Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Changemakers around the world

MEET THE NEW HEROES OF OUR TIME

What is a hero? The American Heritage Dictionary defines the word as "a person noted for feats of courage or nobility of purpose, especially one who has risked or sacrificed his or her life."
The heroes you'll meet on these pages and in these films are different from those in the pages of most history books. They are not famous politicians or legendary soldiers — yet they have improved the lives of MILLIONS of people and made the w
orld more secure. Their 'arsenals' are not of weaponry, but of creative ideas, dogged determination and a deep belief in their power to change the world. Also known as "social entrepreneurs," they develop innovations that bring life-changing tools and resources to people desperate for viable solutions.

Kailash Satyarthi

Projects: Global March Against Child Labor, Bachpan Bachao Andolan (BBA), South Asian Coalition on Child Servitude (SACCS), Rugmark
Locations: New Delhi, India (headquarters), partners in Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka
Kailash Satyarthi has saved tens of thousands of lives. At the age of 26 he gave up a promising career as an electrical engineer and dedicated his life to helping the millions of children in India who are forced into slavery by powerful and corrupt business- and land-owners. His original idea was daring and dangerous. He decided to mount raids on factories — factories frequently manned by arme
d guards — where children and often entire families were held captive as bonded workers.
After successfully freeing and rehabilitating thousands of children, he went on to build up a global movement against child labor. Today Kailash heads up the Global March Against Child Labor, a conglomeration of 2000 social-purpose organizations and trade unions in 140 countries.
Yet even as he has become a globally recognized figure, Kailash continues the gritty work of leading rai
ds to free slaves. Kailash believes that he must focus on a range of activities -- from the most grassroots to the most visionary -- in order to win the fight.

What Does SACCS Do?

Since its inception in 1989, SACCS and its partners have liberated nearly 40,000 bonded laborers, many of them bonded, working in various industries, including rug manufacturing. But to free such children without offering new opportunities would, in Kailash's view, be meaningless.
Bal Ashram in Rajasthan, India is a transition center where newly-freed slaves are taught basic skills. K
ailash describes the arrival of a girl recently freed from a stone quarry: "It's a joyous experience to watch the changing emotions flit across this beautiful girl's face. She's like an open book, and her varying expressions tell us a story: the story of transition from slavery to a new life of freedom. When her face lights up, it is clear she is taking her first steps toward freedom and belief in others."
Since the Ashram can only serve 100 children at a time, Kailash has begun a program called "Bal Mitra Gram" to encourage Indian villages to abolish child labor. In order to be a part of the program, an entire community must agree that no child will be put to work and every child will be sent to school.

While changing India village by village is a worthwhile pursuit, such a strategy could take centuries to achieve Kailash's goal, and he is not prepared to wait that long. So he has begun attacking the problem by harnessing the immense power of market forces.Many rugs from South Asia are manufactured using child labor. Kailash believes that if consumers around the world knew how their expensive and colorful Indian rugs were made, they would no longer think they were so beautiful. He started "Rugmark," a program in which rugs are labeled and certified to be child-labor-free by factories who that agree to be regularly inspected. Kailash plans to extend the labeling program to other products such as soccer balls, another popular product that is commonly made by children.
Kailash says "If not now, then when? If not you, then who? If we are able to answer these fundamental questi
ons, then perhaps we can wipe away the blot of human slavery."

Mimi Silbert

Project: Delancey Street Foundation
Location: San Francisco, Calif. U.S.A.
In 1971 Mimi Silbert founded Delancey Street with four residents, a thousand dollar loan and a dream. She envisioned a place where substance abusers, former felons and others who had hit bottom would, through their own efforts, be able to turn their lives around. Silbert has since built an empire grossing 20 million dollars a year with locations in New York, New Mexico, North Carolina and Los Angeles. She has never accepted a single penny of government funds. Since those early days in a single house, Mimi Silbert has empowered more than 14,000 people to lead crime-free, drug-free lives in mainstream society. They have acquired skills, they attend college and they are part of the workforce. Silbert says she has spent her career cultivating a "university of the streets." She calls it a "Harvard for losers," where the students are former pimps, prostitutes, junkies, drug dealers and armed robbers. Her program's name comes from Silbert's own past. Delancey Street is a place on Manhattan's lower east side where immigrants like her parents came to make a new life for themselves. What Does the Delancey Street Foundation Do? The Delancey Street Foundation is a residential education center where drug addicts, criminals and the homeless learn to lead productive, crime-free lives. It has been called the most successful rehabilitation project in the United States. The foundation runs at no cost to the taxpayer or client. They earn revenue by operating more than 20 businesses, including the Delancey Street Restaurant and Café and the Delancey Street Moving Company. These "training schools" not only generate income, they teach residents marketable skills and inculcate in them habits of self-control and self-discipline.

Each r
esident spends up to four years at the facility and must pass equivalency exams to obtain a high school diploma in order to graduate. They also need to line up a job and a place to live. Silbert likes to see each of her students graduate with three marketable skills to ensure their job success. Silbert reports that 65 percent of the organization's operating costs are paid for by revenue from its businesses. She originally rejected foundation money, fearing it would deter from the participants' feeling that their survival depended on the success of the businesses.

