Education and Vocational Training

Even though Fiji is a beautiful country, poverty is widespread, particularly in rural regions.

S3906 Fiji Project Profile_EDITED-9Fiji might be a tropical paradise, but for many of the nation’s impoverished children, life is no holiday. The community where Crossroads’ partner NGO runs a school is facing deep poverty and high unemployment. This often leads to alcohol abuse, gambling and domestic violence, so that besides teaching their students, school staff often deal with problems the children bring into the classroom from home. The school addresses these problems by engaging not only the children but also their parents. Currently they are extending the school with five new classrooms, to ‘set an example for all Fiji schools’.

Potential impact:

  • Crossroads shipment will provide equipment to fill five new classrooms. Most of what they have requested is not available in Fiji or not affordable for the school
  • The new rooms will be used to train students in new topics, like Economics, digital design, wood and metalwork and much more

S3906 Fiji Project Profile_EDITED-4Laisani (left), a Form 3 student, was badly burnt when the kerosene stove exploded at her home. Her family was reluctant to seek medical help for her as the traditional medicine man threatened to put a curse on the family. Laisani badly needed medical treatment, so staff from the school visited Laisani and her parents. The care and concern of teachers and students gave Laisani the courage to continue with her studies despite the disfigurement from her injuries. She is now healing well.

 

 

 


S3906 Fiji Project Profile_EDITED-3Virisila (left) is a sensitive and compassionate student, gifted in music and dance, but violence at home made it hard for her to concentrate at school. Her father was constantly angry and wouldn’t give permission for her to take part in extra-school activities. She asked a teacher and volunteer to visit her family and talk to her father. When they came, Virisila’s father had the opportunity, for the first time ever, to tell his story in front of his family. He had experienced a lifetime of rejection, emotional deprivation and pain. The father asked how he could find peace and relief from the anger he felt. A time of family forgiveness and healing followed. Now, Virisila feels greater self-confidence, an increased ability to concentrate and a desire to succeed. The entire family is happier and healthier, thanks to reconciliation efforts of her school.

Shipment includes:

  • Computer equipment
  • Calculators, powder paint, cooking pots, acoustic guitars, school chairs and more

This shipment will include furniture and equipment to help give a rich, holistic education to vulnerable Fijian children.

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Fiji Snapshot

Population: around 850,000
Capital: Suva
Population living below the national poverty line of US$3.3 per day: 45%

Compared to its neighbours, Fiji is relatively well developed, though it is the 61st poorest country in the world, comparable with the Philippines.

Fiji consists of 332 islands, of which 110 are inhabited.

Fiji’s main island is known as Viti Levu and it is from this that the name “Fiji” is derived.

S3906 Fiji Project Profile_EDITED-11

It is a truth that we meet every year, but never get used to: that unexpected disaster which caught a population off guard. And there is a matching truth just as painful. While disasters strike rich and poor alike, it is the poor communities who are hardest hit, by a very wide margin. Both realities grieve us.  We can never get used to either.

That is why we resonate with those who say that, surely, we can keep our human race safer. We can increase early warning alerts, be better educated on what to do, construct safer buildings, locate populations more wisely. The list is massive. We can’t stop hazards threatening our planet but we can reduce the risk that they will turn into such damaging disasters.

After the tragic tsunamis that shocked the world on Boxing Day, in 2004, the United Nations gathered world leaders in Japan to lay out a framework that could help keep nations people safer and more resilient. That was in 2005. In 2015, that framework was reviewed, again in Japan, with the wisdom of ten years’ experience. Crossroads was invited to attend and to speak about the new Disaster X-perience we are developing, at the UN’s request.

It delights us to support any measure we can in order to make the world safer and its people less vulnerable.

Below: Malcolm and Sally Begbie, Crossroads’ directors, attending the World Conference for Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai, Japan, March 2015.

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It’s true what people say. Recovery from a disaster can take decades. Haiti is one example. Six years on from their devastating tragedy, in January 2009, and the country continues to battle to find full recovery. More than half the population lives below the poverty line and jobs are scarce. Yet fair trade is having impact. Creative Haitian artisans have found a way. To take used metal drums and recycle them into beautiful works of art. For many artisans with Comite Artisanal Haitien, the money they earn making these crafts is their sole income.

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When is a goat worth more than a goat? An odd question, perhaps, but for one group of women in South-Western China, the answer is empowering! In our fair trade marketplace, we sell handiwork made by these women and, with the profits returned, they have just bought new goats. The goats produce three very valuable things: milk for their families and for extra income, new baby goats that will spread the benefit to more in their community, and lastly…ahem…fertiliser! (The manure produced by their goats means they don’t need to buy fertiliser for their farms, cutting costs and makes their produce organic.) The goat project, kick-started by our ‘fair trade premium’ payment, began with a new goat for 10 families, but as they produce more baby goats, the project is expected to help 200 families in Yunnan! What a picture of life in abundance.

