With Celestine freshly rejuvenated from her
prayer-marathon (and from eating solid food again), we settled down to business.
To fill you in, I am here in Cameroon
working with a non-profit organization called CEFASE, which stands for Female
Circle of Social Action and Mutual Aid. Don’t
worry the acronym works in French.
Operating since 2008, CEFASE is a women’s
organization dedicated to improving the living conditions of the
underprivileged in Cameroon. Their work
focuses on capacity building and community development in agriculture, domestic
violence, vocational training and health education.
In English, that means they do things like:
·
Plant new farms and teach
modern composting techniques so that rural subsistence farmers can increase their
harvest enough to be able to sell in the market
·
Host trainings, seminars and
village meetings on women’s rights, domestic violence and solving conflict
without violence
·
Offer support, mediation and
legal services to domestically abused women
·
Run computer, tailoring and
hairdressing trainings for widows, orphans and single mothers
·
Teach classes on clean water,
hand hygiene and pit toilet maintenance to rural farmers
·
Support and coordinate
trainings on malaria and HIV/AIDs prevention
You may wonder…what is the connection
between an orphan school and a women’s organization on the other side of the
continent? The answer is Ann, one of the
people who brought me to Africa in the first place.
Ann, a longstanding contact of Celestine’s
whom she met at a social worker conference in Belgium, suggested that it might
be beneficial for me to observe the structure and implementation of a
well-established rural education program – something common in the field I want
to work in and something they are looking into back in Uganda. And hey…while you are there maybe you could
help them with some grant writing too! I
suspect the latter is the real motivation behind sending me here, but either
way…I’ll take any excuse for the escape from posho.
So here I am. Mice and all.
Thanks Ann!
But in truth, CEFASE faces similar
challenges (and affinity for capitalization) as KEFRAMA. Both are philanthropy-reliant organizations that
exist in areas where populations have negligible, if any, discretionary income. But more problematic than that, people in
both areas truly do not understand the concept of philanthropy.
Organizations like CEFASE are an
oddity. While there is an obnoxious abundance
of associations and organizations in Cameroon – nearly everyone is a member of
several – most of them focus their efforts inward. Members contribute and then that money is
doled out to the members themselves, either as need arises as part of a lottery
system. To them, this is charity: a
communal safety-net.
There isn’t the same cynical disdain of
philanthropy we see at home: my gift
doesn’t matter, why should I care, I’d rather buy the new iPhone, etc. Instead, the concept, as we know it, is
unheard of to them. Suffice it say that
they don’t see change collection bins on counters, there are no sad bald
children commercials on TV, no direct mail solicitations including free return
address labels. They just aren’t exposed
to it.
Unfortunately, this means that we are
forced to look to the more competitive world of international grant fundraising
to support these organizations. Bad news
for tiny non-profits with limited resources (and thus scope of impact) and next
to no international name-recognition.
I won’t bore you with the minutiae of grant
fundraising, but suffice it to say that most of my time has been spent staring
at the swirly loading sign on a variety of websites…cursing in the
ineffectiveness of African internet. Compounding
the woefully deficient infrastructure is Celestine’s vigor yet utter lack of
understanding the grant world. Every
site with the words “support capacity building” must be investigated
thoroughly, despite that many of them are clearly charitable organizations
seeking donations themselves. It’s a
slow process….
But we have identified a few grants that
are in our wheelhouse, and I have begun the laborious process of agonizing over
verbiage on the applications that will likely get only a cursory reading from
an intern somewhere. Remind me…why do I
fundraise again?
Oh yeah, because every 20th ask
is successful. And in those moments, you
get to connect people with the passion and ability to people with the means and
a belief. I might be a naïve sucker, but
I think it is in these connections that we see the world move forward; tiny
baby steps towards a better future.
.
I just made it to the end (or beginning?) of your blog. It reads like the bones of a memoir- Eat, Pray, Pit Toilet? I'd read it. I'm proud that you're my cousin.
ReplyDeleteAw, thanks Erin! And thank you for your gift to KEFRAMA!
ReplyDelete