Today, the organization receives more than ten million dollars from private donations every year.
Silbert and Delancey Street are always facing new challenges. Today, offenders are often third-generation criminals. Silbert used to tell clients that their parents wanted a better life for them. Since participants' parents are often criminals as well, the draw to go back to the streets can be strong. Fortunately, after more than 30 years, Mimi Silbert isn't about to give up.

Moses Zulu

Project: Development Aid from People to People in Zambia (Children's Town)
Location: Lusaka, Zambia
Moses Zulu is a dynamic 40-year-old with a winning smile and extraordinary determination. In 1990 Zulu opened Children's Town to serve Zambian children orphaned by the AIDS epidemic and other causes. He is devoted to helping these orphans find their way in life.

The program has grown from a handful of children living in tent shelters to almost 300 children and a staff of 22 living in six different houses. The grounds include a primary school and a community center. Zulu's vision includes a plan to make Children's Town self sustaining. Zulu offers hope and inspiration to his young charges. "At our core," he says, "we enable our children to have dreams, to believe in themselves and to take responsibility for their lives."

What Does Children's Town Do?

According to UNICEF, by the end of 2004, nearly one million children were AIDS orphans. Many come from rural areas and, after their parents' deaths, they are force to flee to African cities, where their only means of survival may be working as a street vendor, or resorting to crime or prostitution — behavior that brings an extremely high risk of contracting AIDS and other illnesses. In Zambia's capital, Lusaka, alone, it is estimated that there are more than 75,000 AIDS orphans

For these children, basic needs are unaffordable luxuries. They have no childhood, no time to play, no future. They are overwhelmed by chronic illness, lack of shelter and frequent abuse by adults. Children's Town is a residential education and vocational training institution in the African village of Malambanyama, Zambia, designed to give some of these children basic life skills and hope for the future. Each child goes through a five-year program in which they are taught life skills, responsibility, values and self-care. They graduate with vocational training in agriculture or crafts and business management, as well as a ninth-grade diploma.

Children's Town has trained more than 90 students in agriculture, 50 in business and 400 in agribusiness. They are socialized, taught academic subjects like reading and math, and given practical skills like running a farm and doing carpentry. Children also attend counseling sessions and steel band rehearsal and interact with the local community at least once a week.
Although the future looks bleak for many African children, Moses Zulu's Children's Town provides an oasis of hope and a vitally important example for how poor countries with high numbers of orphans can respond with humanity and compassion to the next generation of the AIDS crisis.

Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy ("Dr. V.") & David Green

Project: Aravind Eye Hospital and Aurolab

Location: Mad
urai, India, Nepal and United States
Dr. Govindappa Venkataswamy and David Green use what Green terms "compassionate capitalism" to give sight and hearing back to millions of people who would otherwise be blind and deaf.

Dr. V. came to the conclusion as a young man that "intelligence and capability are not enough. There must be the joy of doing something beautiful." So instead of retiring at the age of 65, Dr. V. mortgaged his home and opened a hospital to perform free or low-cost cataract surgery — if untreated cataracts can lead to blindness — on poor Indians. In his first year, Dr. V. performed 5000 surgeries. Green was inspired by Dr. V.'s belief that humans were put on Earth not get to rich, but to serve. He noticed that the number of surgeries Dr. V. could perform was limited by the high cost of replacement lenses — $150.00 a pair.

When Green discovered that the actual cost of making t
he lenses could, with a creative approach, be reduced to just $10.00 a pair, he convinced Dr. V. to open a lens factory. Green is convinced that western capitalism has failed to grasp opportunities in the developing world because of a focus on extracting the highest possible profit from every item sold. He says "compassionate capitalism" extracts a small amount of profit from each item sold, but generates a very high sales volume. In the process, it is possible to make available critical goods and services — like eye care — to billions of people.

What Do Aravind Eye Hospital and Aurolab Do?


Dr. V. and David Green are dedicated to making medical technology and health care services accessible, affordable and financially self-sustaining. More than two million surgeries a year are performed at Aravind Eye Hospital using products made through Aurolab, such as intraocular lenses, spectacle lenses, optical lenses, suture needles, cataract kits and hearing aids. Aurolab's products are used by eye care institutions and ophthalmologists in more than 120 countries. The factory produces hundreds of thousands of lenses each year — 10 percent of the world supply — at $5.00 a pair. The company turns a profit of thirty percent on its investment. With the revenue stream produced by Aurolab, Dr. V. has been able to open five new eye hospitals in southern India.

Through Aravind Eye Hospital and Aurolab, Dr. V. and David Green have performed what might as well be miracles for elderly Indians living in remote villages. Restoring their sight and hearing has given them back their dignity and allowed them to contribute to their communities again.
Nick Moon & Martin Fisher

Project: ApproTEC (Appropriate Technology for Enterprise Creation)
Location: Nairobi, Kenya, offices in Tanzania, Mali and San Francisco, Calif.

Nick Moon and Martin Fisher founded ApproTEC out of their belief that poor people don't need handouts, they need concrete opportunities to use their skills and initiative. ApproTEC provides these opportunities by specially designing and manufacturing tools that help people work more productively, allowing them to break the cycle of poverty. "The concept of poor people is really that they need handouts, they need help," says Moon. "We say that a poor person is a very entrepreneurial person and the one thing they want in life is to get ahead." Moon says his company takes a business-like approach to the business of development, "otherwise we're going to be locked forever in this cycle of handouts and giveaways and bleeding-heart social welfare programs."

