Project

Spotlight on... Girls Gotta Run Foundation

by Megan Stacey

It’s about so much more than running.

The Girls Gotta Run Foundation offers about 100 young ladies the chance to form a community, to exercise and share meals among friends, to get a quality education, and to build the foundation for a better life.

Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia funds these athletic scholarships for five students in Sodo through Girls Gotta Run, which celebrated its tenth anniversary in 2016.

“It’s right up our alley,” said Barb Reid, a retired school principal who chairs Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia’s education advisory committee and board of directors. “It’s setting them up, definitely, for success.”

It’s setting them up... for success.
— Barb Reid, MWAHFE Education Advisory Committee

Girls Gotta Run is about reaching out to young women at a time of transition when many drop out of school, usually between Grade 5 and 8. At that age many girls are pressured to get married or work to support their families.

“They didn’t have any access to family planning information or health care facilities and were at a high risk of dying during childbirth. They really weren’t able to access the tools they need[ed] to build economic resilience or sustainability in their family,” said Girls Gotta Run executive director Kayla Nolan.

Sodo, Ethiopia

Sodo, Ethiopia

“So we decided to hone in on that age to help girls build a better tool set so they can reach their goals.”

The three-year athletic scholarship includes transportation to school, uniforms and running gear, medical care for the student and her mother, team lessons, practices, and coaching, plus healthy snacks and meals.

“We use athletics to create that safe environment, where girls can talk to each other about issues they may be facing and form a peer support network,” Kayla said.

Ultimately, it’s a “listening organization,” she added.

“As we became more in tune with what challenges the girls were specifically facing in rural areas and also in the city, we adapted our structure to address those needs,” she explained.

Part of that adjustment led to including the families of the girls in the program, including entrepreneurial training and a group savings plan for their mothers.

GGRF Athletic Scholar Firehiwote and her new puppy at her home in Sodo, Ethiopia.

GGRF Athletic Scholar Firehiwote and her new puppy at her home in Sodo, Ethiopia.

Not only are you keeping a girl in school, but you’re helping her family.
— Barb Reid

“A lot of women don’t have the space to be able to talk about financial issues or learn how to manage money,” Kayla said. “It’s been really inspiring to see the moms get excited about that.”

Each woman contributes 2 birr (about ten cents) per week to a communal pot that they can draw from to enrich their businesses – everything from spice grinding to selling shoes to making injera.

“They invest in each other and then return those loans,” Kayla explained. The funds allowed one woman to hire an employee to help with her labour-intensive baskets, and another family was able to open a small shop in which to sell their traditional, homemade alcohol.

“Not only are you keeping a girl in school, but you’re helping her family,” said Barb.

Thanks to Girls Gotta Run, young Ethiopian women have gone to post-secondary school or job training, many embarking upon their dream careers and some even competing on the international running scene.

And though most of the girls are more interested in running as a recreational activity, that central tenet of the program is key to its success.

“There’s a lot of need in Ethiopia and there’s a lot of ways to invest and contribute to communities, but it’s exciting to use something that’s a source of pride for Ethiopians, like running,” Kayla said.

Girls get ready to stretch out after practice in Sodo, Ethiopia.

Girls get ready to stretch out after practice in Sodo, Ethiopia.

“It’s more dignified and speaks to the community in a way that is respectful and meaningful, and a way they can feel part of the programming we’re working on.”

Kayla said it’s validating to know that many of the girls would have left school if it weren’t for the program.

It pulls on Barb’s heartstrings, too.

“To continue their education, that’s the key. To me, with my background, without an education you don’t have much hope of anything,” she said. Barb’s elated to know the girls in this program will have a strong education in their tool belt.

And the best part is that the scholarships are an investment, not a handout.

“They’ve got to be the ones who do the work, but if we can just help with providing the money so they get the education, they’ll go on to hopefully improve the lives of more Ethiopians,” Barb said.

Kayla sees that ripple effect.

The girls avoid early marriage and tend to have their children later in life. Their parents often report a physical transformation as the girls get stronger, mentally and physically, and have access to lots of fresh air and healthy food.

And the Girls Gotta Run participants pay it forward.

Women and girls have been shown to invest largely back into their own families and community. It’s the best investment you can make.
— Kayla Nolan, Executive Director of GGRF

“Women and girls have been shown to invest largely back into their own families and community. It’s the best investment you can make,” Kayla said. “And it’s exciting to be able to provide an opportunity for people to invest in a way that’s going to have a really long-lasting impact, not just a one-time donation.”

