Monday, 6 October 2014

Cans For Kids 2014-Goat Project Nusa Penida

Cans For Kids: 2014 Goat Project
Our Lady of Hope School: Year 5/6 students

Cans For Kids Project working together with FNPF

Journalist: Kerry Hall
Students Hayley and Tahlia buried in recyclables (Photography by Pat Kr)
























The ‘Cans For Kids Project’ – a fundraising and social outreach initiative by Year 5 & 6
students at Our Lady of Hope School in Adelaide, South Australia – provides micro-financing
funds for Balinese children in need from the sale of recyclable plastic bottles, cans and fruit
boxes.
Students collect the containers, which are cleaned and sorted, before selling them to raise
money for social-enterprise projects on and around Bali. The student’s latest campaign has
funded the purchase of five goats loaned to families of schoolchildren on the island of Nusa
Penida, off Bali– an Indonesian island group popular with generations Australian holiday
makers.
With support from Friends of the National Parks Foundation (FNPF), the proceeds of
‘Cans for Kids Project’ paid for purchase and transport of the goats to Nusa Penida. The
project has provided opportunity for five families who live on Nusa Penida to ‘borrow’
goats for two years. Any off spring born during the loan period can be kept by the family
for breeding and sale.
After the loan period, the original goat is ‘returned’ and loaned to another family. The
goat-loan-breeding program can help offset educational costs of children and also support
the work of FNPF. The Cans For Kids Project is all about kids recycling to help kids in need.
See : Cans for Kids

And we're on the way to Nusa Penida! (Photography by Damai)

Almost there..........(Photography by Godi)






The 'Cans For Kids goat family settling into their new homes.
(Photography of 5 goats by Damai)































Goats
Humans rarely talk of us, the humble, simple Goat
We’re seen by most on roads and paths and places quite remote
We graze in mountain pastures and bleat with pure delight
We’re going to help a family, fight their awful plight
Our task is very simple and of course we aim to please
Our masters’ income trebles as he sells our milk and cheese
He keeps the profits for his tribe, a better life now yields
We get treated handsomely, by living in lush fields
After a vacation, off we go once more
Assisting one more family, escaping from being poor
I urge more Goats to join this scheme, to see the children smile
To realise our diversity, to see it’s all worthwhile
Rhyme by Jerry Berry Roberts.
Jerry Roberts is a travelling poet, who pens popular rhymes
of life’s wonders around the globe.



Cans For Kids 2014/15 Child Sponsorship-Adi Rare Bhuana Foundation


During 2014 and 2015 the Cans For Kids Project also collaborated with
the Adi Buana Foundation (ADF)

to provide a scholarship for this little boy (Bayu) to attend school for one year.

This will also occur for 2015.


Bayu is a healthy, energetic little boy raring to go!
Bayu (early 2014) prior to starting school


His father (Made) is disabled.




His mother (Shanti) has had polio. They find it hard to get enough money for everyday things.

They live in one room which the nearby yoga centre in Singaradja is lending them.



Made and Shanti are with Gusti (from the ABF), to discuss the details of  Bayu’s scholarship.



Tika (also from ABF and Gusti’s wife) is visiting the teacher to get Bayu enrolled for school
and pay his school fees for 1 year.





Now Bayu will have the chance to be educated, and hopefully get a good job later, 

so he can have a brighter future and look after his parents when they get older….



Thanks to students, staff, parents and supporters of Cans For Kids at OLOH School, 

and also Gusti and Tika for their tireless efforts.

It's only $200 AUS to sponsor Bayu for one year, 

so it will not be difficult to maintain an on-going commitment to the education of Bayu.



2015 UPDATE
Bayu (January 2015) after attending school for 6 months....with Tika.

Bayu's progress has been outstanding. 
In just 6 months he has become confident and sociable.


Nice to meet you Made:)


Proud mum Shanti .....makes the best biscuits!


Gusti happily plays with Bayu's new toy.
Bayu waits patiently...


Hey I'm also Made..... number 2

Bayu's sponsorship will continue into the 2025/26 school year.
A receipt will be posted here upon my return in August 2015.

