Agros Blog

Hurricane Ida in El Salvador

As many of you know, Hurricane Ida hit El Salvador late Saturday, Nov. 7, fed by 145-kilometer-per-hour winds and causing heavy flooding. The Category 1 hurricane left over 130 dead and thousands displaced.

We are saddened to report that our four Agros El Salvador communities have all been impacted, as follows:

San Diego de Tenango: The road is inaccessible, a portion of their crops have been lost, homes have been damaged, and families’ health have been impacted.

Nuevo Renacer: Roofs are leaking and floors have turned to mud. There is considerable erosion to the access road and a loss in basic grains and vegetables.

La Esperanza: Severe erosion to the road as well as significant loss of basic grains has been reported.

El Milagro: A large portion of the families’ basic grains were lost.

We are in daily contact with our El Salvador staff, and plans are underway to help these villages recover and rebuild. We will keep all partners posted as this process continues.

Update on Chili Pepper Project in Nicaragua

tabascoIn August of 2009 we wrote an article about chili pepper production in Agros villages in Nicaragua. In October of this year the new harvest is in and the results are great!

Six Agros communities in Nicaragua have become a source of chili peppers for Chiles de Nicaragua, S.A, a Nicaraguan chili exporting business. These six Agros villages have negotiated contracts with Chilies of Nicaragua to guarantee a market for their chili peppers. Chilies of Nicaragua provides Original TABASCO® Brand Pepper Sauce, a company of Louisiana, USA, with a large share of the chili peppers that they use in their popular Tabasco sauce.

Tabasco_peppersThrough agricultural loans and technical training and support from Agros, families in El Eden and San Jose started a pepper project in March 2006. Since that time, the success of the project increased to 115 families in six Agros communities. This year these communities have harvested 18 acres of chili peppers amounting to a combined yield of 69,993 pounds of chili peppers!

This harvest has earned the communities approximately US $31,352 in gross income. In addition to the huge efforts put toward production, the villagers themselves applied the training received from the Agros technical staff to pursue and negotiate a contract with Chilies of Nicaragua that guaranteed purchase of their chili pepper crops.

sanmarcosLearning new techniques, gaining experience negotiating with an exporter, and receiving a fair price for their crops has contributed to increased confidence among the chili farmers and their families.

San Marcos community leader, Hector, describes growing peppers as a challenging project; one that requires new techniques, lots of time, and many participating hands for the product to succeed and give positive results. “It’s not that easy to work with chili peppers,” mentions Hector. “You have to know when and where to cut, how hot the plants are, and then there are three days when you have to handle the peppers that burn your hands. We’ve also gotten used to working under the hot sun. This isn’t what’s important though. The important thing is that the income from these plants will provide for our needs like education, nutrition, medicine, and improving the quality of life in our homes.”

José, another community leader, agrees about the valuable opportunity this work provides. “A poor man doesn’t have anything except the choice to wake up early and fulfill his duties –more so for us now with the pepper project. It’s our turn to work hard and repay our debt. We won’t rest until the bright sun comes out on the new day when, even though we wake up to work, we will own our own land.”

A National Shame

Pedro, a college student starting his last year of studies in Agronomy, is from the Agros village of La Esperanza. Next year, he will be the first college graduate from his community and his family could not be more proud. Unfortunately, many children who grow up in rural communities in Guatemala do not have the same opportunities or support that Pedro received growing up in an Agros village.

A recent article from The Economist, A National Shame, examines the extreme social, economic and political inequality in Guatemala. In certain indigenous areas of rural Guatemala, chronic malnutrition affects over 80% of children. Malnutrition results in stunted growth and learning difficulties for children, greatly compromising their potential future productivity.

“A National Shame” describes how the government’s failure to provide basic services to rural indigenous populations has resulted in severe underdevelopment: two-thirds of rural Guatemalans live in poverty.  These people were” totally abandoned in the mountains with no infrastructure, no education, no health,” says Rafael Espada, the vice-president of Guatemala. If the government continues to fail to provide good schools and health care for the majority of people, the article concludes, malnutrition will continue.

In Guatemala, Agros works with indigenous communities to help families achieve food security, obtain access to essential services, and start productive agricultural businesses that enable the entire community to overcome extreme poverty.  As rural families in Guatemala build thriving communities, they are able impact both neighboring villages and their regional economy.

We are directly challenging the despair so many feel when faced with constant hunger and extreme poverty.  Working in one of the most impoverished regions in the world, Agros is bringing practical, long-term, sustainable solutions to thousands who were once desperately hungry, and without hope.

Partner Stories – Apple Physical Therapy

Randy Johnson, Founder and CEO of Apple Physical Therapy, compares his involvement with Agros to falling in love:

“When you fall in love, you don’t fall in love with a part of a person, you fall in love with them as a whole person.  I fell in love with the total Agros process.”

Apple Physical Therapy is currently involved in the “total Agros process” through a Journey With a Village partnership with the Agros village of Nueva Palestina in Chiapas, Mexico.

Randy characterizes his experiences in Nueva Palestina as “life-changing” and cites one devastating story in particular that brought home to him the significance of Agros’ work and the tremendous importance of Agros’ mission.

apple pt - storyOn his first visit with Agros to Chiapas, Mexico, Randy and his two sons, both in high school, were playing an icebreaker game with members of the Agros village Nueva San Pedrito.

