Friday, 15 June 2012

My Sources


Works Cited
WBBC News - Lesotho country profile - Overview. (n.d.). BBC - Homepage. Retrieved June 14, 2012, from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-13728324
Sentebale. (n.d.). Sentebale. Retrieved June 11, 2012, from http://www.sentebale.org/home/index.html
UNICEF - Lesotho - Statistics. (n.d.). UNICEF - UNICEF Home. Retrieved June 14, 2012, from http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/lesotho_statistics.html


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Thursday, 14 June 2012

Watch 'The Forgotten Kingdom'

To watch Prince Harry's experiences in The Forgotten Kingdom click here

About Sentebale

When Prince Harry visited Lesotho for the first time during his gap year in 2004 he met Prince Seeiso of Lesotho and the two began to formulate an idea for a charity devoted to Lesotho's children.  The film 'The Forgotten Kingdom' which documents the experiences of Lesotho's children created a huge interest in the topic with its success.  600, 000 British pounds were raised in donations from all around the world and another 500, 000 were raised in the sails of the film.  In 2006 the Princes launched Sentebale and set up headquarters in Lesotho.  Since then Sentebale has provided finale aid and management to many local organizations and has effected the lives of countless children forever.

Go the Extra Mile

If you are interested in Sentebale and would like to know more about them or would like to make a donation  visit their website http://www.sentebale.org/home/index.html

Your support is greatly appreciated!

How Can Nelson Help?

My plan of action to get the Nelson community involved in this issue, as well as raise funds for the NGO, is to plan a school dance with all proceeds going to Sentebale.  Dances at Nelson are a lot of fun and if promoted properly they can raise A LOT of money.  I am on SAC so I would be able to propose the idea of this dance to the other members and recruit their help to plan it.  The theme of the dance would be red because that is the colour mainly associated with the fight against HIV/AIDs.  Students would be encouraged to wear red clothes to support the cause.

At the dance students could buy snack, beverages, red rubber bracelets that say hope for $1 or red and silver charm bracelets for $5.  All proceeds from these sails would go directly to Senetbale.


Charm Bracelet




                                 Rubber Bracelets




Each student who arrives at the dance will be given a free red support ribbon after they hand in their ticket.  These ribbons will also be placed at the ticket sails table for students to take as well as the snack and jewelry table during the dance.  Students would be encouraged to take these as a way to spread awareness about the cause and to show their support.
Tickets would be sold for $7 and you could buy them at lunches in the week leading up to the dance, permission forms would also be available in the office during and a few days before ticket sails.  All ticket proceeds would be donated to Sentebale.  At the dance we would keep with the red theme and have red balloon bouquets on either side of the entrance, we would also hang red and white ribbons from the ceiling and cover all tables with red table cloths.  Inside the dance itself we would use red lights to flash while the music played to keep with the theme.  Our goal is that the dance would raise $1000 for Sentebale to help the orphaned and vulnerable children of Lesotho.

Interesting Facts

Did you know?

-Lesotho has a population of 1.8 million
-it is the only country in the world where all the land lies above 1000 metres 
-400, 000 of those people are orphans or vulnerable children 
-nearly one third of the population is infected with HIV/AIDs
-it is the only country in the world completely surrounded by another country 
-Lesotho has the third highest HIV/AIDs rate in the world
-Sesotho is the language the Basotho people speak 
-Sentebale means 'forget me not' in Sesotho
-both The King and Prime Minister of Lesotho have been HIV tested to encourage people to get tested
-life expectancy at birth is only 40 years

Now you know!

