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New Magazine Issue

March 13th, 2010 abranyday No comments

Here it is the very First Issue of the Magazine edited by RESPECT REFUGEES International that includes the most important articles from the E-zines published in 2009 and the beginning of 2010.

Hope you will enjoy reading the magazine and you will share this with your friends.

We’s like to thank the Authors of this issue:

Shannon Alderman

Raja M Ali

Maria Brundin

Trish Harris

Kenneth Karest Lewela

Abby Jenkins Macedo

Paulo Muller

Laura Premoli

Mohammed Riazuddin

Suzan Salem

Linda Salim

Marc Schaeffer

Kirsty Semple

Uma Sharma

Olivia Wallace

Atuu Waonaje

Barny Whitwham

To Dowload this Issue, click here

[ http://issuu.com/enjoythemarket/docs/respect ]

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North Carolina Teacher Helps the World Go Around – One Letter at a Time

January 10th, 2010 admin No comments

by Linda Salim

In this day and age when war is rampant and ethnic discrimination against one another is less and less discrete, there are some people who provide a cooling wind of change. One such person is Mary Hughes Lee, a literature teacher at South Stokes High School in North Carolina.

Marc Schaeffer, RESPECT International’s founder and international coordinator, calls her a dynamite teacher, and having gotten to know her in the process of writing this article, we at RESPECT e-Zine couldn’t agree more.

Ms. Lee’s interests and involvement in letter exchange between students started before her collaboration with RESPECT Letter Exchange Program a few months ago. In the past, she and an English as a Second Language (ESL) teacher in a school in Memphis, Tennessee, organized their own letter exchange between Ms. Lee’s students and the mostly refugee ESL students.

Unfortunately, the Memphis school curbed the program over security reasons. Ms. Lee began looking outward for an alternative when she found RESPECT Letter Exchange Program.

On the first exchange, her students received and responded to 25 letters from high school students in Liberia. Ms. Lee expected nothing from the program except unwrapping pleasant surprises, one of which is the excitement her students show when it comes to discussing and connecting with their new Liberian friends.

As Ms. Lee puts it, she has to make sure that this program continues if she doesn’t want her students to protest. The young Americans show tremendous interests in knowing more about the world, nothing short of Ms. Lee’s dedication in planting in the students’ minds that every human being is as worthy as they personally are.

Being a fan of President Obama, my first impression of Ms. Lee is close to the image I have of the President himself. She radiates the peace she offers to those she meets for the first time, no matter how different they are from her.

Having always been devoted to creative writing, Ms. Lee started developing her interests decades ago. The dedication continued years after through educating her students to be tolerant and curious about the rest of the world.

Last year, she took her students on an educational trip to Great Britain. Another student of hers spent her last year of high school in Australia as an exchange student. Both Ms. Lee and her husband are passionate about the exchange students program and they dream of hosting exchange students at their home in North Carolina.

When asked about her views on the new American leadership and policies, she’s very supportive despite the facts that she believes some of President Obama’s decisions aren’t the most effective ones.

In general, she’s excited about the world changing its view about the Americans. The evolution in immigration issues and the new government’s attitude toward immigrants and refugees are what she’s most excited about.

Voicing her opinion strongly, she believes in empowering refugees, which also means eradicating all kinds of deportation. In her view, deportation is a kind of ethnic cleansing, which is very un-American. Ms. Lee believes that America has always thrived on its variety of cultures, languages, ethnicities and belief systems, among other things.

Instead of sending illegal aliens home, Ms. Lee believes the more effective way to reduce the amount of funding and resources spent on refugees is through eradication of poverty, oppressive government and increased education in developing countries.

She strongly believes that most immigrants, both legal and illegal, would prefer to remain in their homelands, given the choice. Providing them with a safe and comfortable environment back home is much more effective than driving them away from host countries.

The world obviously needs more Ms. Lees. Many people might disagree with her stance on political and world issues, but the fact that she encourages her students to be open-minded and tolerant, and that she welcomes opinions different from her own to co-exist, makes the world simply a better place.

