Tom Hanks and Kristine Pearson holding a Freeplay windup radio
Kristine Pearson with Tom Hanks, who knows the power of radio

Tackling Energy Poverty

All posts tagged by Lifeline Radio

A night at the 10th annual Tech Museum of Innovation Awards

November 10, 2010

Dr Peter Friess, President of the Tech Museum of Innovation, with the Lifeline radio

By Kristine Pearson in Santa Clara

What a thrill to attend the 10th annual Tech Museum of Innovation Awards in Santa Clara on Saturday night. I was absolutely gob smacked that Peter Friess, the head of Silicon Valley’s Tech Museum walked on stage winding a Lifeline radio. Peter talked about the success of the Lifeline radio and Lifeline Energy (well, Freeplay Foundation, as we were known then) as the first winner of this award in 2001 and then excerpts of my acceptance speech was played.  I had no idea they were going to do this. What a huge honour it was to be formally recognized by the Tech Museum again.

This was the first time the gala was held at the Santa Clara Convention Center and was the largest attendance ever at 1,800 guests. Many attendees were legends in Silicon Valley’s tech community. Everyone had come to find out who the five winners would be and also to hear Queen Rania al Abdullah of Jordan.

Queen Rania of Jordan with Applied Materials CEO Mike Splinter

Queen Rania, this years’ James C. Morgan Humanitarian Award honouree, spoke purposefully, passionately and eloquently about the importance of education.  She encouraged everyone to ‘dream the undreamt’ and to ‘imagine the unimaginable’.

After dinner the award winners were announced from a field of three finalists  laureates in five categories:

•    Intel Environment Award – Peer Water Exchange, a project of Blue Planet Network – Worldwide
•    BD Biosciences Economic Development Award – Alexis T. Belonio, Center for Rice Husk Energy Technology
•    Microsoft Education Award – BBC World Service Trust, BBC Janala
•    The Katherine M. Swanson Equality Award – A Single Drop for Safe Water
•    Nokia Health Award – Venkatesh Mannar, Micronutrient Initiative

In this year’s education category I was delighted that one of our partners, the BBC World Service Trust, won for their English language mobile phone programming in Bangladesh.

Kristine Pearson accepting the first Tech Museum of Innovation Award in 2001

The Tech Awards have grown over the years into the world’s premiere awards for technology benefitting humanity and it will always be our honour to have been the very first winner.  The iconic Lifeline radio – which is now retired and has been replaced by the Prime – is a featured display at the Tech Museum in Silicon Valley.

Ten years with Lifeline Energy

September 17, 2010

Written by Michelle Riley

This weeks marks my 10th anniversary with Lifeline Energy, and what an exhilarating ride it has been!  Back in 2000, we were using  big, black radios with a spring crank.  The organization, then known as the Freeplay Foundation, had only been in operation for about 18 months.  It had undertaken some important work by that point, including launching our ongoing support for child-headed households in Rwanda and effectively aiding thousands of Mozambique flood victims.  But we were little known among the major NGOs and agencies, and had virtually no visibility in the U.S.

Ten years later, more than 10 million people have benefited from our old radios, our Lifeline radios launched in 2003, and our lighting projects.  I have had the tremendous honor to learn from and reach out to refugee youth, farmers young and old, women’s groups, and many other remarkable citizens of sub-Saharan Africa.  LIfeline Energy enjoys strong partnerships with dozens of proven local charities, government ministries, and many of the most well-known NGOs in the world.  Our successful efforts and reliable self-powered products have received numerous awards and recognition.

I look forward to what the future will bring in the next decade, as we grow and continue to seek ways in which to reduce energy poverty, a seemingly intractable obstacle to education and economic development.  To be able to put a Lifeplayer or light into someone’s hand and see that person’s world change overnight will always make my heart beat faster.  Knowing the innovative spirit of the communities with which we work, I feel confident the best is yet to come!

GlobalGiving to Match Your Donation by 30% on 16 March 2010

March 15, 2010

We wanted to let you know about an exciting opportunity that we are participating in, through GlobalGiving. When a donation is made to any of our projects on Tuesday 16th March 2010, GlobalGiving will be match your gift by 30% !

And if we raise the most money or get the most donations, we will be eligible for bonus prize.

We need to act fast! By selecting one of our projects, such as  Haiti Humanitarian Radio Relief Fund your donation will ensure Haitian children will quickly get back on an educational track with our wind-up and solar-powered Lifeline radios.

Please help us make the most of it of this opportunity – it’s an easy way to get more impact from your donation dollars right now !

Make your donation go further today.

My extraordinary first visit to Rwanda

October 14, 2009

Phil Goodwin with group, listening to Lifeline radio

Phil Goodwin with group, listening to Lifeline radio

Written by Phil Goodwin

To properly understand the impact of access to information through radio it’s not enough to simply read the case studies or rationalise how uplifting this technology can be. While it’s certainly logical that radio is a powerful tool and plays a vital role in empowering people in the developing world, there is a new perspective to be gained by hearing peoples stories, seeing how they live, understanding their concerns and their daily challenges.

I was privileged to spend a week in Rwanda among child headed households. I experienced a generation growing up not only in abject poverty – but also as orphans to HIV/AIDS, malaria and a horrendous and brutal genocide and civil war.