What Still Needs to Be Done

Although Sentebale has provided much needed aid to this country and improved the lives of many children, much work still needs to be done before this country reaches it' s goals of becoming AIDs and poverty free. In 2000 Lesotho accepted it's UN Millennium Declaration Developmental Goals as being, combat HIV/ AIDs, eradicate extreme poverty and provide universal primary education.  Even with the attention and donations given to Lesotho progress towards reaching these goals is slow and the children are suffering from it.  The children are the future of this country but unless something is done it is likely the country will never meet its goals.  Desperate action must be taken immediately to help save this country's crisis.  Sentebale is striving to take this desperate action and have ambitious plans to help change Lesotho's future but to do this they need donations to help fund the projects they support.  Much work is needed to be done in Lesotho but  with organizations such as Sentebale devoting their time and effort to the cause there is hope for a better future.


Wednesday, 13 June 2012

Prince Harry Talks About Sentebale



What is Sentebale Doing to Help?

Senetebale provides financing and management to grass roots organizations in Lesotho working to solve the country's problems.  They work alongside community organisations helping them establish management systems so they will be able to remain active into the future and deliver the best support possible to the children they help.  They combine aid giving with business like investing as a way to ensure that their funds really make a difference to the community.  The key areas that Senetebale works to improve are child and orphan care, health care, education and special needs children.

Senetbale works to provide funding and management to many local organization specializing in caring for the children in Lesotho.  Projects Sentebale supports are Mants'ase Children's Home, Semongkong Children's Centre, Pulane Children's Home, Reitumetse Church Project and Touching Tiny Lives.  In one way or another these organizations provide a safe place for orphans and vulnerable children, Touching Tiny Lives even provides care and support for babies affect by the HIV/AIDs pandemic.  It is because of these organizations that the orphans and vulnerable children of Lesotho receive the safety and resources that every human child deserves.

 Sentebale also supports Momohato Network and Camps.  They provide support for children who have tested HIV positive and must receive treatments.  The main focus of the camps is to increase the children's self esteem and teach them how to live a healthy life with HIV.  At the camps children play games, sports, arts and crafts and drama as well as education on hygiene, nutrition, and how to live successfully with HIV.  Over 336 children have received support from these camps.  The camps are run by trained staff and professionals as well as doctors, nurses and clinics to aid in the children's treatment.  As the children grow older they are not forgotten about by the camp and can participate in Teen Clubs, Caregiver Days and Camp Reunions.  The Momohato Network and Camps is fully funded and managed by Sentebale and has changed the lives of many children living with HIV.

In Lesotho there is a tradition where young boys looking to provide for their families can become Herd Boys where they spend months and sometimes years away in the mountains tending to cattle and in exchange for their work they receive a cow for their family.  While they are their they endure harsh weather and poor living conditions, they are also forced to end their education to take the time to go away.  Herd Boys are a part of the culture of Lesotho but it is depriving the children of the education they are entitled to.  Sentebale supports programs that provide night school for these boys if they wish to finish their education.  Around 60 boys make the 2 hour freezing trek to reach these schools and the dedication they show towards their learning is outstanding.  In the winter months when temperatures in the mountains drop far below freezing the schools do not only provide them with their education but also with warm meal as well as warm clothes and blankets to keep them as warm as possible while they work.  This program is allowing more children to receive their education and break out of the poverty cycle.


 Sentebale funds and manages multiple care centres which specifically help the physically and mentally disabled.  These are the Kananelo Centre for the Deaf, Morapeli School, Phelisanong Project, St. Angela's Home for the Physically Disabled, St. Bernadette's Resource Centre for the Blind, St. Paul's School for the Deaf and Thuos Centre for Multiple Disabilities.  The disabled population is one that often goes by unnoticed especially in third world countries where they often do not have access to the care they need.  There are 50, 000 disabled children in Lesotho and only 1,200 are receiving the specialized care that they need.  By supporting these projects Sentebale has really helped make a difference in the lives of many disabled children, given them a chance and proper support when otherwise they would have been ignored.

By providing funding and management to local grass roots organizations all over Lesotho, Sentebale has changed the lives of many children forever and helped them break out of the cycle of poverty.