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How Non-Refugee Schools Can Get Involved

January 8th, 2010 admin No comments

Welcome to RESPECT

The stated goals of RESPECT are:

  1. To increase awareness of refugee issues among non-refugee students in participating countries.
  2. To build bridges between non-refugee students and refugee students through pen-pal letter exchange.
  3. To encourage students to act to raise awareness of refugee issues and to raise some funds for their refugee school.

As a teacher or student leader, your participation in RESPECT can consist of step 1, step 1 & 2, or you can work through all three steps. Perhaps you might decide to work on step one this year, step one and two next and all steps the year after that.

It is entirely up to you.

The following paragraphs will help to facilitate the progression through these steps. PLEASE feel free to ask any questions or make any comments.

REFUGEE EDUCATION

STEP ONE
BUILDING AWARENESS OF REFUGEE ISSUES

There are a great number of resources available out there to educators and laypeople free of charge for building awareness of refugee issues. We will be making some specific suggestions for you to order so you are able to receive some basic publications in a timely manner. While there are certainly others, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) are the two biggest publishers of refugee related material to our knowledge.

A list of resources can be found on our resources page.

SPONSORSHIP PROGRAM

STEP TWO
EXCHANGE WITH A REFUGEE SCHOOL

RESPECT is developing an every-growing list of contacts with refugee and internally displaced person (IDP) schools around the world. Countries include Azerbaijan, Cameroon, Guinea, and Uganda.

We would be very happy to introduce your class to a class of refugee students of similar age and academic level by pen pal letter exchange. While we may be able to give you some choice as to country, it would be best if you will accept what letters we have on hand, the refugee students can receive their letters in a timely fashion.

It has been our experience that participating students can be quite excited to initiate a letter correspondence with a boy or girl from exotic countries.

There can be no better way to build awareness & understanding of refugee life than through letter exchange.

Over the last year, we have learned a few things that are stated below:

  1. Before distributing letters it is important to discuss with the students the possibility of disturbing content. The students who wrote these letters may well mention the loss of a parent or parents, they may write about the effects of war in their country of origin and life in the camp.It is your prerogative to screen letters before handing them out to ensure that even after preparing students only the most mature students receive the most mature letters.

    Please note that while SOME letters may be quite serious, others will just write about music they like, clothes and whatnot – kids are kids.

  2. Students may well want to include some kind of gift in their reply letters.
    This is not recommended.
    Very simple things like a bookmark, sticker, or whatnot are fine tokens but any more will make other pen pals jealous and very possibly might be stolen from the letter package by postal workers.
  3. Pen pals appreciate receiving photographs, postcards, cute stationary and so on.
  4. Please post your letters within about two weeks of receiving them from us.
  5. The first one or two exchanges should be sent as a group to save on postage and ensure delivery at the same time. Please include 2 or 3 international reply coupons with your package, so the refugee school can reply without incurring costs. (IRCs can be bought for about $3.50 at your local post office.)

To request refugee letters, please fill out the non-Refugee School Registration Form online. Include the number of students, grade level, range of ages you are willing to accept etc.. Please note that we will be sending you ORIGINAL copies of letters. If you do not post replies to those letters, none will be posted and those refugee children will be disappointed. (We recommend the teacher take care that each student receives a reply. This is easy if all students are in one class. If you are just having some interested students write, you can photocopy each letter, distribute the photocopies writing each student’s name on their original and then hand-over the original letter after the reply had been handed-in.)


ENHANCING COMMUNITIES TOGETHER

STEP THREE
FUNDRAISING FOR YOUR REFUGEE SCHOOL

Building awareness of world issues through videos and discussion and growing a personal connection between students here and refugee students there through letter exchange leads rather naturally to a desire to do something to help.

As stated before, if fundraising is not something you as a teacher or student leader are interested in facilitating this year – that is fine. You can only do what you are comfortable doing.