Monday, 31 March 2014

Cans For Kids Project 2013: Adi Rare Bhuana Foundtion



Cans For Kids Project 2013: Adi Rare Bhuana Foundation




Tika talking about her Adi Rare Bhuana Foundation

Man may work from sun to sun,
                                                   But woman's work is never done.


Yahhh time to go shopping with Gusti and Tika!


Hmmm  the kids all need new stationery....


Hey Gusti....Let's get the best deal on these books...

The girls wear this uniform on certain days....
with these hats! Ha ha ha!
And we get a ten percent discount...Terima kasih!
Now for sorting it all out in little bundles...
Each child will receive this new starter kit for school.

Half of the donated money funded these new school uniforms and stationery.
Tika and Gusti with one of their many children who received new school gear.

The other half of the money was spent on fabric and handicraft materials to help sustain women's handicraft business. Selling these goods will help supplement the family income and benefit the children.
Women work together to make handicrafts. 

Cans For Kids' donation




Friday, 28 February 2014

Friday, 21 February 2014

Cans For Kids Project 2013-Typhoon Haiyan Appeal


The kids at Our Lady of Hope School, Adelaide. 
decided that a donation should be made to this appeal, 
through the Cans For Kids Project.


      Cans For Kids Project donated $100 towards the Typhoon Haiyan Appeal in the Phillipines.


Thursday, 20 February 2014

Cans For Kids Project 2013/14-JAKARTA POST



Piggy bank keeps kids at
school

Care to share: Children tend to pigs at Piggy Paradise husbandry, which funds their school uniforms with the help of Cempaka Putih Foundation co-founder Gede Mangun (left).
Care to share: Children tend to pigs at Piggy Paradise husbandry, which funds their school uniforms with the help of Cempaka Putih Foundation co-founder Gede Mangun (left).
Care to share: Children tend to pigs at Piggy Paradise husbandry, which funds their school uniforms with the help of Cempaka Putih Foundation co-founder Gede Mangun (left).
Making ends meet is tough for many that live in the impoverished Songan region of Bangli.

Situated at the foot of Mount Batur, most families depend on farming during the wet season while during the dry season, few crops survive. They manage to eke out enough to get by, but come the start of each new school year school books and new uniforms are enough to tip them over the financial edge.

Cempaka Putih Foundation was established several years ago by Gede Mangun, who was born and bred in the region, offers a grassroots answer to this annual financial meltdown. Cempaka Putih works in health support and has established a free English language school and a computer school and has now turned its attention to keeping kids at school for longer through animal husbandry.

“We have built a Piggy Paradise with support for the purchase of five piglets from Our Lady of Hope School in Adelaide, Australia, and I have donated land to raise the piglets. Each year the kids can sell off pigs to help cover their school expenses. Schools are free, but that is the school buildings, there is still a lot of other essentials that cost money and every year the kids go to a new class, new uniforms and books are needed,” Gede says as he and the six children in the Piggy Paradise pilot project hand feed the black and white piglets that snort with glee.

Set in an extended band of mature trees half way up Mt. Batur’s slopes, Piggy Paradise almost looks like the gardens of a five star hotel, with a thatched roof and open air bale surrounded by dense tropical jungle.

It is a hands-on project, with the children, aged around 11 years old, taking turns daily to visit the piglets, clean their yards and prepare their feed.

“This is a really good idea to raise money for our education needs. We could go to school without the piglets, but this makes finding the money much easier for our parents,” says Ni Kadek Bulan, 11, in the perfect English she learned at Cempaka Putih weekend language school.

Gede says if the project proved to be a success, some of the current piglets will be kept for breeding and more purchased with donations to increase the number of students having access to the Piggy Paradise program.

“I hope to see the project expand so other kids can also be involved and reap the benifits. At the moment there are five piglets and we plan to buy another five, so in the future we can sell their offspring and we won’t need to buy stock again,” says Gede of the black piglets that cost a staggering US$65 each.