Fisher says he believes a private sector solution like ApproTEC is the only sustainable economic model for developing the world. He says that on average, income goes up by a factor of 10 after people buy an ApproTEC product — providing a return on investment that would be hard to beat anywhere in the world. "It's transforming their lives," says Fisher, "moving them from poverty into the middle class. If you look at the problems in Africa, in other developing countries -- the solution is to create a middle class."

What Does ApproTEC Do?

ApproTEC develops and markets new technologies in Africa. The company's product lines include a series of manually operated micro-irrigation "MoneyMaker" pumps and the "Mafuta Mali" sunflower and sesame seed oil press. These low-cost tools are bought by local entrepreneurs and used to establish new small businesses. The technologies not only create jobs, they create new wealth. All of ApproTEC's tools are designed to be profitable, affordable, durable, easy to operate and easy to maintain. Most of the equipment is manually operated because electricity and fuel are expensive. The tools are also designed to be mass-produced locally in Africa. ApproTEC has developed a sophisticated monitoring program in order to gauge impact. According to their latest research, 35,000 new businesses have been started with their products (about 800 per month), 35 million dollars a year in new profits and wages have been generated, and new incomes drawn from the businesses account for more than .5 percent of Kenya's GDP and .2 percent of Tanzania's.

Fabio Rosa

Project: Agroelectric System of Appropriate Technology (STA) and Institute for Development of Natural Energy and Sustainability (IDEAAS)
Location: Brazil

Fabio Rosa is a charismatic, charming Gaucho -- a guitar-playing cowboy with the energy and vision of a corporate titan who is determined to bring electricity and new farming opportunities to millions of rural Brazilians, allowing them to enjoy sustainable livelihoods while preserving the environment for future generations. Rosa first came to the Brazilian state of Rio Grande Do Sol in the early 1980s, when much of the rural population lived without electricity because they could not afford the installation costs. He saw that by using a single wire system instead of the ususal three wire he could bring affordable electricity to most the people in the region and create a model for bringing it to all Brazilians and people of other countries. Rosa's first effort in the countryside outside the town of Palmeras was wildly successful — bringing hundreds of families electric powered pumps, refrigerators and lights for the first time in their lives. Rosa spread his idea to thousands of families, and eventually to more than half a million Brazilians. But in the late 1990s, the electricity industry in Brazil was privatized and the new owners weren't interested in pursuing his model because the profit margins in the countryside were too low. So Rosa came up with a new plan to rent solar power equipment to villagers who live in the most remote areas of Brazil.

At times, Rosa has felt like a modern-day Sisyphus, constantly pushing the his boulder uphill only to have it roll down to the bottom, forcing him to take up the challenge again from the beginning. In a number of cases, he has come up with a new idea to serve poor familie
s, poured his life into building that idea, managed to realize his vision successfully at an impressive scale — only to be thwarted from further success by bureaucratic forces beyond his control, often by the very government agencies that have failed to meet the needs that Rosa is addressing. But, after twenty three years, he is not prepared to give up the fight. Perhaps, it is because it gives him so much joy to work they way he does. He says, "I am trying to build a little part of the world in which I would like to live. And even if my inspiration is romantic, I require material results, a re-colored reality and so my projects are practical, doable work. Creating these projects, implementing them and succeeding, witnessing one's dreams come true, is my version of happiness." Recently, in one of Rosa's most unexpected victories, the Brazilian government announced it will use his single wire model to bring electricity to millions of Brazilians.

What Do STA and IDEAAS Do?

Fabio Rosa founded both a for-profit corporation -- Agroelectric System of Appropriate Technology (STA) -- and a not-for-profit organization -- the Institute for Development of Natural Energy and Sustainability (IDEAAS). Through STA and IDEAAS, Rosa has been working to bring electricity and community development to rural Brazil since the early 1980s using a combination of non-profit and business approaches to reach the largest possible number of people, including the very poor. IDEAAS creates and demonstrates models of self-sustainable development for low-income rural populations by focusing on the use of high-efficiency and low-cost technologies in the fields of renewable energy and agricultural science. STA has been one of the leading companies in Brazil spreading the use of solar energy and managed grazing systems.

Rosa first floated the idea of renting solar equipment in a village in southern Brazil called Encruzilhada, a poor area where many of homes are so remote that they have little hope of being connected to the electric "grid" anytime in the foreseeable future. His biggest challenges weren't technical; they were overcoming people's beliefs that solar energy was unreliable and unaffordable, and then developing cost-effective systems to serve many customers who pay only tiny amounts each month for their electricity.

Moving forward, Rosa now identifies leaders in each community to who help him convince people their neighbors that renting solar energy will benefit them, and will cost no more than they are already paying for candles, batteries and lamp oil.
At least 600 families in the region have joined his program. It is a slow process, but Rosa sees Encruzilhada as an essential first step toward his ultimate goal of demonstrating how to reach the 2 billion people worldwide who still live without electricity. His mantra: "First Encruzilhada, then Brazil, then the world. But first Encruzilhada."

