Nicaragua Schools

AFF is proud to contribute to building and ongoing operations of schools around the world.  AFF partnered with other Non-Profits to build a school in central Nicaragua.  This school uses the curriculum of the Nicaraguan Department of Education and is operated through a partnership of US Non-Profits and National staff. Your financial support helps purchase books, supplies, and fund a school lunch program. Students receive lunch at school and for some this is the only meal of the day.

As part of the program, the basic health of the children is monitored by teachers and visiting health care professionals. Children learn about hygiene and how to maintain personal health. One hundred percent of your gift provides direct support for your student’s school and programs. The Nicaraguan school year begins in early February and ends in early December, so support for each student must be provided for the entire calendar year.

For more information about the student sponsorship program, please contact us.

Cambodia Flood Relief

Life is a struggle in Cambodia at the best of times.  During the dry season the land is scorched, and covered with cracks.  Dust fills the air, and water becomes scarce.  Women and children must carry water from ever more distant sources.  And then the rainy season comes.  The wells and ponds are replenished.  The rice fields are lush, and the gardens no longer need to be watered by hand

But life has played a cruel joke on Cambodia this year.  Too much rain, way too much rain – causing wide spread flooding, leaving desolation and destruction in its wake.   The goal of Cambodian Hope Organization (CHO) is to be self sustaining.  To raise the crops and live stock necessary to feed the children housed at Safe Haven, and perhaps sell the remaining.  For a year they have labored: to plant their first rice crop, to harvest their first garden, to raise their own fish, chicken and eggs.

But life has played a cruel joke on Cambodia this year.  Too much rain, way too much rain – causing wide spread flooding, leaving desolation and destruction in its wake.   The goal of Cambodian Hope Organization (CHO) is to be self sustaining.  To raise the crops and live stock necessary to feed the children housed at Safe Haven, and perhaps sell the remaining.  For a year they have labored: to plant their first rice crop, to harvest their first garden, to raise their own fish, chicken and eggs.

And now it is gone.  Washed away.  Can you help?  Would you help CHO feed these children until another crop can be planted?  Help them replace the seed?  Help them restock the fish pond and the chicken coop?

Morocco Cerebral Palsy Clinic

Since 2008, The American Friendship Foundation (AFF) has played a key role in the development of a physical therapy clinic in southern Morocco.  The AFF partners with an international humanitarian aid organization and a local association for the disabled to bring help to children who need it most.

Cerebral Palsy is a major cause of disability in the and thousands of children suffer from its effects. Cerebral Palsy describes a group of disorders that affect muscle movement control. Cerebral Palsy results from injuries to the child’s brain during birth, from a brain infection (bacterial meningitis, viral encephalitis) or from a head injury.

Many of these children come from the poorest segment of the population and have limited access to competent medical care.  Early intervention in the form of physical therapy can greatly improve the lives of these children, helping them to develop muscle movement, strength and motor skills in limbs that would otherwise atrophy. Since early 2008, the AFF has helped to provide physical therapy to over 100 children and practical help to their families twice weekly. Parents have been trained in the best care for their children and the kids are making great improvements. We thank you for your gifts towards this life changing project.

The Next Stage

The success of the project has caused the small location where the clinic began to become overcrowded and unsuitable for future growth.  At this moment over 30 children are on a waiting list and are unable to get treatment due to the limited space.  The local government has noticed how effective the clinic is in reaching the needs of the community.  The city council recently voted to give the clinic free use of new location in the center of town.  This new location will allow the clinic to serve every child that is currently on the waiting list.  It will be more accessible for the families who benefit from the clinic and it is also rent free.

Renovations will be required to turn the large space the clinic has been given into a Physical Therapy Center. Today, The American Friendship Foundation is seeking partners to cover the costs of the renovation of this new location. $15,000 is required to make renovations, purchase materials and expand the scope of the clinic.  The transformation will require structural, electrical and plumbing changes. Additional and updated equipment is also required as the clinic seeks to serve even more children and to meet more of their needs.

Strategy

AFF strategy is to sponsor a community clinic providing physical therapy, family training and support for these children and families. An integral part of the program is for the family to be educated on Cerebral Palsy. A family caregiver is required to attend all of the sessions, learn the basic exercises, and continue therapy at home. The clinic also provides employment for six Moroccan women who have been trained in physical therapy in a country where unemployment rates are high. An important component of this project is to work alongside a Moroccan association of handicapped people to assist their efforts in helping the Moroccan people.

Indore Leper Colony & Orphanage

In the Indore area of Central India there are 12 leper colonies.  The people living in these communities are sweet-spirited hard-working people that have been hit with a disease that is crippling physically and that has taken away their ability to live a normal community life.  Even though the disease is treatable and is in remission they are still shunned by society and their only options are to beg or farm to survive.

They have been granted the land that they live on by the government, but must actively maintain the land or lose it. Men, women, and  children work the fields. They are committed to not begging on the street so therefore they plant and harvest in order to eat and survive.

A tractor would greatly ease the back-breaking work of plowing and preparing the soil of the 12 colonies in the Indore area. It would provide the opportunity to grow more crops and to increase productivity in order to provide for the entire leper community.

The Kharwakala Children’s Home houses orphans, children of lepers and children at high risk from all around Indore.  It is a safe home for children who have no home to go to.  These children lack many things but one key item is that the boys dorm  needs a bathroom facility.

In conjunction with committed partners in India, you can help provide this tractor and build this bathroom. The estimated total for these projects is $25,000. Would you please consider contributing to these pressing needs?

Thank you for your support of these people school.  AFF’s commitment is that 100% of your gift will be sent to the Indore project.   AFF is 100% volunteer managed and run.

Afghan Water Well Project

In Afghanistan, two of the most deadly health risks are unsafe water and inadequate sanitation. Responding to these problems in 2002, AFF began a partnership with an Afghan NGO to construct wells with clean drinking water in many communities in Central Asia. AFF has helped establish water wells to 105 villages supporting over 150,000 people.

A staggering 25% of children die before reaching their 5th birthday, primarily from diarrhea and acute respiratory infections. Throughout Afghanistan, only 30% of the rural population has a sustainable supply of safe water, while just 29% have the dignity and privacy of a place to use the bathroom (UNICEF).

Giving Supports things like these:

  • $500/month – Hygiene Education Director to contextualize and prepare training materials, conduct trainings, and monitor the community trainers as they give lessons at the village level
  • $350/month – Lead Driller
  • $200/month – Driller Assistant
  • $200/month – Driver to transport staff, trainers, and drilling machine
  • $75-100/month for vehicle repairs because Afghanistan’s roads are particularly harsh

One-time giving supports these types of efforts:

  • $10,000 – Purchase of drilling machines and associated tools & replacement parts
  • $2000 – $4000 – Per borehole, covers the cost of drilling materials, cement pad and drainage channel, transport to and from the drilling sites, etc.
  • $1000 – Per training session in modules such as cable tool drilling and hand pump repair, covers cost of material prep, translation and duplication, meals and transport for trainees, oral translation
  • $100 – Each set of simple tools for repairing locally used hand pumps.