 

Picture credit: Anna Frodesiak (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

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Fair Taste’s products are a trip around the world in one little package, ending right here in Hong Kong! Take their cashew nut brittle: it’s cane sugar from Paraguay and cashew nuts from India, both with fair trade premiums helping invest back into the communities of producers. Food processing and packaging is then done in Hong Kong by women from low-income backgrounds working with Hong Kong social enterprise Ground Works.

Fair Taste’s coffee tells a similar story. Beans from Ethiopia, Indonesia and Nicaragua, from farmers paid fairly, are brought to Hong Kong and roasted locally. It’s this coffee that was we have been selling through Global Handicrafts’ since we opened in 2005, and we’re still selling it today! We love our friendship with Fair Taste, who were the first fair trade brand in Hong Kong. As well as coffee, we’ve sold their own branded tea, cashew brittle and dried fruit and nuts, and they’re our supplier for some of our other hugely popular fair trade foods like the delectable Divine chocolate and Geobar snacks.

It’s a story of a decade-long friendship investing in lives around the world, and on our doorstep in Hong Kong – one which we’re proud to be part of.

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With all the heartache in Syria, some are asking what hope there is for the region’s children. Is theirs a lost generation.

“We have only a narrow opportunity to intervene now as this potentially lost generation confronts its future”, warned High Commissioner Antonio Guterres, through the UNHCR website. “Abandoning refugees to hopelessness only exposes them to even greater suffering, exploitation and dangerous abuse”.

The Syrian crisis is impacting millions of families. Over half of those uprooted by the disaster are children. In the winter of 2015, hundreds from the Hong Kong community helped Crossroads send winter kits of warm clothing and toys to children in refugee camps and settlements in the Middle East for the third year running.

The appeal saw 5,290 children given winter kits through our partners on the ground, who have been working with these children, building relationships with families and helping with schooling, trauma counselling and other needs. We also ran a summer campaign, which saw backpacks and stationery distributed to children in the camps.

Backpacks and stationery from our summer Syrian appeal helped welcome Syrian refugee children in Jordan to school, many of whom have missed months or years of their education because of the conflict.

Backpacks and stationery from our summer Syrian appeal helped welcome Syrian refugee children in Jordan to school, many of whom have missed months or years of their education because of the conflict.

 

Crossroads coordinated a response that saw more than 5,000 given warm clothes and shoes in the winter of 2014/15.

Crossroads coordinated a response that saw more than 5,000 given warm clothes and shoes in the winter of 2014/15.

IMG_2182Syria-Feedback1-1024x906 copy

“A baby died here overnight,” grieved one of our partners during the cold winter months in refugee camps in Jordan. Some Syrian refugee children are without proper shoes in the cold weather, many don’t have suitable winter sweaters and jackets. (Picture below)

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Donate to a shipment like this one.

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Want to donate goods for a shipment like this one?

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Hope after incarceration: Zambia

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If you saw the movie, Hotel Rwanda, you’ll remember its searing agony. The pain was almost palpable.

There was a deeper tragedy, though. A journalist in the movie captured it well. People, he said, would see the suffering ‘and say “That’s horrible” and then go on eating their dinners.’ He was right.. The Rwandan genocide, in 1994, saw 800,000 people killed while we, globally, largely turned our backs.  One of the worst aspects of war is that we get ‘used’ to it.

The pain of Rwanda’s refugees has continued from that day until now. So has the need for help. In 2004, some of our team happened upon Rwandan refugees living in Kenya. Although ten years had passed since the end of the war, they were still unable to go home. Today, many remain.

How can they survive? Many lost everything in the conflict: family, home and possessions. The one thing war could not take, though, was their tradition. So these enterprising Rwandans put their age-old skills to good work and created cards and crafts to sell, distributed through NGOs around the world. In Crossroads, we have sold their highly original work ever since we met them, helping generate income for them, on a fair trade basis. A big seller has been their fascinating Christmas sets, made with stunning character and ‘packaged’ in a gourd from their region.

We often say, at Crossroads, we invest ‘for life’.  It’s been a decade since these Rwandan refugees started selling through us and they continue to today. Ten years is not a long time in the aftermath of war.  

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WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? Liberia as a nation is still suffering deep social and economic wounds from a civil war that ended...

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Shipment Feedback: The conflict in Syria continues to devastate lives and communities, with thousands of people still displaced and living in flimsy...

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WHO IS THIS SHIPMENT HELPING? When we first started working with our Cameroonian partners in 2010, they were planning and working on...

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