If you decide fundraising for your refugee school would be a good way for your students to feel like they are doing good for their neighbors far away, we have a few suggestions:

  1. A bake sale – organize a bake sale either at student’s home or at school to raise funds.
  2. A talent/variety show – plan a talent/variety show at school to invite everyone to come out to support the cause -large funds can be raised this way.
  3. A garage sale – organize a garage sale either at home or at school – you can ask for donation of items from family and teachers.
  4. A pancake breakfast – organize a pancake breakfast at school.
  5. Collection jars
  6. Raffle Funds can be anywhere from $10 to $1000.

Ten dollars may buy a small gift for your school – a poster for example, or it may pay for the postage for a number of used posters already around your school but not in use. With larger quantities of funds raised, you can send more stuff. We recommend you focus on sending larger quantities of used materials than to send one or two new things.

Recommended items include:
Used microscopes & slides, used school posters, quality student science projects, transistor radio, solar powered calculator, international reply coupons, and so on! Of course, there are many ideas about what kinds of items to send.

We would recommend you send items a whole class or a whole school could share, instead of pencils and whatnot that need to be distributed to specific students.

** RESPECT one day would like to try to send used textbooks and science equipment no longer in use in our schools to refugee schools abroad. Currently, this costs more than we can easily afford. If you have any ideas as to how we might practically accomplish this goal, or your school has a large quantity of items that could be donated in the future, please contact us.

Contact Information

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Frequently Asked Questions

January 6th, 2010 admin No comments

Have you ever wondered where RESPECT International has its headquarters? Or how to become a RESPECT volunteer?

These and other important questions are answered in RESPECT’s newly published Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ). Take some time to learn more about RESPECT and its Global Letter Exchange. There is a separate FAQ with information for refugee schools and non-refugee schools.

What if your question isn’t answered? Then email it to our webmaster and he will make sure you get an answer and will add the question to the FAQ.

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Atuu’s One Book Project to Increase Literacy

January 4th, 2010 admin No comments

by Raja M Ali

Everybody accepts that life can be unfair. But maybe it is not.

At the surface level, Atuu Waonaje’s life is an embodiment of injustice, cruelty and unfairness. He was born poor in an impoverished country and became a refugee at 15 years of age. Still a teenager, he lost his parents, had no possessions and was forced to take care of not only himself but also his brother.

How can fate be more unjust to a person? But looking deeper, we realize that while nature took many things away from Atuu, it also gave him gifts — such as compassion, drive and the confidence to make something out of nothing — which few of us can claim.

Turmoil, calamities and injustice didn’t bog down Atuu and while still in a refugee camp in Tanzania, he started CELA, the Centre for Youth Development and Adult Education, which was so successful that it won him the Women’s Refugee Commission Voice of Courage Award in 2007.

CELA, however, is an old story and Atuu is not resting on his laurels. He has recently started a new project called One Book Project (OBP).

Atuu observed that:

  • There is neither a resource centre nor a library in his city, Fizi Territory (in the Democratic Republic of Congo), which means a large number of students have no access to information except what they learn at school;
  • Young guys have not much to do after school. They generally do not have a habit of reading for pleasure or information and most even don’t know how to use a dictionary;
  • People have books which are unused.

Ordinary people would have looked at the situation and done nothing but Atuu started OBP which collects books from various individuals and then puts them in a resource centre/library for use by locals. The main aims of the project are:

  • Promoting a reading culture among community members who have lost that culture due to the war. Maybe starting a reading week.
  • Empowering villagers with skills through books and connecting them with the world.
  • Increasing literacy.

Atuu has already managed to collects a small number of books but for his project to achieve these aims, he needs your help. You can reach him by email.

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Sponsor Schools to Help Purchase Solar Ovens

January 4th, 2010 admin 1 comment

As part of an ongoing commitment to improving the lives of refugees across the globe, RESPECT is looking to implement a project allowing sponsor schools to support their partner refugee communities by raising funds to purchase a Sun Oven.

Sun ovens are an environmentally-friendly device used to harness solar power to provide cooking facilities. They are manufactured by Sun Ovens International from Elburn, Illinois, USA.