Albina Ruiz

Project: Ciudad Saludable
Location: Peru

Albina Ruiz started worrying about health and environmental problems caused by garbage in Peru when she was a student studying industrial engineering. After writing her thesis, she came up with an idea for a new community-managed system of waste collection that she hoped would serve as a model for urban and rural communities around Peru. One of the first neighborhoods she worked with was El Cono Norte in Lima, where1.6 million people produced about 600 metric tons of garbage daily. The municipal authorities were only able to process about half of the community's trash. People tossed the rest in streets, rivers and vacant lots, causing serious health problems as well as creating a perpetually ugly environment that many residents found dispiriting. Ruiz's idea called for micro-entrepreneurs — small business people chosen from the community — to take charge of collecting and processing the garbage, at once addressing another serious problem in the community: unemployment. She helped these businesses get going and set the monthly fee for the service at about $1.50, the cost of a beer, and came up with a wide array of creative marketing schemes — including special gift baskets — to entice families to use the services and, importantly, pay for them regularly and on time.

Ruiz started doing the work alone nearly 20 years ago. She now oversees projects in 20 cities across Peru, employs more than 150 people and serves ov
er 3 million residents. Her approach to waste management is so successful that she has been asked to come up with a national plan for Peru, while other Latin American countries have expressed interest in emulating her method. Even though her organization has grown, Ruiz remains central to the operations on the ground. She still visits municipalities overwhelmed by garbage, checks on neighborhoods involved in her program and meets with government officials. Ruiz says that where most people see a problem, she sees a possibility. Her ultimate goal is to change the way people think.

What Does Ciudad Saludable Do?

Ciudad Saludable develops efficient solid waste management systems that generate employment and contribute to better quality-of-life and cleaner cities. Ruiz created the organization because government-run garbage collection in Peru had not been effective and illegal dumping was causing environmental deterioration and ground water contamination. The garbage crisis arose partly because municipalities failed to collect the funds necessary to maintain the infrastructure. Because the system wasn't working, people didn't pay their monthly fees, making the garbage problem worse. Ruiz set out to break that cycle. In addition to taking care of the garbage problem, her micro-enterprise model provides self-employment opportunities to local residents in neighborhoods where unemployment rates are high.

The businesses are often run by women who go door to door collecting garbage and fees, and educating people about respecting and protecting
their environment. Some women have even built profitable businesses by creating products like organic fertilizer out of the trash they collect. By generating income for local residents and involving them in the process of improving their neighborhood, Ruiz has succeeded in obtaining pay rates of up to 98 percent. The government collection pay rates sunk as low as 40 percent. Ruiz's simple idea has become a successful business and community-organizing model that benefits large numbers of people and has worldwide potential.

Maria Teresa Leal

Project: Coopa-Roca
Location: Rio de Janerio, Brazil
Maria Teresa Leal founded Coopa-Roca, a sewing cooperative located in Rocinha, the largest favela (slum) in Rio de Janeiro, in 1981. Nicknamed "Tetê," Leal has a college degree in social science and a license to teach elementary school. It is unusual for a middle-class or wealthy Brazilian to set foot in a favela. But when Leal visited the favela with her housekeeper, who lived there, she saw that many poor women in the favela were skilled seamstresses — yet they had no opportunity to use their skills to generate income. So she got the idea to start a co-operative, which would recycle fabric remnants to produce attractive quilts and pillows. Gradually, as the women gained experience and developed skills in manufacturing and marketing, the work grew more professional. In the early 90s Tetê attracted interest from Rio's fashion world, and in 1994 Coopa-Roca began producing clothes for the catwalk.

In order to acquire the luxurious fabrics for high-quality designer clothes, Tetê sought out donations. She also convinced fashion designers to teach the women about production skills and tr
ends. Coopa-Roca started getting media attention, which helped Tetê get more fabric and more contracts. Pieces produced by the co-op are unique, combining a particular type of craftsmanship originated in northern Brazil with luxe fabrics found in couture fashion. Tetê recently signed a contract with the European clothes manufacturer C&A, which she hopes will allow the co-op to expand its offerings and multiply the number of women who benefit from it.

What Does Coopa Roca Do?

Coopa-Roca's mission is to provide flexible employment opportunities to women from low-income families who live in Rocinha, particularly opportunities for single mothers to work from home. The co-operative formed as an offshoot from a recycling project involving local children.

The first group of women was organized to produce decorative craftwork made with textile remnants and using traditional Brazilian techniques such as drawstring appliqué, crochet, knot work and patchwork.
The co-op employs more than 150 women, most of whom are homemakers who had never worked before. Its office is still based in the middle of the favela. All decisions are made collectively and the women share the responsibilities of production, administration and publicity. Most women work from home, but they come to the office to bring their finished pieces and to get more fabric. At first the co-op's biggest challenge was finding outlets for their products. As the project has grown,

Tetê has been able to focus on training younger women as new leaders in the community. Although conditions in the favela are still difficult, the women say the co-op has given them a chance to improve their quality of life dramatically.


Dina Abdel Wahab

Project: The Baby Academy
Location: Cairo, Egypt

When Dina Abdel Wahab's son Ali was born with Down syndrome, she was unable to find a preschool to meet his needs. Children with Down syndrome do not benefit from environments where they are kept apart from mainstream society. They need to be integrated in classrooms with non-disabled children whom they can interact with and enjoy mutually-beneficial learning experiences. In Cairo, at the time, Dina had no such options for her son. If such a place was going to exist, she would have to create it herself. Abdel Wahab felt that preschooling in Egypt amounted to little more than babysitting.

