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     KIGALI PARENTS SCHOOLS HAS TOP 12 STUDENTS IN THE NATION FOR EXAM RESULTS - CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR PARTNER KPS!   CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE   

WORLD BANK LISTS RWANDA AS TOP GLOBAL REFORMER IN EASING BUSINESS REGULATIONS        CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE

RWANDA:  SEE HOW FAR WE'VE COME IN 2009!     CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE

TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL REPORTS RWANDA ONE OF THE TOP AFRICAN COUNTRIES FOR LACK OF CORRUPTION.  CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE

ITAFARI PARTNER GAHAYA LINKS WINS PRESTIGIOUS 2008 AFRICA PRIZE LAUREATE    FROM THE HUNGER PROJECT!  (YOU GO GIRLS!)  CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE   

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Vision 2020

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Rwanda is unlike many African countries.  One of the ways they distinguish themselves is with their plan to transform the country by the year 2020.  This aggressive goal is not just a good idea:  it is the compass by which the country and its leaders are charting their course. 

In the conclusion of the document the writers state:

“VISION 2020 represents an ambitious plan to raise the people of Rwanda out of poverty and transform the country into a middle-income economy. Some will say that this is too ambitious and that we are not being realistic when we set this goal. Others say that it is a dream. But, what choice does Rwanda have? To remain in the current situation is simply unacceptable for the Rwandan people. Therefore, there is a need to devise and implement policies as well as  mobilize resources to bring about the necessary transformation to achieve the Vision. This is realistic based on the fact that countries with similar unfavourable initial conditions have succeeded. The development experience of the East Asian ‘Tigers’** proves that this dream could be a reality.”

 note:  **East Asian 'Tigers' refers to the term Four Asian Tigers or Asian Tigers refers to the highly developed economies of:

  • Hong Kong
  • Singapore
  • South Korea
  • Taiwan

Please download the PDF to read more about the focus of this amazing country and its leaders:  click here for download

 

Itafari Giving Challenge: Ends Soon!

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You still have a chance to help!! We only have until this Friday, January 31st, to take part in the Parade Magazine Challenge. This magazine is sponsoring America’s Giving Challenge and will be donating eight $50,000 grants to the top charities that are donated to. The eight top charities with the most donors, NOT the most dollar amount, will receive an additional $50,000 to support their cause.

If everyone donated as little as $10, we have a chance to make one of the eight top spots. We can’t do this alone, so if you know of anyone that would be interested in supporting our cause and help raise an additional $50,000, please forward this email on.

Be sure to watch our inspiring video explaining what this money will be used for by clicking the button to the left or: http://www.networkforgood.org/pca/Badge.aspx?badgeId=109944

A big THANK YOU to those that have already participated. If you have any questions, please call me at 503-636-3692 or send an email to vicky@itafari.org.

Murakoze (thank you!),

Vicky Trabosh
Board President
Itafari Foundation
503-636-3692

Itafari Giving Challenge

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Dear Friends, Clients and Colleagues,

I need your help! Until January 31st, Parade Magazine, in partnership with Network for Good, is sponsoring America’s Giving Challenge. Parade Magazine will be donating eight $50,000 grants to the top charities that America (YOU) donate. All we need is donors. The eight top charities with the most donors, not necessarily the top dollar amount, will receive an additional $50,000 to support their cause.

What’s our cause?

Although Itafari supports child sponsorships, micro loans, and brick & goat purchases, our main goal for this special opportunity is to raise enough money to help build a high school for less than $500,000 for 1,500 students.

What can you do?

  1. Make a donation by following this link: http://www.networkforgood.org/pca/Badge.aspx?badgeId=109944
  2. Share this email to inform and inspire others to also make a difference

What does this mean?

Your gift of any size will make an extraordinary difference. While we don’t have much time for this very unique opportunity (January 31st deadline), I thank you in advance for your consideration. The children of Rwanda will remember you for the rest of their lives. If you have any questions, please call me at 503-636-3692 or send an email to vicky@itafari.org.

Murakoze (thank you!),

Vicky Trabosh
Board President
Itafari Foundation
503-636-3692

How to Build a School: Itafari by Itafari

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You too can build itafari by itafari! Click here to sponsor a brick that will be engraved with your name.

When is a brick not just a brick? When it becomes a powerful symbol of possibility. When the word itafari spoken in Rwanda brings with it awareness: Of hope. Of strength. Of change.

When the Itafari Foundation began in August 2005, we hoped that the Kinyarwanda word for brick (itafari) would be an image that inspired the idea of opportunity – that placed a picture in people’s minds of what was lost, but also what could be gained. That one brick, one itafari, could do nothing. But together, we could help rebuild Rwanda itafari by itafari by itafari. We could help. We could partner. We could work alongside those who knew better than us what Rwanda needed – the people themselves.

As I travel through Rwanda, I speak of Itafari Foundation. When I introduce myself, “nitwa Vicky” (my name is Vicky), there is no recognition except that I am mzungu (white). But when I say I am a part of the Itafari Foundation, there is awareness, remembrance that they have heard of this Itafari Foundation.