Deforestation is a major issue worldwide, threatening not only the global environment, but the very existence of the 2 billion people worldwide who rely on wood and charcoal to prepare their food. Women often have to spend hours every day scavenging for enough wood to cook for their entire family, or to boil unsanitary water.

In areas where a large refugee influx has occurred, this problem is multiplied tenfold, as thousands of families compete for this valuable natural resource. In areas around refugee camps, the deforestation process can occur at a frightening rate. 25% of Africa is now deforested, leaving vast tracts of land useless for cultivation purposes. In Haiti, the figure stands at 90%.

The effects of stripping the land are devastating. Not only does deforestation increase the risk of landslides and avalanches during the rainy season, but the smoke produced from the hundreds of small cooking fires contributes to respiratory infections, tuberculosis and cancer.

Sun Ovens provide a clean and safe alternative. Once set up, a Sun Oven, essentially a large metal box with panels that focus the suns rays into the cooking area, has no running costs. The small ovens can cook meals for a family of up to 8 people, while the large ‘Villager’ ovens can provide up to 1,200 meals a day and save 384,000 pounds of wood a year.

Such is the appeal of the sun oven to environmentalists that even people in the US have started to use the smaller version. Las Vegas resident, Mike Little, began using a Sun Oven in preparation for potential Y2K issues, and has never stopped. Little uses his several times a week to prepare bread, rice and meat, and is now trying to raise the profile of the device amongst his fellow citizens.

“I want to raise awareness so that local agencies can get involved,” Little said, while demonstrating the Villager Solar Oven at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas Earth Day celebration on April 10. “When you’re doing something for the environment you’re doing something for people.”

Worldwide, 2,500 small ovens and 250 large ovens are in use. These ovens are proving invaluable to refugee communities, not only taking away the need to toil collecting fuel, but providing income to those refugee communities who are using the ovens to bake bread for sale in the wider community.

RESPECT coordinator, Marc Schaeffer, feels raising funds to purchase these ovens for communities would be a worthwhile addition to RESPECT’s work. “We hope to introduce this idea to our sponsor schools, and also put the ovens up on our e-store. We are going to propose the idea to non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and refugee communities to see if they would be interested in receiving a sun oven. From there, it’s simply a matter of raising the funds,” he said.

A small sun oven costs $299USD, while the larger version, which can support an entire community, and provide jobs and valuable skills, costs $10,000USD. A great deal of fundraising will be required to bring this project to fruition, but the concrete benefits for refugee communities are clear.

The beauty of this project is that by donating funds to help the communities, donors are also helping themselves. Deforestation, and the resulting changes to the global climate, is an issue affecting us all, and every sun oven operating in the field will help preserve the future of the planet.

kindly written by Michael Logan

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New TV Channel for RespectBlog

December 21st, 2009 admin No comments

Available from now at RESPECT TV the new TV channel as support to all refugees people around the world.

The goal of the project is to let people understand deeper and deeper life of refugees people and see with their own eyes what is going on apart from their lives.

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RESPECT In Cameroon

November 26th, 2009 admin No comments

Yaounde RESPECT Club

  • Since January 2005, a group of 8 urban Burundese refugees ages 13 to 18 years has correspond with the Bourg Madame High School Solidarity Club in the South West of France.
  • The members of the Club come from several high schools in the city of Yaounde.

 

Exchanges with Nestor Nyoma, RESPECT Club Coordinator

by Sandrine Cortet

Nestor Nyoma is a Burundese urban refugee. Aged 23, he is a high school student in Yaounde, the capital of Cameroon. His scholarship was affected by his refugee status.

Last November, he contacted RESPECT to ask for a pen pal via a RESPECT letter exchange program. Urban refugees are scattered in the schools of the city based on where they live. For example, Nestor is the only refugee in his classroom. Hence, a school letter exchange seemed unrealistic. After a few email exchanges with Nestor, we decided to create a RESPECT Club in Yaounde.