One of Randy’s sons introduced himself and described his mother and siblings back in the United States.  As he was talking, a young man in the circle broke into tears.  The interpreter asked why the man was crying and he responded that his tears were “a mix between happy and sad emotions“.

The young man was grateful for the opportunity to work with Agros, but the mention of family made him weep because the previous winter – before Agros began to work in his village – he lost his young son.  He and his wife had no food, money or jobs as winter was approaching, and fearing starvation they gave up one of their young sons for money in order to buy food for the rest of the family.

Randy and his sons were devastated when they heard this story.  The utter desperation experienced by so many rural poor families brought home to them the life-changing impact of Agros’ work.

Today, Apple Physical Therapy is committed to a long-term partnership with families in the Agros village of Nueva Palestina.  In just 14 months, Randy has seen a profound transformation in the village: economic, physical, emotional, and spiritual transformation.

apple pt - groupAs a self-employed entrepreneur, Randy is especially inspired by Agros’ commitment to empower entire rural villages to work their way out of poverty through sustainable entrepreneurship opportunities.

In Agros villages, individuals, families, and groups of neighbors are encouraged and trained to start small businesses to increase and diversify their income.

Randy describes this economic activity as an upward spiral of positive capitalism that empowers families to send their children to school, find more and greater income-generating opportunities, and improve the stability and security of each family’s livelihood for generations to come.

Randy so believes in the Agros model of development that, following his last visit to Nueva Palestina earlier this year, he came away with a vision of helping Agros develop 100 more villages in Chiapas!

Apple Physical Therapy is a physical therapy provider with a wide variety of outpatient physical therapy services and locations throughout the greater Puget Sound area.  They distinguish themselves by consistently championing values of service and community involvement.

Visit Apple Physical Therapy on the web and let them know you read about them at the Agros website.

Volunteer Spanish Translators Needed

Are you fluent in Spanish and have a few hours to donate to Agros?  We have over twenty-five video interviews from Chiapas, Guatemala, and Honduras that need to be translated.

The process is easy and straightforward:

  • We will send you an audio .mp3 file of a Spanish interview that you can listen to on your computer, Ipod, mp3 player, etc.
  • You type out a word-for-word Spanish transcript of that interview
  • You then translate the Spanish transcript into English (just a quick, rough translation)
  • Send the word doc back to us and you’re done

The interviews vary in terms of length.  We need all interviews translated by September 15, so if you’re interested please email Maria Jose Soerens at mariajosesatagrosdotorg.  Thanks.

Pepper Project Success

peppers948.jpg

In five Agros villages in Nicaragua, 102 families have combined their efforts and produced nearly 50,000 pounds of Tabasco chili peppers for export. Through agricultural loans and technical training with Agros, these families from the El Edén, Nuevas Esperanzas, San José, and San Marcos villages have already generated $7,500 in profits. The farmers obtained a favorable market price by joining together and negotiating a contract with a Nicaraguan exporter.

The pepper project improves families’ year-round income, and is also an opportunity for families to apply the agricultural and business techniques they are learning. With the help of Agros staff, farmers are using a new drip irrigation system, testing new fertilizers, and exploring different methods to minimize and control insect infestations.  The success of this project is boosting farmer’s confidence and encouraging them to apply new skills to other crops and projects as well.

In San Marcos de Belen, Luis and his family are waiting to build their new house, and in the meantime, the family bikes three miles each day to arrive on time to help with the pepper project. Luis works hard at the project and appreciates the equal effort and responsibility from his neighbors.  He remarks proudly, “I am very happy with the work ethic of Agros; we have to work to gain results.  This gives me pride and dignity and the opportunity to leave something behind for my children.” chilecortando.JPG

Events in Honduras

On Sunday, June 28, Honduran President Manuel Zelaya was ousted in a military coup. While there are reports of ongoing protests in both Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula, the rural areas where Agros works have not been directly affected. Agros Honduras Director Joel Martí­nez has reported that all Agros villagers and staff are safe.

As for travel considerations, we not canceling any Service Team or Vision Trips at this time. As we continue to monitor the situation, we may cancel trips in the future if there is any undue risk.

We will continue to monitor events closely, and will stay in very close contact with Agros Honduras staff. Any future updates will be posted here on the Agros blog.

$1,800 worth of eggs and other news from Spring Village Updates!

eggs in guatemalaHere at Agros, we are committed to connecting our supporters with stories, information, and progress made by the inspiring individuals we work with. We do this through a variety of channels: this blog, enewsletters, Facebook, Twitter, our video gallery, and our quarterly village updates.

Every quarter we publish pdf updates on the work and progress of each of our active villages. These updates come directly from Agros’ program staff working in-country and contain the most up-to-date information about projects and programs currently underway in Agros villages along with quotes and profiles of individuals.

All village updates can all be found by mousing over the “Our Villages” tab on the Agros website and clicking on any village to then view and download a pdf.

Here are a few examples of what these updates contain:

  • This spring, many Agros village members have made impressive progress starting new projects and expanding their existing ventures. For example, over the past three months, the women’s chicken project in El Milagro, El Salvador has sold a remarkable $1,800 worth of eggs! The group has used profits to pay loans, purchase supplies, put aside savings, and help their families. We invite you to read more about the women of El Milagro and find stories of other dedicated and successful village members by looking in the Spring 2009 Village Updates.
  • This spring’s update on La Providencia, Guatemala, profiles Ramon, a community health worker. Each week, Ramon dedicates two days to provide health care for community members and he also administers the village’s supplies of medicine and first aid equipment. The success of the leadership in La Providencia is evident from their support for Ramon as well as the recently completed construction of a three-room school supplied with 200 desks and six teachers for 186 proud elementary students.
  • In El Edén, Guatemala, five families recently completely paid their land loans, and many more families are quickly moving towards paying off their loans by investing in successful small business opportunities.

