Wednesday, 27 November 2013

£1 A Day

I'm relatively constrained in organising BIG fundraising events to help me get to my £800 target. Working full time and leaving my job just a few days before the mega-busy Christmas period begins, means that I'm trying to utilise personal networks and family connections. However, that doesn't mean that I don't want to attempt some forms of personal challenge, and so next week I'll be living on £1 a day.

The Extreme Poverty Line is defined at being around £1 a day, and millions of people across the globe live on just this amount a day. In Lesotho, 57% of the population live in these conditions, an amazingly sobering fact. Raising people out of poverty is not about pumping money into areas. It's about empowering communities through sustainable methods, and this is the work that Skillshare International is committed to throughout Africa and Asia.

 For me, experiencing living on £1 a day from Monday 3rd December to Friday 6th December is not about expecting to understand what communities go through on a daily basis. Spending £5 on food over five days will be difficult, especially when I can often spend that on one trip to Sainsbury's  after work. This challenge is for me to experience the difficulty of living on so little. And to make it even more worthwhile, I'll be donating my average spend on food, drinks and groceries each week to Skillshare International.

Any help you can give to this amazing cause would be incredible. My Justgiving page can be found in the link below, and I will be sure to update throughout next week on my progress.

Click here for my Justgiving page.

Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Off to Lesotho

So... I've finally been able to reveal (publicly) that which I have had to keep secret for a few weeks. Firstly, the factual information: As of January, I'm flying off to Lesotho for ten weeks with Skillshare International, an international development charity working across Africa. As part of this, I'll be an International Citizen Service volunteer, a programme mostly funded by the government and facilitated by several charities who run volunteering opportunities for both citizens of the host country, and us Brits. Secondly: Before I go away, I've got to raise £800 for Skillshare International, all of which ensures that the programme continues in the future.

Now then, why am I doing this?

Eventually, somewhere down the road of life, I want to enter a career in international development. Unlike some people who believe Britain should keep all of its money inside its shores, I believe that offering international aid to developing countries is an absolutely essential function of us as a state. The ICS programme takes this belief and ensures that development is both sustainable and monitored. This is in no way voluntourism (or any other combination of the two words), it's a ten week placement manned by both foreign and native volunteers, working together to create evidence-based solutions for real problems faced everyday by the citizens of these countries.

Lesotho is a country with several serious problems. 67% of people are considered to be 'poor', and 57% live on less than $1.25 a day. It has a life expectancy of 41 years old. 24% of people have HIV/AIDS, raising to 50% in some of the larger cities. These problems can be solved. Not overnight, but slowly and surely living conditions for the 1.8 million people living in Lesotho can be improved. Skillshare International's 'Coaching for Hope' programme uses sport as a way of engaging schoolchildren in the development process, specifically HIV and AIDS education, youth empowerment and gender equality. Encouraging children to aspire is an extremely powerful tool in development, and that's what this programme aims to achieve.

I'm incredibly excited and proud to have been selected for such an opportunity. Although it is only ten weeks, I'm certain that I will make some form of difference to a community in Lesotho, which will then be continued by more volunteers as this programme continues. To do this, Skillshare International relies on donations. To give money, please head to my justgiving page here, and give whatever you can afford. Anything will make a massive difference to the lives of people in Lesotho and across Africa.