden Learning Center, a small center set in the middle of corn fields, we found them also keen to have a mushroon house to help feed the children their lunches as well as selling them to the local market to help add protein to their existing lunches. As an aside, the day of our visit the center had been without water for 10 days due to roadworks on the highway. It had got so bad - 10 days without water for cooking or bathing - that some of the teachers and older students had started to go and assist with the roadworks so they could be finished. Last word was the water was expected to be completed the next day...

Our final Learning Center visit was to Thoo Mwey Khee Boarding House and Learning Center, which has over 300 students - half of which are living at the boarding house. This Center, close to the border has leased land with the assistance of Global Neighbors Canada Inc to develop a farm to help support their food and running costs. Several different NGO's are working together to set up a sustainable Centre for educating and boarding migrant children whose parents are in extremely difficult circumstances. It is an amazing place, and the headmaster, Pway Doh, inspires us with his enthusiasm. A definate place for a mushroom house. Or two...

Thursday, July 2, 2009

A travelling day...


The post for our last day in Mae Sot is delayed. We have travelled today back to Bangkok... and sitting down to write the post, an excellent documentary on Burma is on TV5Monde. We hope some of you may have seen it... We will finish the blog on Monday.

Down to Umphang to Du Pla Ya Boarding House


This adventure started Monday with a phone call from our friend who lives in Mae Sot, who was coming with us to Umphium Refugee Camp. She phoned to say the transport was organised but not ideal. Immediate alert! OK to go, but we would have to take the local bus to come back. This is a one and half hour of narrow winding roads through a spectacular mountain range. So we sprang to action, hired a 4WD vehicle and called back to say situation sorted! Tuesday started at 7am to leave for the market to buy fruit, milk and noodles for the children we arrived at the appointed destination to meet with the rest of the gang going to the camp to find no-one there - OK, time to have breakfast afterall.

The scenery down to Umphium is breathtaking, although travel sick tabs are required if you suffer from travel sickness. We arrived at the camp, signed in and were waved through. As always seeing so many people living in such cramped conditions has a large impact, but the rainy season amplifies the effect. Built as temporary accommodation 20 years ago the camp is continually undergoing repair and renovation. Recently the rules have changed to allow these temporary bamboo shelters to have concrete floors and footings. We were pleasantly surprised to find the funds we had sent earlier in the year to repair the canteen roof had stretched to cover the cost of a concrete floor for the dining room and kitchen at Du Pla Ya.

We met with the boarding house leader - a wonderfully compassionate woman who also cares for 20 children in her own home within the camp. We were also joined by Room to Grow Foundation who also partially fund this boarding house and we discussed future plans for working together to provide full support for Du Pla Ya.