Posts Tagged ‘village’

SQR and The Library Project install libraries in 14 Baoxing schools

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

The long-standing partnership between SQR and The Library Project continued last month, as reported by SQR’s Development Coordinator, Li Jiehao.

In the week beginning October 19th, The Library Project’s China Regional Director Jenny Wang and Donation Team Leader Jocelyn Jia, together with two Swedish volunteers — Jennifer and Tarlan — and myself, visited rural village schools around Baoxing County, 130km west of Chengdu.

During this five-day trip, 14 village primary school libraries were established in the following villages:

Baoxing Villages visited by SQR and The Library Project in October 2009

Baoxing Villages visited by SQR and The Library Project in October 2009.
Download this map to Google Earth.

  • Wulong Fengshou Village School
  • Shengli Village No.1 School
  • Shengli Village No.4 School
  • Tuanjie Village School
  • Modaoxi Village School
  • Dayu Village School
  • Heping Village School
  • Leile Village School (in Qiaoqi Zangzu Town)
  • Kari Village School
  • Kari Fengshou Village School
  • Jiala Village Qinglong School
  • Zegen Village Jiajin School
  • Zegen Village School
  • Yaoji School

Like a lot of village schools in earthquake zone, these schools were all damaged to some degree, but fortunately none of the students and teachers of these schools was injured during the quake. Well over a year after the quake, the village children have moved back into newly-reinforced classrooms.

These village schools generally comprise one class for each grade from Grade One to Three, each class having around 40 students. Three to four teachers are responsible for the teaching, school management and maintenance. Due to the lack of the educational funding, these schools are usually suffering from extremely poor teaching and general facilities (see the similar conditions of a village school in Qingchuan County).

SQR helped The Library Project to identify the 14 schools listed above, and were there to help the schools to improve both the students’ extracurricular study, as well as teachers’ resources, by bringing them around 300 books and other reading material suitable for each age group with which to establish a lending library.

The members of The Library Project also trained the teachers in some basic librarian skills, and explained how the provided books could be best used in daily education. Jenny Wang said that these suggestions definitely help schools to maintain the usage of the books themselves and to make the most of every single donation.

As well as immediately seeing the benefits that The Library Project brings to these village schools, I was able to use the skills I learned from observing Jenny and the team when I visited Yanyan Village School a few weeks later.

Well done to Jenny, Jocelyn, Jennifer, Tarlan and The Library Project as a whole for keeping up the good work. We look forward to working with you again in the near future.

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Volunteers needed!

Thursday, June 25th, 2009
SQR SAME camps 2009

SQR SAME camps 2009

DOWNLOAD PDF INFO in English and Chinese.

We need volunteers! With schools out for the summer the kids living in temporary villages in the earthquake area have two months free and not a lot to do, so Sichuan Quake Relief is currently setting up several fun-based activity camps for them.

The SQR SAME Camps will focus on the four areas of Sports, Art, Music and English-language learning.

Camps will be run in 5-day modules from Monday to Friday, commencing Monday June 29, and running till the end of August.

SQR SAME Camps 2009 - 中文

SQR SAME Camps 2009 - 中文

We are asking volunteers to commit to at least one full week of teaching over the summer, leaving Chengdu on the Sunday, staying in the village teaching from Monday to Friday, and returning to Chengdu on the Friday evening. We are looking to build mixed teams to run each camp, so people of all ages, Chinese and non-Chinese, most welcome. And while teaching experience and some Chinese language skills would be great, they are not necessary. We just need flexible, enthusiastic people who have a sense of humour and are able to live and work under difficult conditions.

Transport costs to and from the camp, (very basic) accommodation, and food will be provided by SQR. We are currently building teams for the first seven SAME Camps:

  1. June 28 – July 3
  2. July 5 – July 10
  3. July 12 – July 17
  4. July 19 – July 24
  5. July 26 – July 31
  6. August 2 – August 7
  7. August 9 – August 14

If you would like to volunteer for one or more of these camps, or if you would like additional information, email volunteer@sichuan-quake-relief.org or call (86) 136 7121 2235.