There are many more examples and stories of lives being changed. Enjoy exploring and reading.

Interview at Wandering Educators

Wandering EducatorsI was recently interviewed by Wandering Educators, a “global community of educators, sharing travel experiences”.  They are a fascinating group, and their publisher, Dr. Jessie Voigts, took great care in learning about Agros and sharing our mission with their community.

You can read the interview at their site with photos and video, or here is the text below:


WE: One of the most important things that we in international education can do to change the world is to help others. Because we travel, live, and learn around the world, we have a unique chance to be change agents for those who need it. I have been so very impressed with one organization, Agros International, that is working on ending extreme rural poverty.We’ve featured Agros International here on WanderingEducators before, as part of a story about SalaamGarage, which leads adventures that collaborate with International NGOs with the goal to cause change through creating and sharing intentional content.  I was so very impressed with Agros International that I contacted Sean Dimond, Director of Marketing and Communications at Agros. He was happy to share all that Agros is doing with our readers, and I was fascinated at this extraordinary project. We were lucky enough to sit down with Sean and talk about poverty, international development, and more.

WE: Tell us about Agros International.

SD: Today, literally half of the people on our planet live on $2.50 per day or less.  The vast majority of those families live in rural areas, dependent on farmable land for income, security, and survival.  A significant majority of those families do not have ownership or a secure stake in the land they depend on.

In our hemisphere, the poorest countries are in Central America, where approximately 65% of the population lives in extreme poverty.  The majority of these families live in rural areas, and are landless.  Landlessness is one of the most important indicators of extreme, rural poverty.

Agros exists to empower rural, poor families throughout Central America and Mexico to literally work their way out of extreme poverty, with dignity.  We do this by providing communities with long-term credit for land purchase, holistic community development, and agricultural business training.  By partnering with Agros, families are able to start, develop, and eventually own a thriving, economically sustainable village.

In a nutshell, Agros exists to end rural poverty in this region – one village at a time.  With almost 40 village projects across five countries, the work of Agros is enabling thousands of men, women, and children to work and achieve the dream of a future free of crushing, long-term, extreme poverty.

WE:  What was the genesis of Agros?

SD: In 1982 Skip Li, a local Seattle attorney, was attending a conference and he heard a speaker casually mention a news article from the morning paper.  The article was about the millions of dollars the United States was spending on covert military activity in the civil wars raging throughout Central America. This speaker made the comment that if you used that money to buy land for the rural poor, the wars might cease.

Skip couldn’t sleep that night. A few months later he was on a plane, flying into Guatemala. Skip was the son of a Chinese diplomat and had spent time growing up in both Colombia and Guatemala, witnessing extreme poverty in these countries on a daily basis.

The burning question that caused Skip to fly into a raging Guatemalan civil war was this — could you buy land privately and loan it to small communities of landless farmers until they secured the resources to purchase it?  Could this be an effective means to ending poverty?  That question launched Agros into existence.

Twenty-five years later, Agros has helped thousand of people across Central America and Mexico start and own economically sustainable villages.  Rural families beat down by war, natural disaster, lack of access to basic services, racism, and extreme poverty are today building new lives for themselves.

Landless families are not only able to achieve the dream of having their own land to call home, to use as a means for food security, to create thriving agricultural businesses — they are also developing assets that they can pass down to future generations.

The exciting thing is that this transformation occurs because the people we work with have the ability to do it themselves — they simply need the support and training to make it happen.  In this way, Agros is not merely providing a hand-out, but a hand-up.  We not only teach people “how to fish”, but we enable them to also own the pond.

WE: So much of international development work seems ineffectual, or top-heavy. How is Agros working to be different?

SD: Argos addresses the root, systemic causes of poverty.  We also use a somewhat unique definition of poverty — we define poverty as “broken relationships”.  And I do not mean this in a Hallmark greeting card sense.

For the rural poor, all of the fundamental connections that make up a sustainable way of life are damaged or destroyed.  Families are broken apart through migration; relationships with local municipalities are often broken; complex environmental and cultural systems break down; on and on… so many of the critical relationships that determine the health of a community are destroyed by extreme poverty.

Further, the causes and solutions to extreme poverty cannot be effectively reduced to just the individual or family level.  Instead, economic, cultural, social and personal factors all play into establishing generational cycles of poverty that extend across communities.

Agros has learned over the years that restoring all of the aspects that make up a healthy community is required to ensure economic sustainability.  A holistic understanding of people leads us to a holistic understanding of human transformation. There is much more to alleviating poverty than technological change, increased income, or the improvement of merely material well-being.

For Agros, we’ve learned that if you really want to get at the root issues of poverty in a way that makes a lasting difference — a difference that offers new hope and opportunity for generations to come — you’ve got to approach these issues holistically.

A holistic model of development requires a connection between the various parts of the whole. In other words, we work to create a context where rural families themselves are, over time, empowered to restore the various relationships that break down in extreme poverty.

We do this by using a participatory, values-based approach.  When we work with a new group of families, rather than do a traditional ‘needs assessment’, we start with the assumption that their needs are self-evident, and a more powerful place to start is by having the families identify and name their assets, their values, their dreams.

