Posts Tagged ‘grassroots’

Notre Dame and Haiti Event Weekend!

October 8th, 2010

It’s been nine months since the worst earthquake in 200 years hit 25 kilometers west of Port-au-Prince.  At a 7.0 on the Richter scale, the earthquake devastated the landscape of the most populous parts of Haiti, and eight days later, aftershocks were still toppling buildings along coastal towns.  For groups working in Haiti, the reality of the vast damage inflicted is only made more daunting by the reality of the work needed to repair and rebuild.

In an effort to shed new light on a situation which had been the focus of intense media attention that began dissipating much faster than those one ground could afford, groups at the University of Notre Dame have put together a series of events on campus.  Notre Dame has a stake in all this.  They’ve been working in Haiti since 1993, conducting mass drug administrations with the goal of eliminating lymphatic filariasis by 2015.  With 2015 inching nearer, Notre Dame’s Haiti Program and its partners have pushed past the obstacles left in the earthquakes wake, and will reach 100% coverage of the entire population in the next round of treatments.

This weekend, the focus is advocacy.  Lectures, personal stories, demonstrations, and a special event at the Notre Dame-Pitt will focus on different aspects of health and survival in the aftermath of the earthquake.  A Tent City exhibit, designed by members of the Haiti Working Group who have recently traveled to Haiti, is being raised on the Irish Green.  Over one-third of people in Haiti are still living in the more than 13,000 temporary shelters that clutter the space where homes used to be.  Along with the demonstration, the event will also pay tribute to those who have supported relief efforts.

So, if you’re a Notre Dame student, staff or faculty, happen to be in South Bend, or need a reason for a road trip, visit the campus and participate in one or all of the activities planned.  Below is a full list of events.  Stop by the Irish Green on Friday, October 8 from 4-7 and Saturday, October 9 from 11 – 3 for the Tent City demonstration.

Haiti Program Pitt Game Weekend Events

Thursday, October 7, 2010

What: Serving in a Field Hospital, Response to Haiti’s Earthquake Disaster: An Oral Surgeon’s Perspective

·         Dr. Bill Hoffmann, DDS Metropolitan Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeons, P.A. Minneapolis, MN and Dr. Dan Klauer, DDS South Bend, IN

Where: Room 114 of the Pasquerella Center (ROTC Building)

When: 5:00 pm

Friday, October 8, 2010

What: Tent City – A Student Demonstration – Haiti Working Group

Where: Irish Green (South side if the Debartolo Performing Arts Bldg./South side of campus)

When: 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm and Saturday 11:00 am – 3:00 pm

What: Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative and Product Development Partnerships

  • Philip E. Coyne, Jr., M.D., M.S.P.H. CAPT, US Public Health Service, Dept. of Preventive Medicine and Biometrics; Assistant Professor of Tropical Public Health, F. Edward Herbert School of Medicine, ND ‘76

Where: 105 Jordan Hall

When: 1:00 pm

What: In gratitude for your support of the Notre Dame Haiti Program and in solidarity with the people of Haiti, the Notre Dame Alumni Association is hosting a reception for volunteers of the program.

Where: Eck Visitors Center

When: 5:00-6:30 pm (Prior to the Notre Dame vs. Pittsburgh Pep Rally)

Saturday, October 9, 2010

What: Tent City – A Student Demonstration – Haiti Working Group

Where: Irish Green (South side if the Debartolo Performing Arts Bldg./South side of campus)

When: 11:00 am – 3:00 pm

What: President’s Brunch – Recognition of Volunteers – by invitation only

Where: South Dining Hall – West Wing

When: 1:00 pm – 2:00

What: Game Day Recognition by invitation only

Where: On the field – north end zone

When: 2nd time out

I am “Living Proof”

July 23rd, 2010

By: Manuel Claros

The “Living Proof Project,” created by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, features true life testimonials that demonstrate the positive impact that global health/development interventions can have on individuals across the globe. The touching stories inspire us to reflect on our own experiences by connecting us to theirs.  Sharing a personal story is different than just being another statistic, another number amongst the myriad of global health facts and figures we find ourselves inundated with constantly.

My personal story has had a deep impact on my life and where it has taken me. It is also why I was interested in starting a campaign to raise money for neglected tropical diseases. I am from Popayan, a small town in the south of Colombia and come from a big family where I am the eldest of 19 cousins on my paternal side and 16 on the maternal side. Growing up in my paternal grandmother’s house was a lot of fun because there were always a lot of kids to play with.  On the weekends at any given time there would be 10-20 kids in the house. While this was very fun, it also meant that sickness traveled frequently from child to child.  Everything from chicken pox to measles traveled through us all…..and of course parasites were not an exception.

» Read more: I am “Living Proof”

Don’t Drop the Ball on Aid

July 6th, 2010

By: Ian Sullivan

This summer, we’ve had the pleasure of enjoying a nail-biting World Cup full of suspense, thrills, and triumphs. The World Cup has also been a mechanism that has united fans within countries and continents, resulting in an unwavering passion for one team, and ultimately one sport – football.

We wanted to turn all of that into something genuinely world changing. We wanted to connect with football fans around the world and give them the chance to express themselves in a meaningful way. So, we decided to set up a massive game of keepy-uppy and to tell our leaders ‘Don’t Drop the Ball on Aid‘. It’s time to kick off. Grab a football, a camera and film yourself keeping the ball up. Whether you can do one, two or twenty, your keepy-uppys will form part of an amazing video chain, linking people worldwide who care enough to kick off and fight poverty.

Just months after the World Cup finishes in South Africa, the UN’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) conference kicks off in New York and we’ll be showing your videos to the world leaders that attend. The MDGs have the power to revolutionize people’s lives in poor countries. But rich countries are failing to provide vitally-needed aid money to turn the goals into reality, and this conference – combined with your keepy-uppys – can kickstart that vital progress.

Spent well and targeted effectively, foreign aid money is a massive force for good. It means kids in schools. Trained nurses. Clean water. It means whole communities – even whole countries – facing the future with hope, not fear. But in 2009, nearly half of the world’s richest countries actually cut the amount they spent on aid. And it means that millions of people are being denied a new start. But together, we can make change happen, and – with the Millennium Development Goals conference planned for September – this is the year to get it done. So don’t just watch the action in South Africa, grab a ball and get yourself filmed. A lot of very powerful people will get a timely reminder to keep their promises on delivering aid money – as well as getting a chance to check out your beautiful ball skills.

Find out more and upload a video!

   

Ian Sullivan is the Global Digital Campaigner for Oxfam.

Reading List 6/30/2010

June 30th, 2010

New list of reads to help get you through the week! Today we’re reading about great strides and advances in the control and elimination of NTDs – such as the substantial drop in human African trypanosomiasis cases over the last five decades – as well as other developments that pose more as obstacles, such as the re-emergence of Dengue in the U.S. Take a look:

Human African trypanosomiasis: number of new cases drops to lowest level in 50 years, WHO
Community-Based Education Strengthens Elimination of Lymphatic Filariasis, Science Daily
Pharmacy students work to close the gap, Charles Sturt University
Foreign Policy Examines GHI, PEPFAR, Kaiser Family Foundation
Researchers In Australia Make Important Malaria Breakthrough, Government of Australia
Do Parasites Make You Dumber?, Cassandra Willyard, ScienceNOW
Dengue Re-emerges in U.S., Spurring Race for Vaccine, Gayathri Vaidyanathan, The New York Times