For Barb, it’s about sharing the value of childhood education – no matter where you live.

“By providing them with an education, we’re providing them a future.”

Photos courtesy of Girls Gotta Run Foundation, Inc.

Surgical Success Story - #80

We are celebrating with Beselech today because after suffering with a third degree prolapse and a very large cystocoele for eight years, she is undergoing surgery today! This 60-year-old mother of five is so grateful to the Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia supporters who made this possible.

 
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Surgical Success Stories - #77 & #78

Dr. Mark just let us know that his team has successfully performed surgeries number 77 and 78 that were sponsored by Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia. We’d like you to meet one of those surgery candidates, Almaz Mena. She had been suffering with a prolapsed uterus and a large cystocoele for two years but is now recovering. Thank you to our wonderful supporters for helping to change her life! ❤️ 

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Donor Profile: Jessica Watson

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by Megan Stacey

For Jessica Watson, it’s all about the kids.

She’s always had a soft spot for little ones – even building her life’s work around that passion.

And for the past few years, she’s dedicated consistent, monthly donations to the children of Busajo through Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia.

She first heard about MWAHFE through her grandmother, who bought tickets to Gems & Java. What Jessica heard there tugged at her heartstrings.

“Shelley was just so honest and real about what was going on in Ethiopia. Seeing her heart for those people, I know it moved everyone in the room – but it moved me, really,” Jessica said.

“Even though we all can’t go out in the world or move somewhere, we can still help in other ways with the resources we have. That really struck me.”

It inspired her to become a regular donor. The project, naturally, was Busajo.

Those kids are getting an education and they’re developing skills and creating community. It just really, really hit a deep chord in my heart.
— Jessica

“Those kids are getting an education and they’re developing skills and creating community. It just really, really hit a deep chord in my heart,” Jessica said.

“I really believe that if you want to see change in the future, you have to start with children. They’re so impressionable and they just desire love. To me, that’s so important, to give love.”

Watson is showing her love for the children of Ethiopia in a tangible way, with a consistent monthly donation to Busajo.

“It’s a constant income they can count on,” she said. Charitable giving is a priority for Watson, though she’s incredibly humble about her efforts.

You see that good things are happening and lives are being changed.
— Jessica

“I really think we’re so blessed here. For me, I like to give 10% away of whatever I make,” she said. “If we just hoard all our money, nothing is going to change.”

And Watson is very comfortable directing some of her hard-earned cash to support MWAHFE.

“It just makes you feel good. You know where your money is actually going,” she said.

More specifically, she’s able to see the results of those donations, the difference that her funds are making in the lives of Ethiopian children.

“You really do know something by its fruit,” Watson said.

“(With MWAHFE), you see that good things are happening and lives are being changed.”

Spotlight On: WRAPS

by Megan Stacey

For many women in Canada, it’s almost inconceivable that a monthly period could be more than a minor inconvenience.

Keep us home from work? Not likely.

Keep our daughters home from school? Not more than a day here or there.

But what if it wasn’t so easy to pop over to the pharmacy and find rows of feminine hygiene products?

For millions of young women in less developed countries, menstruating stops life in its tracks. It means staying home and using leaves or other materials as a sort of make-shift pad. School, in many cases, is out of the question.

 
 

Allison Karnes just couldn’t accept that reality.

“I was reading this book and there was this section that talked about girls in Africa missing so much school because they don’t have any pads. It just leapt off the page,” said Allison, who’s from the States. “I had never thought about that before.”

Though statistics on this topic are scarce, there is a lot of anecdotal data to show that girls are missing school thanks to their periods. One study showed that more than 40 per cent of schoolgirls in northern Ethiopia reported missing school because of menstruation in the past month.

Even in places where feminine hygiene products are available, they are prohibitively expensive.

Allison was living in Ethiopia – her husband is Dr. Mark Karnes, who performs surgeries to correct prolapsed uteruses, another project to which MWAHFE directs funds – when she had the idea to make reusable pads. She decided this was the perfect way to make a difference.

After pitching the idea to others and picking the brain of a friend doing a similar project in Kenya, WRAPS was born.

Allison and her right-hand woman, Inge, hired a team of Ethiopian women to help sew and develop the washable, reusable, affordable pads (WRAPS).

“It was hard. We worked and worked and worked to get our design. We made it from scratch. We made a lot of bad pads,” Allison said with a laugh. “We finally feel like we hit upon a pretty good pad.”