Living in extreme poverty has for many destroyed the basic human ability to dream of a new and better future.  We want families to dream again, and not only to dream… but to be empowered to make those dreams reality.

We also realize that there is no magic bullet or single answer to alleviating poverty.  This is tough, difficult work.  Many people here in North America are familiar with the devastating poverty statistics that exist – but you cannot reduce these issues to mere numbers.  We’re talking about real people who are complex and multi-faceted and full of enormous potential.

WE:  How can a sustainable approach work with so many different cultural actors? Are there intercultural differences that you need to take into consideration with each project?

SD: Absolutely.  We have a highly effective, five-component development model, but we realize that this model needs to be contextualized within a given community dynamic.  We do not have a ‘cookie-cutter’ approach.  At the end of the day, our work is only successful if the families themselves are able to create a better life for themselves.  We’ll provide the access to long-term credit, support, training, basic infrastructure, encouragement… but the families have to do the work themselves, and they each have to bring their concerns, hopes, and unique context to the process.

Further, we work with a culturally diverse array of families.  We work with indigenous Mayan communities in the highlands of Guatemala; rural “campesinos” in Nicaragua; refugee communities in Chiapas, Mexico; and so on.  In each case, a holistic approach creates the setting where the unique values, dreams, and aspirations of each family are taken into account.

WE:  How can people help Agros?

SD: In this difficult, global economic downturn it is the extreme poor who suffer the most.  When facing hard economic times, instead of reducing the gasoline, or college education, or food budgets — rural poor families go hungry.  They simply don’t have budgets to cut. Living on the extreme
margins of society leaves these families incredibly vulnerable, particularly in a time of such historic economic downturn.

So to be perfectly frank, what we need is continued financial support.  Please consider a one-time gift, or perhaps a monthly gift, to support and empower rural, poor families to work their way out of poverty.

WE: Is there anything else you’d like to share with us?

SD: Just my gratitude.  We are, I believe, at a critical time in human history.  The global connections that exist between nations are such that our ability to collectively invest in sustainable solutions to some of the most dire problems on the planet are more important than ever before.  The challenges of resource consumption, the environment, food security, disease, extreme poverty — these challenges must be met by unique and lasting solutions…not by quick fixes and temporary approaches.  The work of Agros International is, I believe, one important voice in this larger conversation.  Further, the families in Central America and Mexico who are learning to dream again have an even more important voice in this conversation, and I’m grateful for being able to share a bit of what we are accomplishing together.

Thank you for allowing us the privilege of sharing this life transforming work.

WE: Thank you, Sean, for sharing Agros International with us. It is incredible, life-changing, important work – and so very inspiring.

A Conversation with Hans

Today Agros makes the exciting announcement that Hans P. Theyer has been selected as President & CEO, effective June 1, 2009.

By way of introducing Hans to the Agros community we recently asked him to respond to the following questions.

Hans at the Agros Office

What drew you to the Agros position?

The possibility of helping and serving the poor in both the regions where Agros is already working, and in regions where Agros is considering to one day expand.

Agros has a model that actually breaks the cycle of poverty for rural communities. In developing economies, this cycle of poverty and suffering is passed on from generation to generation and sadly is not a condition children can easily overcome.

The key to breaking cyclical poverty for the rural poor is in taking a long-term, holistic approach. This must certainly include empowering families to work and increase their income, as well as helping them to build long-term assets. But in order for the economic component to be successful we must also look at the whole person within the whole community.

To use a familiar analogy, what Agros does is not only teach families how to fish, but how to sell the fish, and to care for the pond. And most importantly, Agros does this in a way where the families themselves become owners of the pond!

We already know that bottom-up strategies that empower rural families over the long-term are more effective than short-term, individual interventions. And for the rural poor, those families depend so much on land for food, security and shelter. Being able to own your own land for these families is not just a dream, it’s essential!

These are just a few of the reasons why I’m honored to be able to join and serve this unique mission!

And then from a personal perspective, working for Agros is a dream come true. Working at Agros is a place where I can integrate the personal, spiritual and professional realms. I come from a background in Latin America where men define themselves in terms of their careers and professional accomplishment, and this does not necessarily go hand in hand with personal growth and serving others.

As you think about the days ahead for Agros, what excites you the most?

It is hard to prioritize — there are so many things. Let me share just a few.

Today I was looking through pictures from our Program Director, Laurie Werner, of families in El Salvador signing their land title deeds after paying off their land loans. Even from a distance I can feel what this means to them and how, previously, obtaining land ownership was a far away dream. But now the dream for these families has come true.

As I’ve had the chance to interact with (Agros founder) Skip, the board and the Agros executive leadership team, it has indeed been a pleasure as they set such a high personal and professional example. I have also interacted with several Journey With a Village partners, and have seen how their eyes and smiles brighten when they speak of their experiences and their connection to their “extended families” in the villages. I can sense how enriching these partnerships are to villagers as well.

I also remember how the Agros staff welcomed me so warmly just a few days ago and I must admit this is one of the most dedicated and knowledgeable teams I have ever seen.

Lastly, for me as well as for my wife and two sons, this opportunity is a joy and a blessing.

Tell us about your past work experience and how it relates to Agros?

First, I believe that my experiences with rural realities in so many different countries give me a good understanding of the challenges our villagers are facing and how Agros’ holistic approach can offer a lasting solution. I have had the chance to work in South East Asia, China and India, as well as throughout Latin America. While these regions are all fairly different from one another, they also have commonalities and similar challenges in their underserved communities.