At the same time, the Bourg Madame High School Solidarity Club in the South West of France was applying for a letter exchange with eight refugees aged 13-15, the same age as their members. Nestor was in charge of recruiting eight refugees to exchange letters with them. Young refugees from his area were older so we extended the age range to 18 years old. For two young refugees aged 13 and 14, Nestor had to talk to their parents to explain the program in order to obtain their agreement.

On a Saturday, Nestor gathered the freshly recruited young refugees in a room of Yaounde University where his community usually meets. The Yaounde RESPECT Club was born. The group is now meeting once a month. Nestor is the coordinator and he will always keep in touch by emails with RESPECT and with the Bourg Madame High School Teacher.

Who is Nestor? What is his story as a refugee? How is the Yaounde RESPECT Club going to be run? Here are few questions he kindly answered and to help us to better understand the refugee life in Yaounde.
RESPECT: Could you tell us where you come from, your roots, your family?

Nestor Nyoma: I did my first steps in Burima II near Bujumbura, capital of Burundi. My whole family is from Bujumbura (rural), a war devastated Burundese Province. I don’t like talking about my family because I have been separated from them for a long time. I don’t have any news. I avoid speaking about that to lighten the nostalgia as well.
RESPECT: What do you want to say about your character?

Nestor Nyoma: I hate the contempt, I am willing to help and a little talkative when necessary.
RESPECT: What is important in your heart?

Nestor Nyoma: To find my relatives again and to rebuild my life in dignity.
RESPECT: Since when have you been living in Yaounde?

Nestor Nyoma: I came to in Cameroon on October 18, 1995. I spent three years in one of the Missionary Sisters convent, then, in 1998, I arrived in Yaounde.
RESPECT: Before creating the RESPECT Club, you were involved in the refugee community, what did you do?

Nestor Nyoma: In the current context, it is hard to say “keep your hope,” however, if you lose hope, you lose the vitality that keeps you moving as well. You lose the courage of Being, this quality that helps you to go further despite everything. This conviction was the reason for me to create a soccer team in 2000. I named it: “RWARUKA Espoir F.C.” in my mother tongue, which means “Youth Hope.” The purpose is to meet during the weekends to do sports but also to meet other young Cameroonese at vacation championships and to be well integrated in our adopted countries. In the Burundese refugee community, I performed several positions: Arbitrage Council member, then Account Commissioner, and Vice-president. Besides this, I have taken part in the creation of a Cameroon Refugee Communities Group (CCRC, Collectif des Communautés des Réfugiés du Cameroun) when the HCR (High Commissioner for Refugees) closed its doors in Yaounde, we wished to be able to defend our rights and to plea for a reopening of HCR because we felt abandoned and by ourselves.
RESPECT: What do you have in common with other Burundese except for coming from the same country?

Nestor Nyoma: We share the same pains mostly. We face the same difficulties due to our refugee condition. Thus, we have to combine our efforts to overcome our problems. That is why we created a community called CO.B.Y (Communauté Burundaise de Yaoundé, Yaounde Burundese Community). We meet in the community like we do with the soccer team I talked about. I used to be a drum player in a group (a basic instrument in our culture). We meet 3 times a year in General Assembly, more if necessary. We have developed a solidarity spirit despite the level of poverty in which most of us are living. It can induce misunderstandings; like in any refugee communities.
RESPECT: Do you feel close to other refugees who are not from Burundi?

Nestor Nyoma: “To be brother is not to look at each other, but to look in the same direction.” Yes, I feel close to other refugees from different nationalities. I even have a bunch of friends from other communities like the Liberian, Centrafrican, Congolese and Chadian ones.
RESPECT: What do you expect from a RESPECT letter exchange?

Nestor Nyoma: Exchange and the experience we can gain from it.
RESPECT: What has motivated the other young refugees in taking part in this program?

Nestor Nyoma: The willingness to discover other people from a country different from Africa. The wish to have an idea about what happens in other places.
RESPECT: Do you have any project ideas to make the Club run?