Early childhood education was not grounded in the science of child development and psychology, as it is in European and American schools. Determined to help Ali lead a normal life and to improve preschool education in her country, Abdel Wahab made a brave choice: She decided to open her own school where Ali would become the first student.
"I didn't want to change my son's lifestyle, so I decided to try to change society," she said. "Being an entrepreneur I had the flexibility of doing what I really believe in. In my past development work there was too much bureaucracy, too many agendas. Now I could put away the papers and be there to give what I felt the children needed."

What Does The Baby Academy Do?

The Baby Academy is a chain of preschools for children three months to five years old. The school's child-centered philosophy is based on love, learning and play and its curriculum is tailored to children's developmental needs and designed to inspire children to achieve their potential.
Today the business is thriving with a remarkable 20 percent of its preschoolers children with special needs. Abdel Wahab recently opened a new branch in Cairo and plans to open two more schools in the next two years. Eventually she'd like to franchise the concept. According to a United Nations report, less than four percent of Arab children have access to preschool education. The mission of The Baby Academy is to become a leader in early childhood education throughout Egypt and the Middle East.

Now that her private model is working, Abdel Wahab is preparing to
work with the government. Since not everyone can afford The Baby Academy, she advocates for inclusion opportunities for special needs children in Egypt's mainstream education system. She believes it is the role of entrepreneurs to envision new ideas to solve society's problems and assume the risks of bringing them to life. She says, "It is easier for me as an entrepreneur to take the risk and do something, than for the government to do that on a mass scale. I do think that this is the future, I do think we can work together as partners."
Inderjit Khurana

Project: Ruchika School Social Service Organization (RSSO), Train Platform Schools
Location: Orissa, India
As a schoolteacher, Inderjit Khurana used to take the train to work. And each day, in the stations, she would come into contact with dozens of children who spent their days begging from train passengers rather than attending school. She learned that it was not a rare or isolated problem and that millions of children in India live on the streets. Convinced that these children would never be able to escape their conditions of poverty and homelessness without education, and realizing that it would be impossible to enroll these children in school, Inderjit decided to create a model program for "taking the school to the most out-of-school children."

Khurana's "train platform schools" aim to provide a creative school atmosphere and equip children with the basic levels of education necessary to allow them to work productively, enjoy many of life's pleasures, and become positive contributors to their communities. Khurana's ultimate goals reach far beyond the 20 platform schools she and her colleagues have created in India's Bhubaneswar region. She is determined that her program become a model for effectively changing the lives of the poorest children throughout India and the world.

What Does RSSO Do?

In response to the challenges faced by children who live in the slums of Bhubaneswar, India, Inderjit Khurana founded the Ruchika Social Service Organization (RSSO) in 1985. The program is dedicated to creating a society free of child labor, destitution and exploitation by advancing the opportunities of extremely underprivileged children through education. Initially the program consisted of a single train platform school. Today the organization reaches out to more than 4,000 underprivileged children and their families. Remarkably, the train school program is inexpensive and cost effective. Teachers gather the children together between the stops of the train for reading, writing, arithmetic, geography and history taught through song, puppetry and other teaching devices such as the train schedules themselves.

RSSO targets mostly street children, child laborers and children of impoverished families, providing basic literacy, voc
ational training, nutritional information, medical treatment and emergency assistance. Some of the children are orphans who live on the street and beg to acquire the barest necessities. The rest of the children live in the slums and are sent by their parents to beg at the train station. Khurana recently came to realize that the education of these children is practically impossible when the most basic needs of their families are not being met. So she expanded the program to provide food and medicine to their families. Khurana maintains that every child has the right to an education and vows that if the child cannot come to the school, then the school must come to the child.

Sompop Jantraka

Project: Development and Education Program for Daughters & Community Center (DEPDC)
Location: Mae Sai,Thailand and Mekong sub-region (including Laos, Burma and the Yunnan Province of China)
Sompop Jantraka has put his life on the line to save young women sold into prostitution by poor farming families. He is also proving that these women can be far more valuable to Thailand as educated members of the work force than as sex slaves.
Jantraka offers the poor families of young women between the ages of 8 and 18 (who are often desperate for income and easily deceived by brothel owners) an alternative to sending their daughters into prostitution by providing the girls with education, job training and employment assistance.

Eight different projects focus on children at risk, children's rights, child sexual abuse and forced labor.
Since 1989 when he founded the Daughters Education Program, Jantraka's work has directly affected more than 1,000 children. Starting with an initial group of 19 students, the program is now supporting more than 360 girls and boys. Jantraka considers education and training the keys to allow these girls to find alternative employment, improve their communities and reach their full potential.

What Does DEPDC Do?


The Development and Education Program for Daughters & Community Center (DEPDC) is an organization that offers education and full-time accommodation to at-risk children in order to prevent them from being trafficked into the sex industry or other types of forced labor. The program
offers alternatives through education and life-skills training, as well as by strengthening families and communities. Human sex trafficking is a worldwide problem, but it is especially tenacious in Thailand. Victims can be Thai women and children, ethnic hill tribe minorities, and women who migrate illegally from Burma, China and Laos. Without citizenship or land tenure, the majority of northern Thailand's hill tribe people live in poverty without access to education, health care or legitimate work opportunities. Drug addiction and HIV/AIDS infection are also pervasive problems in the region. Brothel owners have networks of agents who comb villages and seek out troubled families. The traffickers offer to exchange the families' young daughters for money. The problem consists of a complicated web involving relatives, village and city authorities, police, government officials and business people who all profit from the girls' labor.