And now we begin to find common ground. Not because I am known, but because Itafari is known. That is because our donors give to Itafari and I represent them and their intention to make a difference here in Rwanda.

Today was one of the best days I have ever had in Rwanda. And that’s saying something!

Today we had a ceremony for the ground breaking at Kigali Parents School for the High School that Itafari is helping to build. And what a ceremony it was! You know, we do not do justice to celebrating greatness in the U.S. In Rwanda, when you are honoring an organization, a new beginning, a success, there is a very formal process. And this process was part of what I took part in.

Kigali Parents Primary School began in 1995, one year after the genocide. Two teachers from Uganda whose parents had fled Rwanda in the late 1950s were called to a land that was devastated. Though they had never lived in Rwanda themselves, these two young men wanted to help the people they met. The survivors. And they only knew how to do one thing: teach. They set up their first small school in a brothel where the landlord agreed to give them one of the rooms and started with six children – some of them, the children of the brothel’s prostitutes. These prostitutes were desperate to feed their children, which was why they were willing to degrade themselves in this way.

Charles and Eugene began to teach. Soon they had more than 60 students crowded into that one room, different parts of a chalkboard separated to teach each grade of student.

And they persevered. And the children learned. And they grew their program. And soon took over more rooms in the brothel. Their dream of educating children blossomed. They acquired some land and slowly built the Kigali Parents Primary School (KPPS).

Today, 1500 children attend the highest academically rated elementary school in all of Rwanda! The school is simply amazing. The teachers and children demand excellence of one another. And all strive to serve to better their country and their families.

Itafari is honored to partner with them. Currently the Primary School goes through the sixth grade. After graduating sixth grade, all children in the country are required to take a national test. Kigali Parents School consistently has their students place first and in the top percentile of the nation!

The school is desks and chairs and a blackboard and students and teachers. The school is hope and possibility and greatness. And it is available to students regardless of the economic status or heritage. Because there is currently no Kigali Parents Secondary School (high school), the children often transfer to less academically rigorous schools and lose the advantage they have gained with their superior education.

At KPPS, the children arrive at 6:45am, work all morning, have about a 90-minute lunch, return to school and work until 5:00 pm. They are learning English, French, and Kinyarwanda. They are beautiful, well-behaved, smart kids. They wear a uniform that makes them all equal. You cannot tell a child who has a parent in the Government Cabinet, from the child who is there on a scholarship. They are the future of Rwanda. And they need a rigorous high school education that prepares them for University.

At the ceremony, Itafari presented our first donation toward the project we have been working on for over a year: building the new school. The ceremony took place at the future site of the school itself – nearby, a huge bulldozer was ready to clear the land. The dream has begun.

The children danced and sang – they had even written a song for Itafari. The city and district officials thanked Itafari for partnering with Rwanda in caring for the children. Principal Charles thanked Itafari for helping them realize their dream. The parents of students were there to look on proudly at all they had accomplished and what was possible.

I cried. I was overwhelmed.

Do you ever work so hard to accomplish something that you don’t stop to see what will happen when you begin to reach your goal? That is me and Itafari. As a Board, we are determined to build this school. Our donors hear our request and give. But not enough give specifically for the school.

We only have enough money to clear the land and level it. Next we must build the foundation of the entire school and then build S1 – Secondary 1 – seventh grade – for the KPPS who will be entering seventh grade in January 2008. We need about $190,000 to have Kigali Parents Secondary School (KPSS) open. And then each additional set of classrooms for the next grade will be built. It’s a wonderful way to build a school – as needed. Itafari by itafari by itafari.

Consider giving to this project. You can do so on the website. Every gift of $75 will qualify you for one itafari (brick), which will be placed on the front of the building. We will be selling approximately 2,000 itafari…and the children will remember always that people all over the world believe in them.

The parents at Kigali Parents Primary School will also be participating in this fundraising. This is their school. Their children. But they need our help.

Give on the website or send us a check. Buy amatafari (many bricks)! I will get back with you when I return to get the information on how you would like your name written on your itafari. Can you imagine: building a school itafari by itafari by itafari.

Trabosh Presents Itafari to United Nations

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Itafari Foundation – Rebuilding Rwanda One Brick at a Time
April 7, 2006
United Nations, New York City, NY

My name is Victoria Trabosh and I am President of the Itafari Foundation.  The word Itafari is Kinyarwanda for brick.  I will explain how we chose this name later in my comments.  We are a not for Profit 501(c)(3) Foundation dedicated to assisting the people of Rwanda.  In the few minutes I have, I would like to tell you why we formed Itafari and how we are assisting people in Rwanda.

We know that genocide is not a crime of passion.  It is a premeditated act.  And so then is Itafari’s mission to assist and empower Rwandans.  Itafari’s focus is premeditated.  Our determination is premeditated.    What drives us, anyone, outside of Rwanda to want to make a difference?

