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Monday, July 29, 2013

Job Satisfaction

One of te amazing things in my job with Anglican Aid (www.anglicanaid.org.au) is the stories I get to read from our partners in Africa. Disability is difficult in a developed nation so imagine the difficulty of being disabled in aculture where disability is seen as a curse and witch doctors are consulted to assist families with the perceived shame of having a disabled child.
The following link is a short summary of the disability project supported by Anglican Aid ina really remote part of Tanzania called Karagwe. Google it to see how isolated. Committed Anglican Church of Tanzania staff work tirelessly to ensure every person can reach their full potential.
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=664331526928981&set=a.604266046268863.1073741825.203304343031704&type=1&theater

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The dead at sea | Defence against the dark arts | Blogs

The dead at sea | Defence against the dark arts | Blogs
My friend Michael Jensen has authored a blog on the death of asylum seekers, seen from the air but whose bodies were not retrieved by Australian Navy some weeks ago. This article is well worth reading.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Is Child Sponsorship Effective

A recent report by the University of California San Francisco measured the success of child sponsorship. Not surprisingly it found that outcomes for children being sponsored were positive. The link provides a view worth thinking about. Watch for more posts.http://markmcpeak.wordpress.com/2013/01/24/some-thoughts-on-child-sponsorship/

Thursday, April 25, 2013

April 25 ANZAC Day in Australia is World Malaria Day. See what Anglican Aid is doing in Africa to reduce malaria's impacts on children in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Amazing how such a small creature can kill so many. In 1980 I carried the dead body of a child in a refugee camp to the mortuary. She died of falciparum malaria. OK and recovering in the morning. Dead six hours later. Still a big killer in Africa of children
http://anglicanaid.org.au/overseasdevelopment#malaria_awareness_prevention_and_treatment_project

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Friday, April 19, 2013

My Life has Changed

I started working in February for Anglican Aid http://anglicanaid.org.au/ a faith based organisation which has international development projects in Africa and Asia. I was employed as Office Manager but I have many and varied duties which include all aspects of looking after the office as well as responsibility for African projects.I have been impressed by the quality of work done in Africa through our partners in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Egypt, Ethiopia and South Sudan. A little money from Australia goes a long way in Africa and is transforming communities where we work.

Hard to believe that less than two months ago I was driving to work and home in a job which was effectively subsidised by the taxpayers of NSW. This job seeks to encourage and engage donors and our projects are reliant on being able to do that. My boss is in the last week of a four week, 2,500km cycle ride "Smashing Cycles of Poverty" tour raising awareness on global injustice.

Is this the best job I have ever had? I really think it is!
 My boss David Mansfield in yellow
 We work amongst street kids in Ethiopia
 Malaria education and provision of nets is saving lives in Africa
An income generation project in Uganda is assisting people to feed their families, send kids to school and build concrete housing rather than the thatched houses which are easily destroyed in bad weather

GENOCIDE Kool Aid - Dishonest, Deceptive, Deceived or Dumb?

Cide has a Latin and French derivation and is used in terms such as regicide, matricide, patricide,  algicde, fungicide, avicide, parricide,...