Every year, in conjunction with teachers, village leaders and monks, DEPDC identifies children most at risk. They may be orphans or have parents who are drug addicts. Many have older sisters or other relatives already working as prostitutes. Jantraka hopes that the schooling and vocational training these children receive through DEPDC offers a viable alternative to the sex industry, providing them with a good start to leading a healthy life.

Illac Diaz: the Making of a Global Leader

Just named a “Young Global Leader of 2008” by the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Geneva, Manila-born Illac Diaz, 36, is making waves not by leaving the Philippines (though he’s done that too) but by calling the world’s attention to Filipino vision sparked by brilliance and marked by compassion.
Illac joins Senator Francis “Chiz” Escudero and 243 other public figures, executives and intellectuals 40 years old or younger who “initiate, develop and drive innovative solutions to globally-oriented issues," in the words of the head of WEF’s Young Global Leaders Forum David Aikman.

Selected from 5000 nominees worldwide, Diaz and Escudero now count with the likes of actor Leonardo DiCaprio, CNN news anchor Anderson Cooper, tennis superstar Steffi Graf, the King of Bhutan Jigme Wangchuck, the Queen of Morocco Lala Salma, Harvard Law School director Daniel Shapiro and president/CEO of the Neiman Marcus Group Brendan Hoffman in giving “a preview of what effective, collaborative leadership in the 21st century might look like.”

Many know already of Chiz Escudero, but who is Illac (pronounced ee-lak) Diaz?

Nature and nurture both have answers. His father Ramon is an accomplished visual artist who also happens to be a brother of the first Filipina Miss Universe, Gloria Diaz. His Italian-born mother Silvana, nee Ancellotti, runs the dynamic art house Galeria Duemila adjacent to the family home in Pasay City. Surrounded by both art and squatters in the neighborhood, Illac’s childhood memories include accompanying his mother on her weekly feeding program for street children.

Today he credits what he initially resisted as a chore for the human connection he developed with people outside the “cloistered groups” he was born to. Before Illac became a model, party figure and sometime executive for Smart Communications, he had already closed a crucial inner gap separating the educated Filipino from the teeming ranks of the Philippine poor.
“Why can't there be a business that we could sustain everyday, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and continuously solve problems?” Illac asked. He had both the head and the heart to answer his own question.

With a bachelor’s degree in Management Economics as a full academic as well as athletic scholar at the Ateneo, the seed his mother planted began its blossoming as Illac next earned a masters degree in social entrepreneurship at the Asian Institute of Management. His graduate thesis, “Shanties to Jobs: Creating a Migrant Center in Manila,” was not only chosen Best of the Year at AIM. It would be the first proof of a well-grounded, compassionate vision.

“My priority is to answer the call of service on my own terms in confronting poverty,” Illac told the writer Ria V. Ferro. Warm human encounters in his own Pasay neighborhood taught him that the poor are “often people of high intelligence who are unfortunately under-employed or unemployed, with little or no prospects to improve their lives.”

Establishing Pier One in Intramuros the year he graduated from AIM in 2001 was the beginning of Illac’s lengthening trail of firsts. This first migrant housing center in Manila met an urgent demand for affordable, clean and safe transient housing for men coming to Manila from the provinces to look for work as seamen, and seamen awaiting the next voyage out. Before then their housing options had been unhygienic shanties, expensive but run-down government shelters or the open air at the Luneta.

Today Pier One’s initial 40 beds have increased to 2000. When skyrocketing rent in Intramuros drove its recent transfer to Ermita, it had already benefitted a total of 120,000 Filipino seamen beyond affordable shelter to job search assistance, creation of small business opportunities and HIV/AIDS treatment.

Pier One made Illac Diaz the youngest AIM alumnus to receive an Honors & Prestige award in 2003. CNN reported the story and three new awards came in 2004 – an Everyday Hero Special Award from Readers Digest Asia; an Entrepreneur Award from the 1st Johnny Walker Social Awards; and a runner-up award in New York’s Next Big Idea International Design Competition. In 2005 came a TOYM Award, the first for Social Entrepreneurship.

In September that year, Illac left for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston as a Fulbright-Humphrey Scholar and Research Fellow in a Special Program for Urban and Regional Studies (SPURS). This would lead to a grand slam of firsts never before accomplished by Filipinos at MIT – three grand prizes for teams either led by or with Illac Diaz as a member: the inaugural $ 100 K Business Plan Competition on the “development track”; the $1K Business Ideas Competition; and the IDEAS Competition.

The latter included a “Peanut Revolution” to help women manually shelling peanuts with simple pedal-powered machines, and First Step Coral, an artificial coral reef system to attract fish stock to shallower waters and hasten the growth of the shellfish population – important sources of nutrition for coastal communities in the Philippines and beyond.
Practically without a pause next came Illac’s new MyShelter Foundation, Inc. and its “earthbag” construction, the first in Asia. This more affordable, indigenous rather than fully manufactured construction material addressed the shortage of clinics and schools in rural Philippines.


MyShelter has thus far built five clinics and twenty classrooms at one fourth the cost in 10 provinces, as well as conducted complementary seminars on preserving dwindling forest resources.Housing and all forms of shelter have been a constant theme of Illac Diaz’s public life. “(The) dome houses he worked on some years back impressed me as a project that combined pragmatism with aesthetic sensibility. Bonus points on the work's ‘compassion’ and ‘creativity’ scale went through the roof. In this case, literally an egg shaped roof, made of soil, lime, water and some cement,” wrote Ria Ferro in an interview for the magazine Pinoy Global Access in November, 2006.