Secondly, with a background in business, economics, and most recently having brought leadership to Microsoft’s rural computing efforts for emerging economies, I feel I can bring Agros a balance between strategic vision and a results-driven approach, knowing that strong partnerships, relationships, and teamwork are essential.

I have also worked both in the field and in corporate headquarters, giving me an understanding of “both worlds”, a valuable asset for managing our Seattle and country teams in the five countries where we operate.

Lastly, I have worked with and led multicultural and interdisciplinary teams, creating partnerships between many diverse entities, which is also the case at Agros. Creating effective partnerships across cultures, languages, and geographies is a key part of what Agros does.

As you look forward, what do you see in store for Agros?

A time for growth and larger impact! As I recently shared with the Leadership Team, Agros’ work is not only unique and effective, but transformative for everyone involved. Agros has done a good job sharing the work with their current base of supporters, but I believe we have an opportunity to gently but firmly take Agros’ light from under the basket and let it shine in many new places!

Globally, there are so many issues that cry out for sustainable solutions.  Whether it’s the world food crisis, environmental sustainability and over-consumption of resources, or the increasingly linked economies of the developing and developed world; we are in a time where Agros has much to offer.

Alleviating poverty is hard work. There are no quick solutions and so much depends on the generosity of supporters. However, I simply believe that Agros’ work is too effective, too transformative, and too important to not work as hard as we can toward that dream of “mil-Agros”  (In Spanish,  “a thousand Agros Villages” and/or “a thousand miracles.”)

Any last thoughts you wish to share?

Yes. I want to thank Skip, Susan Moulton and the Board, as well as the Agros Leadership Team and staff for how they have already welcomed me. And I can’t wait to meet our hard- working field staff and country directors.

I also want to thank our donors and partners for their support in making Agros the blessing it is for so many today, as well as for the many more rural, poor families we wish to touch. I look forward to meeting and getting to know our current family of supporters, as well as reaching out to new supporters and partners.

You all deserve my very best professional, personal and spiritual effort to assist in this transforming journey called Agros. Thank you.

Responding to Swine Flu

As the World Health Organization (WHO) raises the swine influenza A (H1N1) pandemic threat alert to level 5, Agros is carefully monitoring the situation in the countries and regions in which we work.

Of the five countries Agros works in, “Guatemala, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, and Mexico”, Mexico is the only country with confirmed cases of swine flu to date. On Tuesday of this week health officials from member countries of the Central American Integration System met in Managua, Nicaragua to coordinate and discuss preventative swine flu measures, which include tightening border and immigration controls. In addition, these health ministers signed joint accords committing to unite together, and to use all resources available to confront the epidemic.

Agros villages are located in the rural sectors of these countries. We have field staff who are in regular contact with our villagers and if anyone starts to show swine flu symptoms we will work to make sure they obtain medical attention. In addition, our staff are conducting hygiene reminders in every village and making sure villagers know what to look out for.

As for travel considerations, we not canceling any Service Team or Vision Trips at this time. As we continue to monitor the situation, we may cancel trips in the future if there is an undue health risk in any region where we travel and work.

Lastly, here are a variety of helpful links:

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
http://www.who.int/csr/disease/swineflu/en/index.html

CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL & PREVENTION
http://www.cdc.gov/swineflu/
http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/default.aspx

US STATE DEPT TRAVEL RECOMMENDATIONS
http://travel.state.gov/

INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL INSURANCE SITES
http://urgent.internationalsos.com/default.aspx
http://www.hthtravelinsurance.com/extras/swineFlu.cfm

GENERAL NEWS SOURCES
http://www.reuters.com/news/globalcoverage/swineflu
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/

Follow Agros on Twitter, become a Fan on Facebook!

This spring, Agros has become even easier to keep track of.

Agros launched a Facebook Cause page last year, but have additionally started both a new Facebook fan page as well as a Twitter Account.

twitter birdDid you know that each post on Twitter is called a “tweet”?  Check out our tweets to find Agros updates, information about upcoming local events, and relevant and interesting news articles.  Set up a twitter account yourself so you can comment on our postings! The Agros twitter username is @agrosintl.

logo_facebook.jpgNext, it’s time to become a fan of Agros on Facebook.  Our fan page has updates on recent happenings, general information on Agros, a place to view blog posts and a selection of photos and videos. At the Agros cause page,  you can show your support for Agros’ cause and make a donation. Become a fan and connect with other supporters of Agros to share your experiences.

Upcoming Events

Following are a list of educational, film, and international development events in the Seattle area:

May Events

Meaningful Movies, ‘Un Poquito de Tanta Verdad’ (A Little Bit of Too Much Truth)
May 1st, 7:00 p.m.
Keystone Church, Wallingford, 5019 Keystone Place

“Un Poquito de Tanta Verdad” shows the story of a community of farmers, workers, and students organizing in Oaxaca, Mexico to tell their story of oppression when the mainstream media refused to report it.  Filmmaker Jill Freidberg will be in attendance and host a community discussion after the film.

International Worker’s Day Rally and March
May 1st, 3:30 p.m. rally, 4:00 p.m. march
Judkin’s Playfield, behind St. Mary’s Church, 611 20th Avenue South
(206) 324-6044

Join El Comite Pro-Reforma Migratoria y Justicia Social for the annual May 1 rally & march in support of workers everywhere.