Perpetrators

The people within the country are responsible for the spread of HIV/AIDs and continuing poverty.  People infected with the disease who do not know how to deal with it or how it spreads are the main reason so many people are infected.  Due to the lack of education in the country people do not know when they have the disease, how they got it and how it can spread, how they can get help and what to do with themselves when they contract it.  This leads to people continuing to have unprotected sex after they have contracted the virus with continues the spread of HIV/AIDs.  No one person is the cause of the HIV/AIDs pandemic it is the country on a whole that needs to unite in a common goal against this virus.

 Poverty within the country is a similar story.  It is a vicious circle that is difficult to break with the HIV/AIDs pandemic making the situation even worse.  The life expectancy in Lesotho is only 40 years old, so most children loose their parents when they are still at a very young age.  Due to this they are forced to drop out of school as young as 5 years old to go to work to support younger siblings and relatives who are caring for them.  Their uncompleted education does not allow them to qualify for better well paying jobs when they get older so they are forced to do hard, low paying, manual labor for the rest of their life, continuing the circle of poverty.  Unless a child is able to break free from this circle by managing to stay in school and receive their education, it is likely the circle will continue for the generations to come. 

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

The Victims

Many people fall victim to the HIV/AIDs virus in Lesotho but the victims Sentebale is most dedicated to helping is the children.  Children, at a very young age, can and will loose their parents to this virus and will become orphans without a safe place to go.  Children who have not lost their parents to the disease are still very vulnerable and without the proper health care and education they need they will continue to make the mistakes of the generation before them.

 Special needs children are at a huge risk especially if they loose their parents at a young age.  Some special needs children lack the skills they need to be able to provide for themselves, this can result in extreme poverty and even death.  Some disabilities, without proper treatment, can worsen over time spreading infection and causing further unnecessary damage to the child.

  When young children loose their parents they must find a way to provide for themselves and their family.  They do this by any means necessary, whether it be working dangerous jobs, becoming herd boys who tend livestock in remote highlands in exchange for a cow for their family, or selling their body's to make ends meet and putting themselves in the path of the HIV/AIDs virus.  Rumors swirling among the infected say that having sex with a virgin will cure you of the disease.  This again puts young children at risk for contracting the HIV/AIDs virus and possibly being put in further harm involving violence and rape.  The innocent children of Lesotho do not deserve to suffer the way they do because of the poverty and disease that fills their country.

What is the Problem?



Lesotho is a tiny kingdom within South Africa.  It is very mountainous and is often referred to as "The Mountain Kingdom."  In fact the majority of villages within Lesotho are in the highlands that can only be reached by foot, horseback or light aircraft.  Lesotho has remained hidden away and untouched my the modern world, this comes with both its benefits and problems.  Having a large wealth of natural resources is a benefit but the lack of access to modern education and health care is causing significant problems.  Due to its small size it's struggles have gone relatively unnoticed by the rest of the world.

Unfortunately one of the things Lesotho has attracted attention for is the HIV/AIDs virus.  40% of the          2, 171, 318 people living in Lesotho are living with the HIV/AIDs virus, this makes it one of the highest rates in the world.  In 2009 it was estimated that around 290, 000 people of all ages were living with this disease.  In 2000 Lesotho's King Letsie declared the HIV/AIDs pandemic to be a national disaster and the country's number one enemy.

HIV/AIDs is not Lesotho's only problem, the UN has stated that 40% of the Lesotho population are living in "ultra poverty."  The lack of modern health care and education in the country is the main cause for this.  Young children are often forced to drop out of school at a young age to help support their family but by not getting a proper education they do not have access to good paying jobs and the vicious cycle of poverty continues.  The HIV/AIDs pandemic also plays a role in the poverty this nation suffers from.  Children who loose their parents at a young age to this disease must drop out of school to support younger siblings and relatives who take them in.  Also, by dropping out of school early the young miss the chance to get educated about the disease and what they can do to stop it so HIV/AIDs continues to plague the next generation.

Mission Statement

To transform the lives of Lesotho's orphans and vulnerable children