“Nearly fireproof and earthquake proof, with a naturally cooler internal environment, such houses would take less energy to maintain, and cost about 50% less to construct than a traditional assembled box house. I remember thinking: what sort of mind would come up with something as unique, unexpected and relevant as that?”

The idea had alighted on Illac while visiting his late aunt Rio Diaz-Cojuangco in Negros, where he noticed adobe bridges built in Spanish times. Internet research and visits to India and America made him realize that the idea of adobe houses was eminently applicable to the Philippines.
More important than the ‘what’ and ‘how’ is the ‘why’ that he shared with Ferro:
“The issue here is the need for more housing. As population escalates, so will the gap. The main point is the involvement of the residents themselves in the task of sustainable construction and community building. By the way they build their own settlements even at the barest of resources, we can see that they that they are willing to work and capable of coming together.”
Ria Ferro observes that “identifying gaps of service, devising ingenious business solutions based on pioneering ideas and achieving significant gains in the quality of life of a marginalized group” have been the themes of Illac Diaz’s world trajectory, with awards trailing behind.


In 2006, his year at MIT, he was named one the Ten Outstanding Persons of the World by Jaycees International. Word of the WEF Young Global Leaders Award came as he presently works on a global architectural competition to design more disaster resistant classrooms in the Philippines. Back in Boston, this time he’s on a mid-career Masters in Public Administration as a Catherine Reynolds scholar in Social Entrepreneurship in Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.

As Illac’s now trademark vision, compassion, creativity (and good looks) make his naming after the Aztec god of light progressively more descriptive, he has reflected, “It’s really weird. When I was an advertising executive for Smart, I made a lot of money, but I would never be able to afford anything I do today. When I started helping out, people started offering advice, consultancy and I got this scholarship.

Somehow by giving, you get so much more. I made more friends than I ever had before, I travel more than I’ve ever done before, study in the best schools. If you do something good, the future will come. By doing good, the world will conspire to work with you to achieve new heights.” Amen.

Source: INQUIRER.netFirst Posted 16:09:00 03/19/2008

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Bill Drayton, C.E.O. and Founder

Bill Drayton has been a social entrepreneur since he was a New York City elementary school student. He was born to a mother who emigrated from Australia as a young cellist and an American father who, also unafraid to step into the unknown, became an explorer at an equally young age. Public service and strong values run through the stories of both parents' families -- including several of the earliest anti-slavery abolitionist and women's leaders in the U.S. These family influences, the rich diversity and openness of life in Manhattan-as well as America's deep cultural concern with equity, which flourished during the Civil Rights years-all interacted with one another and with Bill's temperament to plant Ashoka's earliest roots.

In elementary school, Bill loved geography and history and was equally unmotivated in Latin and math. His real passion in those years went to sailing, and starting and running a series of newspapers in his school and beyond. In high school he created and built the Asia Society into the largest student organization. By high school he was also a NAACP member and actively engaged in and deeply moved by civil rights work. At Harvard he founded the Ashoka Table; and, at Yale Law School, he launched Yale Legislative Services which, by the time he graduated, engaged one third of the student body in helping key legislators throughout the northeast design and draft legislation.

Bill's deepening commitments to Asia, especially South Asia, and to civil rights were closely linked. Martin Luther King, Jr. followed Mahatma Gandhi's way, and anyone concerned with inequity within the U.S. could only be more disturbed by the greater inequalities between the world's North and South.

Once focused on such a chasm, any entrepreneur would have to ask: "What can I do?" At Harvard and Oxford, Bill did ask. Fully appreciating how central to significant change ("development") entrepreneurs are, his answer was the Ashoka idea.

Bill is also a manager and management consultant - choices that also grow from his fascination with how human institutions work. Although he loves and thinks first in historical terms, he is trained in economics, law, and management, the three key-interventionist disciplines. He was a McKinsey and Company consultant for almost ten years, gaining wide experience serving both public and private clients.

For four years, he was Assistant Administrator at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, where he had lead responsibility for policy, budget, management, audit, and representing the environment in Administration-wide policy development, notably including budget, energy, and economic policy. He successfully "intrapreneured" a series of major innovations and reforms in the field, ranging from the introduction of emissions trading to the use of economics-defined incentives to remove the advantage of delaying compliance. Later he founded and led Save EPA (an association of professional environmental managers that helped the Congress, press, administration, citizen groups, and public understand and the block much of the radically destructive policies proposed by the Administrator Ann Gorsuch and others). Bill also founded and led Environmental Safety (which helps develop and spread better ways of implementing environmental laws).

He also served briefly in the White House, and taught both law and management at Stanford Law School and Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.

He is currently significantly involved as board chair of Get America Working! and Youth Venture, both major strategic innovations for the public good.