It took a lot of trial and error – starting with some market research and buying pads sold in Ethiopia.

“We looked at what they had on the market, and cut it to that length and width,” she said. “We added little tabs…and I import all the Velcro from the U.S. But that’s easy to bring in, because it’s so light.”

WRAPS are made of simple materials, including Ethiopian flannel and dollar store shower curtains that Allison buys in the U.S. The pads even incorporate unused surgical towels that Dr. Mark and other doctors have in their pre-op kits but may not use.

“I was walking across the hospital compound one day, and saw these blue towels floating in the wind. I’m always on the lookout for materials that might work,” Allison said with a chuckle.

WRAPS are changing lives, starting with the six women who found employment through the project.

All have returned to school – at levels from Grade 3 to post-secondary – and are finding fulfillment through their work. Some of the women have heart-breaking life stories, and one was even rescued from the sex trade.

And of course the impact extends to the young women who receive the pads.

WRAPS is a really critical piece of support for women and young girls in Ethiopia, because they often don’t have other resources to be able to manage menstrual cycles.
— Tracey Hedges

“WRAPS is a really critical piece of support for women and young girls in Ethiopia, because they often don’t have other resources to be able to manage menstrual cycles. That limits the activities they can do, especially as it relates to school and functioning within the family during that time,” said Tracey Hedges, the WRAPS project lead for Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia.

“That impacts on their self-esteem and their self-worth. Being able to offer such a simple intervention – by North American standards – has such a huge impact on their daily lives,” Tracey added.

The goal is to distribute the kits to young women.

“We’re looking at primarily Grade 5 through Grade 8. We feel if we can capture the girls at the middle school level, and keep them in school, we have a better chance of getting them to high school,” Allison said.

“We really want to work with the younger girls, because that’s where the dropout rate is so high.”

A WRAPS kit – which costs donors about $15 – includes several washable pads and a pair of underwear inside a small cloth bag.

“A small amount of money has such a significant impact on their physical health, their emotional well-being, and their ability to continue to function in their daily lives,” Tracey said.

All that for just $15 – what a return on investment!

Of course the WRAPS venture hasn’t been without challenges.

Last summer, Allison and her team hit a huge roadblock after her daughter tested out the WRAPS kit.

“She said the pads were just beautiful and washed up just fantastic – no blood stains, they don’t stain, they’re just beautiful – but they’re not holding the moisture. She said ‘I’m leaking right through.’ That was a horror, as you can imagine,” Allison said.

“I fell apart and had a meltdown. All my girls were sobbing with me.”

It turned out that workers had substituted one of the waterproof materials with another, more permeable, one.

But Allison’s partner Inge was undeterred.

“She’s like ‘well, we’ll just remake them all.’ So we remade…3,000 pads this summer,” Allison said. “(Now) I know these pads are not going to leak. I’m confident that they’re the best we can make.”

And the program is still growing. Allison’s goal is to eventually return to the communities where they’ve distributed pads to talk with the young women and their families to ask about the WRAPS and if they’re making a difference.

Tracey is confident that this project is more than worthy of donations from MWAHFE.

For those young girls who have the option or ability to go to school, we need to really support and encourage them in that.
— Tracey Hedges

“For those young girls who have the option or ability to go to school, we need to really support and encourage them in that. For them to have to miss school because of a normal bodily function is just really a shame,” she said.

“Allison is on a roll….I can’t wait to see where it goes.”

It’s just one more way that Mothers with a Heart for Ethiopia is able to support women and children in Ethiopia.

“To be able to support them in continuing their education, so they can go on in their education and develop into good leaders and pursue their goals is just amazing,” Tracey said.

“That’s the impact that such a small item can make on their lives.”

Surgical Success Story - #75

Let us introduce you to Asrese Chekole. She is 50 years old and has seven children. She has been suffering with third degree prolapse for a year.  She is a widow from Gama Gofa and has her surgery scheduled for today. From Dr. Mark: "Thanks so very much Mothers With A Heart For Ethiopia for making a difference in her life. God bless you."

Surgical Success Story - #74

We'd like you to meet Dalgite Chusero who has been pregnant seven times and has four living children. She is from Darrow and has suffered from prolapse for over a year as well as urinary stress incontinence and cystocoele. Dalgite's surgery is scheduled for today and we're so pleased for her.

Thank you for supporting these life changing surgeries!