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ERC (Earthquake Resource Center) trip to Beichuan

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

ERC Newsletter for BeiChuan (北川) trip – August 29th to 31st 2008

20080829-31 ERC trip to Beichuan

The trip to Beichuan was a success! Everyone involved in the trip was very happy with the effort put forth by the volunteers, from us at the Earthquake Resource Center (ERC), to the local volunteers living in JingJiaCun, and most importantly, to the villagers themselves.

You dismantled two tents, assembled three tents, provided a waterproof covering for one house, completely dismantled three houses, from the roof tiles to the brick walls, and saved and stacked the reusable materials for use in rebuilding the home. You dug out the foundation for a new house, cleaned up garbage, moved materials to where they needed to go, prepared an area for construction, and all in one weekend.

You took the time to play with the local children, who really needed a little fun in their lives. You took care of the elderly, freeing the locals to do other things.

Gao told us that he was amazed with the amount of work done by the volunteers. He had not expected that so much work could be done in so little time, he was very impressed. Frank, the CEO of the ERC, who has many years of experience volunteering, agreed. He said “There is nothing greater than seeing the joy on the faces of the villagers after a long weekend of hard work by the volunteers.”

To see their joyful faces, as well as your own, please take a look at pictures from the trip.

So from all of us at the ERC, we want to thank you for all your hard work in making this a successful weekend.

In fact, the weekend was so successful, we are planning on going again this weekend. And we understand the time and effort that goes into volunteering, so to make the financial burden easier, we are planning to subsidize the cost of transportation, so each person should only have to pay around 40RMB for the weekend, which includes everything: transportation, food, lodging, equipment and materials to be used that weekend.

And this isn’t our only project. This weekend, we are also going to a town in AnXian to help repair the poorly constructed temporary housing units that are being used as dormitories for the local elementary and middle school. Right now, the leaky ceilings are making the dormitories a health hazard. In two weeks we’ll have another project in JiangYouShi where we’ll rebuild a wall of a dam that provides the water to a village for irrigating crops. And we have many other projects ranging from water restoration and rebuilding houses, to teaching children and providing counseling to people hurt by the earthquake.

We hope you enjoyed your volunteer experience, and can join us again in the future. Stay in touch. Thanks again for everything!

Sincerely,

The ERC

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Ecological toilets – project meeting

Friday, December 19th, 2008

SQR recently attended a meeting to launch a project to encourage the installation and use of ecological toilets.

The meeting was quite a grand one. It was reported to the UN, and featured on local and national media, including CCTV.

The meeting consisted of four parts: opening ceremony, expert lectures, organisation experience-sharing and action-starting ceremony.

Opening ceremony:

The host welcomed everyone, and the sponsor gave a short speech.

Expert lecture:

Some doctors and scholars majoring in related fields spoke about the importance of the ecological toilet and the necessity of building ecological toilets for people in disaster area.

Organization experience sharing:

Several leaders of some NGOs and volunteers shared their experience of ecological toilet building. A village head talked about when he used the toilet built by an NGO.

Du Yan, the Chinese project manager in Ecologia shared experience that they cooperated with Rabbit King, another NGO, to do such a project.

They have presented information about the ecological toilet to local people, and they have built some public toilets for several villages. They encouraged villagers to build ecological toilets for family use by offering microfinance loan and some favourable conditions. She emphasized that when you begin to implement a project, you must make a demonstration as an example for villagers at first. Because it can be hard to persuade people to change their behaviour and use this new technology, you have to demonstrate tangible and real advantages to attract them. They once chose one family to help build ecological toilet. The child of this family was so excited that she told all her classmates and friends. All the children poured into her house to have a look at the new-style toilet and asked their parents also to build such a toilet when they went back home.

“This at last proved to be a successful propaganda tool,” she concluded.

Action starting ceremony:

Host read the proposal. Representatives from all the organizations and government went to fill the organisation name and project site in a huge map.

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Examples of funding requests

Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

This post features a fairly typical request for specific aid, resulting from one of SQR’s trips into the affected area. Some details have been removed, but this is here to show how part of SQR works: volunteers talk with local people, and then pass on specific requests.

SQR quickly considers the requests, and, if approved, organises the purchase and delivery of material. If you would like to sponsor a similar delivery, please contact SQR at info@sichuan-quake-relief.org.