Bill has received many awards for his achievements. He was elected one of the early MacArthur Fellows for his work, including the founding of Ashoka. Yale School of Management gave him its annual Award for Entrepreneurial Excellence. The American Society of Public Administration and the National Academy of Public Administration jointly awarded him their National Public Service Award, and the Common Cause gave him its Public Service Achievement Award. He has also been named a Preiskel-Silverman Fellow for Yale Law School and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Most recently in 2005, he was selected one of America's Best Leaders by US News & World Report and Harvard's Center for Public Leadership. In the same month he was the recipient of the Yale Law School's highest alumni honor, The Yale Law School Award of Merit- for having made a substantial contribution to Public Service.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

(PH) BEST COUNTRYSIDE BUSINESSES

This is an article from a magazine last October 2005. It's about a real story of a filipino entrepreneur.

WELCOME TO THE SEAWEED COUNTRY:

Zamboanga’s bountiful seas have made it the home of fish processors and the country’s largest supplier of dried seaweed.
By Marjorie Ann R. Duterte

Zhuvaida Pantaran discovered seaweed around 1995 while visiting her father’s coastal hometown in Zamboanga del Sur, where her poor relatives relied solely on seaweed farming to live. There were no traders in Pagadian City then, so most of the seaweed farmers who could travel to Zamboanga City, sell their harvest. “There were times when no buyers came and they stopped planting,” says Pantaran. “They had no source of living other than seaweed farming.” Moved, Pataran used some of her husband’s savings to buy her relatives’ dried seaweed and initially sold five tons at P15.25 a kilogram to her brother’s employer, a seaweed processor. She later supplied him with 50 tons worth P900,000.

Excited by the dried seaweed’s potential, Pantaran studied everything about it and then provided her relatives and other seaweed farmers with Eucheuma Cottonii seedlings, planting materials, pump boats, and cash advances for their daily needs. She borrowed P250,000 as rolling capital from a rural bank in 1997 to expand her business, turning to the big seaweed processors in Cebu including Shemburg, the industry leader. She now supplies Shemburg, Kerry Food Ingredients, and Genu Philippines with 500 to 700 tons of dried seaweed monthly at P36.50 to P38.00 a kilogram. She buys her stocks from nine seaweed-producing towns in Pagadian that she helped develop.

Pantaran’s ZDS Enterprise re-dries and cleans the farmers’ seaweed in her warehouse and separates the good ones from the bad. Buyers pay her per sack after the dried seaweed is weighed. She nets P250,000 a month form the business, and she is thankful that her husband, a contract worker based abroad, no longer needed to leave the country to earn money.

“My first intention was to help, but I found it was very profitable business,” she says.

This is another story that has inspired me and I think for many as well. Zhuvaida Pantaran has not only helped her relatives, but the livelihood of the seaweed farmers community, whose source of living has no guarantee of continues support for them. She has provided them income, in turn, she gained profits. Just like Muhamad Yunus, she has seen the need of her fellowmen from the countryside, and she has come up with a desire to help them not only to improve and develop, but change their lives. From her simple desire to help others, it has given her a big success and wealth. It takes a lot of risk and effort to be successful, but the eagerness and desire to achieve it will make it possible.

When you want your business to be successful, you have to consider the people behind it. These people are those who strive to be in your business and whom you share your goals and visions with. They are the ones who work hard for the success of your business, and you in turn, will help them achieved their goals. The ability to work with these people with humbleness and positive attitude will enhance and strengthen the working conditions inside the business.

Posted by: Jasmin Bautista

Saturday, January 24, 2009

The 1st Filipino!

Illac Diaz
AKA Illac Angelo Ancellotti Diaz


1st Filipino winner of the 1st DHL Young Entrepreneurs for Sustainability Award (YES, 2007)

1st Filipino recipient of the Ten Outstanding Young Men award for social entrepreneurship (TOYM, 2005)

1st Filipino Winner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology US$100K Business Plan Competition
Founder of the Usap-Kamay program

Founder of MyShelter Foundation


“Nowadays, our most important resource is being left out: the young people who want to make a change. Young people can change the world. Sometimes, establishments don’t work. It’s up to us to find a way to do what we want.” -ID

Who is Illac Diaz?


Diaz, Illac

Prior Education
MIT Special Program in Urban and Regional Studies (SPURS), Research
Fellow Asian Institute of Management, Masters of Entrepreneurship
Ateneo de Manila University, Business Administration Degree


Professional Experience
My Shelter Foundation: Executive Director
Pier One Seafarer’s Center: President
Ten Outstanding Young Persons of the World for Social Enterprise Award Recipient 2006
MIT $100,000 Business Plan Competition Grand Prize Winner (Development track)
Ashoka Low-Cost Housing Global Competition Finalist (2006)

Biography

Illac: "My involvement with social enterprise began as a thesis project for my masters program. We were challenged to seek opportunities where business skills could be used to create sustainable solutions to poverty situations in the Manila area. I was interested in the impacts of the large transient population brought about by the country’s focus on exporting labor, especially on housing and HIV/AIDS. This lead me to do research on the seafarer population, which had the highest rate of movement into the city at about a million people a year; this group also accounted for 35% of all HIV cases recorded for the Overseas Contract Workers (OCW). No alternatives were available to this low-income group."

"Starting with only forty beds, Pier One was established as a shelter where seafarers could find accommodation for one dollar a night and a unique system where they could be given temporary jobs during their stay. This project has since grown to 1,500 beds, and it has both served and provided job assistance to over 95,000 maritime workers to date. The program is further strengthened by weekly programs on HIV/AIDS and the availability of free medical assistance. Through the Fellowship, I am excited to break new ground with insights I will gain from my colleagues and knowledge I will gain from the program that will increase the social impact of my work."