Nestor Nyoma: It will depend on how the exchange turns out and on the young refugees’ interest. During our meeting, I can suggest to create a newspaper style writing for them to express themselves. We’ll see later if we can have an official site. So far, I cannot promise great things.
RESPECT: How do you access the Internet?

Nestor Nyoma: In a cyber cafe, where we pay based on the connection time. Usually, it costs 500 CFA Francs per hour (about US$ 1). This is where I printed the RESPECT form. Then, I made the 8 copies in a copy shop to save money. Young refugees have filled out their forms at home and on the day of mailing each one, we gave 100 CFA Francs to pay the postage.
RESPECT: Where is the post office situated?

Nestor Nyoma: It is 4 km from my home. To receive letters from France, I won’t have to pay for a taxi. I have subscribed to somebody who lives close to my home; he will give me the mail in exchange of 100 CFA francs for each package.
RESPECT: Why can’t you receive mail at your home?

Nestor Nyoma: Because of administrative formalities. Even though I am recognized as a refugee by the HCR since 1996, the Cameroonese government does not recognize us as refugees because there is neither a national eligibility structure nor a national legislation about refugees. This ambiguous condition explains just one part of our problems.
RESPECT: How will it work when the Club members receive the letters?

Nestor Nyoma: I will gather the letters to dispatch to the refugees. If I have time I will take the letters to their homes.
RESPECT: How do the Club members write their letters?

Nestor Nyoma: We agree that I won’t interfere in the letter exchange. Each Club member will be able to write freely his/her letter and then bring it back to me. Everybody will have to follow the same rhythm in order to mail the letters together in the same envelope to save money. If one of the young members encounters difficulties to reply to his/her pen pal or if he doesn’t understand something, I will help him/her but still allow them the freedom of content.

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A Message from Country Coordinator : Ghana

November 23rd, 2009 admin No comments

Ayifli Fred Kodzo

As the Country Coordinator for RESPECT Ghana I believe that issues of refugees everywhere need our urgent attention but should we always wait to see our brothers and sisters, mothers and children become refugees before we start showing our love and concern? Are we as a people and global citizens well informed about issues of refugees and on the rights entitled to refugees for international protection under the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol? How about the rights of refugees, enshrined in the 1948 Declaration of Human Rights which gives the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution?.

The fundamental truth is that whether we like it or not, we are all global citizens and in today’s globalized world, we cannot escape the fact that actions taken in the Europe and North America, Asia and all over the world do have reverberations in Ghana, and in a similar vein, war in Africa affects Europe and North America as well. We can no longer afford to ignore our common humanity or focus our vision narrowly on our own interests, our own people or our own problems. This is the true meaning of globalization. The world’s problems, and the world’s successes, today belong to all of us. We are responsible for each other, and we must RESPECT one another.

This essentially is the motivation behind my duty as the Country Coordinator for RESPECT Ghana, I see this role as an opportunity to also reach out and promote the goals of human rights and world peace. I am optimistic that with my team members and with your help and ideas we can raise awareness about refugee issues through our ever widening networks and affiliations. There is an urgent need to make the world a better place devoid of wars, disputes and terrorist attacks. Please do not hesitate but subscribe with us and let us push our vision forward with your wonderful ideas and solutions to make the world a better place for all.

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Ase'Eci Primary Refugee School

November 17th, 2009 admin No comments

Country:

  • Democratic Republic of the Congo

Description:

  • Primary School Ase’Eci has 6 classes, but only 3 are running due to the difficulties in the country.
  • The school is situated near the Uvira-Fizi road in DRC. It is bordered by Lake Tanganyika in the East, by the mountains in the West, by the Kahama village in the North and by the Pemba mountain in the South.
  • Lessons are given in Swahili and French.
  • A penpal programme is vital for us.

Comments:

  • 66 students are interested by RESPECT International programme and would like to find a penpal.
  • Our school has numerous problems. We would like you to guide us, advise us and assist us, as you can, to try and answer the needs expressed by the children in their letters. We have no support to help them.

Help this schoo or other refugee schools like it from our website: http://www.respectrefugees.org/

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