El Centro de la Raza Cinco de Mayo Celebration
May 2nd, 3:00 p.m.
Jefferson Community Center, 3801 Beacon Avenue South
(206) 957-4602

El Centro’s 4th annual Cinco de Mayo celebration will feature traditional food, arts and crafts, children activities, local vendors, and entertainment.

Sandra Cisneros at Town Hall Seattle
May 7th, 7:00 p.m.
Town Hall Great Hall, 8th Avenue and Seneca Street

Author Sandra Cisneros celebrates the 25th anniversary of The House on Mango Street, a novel about a young girl growing up in Chicago’s Latino neighborhood.

Dead Aid: Why Aid is Not Working and How There is a Better Way for Africa
Featuring Dr. Dambisa Moyo
Kane Hall, Room 130, University of Washington

The World Affairs Council presents Dr. Dambisa Moyo, member of Cambridge University’s Center for International Business and Management and the Royal Institute of International Affairs. Dr. Moyo argues for more innovative ways for Africa to finance development, including trade with China, accessing capital markets, and microfinance.

Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference
May 8th, 7:00 p.m. and May 9th, 8:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Upper Gwinn Commons, Seattle Pacific University

The Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference brings together local organizations on the forefront of microfinance to collaborate and share ideas about reducing global poverty. The conference features a talk from Skip Li, Agros founder and Laurie Werner, Program Director.

Genevieve Albers Forum: Bill Gates, Sr.
May 19th, 7:00 p.m.
Piguott Auditorium, Seattle University
(206) 296-5732, haukebatseattleudotedu

Seattle University Albers School of Business hosts Bill Gates, Sr., discussing Showing up for life: Thoughts on the Gifts of a Lifetime. Gates, Sr. is the co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and is involved in various philantrophy and non-profit projects.

International Relief, Development, and Conservation in the Cloud
May 21st, 7:00 p.m.
Museum of History and Industry, 2700 24th Avenue East

The World Affairs Council presents four CIO’s (Chief Information Officers) from leading NGOs, Ed Granger-Happ from Save the Children, Simon Jennings from Oxfam, Vida Durant from CARE, and Jean-Louis Ecochard from The Nature Conservancy. They will discuss the effect of information and communications technologies on the work of humanitarian agencies.

Environment in a Developing World
May 26th, Time and Location TBA

Join the discussion with various Washington-based groups on how to improve working conditions and the environment in the developing world.

Introducing Shannon Gallagher!

Shannon GallagherI’m very excited to announce that Shannon Gallagher has joined the Agros team as the new Agros Annual Campaign Manager. We are grateful to have such a talented, committed person join our team. She brings a clear passion to serve, and a remarkable professional background.

Shannon’s previous work experience includes working as the Yahoo! Global Marketing & Programming Manager, Yahoo! Front Page, managing a multi-country targeted IP marketing program to better engage (localized content) and monetize (premium upsell) 90M international daily users adding millions of dollars in new revenue.  She guided a team of designers, web developers, and media specialists to implement simultaneous international internal marketing, co-branded and cause-related campaigns.

Shannon left Yahoo! for Africa, working in Mozambique as a Microfunds Fellow for Kiva (www.kiva.org). Returning to the US, she then went to work as Director of Marketing and Content for Graspr, Inc., an online video community that offers high quality instructional content on a wide range of topics.

She has a Masters degree in Latin American Studies from Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service, has studied in Venezuela and Chile, worked on projects in Bolivia and Argentina, and is fluent in Spanish as well as proficient in Portuguese. She also completed a Research Assistant Internship at the United Nations, Secretary General’s Office.

Please join me in welcoming Shannon to the Agros family!

2009 Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference

microfinance-conference1.jpgOn May 8th and 9th, Agros Founder, Skip Li, and Program Director, Laurie Werner, will speak at the 2009 Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference. They will share observations and insights gained from their years of experience using microfinance as one integral part of Agros’ holistic approach to poverty alleviation for entire communities.

Integrated within the five-component Agros development model, small capital loans provide the opportunity for villagers, especially women, to dramatically increase their income and productivity. This conference is an important local forum for discussion about poverty alleviation and an opportunity for Agros to talk about our unique holistic development model and to connect with other local non-profits using microfinance.

Interest in microfinance as a tool for poverty alleviation has skyrocketed in recent years. The MicroCredit Summit estimates that at least 3,000 institutions utilize microfinance and over 100 million people have participated in microfinance programs. The Conference presents a unique opportunity for local professionals, educators, students, and interested members of the public to connect and engage in a dialogue about microfinance. The diverse group of speakers and exhibits will demonstrate the range of institutions using microfinance, showcase a wide variety of success stories, explore recent innovations, and provide information about how to support local organizations engaged in microfinance.

Chi-Dooh “Skip” Li will deliver the Saturday evening address, “Call to Action”.  In 1982, Li responded to the needs of the landless poor in Central America by founding Agros International, a non-profit with an innovative development model. He will draw on 25 years of experience working with rural poor and observing the effects of microfinance programs. Laurie Werner will be speaking on the panel Beyond Credit: The Integration of Financial and Non-Financial Services Within the Community: looking at the impact of how microfinance can be used as part of a larger, integrated strategy of poverty alleviation.

The Microfinance Conference presents a fantastic opportunity to learn more about microfinance, support Agros International staff members, and connect with local citizens supporting the effort to find solutions to global poverty.

Please come to support Agros and learn more about local microfinance!