“We could have gone with the less expensive white skinned pigs, but the black pigs are more like forest pigs and, therefore, much hardier. They are more disease resistant and can forage on the natural food found in the forest,” says Gede, adding that the moment the piglets were released into the Piggy Paradise they started digging into the rich black soil.
Back to school: Children of Songan get opportunities to go to school like others from wealthier areas.
Back to school: Children of Songan get opportunities to go to school like others from wealthier areas.
Back to school: Children of Songan get opportunities to go to school like others from wealthier areas.
Learning to raise pigs for market is fun for these kids, but for their parents the potential addition to family finances is a relief.

“If this project works a lot more kids from Songan will get the opportunity to go to high school and maybe even university. It’s that important,” says Wayan Serinin, a mother of one of the children involved in the pilot.

“Lives can change with education so if we can get our kids to high schools their choices in the future will be improved,” says Wayan explaining that there was no upper high school in Songan at present. A new technical college is currently being built, but most students wanting to go to upper high school must board in Bangli, Denpasar or even as far away as Singaraja on Bali’s north coast.

“That is a very expensive option and that is why so very few of our kids ever get to high school. The success of the pigs for our kids could be the difference between getting a good education or not,” says Wayan.

Cempaka Putih Foundation is in need of financial help to ensure that success. “If people can donate a piglet, they get to name it. We also need help with roofing materials to complete the roof of the food store, and of course the ongoing costs of feed,” says Gede, who to date has personally funded the bulk of the project, believing that putting into this piggy bank today will yield great things in the future.

For more information visit the Cempaka Putih website at cempakaputih.org.

Photos by J.B.Djwan


Paper Edition | Page: 22

Post Your Say

Selected comments will be published in the Readers’ Forum page of our print newspaper
Email from Gede: We have received from you IDR 8,214,000 and IDR 770,000         Total IDR 8,984,000
So the rest (IDR 4,651,000) I have donated.

Now piggy more than twice  bigger than when you're in bali,they eat very much hehe.... and soon will need 15-20 kg per day.
They keep digging the wall and often out.. smart pigs but crazy!

To compelate the roof and garden will need around $ 350- 400
And food 230,000 IDR (21$) per week.

Have a great day.
Cheers
Gede
Powered by Telkomsel BlackBerry®


Here's the spread out cost for the Piggy Paradise project as follow:
1. 100 pc bamboo pole @ 6000 =600,000
2. 30 Alang2 grass roof @ 12,000 =360,000
3. 15 sak Cements @ 57,000 = 855,000
4. Wire/2 roll(25 x 1m) @ 450,000 = 900,000
5. 5 Piglet @ 700,000.  = 3,500,000
6. 1 big truck sand. = 650,000
7. 1 plastic roof 6 x 5  = 180,000
8. 2 kilo very thin wire @ 25,000 = 50,000
9. 1 sak piggy food = 230,000
10. 3 x transportation(small truck)@ 350,000 = 1,050,000
11. Builder 6 prs x 2 + 5 prs x 2,    Total 27 x 120,000  = 3,240,000
12. Another 2 rolls wire for flooring.     (1,5 m x25) @550,000 = 1,100,000

Additional; 4 x food (sak 50 kg) @ 230,000 = 920,000
Ps: now they eat 10-15 kg/day
So the Grand Total IDR 13,635,000
300 breeck-free(gede donate)
Land-free (gede donate)

Cheers
Gede
www.balisunrisetours.com




Powered by Telkomsel BlackBerry®


Receipt for donation from Cans For Kids Project
Public donations can be made via PayPal   (patkr57@hotmail.com)
If you buy a pig (70 AUS) it will be named after you and you will receive a photograph and an official receipt.



2014 August Update of Piggy Paradise

The Cans For Kids Project donated another $230 AUS to buy piggy food, in the absence of the proposed organic vegie garden, which was meant to feed the pigs. Unfortunately things don't always go to plan:
And so, the story of the Five Little Pigs continues....

The spoilt little mongrels decided that 'the grass was greener on the other side' and so burrowed their way out of the enclosure! Who has heard of pigs that burrow?? At fist it was hilarious! Imagine a bunch of school kids and neighbours chasing these slippery black pigs through their rice paddies and vegie gardens... 

