A Future Without Poverty

A Future Without Poverty Passionate about working to creating opportunities for a future without poverty? So are we. or to build opportunities of creating a sustainable social business.

We use a fundamental approach when working in impoverished communities. Projects are the result of identifying the true leadership in each community and building a shared vision for the future of that community. Through honest and candid conversations, our development specialists identify and review the community's needs and work with the residents to decide what will be done. The project is desig

ned with the community as we work together to estimate costs, time, and expectations. Through generous donations from individuals, corporations, foundations, and government grants, we are able to complete the project. FWOP volunteer teams also help raise the funds needed to cover the project costs through their networks. Projects are chosen on the basis of their ability to build basic infrastructure (such as water, electric, roads, waste water treatment, etc.) The intent here is for total local control and sustainability. To learn more, visit our webpage at www.fwop.org. Thank you.

Herbal garden installed in 2024 in Apango. Mx BY RESIDENT VOLUNTEERS  in innovation village.  Awarded status State of Ja...
01/19/2026

Herbal garden installed in 2024 in Apango. Mx BY RESIDENT VOLUNTEERS in innovation village. Awarded status State of Jalisco. First awardee in State.

Apango Trip
05/31/2024

Apango Trip

12/08/2023
The Indian veteran guy visiting now?  It is challenging how can we create the job!!?? One idea . . We can reuse bottles ...
01/22/2023

The Indian veteran guy visiting now?

It is challenging how can we create the job!!??
One idea . . We can reuse bottles and make building instead of Bricks. That can be small huts. These can be applicable at resort areas.
2-by other plastics materials can be produce and sell.
I think all these approaches are globally in use.
https://www.nepalitimes.com/here-now/refuse-recycle-reuse-repurpose-plastic/
https://www.nepalitimes.com/here-now/plastic-money/
https://kathmandupost.com/columns/2022/05/01/thinking-twice-about-single-use-plastics
https://www.gffhelps.org/plastic-waste-management-project-nepal/
On Fri, Jan 20, 2023, 6:20 PM Ingman, Stan wrote:

Waste Warrior of India . See video below of a recent FWOP presentation he made on his work

Binish Desai has several youtube presentations you can access easiloy

He is visiting Arise Veteran Foundation and FWOP in S. Illinois for 6 month – how to create jobs for veterans. Using waste.?

video1864699847.mp4

Plastic Waste Management Project – Nepal Image: Cleanup campaign on solid waste held on the 6th of June in honour of World Environment Day The Problem Kathmandu valley generates hundreds of tons of solid waste each day out of which more than 60% is organic, which could still be composted. But sinc...

12/13/2022

2023 Exciting Year for FWOP and our Partners!
DR Binish Desai, India
ARISE VETERAN FOUNDATION AND FWOP teamed up to bringing Dr Binish Desai from India -Waste Warrior of India and Recycle Man of India- to USA for three months. He brings a unique engineering mind for making products out of waste or invasive species in our environment. His work with village women to expand their income from waste is exciting to FWOP partners. He takes wastepaper with a binder to create lamps for homes in India. He and his wife have settled in southern Illinois to start the collaboration.
Apango Mexico.
Some ten years ago FWOP with graduate students from UNT visited for two days. Solar panel was installed in one home. Another family with a new baby received assistance. In 2021, Fernando Martinez, son of the Martinez family -long time FWOP support for some 25 years, adopted Apango as his college focus. In Summer of 2022, Arise, FWOP and local support in Mexico a summer program. To our surprise the Fernando ‘s team stimulated clean stoves to be built in three homes in Apango. Families built their stoves and the partnership funded the material costs ( $200 each). Plans are to keep adding more clean stoves as funds are available for the next 9 months. Some ninety home need clean stoves.
Hempwood.com – Murray, Kentucky
Under the bannerr for reducing ecological damage ARISE and FWOP are happy to have created a partnership with Hempwood company. As part of a plan to secure more employment to veterans with PTSD and addiction issue – Hempwood.com is excited for us to help his business expand and help him secure more employees. Dr. Desai has done similar work in India using Lantana, an invasive species. Industrial h**p can be grown in three to four months and then harvested. To avoid off gassing organic glues or binder are be used. Thus, economic development and ecology , or sustainability can blend together in these efforts.
Air Monitoring- Kenya.
As part of student education especially around the issues related to STEM education, FWOP created an initiative related to monitoring the quality of indoor and outdoor air. Our work in clean stoves was an early concern for clean air in homes . Recently, our friends in Kenya contacted us to assist them to expand their efforts. The Kenya Meteorological Society presented the results of monitoring air quality in 8 parts of Kenya- using monitors we sent them a year ago. We will send more monitors soon. In March they will host a conference on air quality, and FWOP and Sustainable Communities Review journal will be co-sponsors. We are encouraging them to consider a clean stove project in Kenya.
Mental Health First Aid
FWOP and ARISE have been concerned about mental health, drug overdoses, and su***de prevention among veterans, students, human trafficked victims and other for some years. Our partnership with Southwest Airlines and their free tickets allowed PTSD Veteran foundation in Houston to save some 150 veterans from su***de. In April we organized the conference on human trafficking at UNT.
Dr Jesmin some three years ago secured a su***de awareness grant from Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration (some $300,000) In 2022, she secured a second training award entitled Mental Health First Aid for some $600,000 for five years. Initial focus will be Texas. FWOP network is working to spread the word and secure location for the training to be done.

