Discovering A Cause in Cambodia

In 2002, Bill and Lauren Smith travelled to Cambodia and encountered a site that changed their lives.

As a photographer, Bill had been visiting Cambodia for several years to document the country’s landscape, but he and his wife could not have imagined what was occurring at the Phnom Penh garbage dump. Hundreds of impoverished children were rummaging among the trash there every day in search of materials from which they could make a small profit.

Upon returning to the United States, the Smiths began sharing the photographs of the children they had seen and the story of what they had done to help, and the encouraging responses that they received inspired them to found A New Day Cambodia. Today, the nonprofit organization provides safe shelter and funding for the education of about one hundred Cambodian children.

For more on the Smiths’ first trip and A New Day Cambodia, read the full article on CNN.

Meet the Nepal Chapter Writer, Manjushree Thapa.

Welcome to Nepal. Here, among a certain pastoral beauty and scenes of women doing hard manual labor with utter grace, we meet acclaimed writer and activist Manjushree Thapa and Suma, her subject. When she agreed to write a story for Girl Rising, she had not yet met the girl we call “The Emancipated.” Suma was handed into bonded labor at age 6 — a practice called “kamlari” — described by Thapa as the “stories that put our society to shame.” A stroke of luck gave Suma a chance to go to school, where she is both thriving and fighting to see other girls freed. Thapa sees her as “shy… and girlish… but opinionated and actually quite strong.” That’s our Suma. One girl with courage is a revolution. Watch the video:

Reserve your tickets now.

To learn more about Suma and the NGO that Room to Read helped pay her school fees, introduced her to a mentor and gave her life skills training to build confidence, please go here.

World Vision: Educating Girls is the Cure for Poverty

10×10 is built on a foundation of partnerships with NGOs, corporations, policy makers, and grassroots organizations – all working to change minds, lives, and policy. 10×10′s coalition of NGO partners provide life-changing services to girls every day, and are among the best practitioners of their kind. They include: A New Day Cambodia, CARE USA, UN Foundation’s Girl Up, Partners in Health, Plan International USA, Pratham USA, Room to Read, and World Vision. We are proud to present our weekly Partner Series, where we highlight the wonderful work that they are doing on the ground.

There is a saying in Ghana: “If you educate a man, you simply educate an individual, but if you educate a woman, you educate a nation.”

Here’s how the benefits stack up for a girl who is educated: her income potential increases, chances of maternal or infant mortality are reduced, her children are more likely to be immunized, and HIV infection rates (especially in Africa) are lowered. Those are dividends that spread to an entire community and nation.

But tragically, in our world today, being female often means being sentenced to a life of poverty, abuse, exploitation, and deprivation.

Compared to her male counterpart, a girl growing up in the developing world is more likely to die before her fifth birthday and less likely to go to school. She is less likely to receive adequate food or health care, less likely to receive economic opportunities, more likely to be forced to marry before the age of 16, and more likely to be the victim of sexual and domestic abuse.

In my opinion, the single-most significant thing that can be done to “cure” extreme poverty is this: protect, educate, and nurture girls and women and provide them with equal rights and opportunities—educationally, economically, and socially. This one thing can do more to address extreme poverty than food, shelter, health care, economic development, or increased foreign assistance.

In Bolivia, I met a young woman who beat the odds—Lorena, 25, a doctor serving in one of World Vision’s projects. She grew up poor, one of eight children in her family. But she became a sponsored child, and that, along with scholarships, helped her go all the way through medical school. “We want our daughters to be like Lorena,” say the women in this community.

Lorena told me that many of her brothers and sisters live with her. She’s helping support them as four are in university and three are in high school. Ultimately, all eight children will hold college degrees.

Wow, I thought. Then I asked, “What is it about your family that made education so important—for both the boys and the girls?” She said it was her father, quoting him: “I will not die a happy man until all of my children are educated.”

It takes courageous women and men to change perceptions of gender and equality in
societies. It takes us all seeing each other as God sees us—created in God’s image, each with a purpose and a role to play in God’s kingdom.

World Vision is excited to partner with 10×10 and share the need to bring hope and a future to girls around the world. Join us as we share more about our work and how we strive to overcome the barriers to girls as in our blog series starting on October 8th.

_________________________________________________________________________10x10 partner, World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families, and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. The organization serves close to 100 million people in nearly 100 countries around the world. World Vision serves all people, regardless of religion, race, ethnicity, or gender.

77.6 Million Girls Are NOT Going Back-to-School


School. What comes to mind when you think about school? Close your eyes and think for a second.

I think of books full of knowledge waiting to be devoured. I think of teachers standing in front of the class, doing the best they can to shape lives every single day. I think of cramming for tests, homework assignments I procrastinated, and that anxious feeling the day before I stepped back into those halls after a summer that went by too quickly. I think of my peers, and I smile and think of my friends and the endless memories that I will have forever. I think of the skills and confidence and knowledge that I gained, to prepare me to stand on my own as a positive contributing member of society.