Email from SQR’s Peter Goff to SQR volunteers:

Today Sofia and Rainy are in Beichuan with trucks delivering food supplies to Chenjiapu. Lucy, Tessa and Bingbing are in Luoshui on the summer camp project. We’ve been coordinating some projects with a group of local volunteers. They’ve come across two villages that need support. Info below for the funding committee’s consideration. The lists below identifies a lot of needs. We haven’t gone to these two villages yet ourselves so perhaps we could take in some of the most urgent stuff in the next day or so and do further research when there?

Info from Earthquake Volunteer Home

The following villages are along a river bank at the foot of the mountains. There are threats of floods and landslides in the region so they need some extra help.

Niubizi Village, Hanwang

General Info: No electricity. Road conditions: all right. Just off the road. Possible landslides on the other side of the village. Population: 2601 registered villagers (950 families) plus 200 Yi minority. Long-term residents 40-60 families.

Most urgent:

  1. Cooking oil: per person per month minimum 1.5kg. 14.4 per kg from last shopping experience. 1.5kg x 2801ppl if we provide enough for a month.
  2. Mosquito incense 2 box per month per family x (950+ the Yi families)
  3. Matches: 1 box per family x (950 + the Yi families)
  4. Candles: 10 pcs per family x (950 + the Yi familes)
  5. Quilts for all families. 1 for 3 people.

The village is divided into 14 farming units.

Qunxin Village, Hanwang

General Info: has electricity and Internet, but no computers or any other office equipment. Total population 2840, 1030 families. 100 villagers aged from 8 to 12, 100 from 13 to 16, 2640 above 17.

Fighting floods every day. Flood threat much worse than Niubizi Village.

Most urgent:

  1. Cooking oil: per person per month minimum 1.5kg. 14.4 per kg from last shopping experience. 1.5kg x 2840ppl if we provide enough for a month.
  2. Mosquito incense: 2 boxes per month per family x 1030
  3. Raincoats and plastic rain boots for the frontline flood fighters (lots of people have became flood-fighting team members since losing their houses).
  4. Summer clothing : shorts and singlets (all donated clothes are for winter)
  5. Blue and red material 150 units (dimensions for per unit width 6m or 6m, length 50m). Or a whole roll according to this request.
  6. Office equipment: secondhand laptop and all in one printer/fax/copier. Recycled or new printing paper.

Their village community people have been working day and night writing by hand. With the help of computer and Internet they will also be able to help get the information of their neighbouring Niubizi Village out sooner.

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More visits, info, links, continuing activities

Monday, June 9th, 2008

Sichuan Quake Relief’s activities have been continuing. For details and pictures of one of the recent visits up north, see Earthquake Zone – Survivors’ Stories, part of a blog by Fiferis.

  • The web site has been updated to include:
  • T-shirts have been printed and are available at The Bookworm. They are made of high-quality material and are selling well — get your hands on them quickly (pay for them first though, please).
  • Volunteers have been travelling out to various villages to deliver more aid, and collect information on what they require. They report that the authorities are well-organised in the areas affected by the earthquake. The current strength/advantage/purpose of Sichuan Quake Relief is to channel donations (for example, a donation of hundreds of large tents), guide volunteers into the area, putting them in touch with the villagers and helping the aid to be delivered (in this case, helping to erect the tents).
  • A meeting of Sichuan Quake Relief volunteers created a basic organisational structure which will allow the organisation to continue to function as an info hub and donations channel, mainly, but not exclusively, for foreign donors and donations. It is important to stress that Sichuan Quake Relief has been working with very many local people and organisations.

So, despite the apparent lack of major developments on the web, there has been a great deal of activity. The organisation continues to make a real difference to the lives of the people it has managed to reach, by helping with accommodation, food, water, educational supplies, and hygiene supplies, and just by being part of the huge effort which shows that people in the affected region have not been forgotten, and will continue to receive support.

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Interview with Lee M.