12/10/2022

Good Documentary Film on Netflix

WHO WE ARE BY JEFFERY ROBINSON

11/02/2022

FWOP had retreat at CATIE in 2017.

We learned about a diving training program in
SW Costa Rica and linked them to Ken Stewart of DWP in Nashville.

Below is a report on what happened - a DWP II in
Costa Rica was created. Some 18 from USA were in CR to do training this
Fall.
Diving With A Purpose International II, Costa Rica

By Melody Garrett and Erly Thornton DWP Lead Instructors,

After a two year hiatus, DWP International II, Costa Rica was off to an exciting start. Affectionately termed “DWP With A Twist“(Caribbean Twist), it did not disappoint. Travelling to the coastal town of Cahuita on the Caribbean Sea, our group of 18 participants came from across the US, Costa Rica, and South Africa.

After the introductory lectures and presentations, the group practiced their newly acquired documentation skills on the land created mock wreck site. We were often greeted by noisy howler monkeys and other wildlife who came in for a closer look.

Once the on-land training was complete, the group traveled to Puerto Viejo, a nearby town, to perform our maritime underwater training skills. The lovely Chino Beach was the perfect site for our daily shore dives to the underwater mock wreck site. The site and artifacts were prepared by our local friends and colleagues, Ambassadors of The Sea. With a water temperature of 82 degrees Fahrenheit, the students worked along the 100 foot baseline which bisected multiple artifact-like structures laying at a depth of about 20 feet. Once again, we were greeted by local marine life including rays, scorpionfish, squid, seahorses, and a family of flying gurnards.

Besides the three days of documentation and creating the composite site map, one morning, we had the honor and privilege to visit the wreckage site (final confirmation pending) of the 2 Danish shipwrecks which carried enslaved Africans from Ghana. Cannons, bricks, and anchors lay within the site. The ships are believed to be the Fredericus Quartus IV and the Christianus Quintus V.

The Heritage Awareness Diving Seminar (HADS) training was provided as well as a viewing of ‘Enslaved’ Episode 4 prior to the historical wreck site dive. Ambassadors of the Sea and the local community strive to preserve the culture and heritage around this site. Our entire DWP group was highly touched and expressed emotions after the dive. The rest of that day was free for participants to enjoy Cahuita. Bird watching tours, chocolate tours, hiking, and night tours through park were just some of the activities selected.

The Program culminated with graduation, a tasty local cuisine, and a photo contest between participants. New friendships and bonds were created that will last well beyond this week. Love that Caribbean Twist.