I spent the better part of 13 years of my life inside a classroom and I honestly can’t imagine where or who I would be, without that. But though my formal schooling has ended I am still a student. We are all students. And it’s time that the citizens of this world educate themselves on the status of girls’ education.

As you read this sentence, millions of people around the world, young and old, male and female, are sitting in classrooms. But what about the 77.6 million girls around the world who are NOT going back to school this fall? What happens to them? What happens to us? 

Most people don’t realize that globally, education is still far from equal. And though there are thousands of people on the ground trying to turn the tide, currently 86 countries are still at risk of not achieving the Millennium Development Goal of gender parity by 2015.

Why is it so difficult to make progress? Most people—most nations–aren’t aware of how big of an issue this even is. Most people aren’t aware that by not educating girls, everyone is effected. Today, when international development funds are allocated, less than 2 cents of every dollar is directed specifically to girls.

So why aren’t girls getting to school?

  • Because their families can’t afford the school fees, or need their daughters to work to help support the family. Around the world, 250 million adolescent girls live in poverty
  • Because they’re married off as children. One in seven girls in the developing world is married before her 15th birthday.
  • Because getting to school is dangerous - an estimated 60 million girls are sexually assaulted at or on their way to school. 
  • Because they don’t have access to clean facilities – 1 in 10 school-age African girls do not attend school during menstruation, or drop out at puberty because of the lack of clean and private sanitation facilities in schools. 
  • Because there are no laws to protect them, or the laws that exist aren’t being enforced.

Because girls education is not looked at as something that’s of value. BUT research has proven time and time again, that when you educate a girl, you can break cycles of poverty in just one generation. Ultimately, 65 low and middle income countries are losing approximately $92 billion per year by failing to educate girls to the same standards as boys

Here are the facts:

  • When 10% more girls go to school, a country’s GDP increases on average by 3%
  • An extra year of primary school boosts girls’ eventual wages by 10-20 % An extra year of secondary school: 15-25 %. 
  •  When a girl in the developing world receives 7 or more years of education, she marries 4 years later and has 2.2 fewer children.
  • Children born to educated mothers are twice as likely to survive past the age of 5.
  • Women who are educated are 50% more likely to immunize their children.
  • A girl who completes basic education is three times less likely to contract HIV.

In the words of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, “We must remind ourselves that ensuring the rights of women and girls is not only a matter of justice. It is a matter of enhancing global peace, progress and prosperity for generations to come.” Educating girls is not just the RIGHT thing to do, it’s the SMART thing to do.

Help us educate these girls. Because they will change the world.

Raise your voice for girls education. Share this with everyone you know. Now.

Join us to spark conversation on raising the value of the girl on October 11th: the world’s first International Day of the Girl.

 

10×10 Weekly News Digest

Welcome to 10×10′s weekly News Digest. In case you missed them, here is a sampling of some of the week’s most interesting articles on girls’ education and women’s empowerment. Happy reading!

Education For All: The Only Job for Boys and Girls is to go to School: In honor of World Day against Child Labor- a reminder that the only place kid’s belong is in the classroom.

Sierra Leone: ‘More Girls in Schools Mean Better Families, Better Communities and a Better Nation’, President Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma: President Koroma disclosed that apart from all other things, he was a living example of how education can transform not just the life of an individual, but also the lives of those around him.

CAMFED: Girls Education to Beat Poverty: Secretary of State champions girls’ education programs to beat poverty.

Afghan Girls’ Long Road to Education: Like any girl around the world, Afghan girls want the freedom to pursue an education and gainful employment ─ but for many of them, that is not possible without threats to their lives.

India: The Orphanage Giving Girls a Future: One wants to be a singer, one an astronaut, one a maths teacher. For girls at this pioneering orphanage in Mumbai anything seems possible

Best and Worst G20 countries to be a Woman: The poll, released ahead of a summit of G20 heads of state to be held in Mexico June 18-19, showed the reality for many women in many countries remains grim despite the introduction of laws and treaties on women’s rights.

India Advances, But Many Women Still Trapped in the Dark Ages: ”It’s a miracle a woman survives in India. Even before she is born, she is at risk of being aborted due to our obsession for sons.”

Africa’s Female Presidents Say They Offer Different Kind of Leadership: “Women tend to make better leaders because they are more directly connected to the needs of their people.”

Meet Aparna, Mumbai’s Teenage Sex Educator: Aparna is member of a nongovernmental organization called Kranti, meaning “revolution,” which strives to give young women rescued from prostitution access to education and new opportunities.

White House Blog: How will we save five million children’s lives each year by 2035?: In one of the greatest humanitarian achievements of the past 50 years, child mortality has dropped by 70 percent world-wide.

10×10 Weekly News Digest

Welcome to 10×10′s weekly News Digest. In case you missed them, here is a sampling of some of the week’s most interesting articles on girls’ education and women’s empowerment. Happy reading!