Sunday, June 8th, 2008

On Sunday 8th June ‘08 SQR chatted to Lee, who has been volunteering for SQR and in charge of many of the trips out into the earthquake zone, organising and sourcing materials, arranging transport, liaising with local communities and buying beer for the volunteers. SQR strolled into the Bookworm just as Lee and other volunteers had returned from …

Lee
We went to Baiguo Village near Hanwang. Just before you go into Hanwang, you turn left and you’re pretty much there. It’s looking better there than before. Its buildings are rubble of course. We went with iboughtashelter.com, who have their own design of temporary tents.
SQR
How did they get in touch with Sichuan Quake Relief?
Lee
They contacted us after reading about us on the web. Baiguo is in an area north west of Mianzhu and Hanwang that we have delivered aid to previously, and each time we have spoken to the people who live there, which is a major part of the reason to go on trips out there, to build up meaningful links with local communities. They asked for our advice and this is one of the areas we suggested.
SQR
How did you choose that area?
Lee
There is a real need for these tents almost everywhere. The tent is a really decent construction. Getting lots of them put up quickly and properly is just about practice. We took some trucks, a jeep, all in all 20 people, including Mike, Lucy, Lydia, Angel, me, Sam and Luke and others. We use one-tonne trucks. They are small, easy to get through, and we have a good relationship with the drivers.
SQR
You’ve been going out there for three weeks now. Do you now have a fairly standard procedure for approaching the various sites and setting down deliveries?
Lee
It has changed over the few weeks we’ve been going. There are police checkpoints in many places, at every major turning and every at major entry and exit point into an area. The officers who dealt with us today were from Gansu, and so are all outsiders. They stop foreigners to check what we are up to. When I chat to them and show them my passport, and a letter showing that we are helping people in the area. If you greet them with a decent attitude, they are fine. We let them know we are heading up to the village(s).
SQR
What do you tell people when they ask you what it’s like?
Lee
The area is a lot better than it used to be. Three weeks ago this area had the smell of death, an air of desperation, and everyone wanted food and shelter. That kept going for a couple of weeks. Now that the frequency of the major shocks has lessened, people are actually looking past that and facing up to reality, which is a terrible thing as well, but it makes them get on with life. Their loved ones have gone, dead, their children are dead, their houses have gone, and their livelihood has gone as well.
SQR
What were those tents for today?
Lee
Accommodation. The farmers there have food and water, but really need shelter. They are working on their farms, getting on with life. Almost immediately after the earthquake, people started to work on their land again. We also took up a load of toys and games at the beginning of June. The kids absolutely adored that. Water and food is getting through. The government is giving each person rice and other basic foodstuffs and water.
SQR
In the first three weeks after the quake, Sichuan Quake Relief concentrated on delivering emergency relief, water, and different types of food to give a small amount of dietary variety for some. What are the priorities now?
Lee
Now we’re looking long term and in particular at providing shelters at this period of time, so it’s a good thing the guys from iboughtashelter.com are here. You can get twelve people in one of the tents. Using tarps is always going to mean that heat is a problem. Any tent made of that material is like a small greenhouse, but they are working on the ventilation issue, and it will be sorted.
SQR
What was the reaction of the villagers to the new tents?
Lee
They loved the tents, they all helped. The tents are great and the response has been absolutely marvellous. They have a thousand people to accommodate there, and so we’ll visit again.
SQR
Any particular moments you remember from today’s trip?
Lee
Permits are very important and the police spoke to us four times, and were very positive, pleasant and professional and even mentioned a village in Gansu that we might visit to help. After putting up the tents, as we were leaving, they all waved to us, and the police came and saluted us. The police specifically drove up to us to thank us and salute us and were almost teary-eyed. It was pretty moving. They were senior officers and they were saluting us.
SQR
What are the plans for the near future?
Lee
Three hundred or more tents will be sent from Shanghai. They are specifically designed for this emergency. SQR’s role is to recommend places to take them, and get in touch with the village leaders. There are thousands of people to accommodate, so there’s plenty to do.
SQR
Any signs of normal life returning?
Lee
There are some. Kids are smiling. People’s income there is from farming, so people are working and there is work to do. People are smiling, sitting around, happily joking and laughing. Obviously they are friendly because we are helping them. Obviously the atmosphere is still so sad, but people are facing reality.

If you would like to volunteer, please contact SQR at The Bookworm or email info@sichuan-quake-relief.org.

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