10/09/2022

Internet connectivity brings opportunity to remote region where violence once lived
Nicolás CongoteJun 6, 2022
Sylvie Duchamp
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For more than a quarter of a century, violence was nearly constant in Ovejas, Sucre, a small town in the foothills of the Montes de María in northern Colombia. The region was the scene of fierce clashes between armed groups and a mass exodus of its inhabitants. Their cultural richness, music and traditions stopped in time, along with the region’s development.
With the signing of a national peace agreement in 2016, the people began to return along with opportunities: previously impenetrable territories managed to connect again with government and private organizations, and Ovejas came out of isolation.
With Microsoft’s Airband Initiative, which aims to close the digital divide and bring high-speed internet connectivity to communities around the world, connectivity has arrived in this remote region of Colombia and opened a new world for hundreds of children and young people.
YouTube Video
“My children tell me they have learned so much from the internet, and that is so important,” said Wilmar Hernández, who shares the courtyard of his house with the San José de Almagra school. He makes a living growing to***co, and today his children teach him how to handle a cell phone.
“Now one’s children have all the possibilities,” he said.
Thanks to broadband access provided through the Airband initiative and Microsoft’s local broadcasting partner Telecaribe, 650 children from eight schools tucked among the dusty streets and green mountains around Ovejas have been able to experience internet connectivity for the first time. Colombia is one of the Latin American countries that has made the most progress with the Airband Initiative, which has connected more than 180 schools and community centers there.
To get to school, many children and young people living near Ovejas must walk kilometers under the sun and rain on difficult roads. Some children from the indigenous reserves arrive on donkeys’ backs, while others ride on the motorcycle of a neighbor traveling to town.
On a typical day they now arrive punctually to learn on the screens of cell phones that relatives or friends lend them. They read, review video sessions and download curriculum guides with the help of teachers such as Wílmer García, multigrade teacher of the San José de Almagra Educational Institution, headquarters of Escuela Nueva Activa Las Mercedes.
Research shows that that 77 million people living in rural Latin America lack internet connectivity with minimum quality standards. Microsoft’s Airband Initiative aims to change that. Photos by Nicolás Congote.
In a single classroom of about 40 square meters (430 square feet), García improvises virtual learning guides in which he shares material interactively. His goal is to inspire children and young people to finish school and then take the next step to professional, technical or technological university careers.
Forty minutes from there, at the El Camping Education Center, his colleague Julio Hernández teaches natural science lessons to a handful of children in a classroom that 20 years ago sheltered workers who built the road that connects Ovejas with Sincelejo, the capital of the Sucre Department.
“The internet connection…came when children needed it most, just in time for virtual classes,” said Hernández. “People came from other schools to connect, and it was also very useful for students of technical education programs. Here they had connectivity, a roof and furniture to do their projects and assignments and even to connect to their online classes.”
Connectivity with purpose
Research conducted by the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and Microsoft in 24 countries in Latin America indicates that 77 million people living in rural populations lack connectivity with minimum quality standards. This connectivity gap limits the social, economic and productive potential of the region.
In Colombia, the differences in broadband access between cities and the countryside remain stark, with 71% coverage for urban areas and only 37% for the countryside. Some remote areas are completely cut off from a world that is increasingly digital. According to the study conducted by IICA, Microsoft and the IDB, only 9.4% of households in rural areas have a desktop, laptop or tablet computer, which has hindered access to educational and professional opportunities in these communities.
García, who has been teaching in the region for 21 years, sees technology, but above all connectivity, as essential for young people to succeed today.
Colombia is one of the Latin American countries that has made the most progress with Microsoft’s Airband Initiative, which has connected more than 180 schools and community centers there. Photos by Nicolás Congote.
“For decades they were lagging behind in the countryside, dedicated exclusively to agriculture, and did not envision living here. Today this technology is giving them a new vision because they can go to study and, if they want, return to work in their field, but with better tools and knowledge,” he said.
Paula Imitola lives next to the El Camping Education Center, which she first attended when she was five years old. Today, she has a preschooler and fifth grader who study there. In addition to her children’s classes, Imitola found support to finish her studies there — with her computer in hand, she sat outside the school for two, three hours to do her work and take virtual classes.
‘When the internet came, many kids who are in college or high school, as well as parents and the community in general, benefited. Even people who are not part of the community came here to connect, to do errands, to make their resume, to look for a job,” she said.
The goal: connecting 2 million people in Colombia
Microsoft has committed about 10 billion Colombian pesos, roughly 2.5 million USD, to deploy its purposeful connectivity program in Colombia, where it aims to reach 2 million connected people by 2022. In addition to the project in Ovejas, the Airband program is collaborating with partners such as the Alcaraván Foundation (Ecopetrol and Sierra Col), the Lavazza Foundation (with ALO & Partners and Makaia), the National Federation of Coffee Growers and the Luker Foundation.
In addition to its educational component, Airband Colombia has projects in agriculture, health and local empowerment aimed at reactivating the economy and promoting rural development. “There are projects in the coffee, cocoa, livestock and cotton production chains where technology is helping people be more productive, so their costs are lower and they receive more money at the end of the day,” said Germán Otálora, Airband’s director for Latin America.
650 children from eight schools tucked among the dusty streets and green mountains around Ovejas have been able to experience internet connectivity for the first time. Photo by Nicolás Congote.
Telemedicine solutions have also enabled people living in remote areas to access essential medical services as well as specialists in dermatological, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases who have improved their quality of life — without having to journey several days to reach a doctor.
“Progress cannot leave anyone behind,” said Otálora. “Technology is only a means, the true end is to generate development, opportunities and well-being.”
Top image: Microsoft’s Airband Initiative has brought internet connectivity for the first time to Ovejas, Sucre, a small town in the foothills of the Montes de Maria in northern Colombia. Photo by Nicolás Congote

10/09/2022

07.10.2022
War. Day 226.
I write what I see.
***
hear me even when I'm silent
beside me even if I'm far away
when fate blows out my candle
my soul in the sky will fly as a stork
meanwhile, you just hug me
hold me softly like i am crystal
let there be no war for us for a moment
let the trees whisper about peace for us
Elena Tatyanchenko

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