After a time, Gede's email mentioned 'angry neighbours' in the same sentence as 'Indonesian Police' and a decision had to be made....fast! Our five, not so little pigs, have found themselves moved to "piggy jail' rather than 'Piggy Paradise'. They now lead a hopeless life, in confined concrete quarters, like all the other Bali pigs. 

It can now only be hoped that they will continue to grow fatter, and that with the help of Gede Mangun, it will reap the families some financial reward to help school their kids, because after all....that's what Cans For Kids is all about.

Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Cans For Kids Project 2013/14-CESA Website article


 Our Lady of Hope Students Outreach to Balinese Community

18 February 2014

This article is now posted on the CESA website:    http://www.cesa.catholic.edu.au/news

Patricia teaching students in Songan Village the 'the' words.

As part of the School’s outreach, Year 5/6 students at Our Lady of Hope School in Adelaide are supporting children in need in Bali, particularly through the ‘Piggy Paradise’ project. This project helps to raise pigs in a more humane way in Songan Village, Kintamani, where ‘Piggy Paradise’ has been established. From dark, confined, concrete quarters, to roaming free amongst a patch of exquisitely lush vegetation, at the base of Gunung Batur, Bali pig farming has taken the lead and moved a step forward. In this little haven five pretty Bali pigs have now become permanent residents, where they are free to eat, snort and shuffle to their heart’s content. They can seek shelter from the rain, under the quaint alang alang tree houses.

This ‘Piggy Paradise’ evolved out of a fundraising initiative undertaken by Year 5/6 students. Social justice is intertwined in Catholic school philosophy so it was a logical step to support children in need, as many Australians holiday in Bali. Plastic bottles, cans and fruit boxes were collected, cleaned and sorted, before selling them to raise money. The project is now known as, “Cans For Kids Project” where kids here work to help kids in Bali, more specifically the Cempaka Putih Foundation, Songan Village.
Patricia teaching students at OLOH School in Adelaide about the Cempaka Putih Foundation.

 The proceeds have provided an opportunity for six committed families to start a sustainable business, share the profits and it has the potential to expand and include more families. The continuation of this project is conditional on the humane treatment of animals and positive environmental practices with a view to ongoing sustainability. Such projects have the potential to expand and lead to more fellowship between the two cultures.

Year 5/6 Teacher Ms Patricia Kerkenaar-Richards has recently returned from a trip to the Songan Village where she worked as a volunteer. The Village has insufficient housing, inadequate roadways, inaccessible health care and inadequate water supplies all run deep into the fabric of this community. The Cempaka Putih Foundation is helping to provide clothing, first aid supplies, building supplies and volunteers to build houses. It also provides free English lessons and computer tuition for anyone able to access it, using volunteers like Ms Kerkenaar-Richards to run classes. 
We know out 'the' words really well!
Oral presentation in Songan Village language school
Gede, a leader in the Community spoke about plans to start an organic garden. “Next to piggy farm…..we can grow sweet potatoes for the piggies. “The manure is good for fertilizer,” Gede said. “The children can help out after school and they will learn about happy pig farming,” he said.

Ms Kerkenaar-Richards is enthusiastic about the Cempaka Putih Foundation move towards more environmentally friendly ways of making a living in the future. It’s all looking on the up and up in Songan Village.

“‘Piggy Paradise’ will provide a living for six families and even though pigs will be slaughtered for ceremonies and food, the concept of sustainability will shine through. ‘Piggy Paradise’ is also about stepping closer towards the practice of humane pig farming, environmental awareness, maintainable business practices and a more productive future with the promise of hope which binds us all,” said Ms Kerkenaar-Richard.


Abridged and edited by;
Veronica McCaffrey Ed D
Catholic Education SA

Public donations can be made via PayPal   (patkr57@hotmail.com)


If you buy a pig (70 AUS) it will be named after you and you will receive a photograph and an official receipt.

Article reproduced in the OLOH School magazine