2009 Pacific Northwest Microfinance Conference
Upper Gwinn Commons, Seattle Pacific University
Friday, May 8, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. and
Saturday, May 9, 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Registration: Before April 30th: $40, $10 students (first 100)
After April 30th: $50, $20 students

Additional Information: http://www.spu.edu/depts/sbe/se/microfinance/

Employment Opportunity at Agros

Agros has a new open position for an Annual Campaign Manager.  As follows:

Position Summary:

The Agros Annual Campaign Manager will plan, manage, and grow all aspects of Agros’ Annual Giving efforts. This individual will increase overall annual giving by leveraging channel marketing expertise, direct mail and online giving experience, expertise in donor segmentation, and implementing effective donor acquisition and retention strategies. The Annual Campaign Manager will directly oversee the management of all direct mail, online and monthly giving programs, and work closely in all aspects of resource development to create, market and manage multi-faceted fundraising campaigns. Additionally, the Annual Campaign Manager will also help in the design & production of associated online & collateral material to promote the various aspects of the Annual Campaign.

Key Result Areas:

  • Campaign Management: Plan, market, and manage Agros Annual Campaign efforts, leading the effort to secure gifts, acquire new donors, and through segmented communication channels strengthen relationships with current donors.
  • Donor Acquisition: Increase the overall number of donors within each giving channel by marketing an integrated array of online and direct mail giving opportunities.
  • Donor Retention: Increase donor retention through segmented donor stewardship and communication best practices.
  • Fiscal Management: Under supervision of Director of Marketing and Communications, able to maintain and fiscally monitor campaign budget.
  • Collaboration: Ability to collaborate across departments in a team environment; ability to work with and lead vendors and volunteers as necessary.
  • Demonstrated Knowledge: Understand principles related to resource development, fundraising strategies, channel marketing, and resource management (statistical analysis of campaigns).

Click here for more details.

Training Provides Opportunity for Local Economies

During times of global economic turmoil, providing access to training that empowers the poorest of this world becomes crucial. Through training and community education, people in Agros villages are able to start their own businesses and grow a robust local economy.

Benjamin and Catarina, a couple from the Agros Guatemala village ‘Cajixay’, have used their entrepreneurial spirit to start new businesses with the training they have received from Agros staff.  This training empowers them to develop new  income for their family.

benjamincatarina2.jpgBenjamin is the first man in three generations of his family to own land thanks to the support of Agros International. He and his wife Catarina have lived in Cajixay for all their lives, (except for a brief time during Guatemala’s civil war when they were forced from their village).  Even though Benjamin was the third generation to live in Cajixay, his family did not own its own land. As a boy, Benjamin would join his father at the large coastal farms working as a wage laborer.

Life on those farms was difficult,” he remembers, years later. “We always left Cajixay healthy and strong and returned home weak and sick.”

Today, Benjamin no longer has to live the life of a day laborer. Since Agros offered credit for land for his community 5 years ago, Benjamin has been cultivating his own land.

I, Benjamin, am the first man in my family in three generations to own land,” he humbly says.

benjamincatarina1.jpgTo help earn extra income, Catarina has involved herself in a weaving project with Agros where she is learning to improve the cost efficiency of her already excellent weaving skills.

But Benjamin and Catarina were not satisfied just to improve skills they already possessed. They wanted to learn more. So when it came time to build new, permanent houses in Cajixay, they saw an opportunity to broaden their skill sets. Rather than just watch the house being built, Catarina and Benjamin had the Agros staff teach them how to actually build these structures. Now Catarina and Benjamin are earning additional income by building homes for other families in the village!

Since then, they have also learned how to construct a new type of stove, which they are also being hired to build.  Slowly but surely, they are ensuring that each home in Cajixay has an improved stove.

benjamin-and-family.jpgWe are so grateful for our American brothers who have helped to make the work of Agros possible and who visit Cajixay. With all of the support and love we have received, we are able to move forward.

Trace Bundy in Concert

trace bundy album coverTrace Bundy, a world renowned guitarist and a passionate Agros supporter, will perform this coming Monday, December 1st, at the Triple Door in Seattle.

Trace’s most recent album “Missile Bell” is named after the story of an Agros village in El Salvador called San Diego de Tenango. Tenango’s history is laced with hardship and displacement. During El Salvador’s civil war, the villagers fled the country, surviving the war in Honduran refugee camps. They returned years later to find their land destroyed and occupied. With the help of Agros, the 18 families were able to purchase property and embarked on a new life together. The families, filled with gratitude and deep faith, postponed building their own homes in order to build a church and hold a service of thanks. But they needed a church bell. So they went searching and found an old missile casing leftover from the war – perhaps similar to one that destroyed their village in the first place – and they hoisted it up on a rope, transforming it into their bell.

Their missile-turned-to-bell speaks to the power of redemption: ugly become beautiful, dead things alive, old things new. Trace took that image and wrote a song called “Missile Bell” playing ugly, dissonant chords in a way that becomes harmonious. He plays it as a proclamation of peace and a testament to the villagers in El Salvador.

Trace and his wife Becca, together with friends and family, support the Agros Village of Villa Linda in Barillas, Guatemala. It is their desire to use their platform as artists to advocate on behalf of the poor and marginalized. Partnering with Agros has been an exciting way to make that vision a reality. The story of Tenango’s Missile Bell continues to impact their lives, their work, and their faith.

We invite you to come experience Trace’s music!