We know that the genocide in Rwanda was not an African problem but a larger issue.    We know it was a human rights violation.  And we cannot stand by and ignore the results of our earlier indifference.

Twelve years ago, I missed the genocide.  I don’t remember hearing anything about it.  I did not know where Rwanda was.

In 1984 I visited Yad Vashem in Israel, the holocaust memorial outside of Jerusalem.  And after spending hours in the memorial I believed: never again.  I believed that the evil that killed millions of Jews could never be repeated.  And I felt assured that the world had learned its lesson.

I noticed what a serious place Israel was.  Its people were not frivolous or wasteful.  And I found the same true in Rwanda when I was there in June of 2005.

When I visited the genocide memorial in Kigali, Rwanda, I think I was less shocked by the images and human remains because I was prepared for what I would see.  But I was not prepared for my remembrance of the Holocaust memorial and my belief that it would never happen again and then knowledge that it had happened again and again and again.

And so we know that another genocide in Rwanda is as close as our indifference.  Another genocide is as close as our denial that it COULD ever happen again.  And another genocide is as close as Darfur.

But we also know that one person can make a difference.  A woman named Rita Ngarambe asked me to come to Rwanda and speak about hope.  I met her at a meeting in Portland Oregon in March 2004.  She was visiting Portland through World Vision as Director of the Microfinance Program.
 
Through her inspiration and belief that I could make a difference, I began to get interested in Rwanda and since that time, the intention of making a difference has been multiplied countless times by countless others.

In May 2005, I held a fundraiser for the Women of Rwanda to raise awareness and money for the Microfinance program in Rwanda.  Two women, Karen Freelander and Bethe McChesney who attended the event, pledged to raise $50K through Pay It Forward Events.

Their desire to make a significant contribution and a life changing difference for others led us to the formation of the Itafari Foundation.

Itafari is Kinyarwanda for brick.  And a brick represents the weight of a malnourished child that cannot be comforted.  It is the burden that a woman carries as she struggles to find a way to feed her family.  It is the color of the soil that a woman sees as she is being violated face down in the dirt.  But, the brick also represents hope.

 One brick alone can do nothing but together we can build something for and with the people of Rwanda.

And so Itafari’s purpose is clear – to help rebuild a nation one brick at a time.

Everyone touched by Itafari must be empowered.  Our donors, board members, recipients and those who casually observe what we do.

Organizations formed like Itafari fill a need.  Rwanda is a  country full of people who are survivors, orphans, widows and widowers, men and women of great vision, children and even the guilty, there is no end to what must be done and what can be accomplished.

Our foundation is exclusively for the people of Rwanda.  And that cannot change.  After all, our name, Itafari is Kinyarwanda!

Eight million people live in Rwanda.  And while we do not offer pity, we come with determination.   A determination to quench this fire within us to reach out to another human being in need. 

As their equal.

As our brothers and sisters of the human race.

We are an organization made up of more than just wazungu (white people), though there are a number of us.  We are also African American, Rwandan survivors, lawyers, writers, screenwriters, musicians, housewives, retired executives, professors of African history, students and children and most importantly:  we are people who care and believe that one person can make a difference.

We are all concerned citizens of the world who do not have all the answers but seek a better life for ourselves and others.

When you have the ability and space to create something for another, you should act.

A friend recently wrote a note to me that said, we celebrate and honor those who have died more by our action than by mere grief.  Not everyone has the opportunity to do that.  Not everyone came through the genocide whole enough to do anything but survive, or worse: wish they had not.Many Rwandans who I have met, both in the US and in Rwanda are lifting themselves and others out of the wreckage of a human explosion that was not their doing or desire.  And they are doing work that is necessary and combats all that is evil. Here are some examples:My dear friend, teacher and survivor Nassira teaches me Kinyarwanda and will not accept money for her efforts.Jean Paul Samputu, along with Jacques and Vincent, travel tirelessly throughout the world sharing the beauty and joy of the music, dance, and traditions of Rwanda.And Immaculee Ilibagiza who has found the way to forgiveness as many before her who are left to tell have also found a way to heal.This anniversary of the Rwandan Genocide that we must remember happened because the world became complacent. 

And however small the efforts of Itafari are, our faith and belief that one person makes a difference is enormous!  The size of the undertaking is also enormous but the human spirit intentionally focused can create unbelievable change.

Our focus is on widows and orphans, microfinance, education and equality for all Rwandans in the world.

We do not define Rwanda by its genocide, but by the strength of its people who refuse to give up.

I will spend May 2006 in Rwanda meeting with organizations, groups, and individuals who have a vision of how Itafari’s assistance can be useful for them.

For more information, please visit our website itafari.org, take a brochure or see me after this session. 

There is no end to what we believe is possible.  We look to the future.

To educating the children.
To believing in reconciliation and forgiveness.
To listening to and for what the Rwandan people need and want.
To working with Rwandans of integrity like Immaculee and Jean Paul who believe that their nation can be healed.
And to paraphrase Winston Churchill, to never ever ever ever give up.

Murakoze cyane.

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