Triple Door Mainstage
216 Union St. Seattle, WA
Monday, December 1st, 7 pm
$10 advance / $12 at the door
206.838.4333
All-Ages – doors at 5:30pm
Additional Info and Tickets:  http://www.tripledoor.com/event.aspx?eid=3838
www.tracebundy.com

Agros in the Seattle Times

The following is a joint op-ed article published yesterday (10/08/08) in the Seattle Times.  This was written by Tim Hanstad of the Rural Development Institute, Greg Rake of Agros International, and Marty Kooistra of Habitat for Humanity.

You can read the published op-ed at the Seattle Times website by clicking here.

Seattle groups work to secure land, shelter rights

By Tim Hanstad, Greg Rake and Marty Kooistra

Special to The Times

Many of us in the U.S. don’t think much about the relationship between land ownership and poverty. But for the 1.4 billion people on our planet who survive on less than $1 a day, land is the most important asset they could have. It is the crucial source of shelter, food, income and security. And for the poorest in the United States, land and homeownership remains the unfulfilled American dream. This past Monday’s World Habitat Day is an opportunity to call attention to the universal need for secure land rights and shelter.

For Padma, a woman living in rural India, becoming a landowner transformed her life. Like many women in developing countries, Padma did not have legal rights to property. She worked as a day laborer, when work was available, earning 18 cents a day. Her children, who came to the fields with her, ate only one meal of rice gruel a day, not enough to provide them with the vital micronutrients they needed to thrive. They squatted in poor shelter, with poor sanitation and the threat of disease, and were prone to exploitation.

Today, Padma is a landowner. She earns $5 a day with the flower business she started on her small plot of land. The income allowed her to build a home, grow plenty of food and send her children to school, giving them a future full of possibility. With help from RDI, a Seattle-based nonprofit that helps governments provide secure land rights for the poor, the government of India is now giving the same “micro-land ownership” opportunities to millions of families like Padma’s, providing shelter, food security and economic prosperity at little cost.

Padma’s story is not uncommon. In the Ixil region of Guatemala, landless rural residents spend days marching to the coast to work on plantations. In return, they are offered “rights” to plant corn and beans on land that is only marginally productive, leading to malnutrition and hunger. This migration means that families are either separated or, more often than not, everyone who can must go to work. As a result, few children attend school.

Last year, five of these young people graduated from a Guatemalan university. This was possible only because their parents purchased land through another Seattle-based nonprofit, Agros International. With the land, the parents no longer had to migrate and the children were able to go to school. Four of the five graduates were daughters, and all have moved back to their villages to give back to their communities.

The work of these Seattle-based organizations demonstrates the many benefits secure land tenure provides: food security, women’s status, economic development and sustainable housing. Secure land rights give people a reason to invest in their land, improving agricultural production and environmental stewardship. It also reduces urban migration and creates political stability.

These struggles for a secure place to live aren’t isolated to developing countries – they happen right here in Seattle. For a family of refugees from Ethiopia, their recent escape to the U.S. was a dream come true. But the only apartment they could afford in Seattle was cramped and infested by ants. The house was filled with mold, and the plumbing and electricity did not work so the family lacked heat. When they applied for help from Habitat for Humanity, they were initially turned down.

Although Habitat for Humanity strives to serve as many families as possible, it is a constant challenge to secure enough land in Seattle for all needy families. Fortunately, the city of Seattle donated property and the family now lives in a simple home with a 30-year, affordable mortgage.

In the Sept. 29 issue of Newsweek, one week before World Habitat Day, editor Fareed Zakaria described land rights as one of the five most important things that can help solve our world’s problems. The efforts of local organizations such as Habitat for Humanity, RDI, Agros, World Vision and others demonstrates Seattle’s role as a global leader in innovative solutions to some of our world’s greatest issues, and shows the power of land rights and shelter in creating a safer, more secure world.

Tim Hanstad is president and CEO of the Rural Development Institute (RDI); Greg Rake is president of Agros International; Marty Kooistra is CEO of the Seattle/South King County Habitat for Humanity.

Come Run with Agros!

blogrun1.jpg

Our 1st Annual Agros 5K Fun Run/Walk is coming up Saturday September 13, 2008 at Magnuson Park (directions). Early registration deadline is next Friday September 5, 2008.

Invite your friends and family to run and bring awareness about the great need for hope and opportunity in Central America and Mexico.

Schedule:
Race Day Registration: 7:30 – 8:30 am
Run and Walk: 9:00 am
Awards: 10:00 am
Kids Dash (ages 5 and under): 10:30 am
Kids Dash (ages 6 to 10): 10:30 am

Fees:
Run:
$25.00 per person, early registration, through 9/5- includes registration and T-shirt.
$30.00 per person, late registration (after 9/5) and race day – includes registration and T-shirt (T-shirt will be mailed to you).

Walk:
$25.00 per person, early registration, through 9/5- includes registration and T-shirt.
$30.00 per person, late registration (after 9/5) and race day – includes registration and T-shirt (T-shirt will be mailed to you).

Kids Dash: Free.

Runners/Walkers can register online, by fax, email or snail mail:
Register Online
Download PDF

Become a Fundraiser!
You can help Agros by creating your own fundraising web page for this event. Invite your friends to join the mission of Agros and let them know about the Agros 5K Fun Run. Click here to start.

For more information about the event:
- Email Doug Haley at racedirectoratagrosdotorg  (racedirectoratagrosdotorg)  
- Or call 206.528.1066

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Agros International | Land Hope Life Ending Rural Poverty Through Land Loans, Community Training, And Empowerment.