To place my own children of the same age as most that I met in this situation acutely highlights the contrast in our lives. Imagine for a moment, the hopes for your children that you might have as a parent – a good education, good health, a sound set of values – even simple basic manners. Imagine then expecting the same your children after being stripped of the privilege of safe, clean running water, access to light in the darkness or food security – and after having lost their parents through disease or mass murder on an unprecedented scale. To be alone and raising siblings under such difficult conditions when you’re 8 or 12 years old is something few of us can barely comprehend.

What I have experienced of these children was remarkable. Thrust into enormous responsibility at very young ages – to care for, feed, clothe and school their siblings, often selflessly. Those that I met, without exception, would make me proud were I their parent. More remarkable is that there is hope among these children where you would expect hopelessness.

I doubt that many will ever enjoy any real privileges, but there’s no doubt that their lives are being made easier by clean, dependable access to information through Lifeline radios. These radios have assisted these children more than I can properly describe. By providing sustainable access to information these children are learning how to sterilize their drinking water and about reproductive health and HIV prevention. They are learning their rights – especially those of women, where rape has been used so commonly as a weapon.

In a country so brutally divided only 15 years ago they are learning about reconciliation – how to live in unity with difference, how to trust others. I was struck as I left a school, being mobbed by a hundred children all keen to practice their English with a Mzungu (foreigner). A young girl asked me where I was from – I said I was South African. I asked her the same question; her reply was powerful and simple, and repeated by the others standing round. “I am a people – we are people”.

*Phil Goodwin is the Executive Director of Lifeline Energy’s for-profit trading arm, Lifeline Technologies Trading Ltd
.

Reflections of 11 Years of Progress in Rwanda

October 13, 2009

Written by Kristine Pearson

Today is why I do my life’s work. My colleague, Phil Goodwin*, and I spent the day in Bugasera, Rwanda in an area where prior to the genocide, the population was 64,000, afterwards 2,000. We spoke with 30 (50/50 female/male) child heads of households who had received our Lifeline radios 6 months ago in collaboration with local NGO, Trust and Care. Between the ages of 12 and 20, they had walked up to three hours to come and as always, I learned more than I thought I would and it never gets any easier.

All live at the hard edge of grinding poverty. As heads of their families, they’ve sacrificed an education to enable their younger brothers and sisters to attend school. The government’s ambitious programme to get youngsters into school and to learn English means more students in primary school than the system can cope with. Learners attend either the morning or afternoon classes.

Rwanda aims to join the Commonwealth and about 85% of the population speaks only Kinyarwanda. A significant number of teachers were killed in the genocide and it has taken years to rebuild classrooms and basic teaching capacity and few teachers speak English themselves.

When I first visited Bugasera in 1999, there were pockets of ‘feral’ children – hundreds of child-only families living in round mud and thatch houses. Children wore rags showing their distended stomachs, trying to eke out an existence by subsistence farming with little or no adult guidance. Water had to be collected from a swampy area at the bottom of the hill an hour’s walk away. It was impossible to imagine that children would have to live like this. Understandably, they seldom smiled or laughed.

The dirt road was so pockmarked from Kigali that we rarely got out of first gear and it could take over two hours to reach this area. Now it’s a smooth 45 minutes as there’s a fine highway linking Kigali to the bustling market town of Nyamata (and onto Bujumbura) and the road to the meeting place we were in has been gravel paved with concrete gutters.  I saw small shops selling basics on rural back roads and there are more bicycles and bicycle taxis.  The rickety mud brick thatch traditional homes are slowly being replaced with rectangular two and four room houses with tin roofs under new government regulations.  Most had pit latrines nearby. Despite, visible progress these orphans remain abjectly poor and the complex factors of poverty reinforce each other.

Chantal drawing water, Bugasera, Rwanda.

Chantal in her school uniform drawing water, Bugasera, Rwanda.

Rwanda has the strictest environmental laws on the continent, but there are markedly fewer trees and greater soil erosion than 10 years ago.  Although, there is now a water pipe,  the children say they become sick unless they boil the water, using wood and creating further deforestation. Girls said they still fetch water up to 3 times a day. The rains have been poor and hungry, and malnutrition remains a serious problem.

What We Wanted to Find Out

We asked a series of questions to only girls and only boys and then together. We wanted to learn about what they listen to, what they’ve learned or do differently since having the radio, what they do for lighting and after dark, what is important to them and how they see their future.

Not one person owned a radio previously and none have a cell phone or had even made a phone call. They said they got their information from neighbours and word of mouth. To sum up their comments, all said that they listen to ‘amakuru’ – the news.  They want to know what is going on not just in Rwanda, but they’re curious about what is happening in frontier states and beyond. Girls cited programmes about health, AIDS, abuse, and women and children’s rights as most important. Betty, 20, said that “they were learning from the radio that it was not acceptable to abuse girls and women and that they now had laws to protect them”. Before she had her radio, she didn’t know this. Given the rates of rape during the genocide and in the refugee camps, her comment is not surprising. Boys also said that they want to listen to sports, to follow the national and international soccer teams and they liked agricultural and livestock programmes, citing Imbera Heza, a radio programme that Lifeline Energy funds on Radio Salus.

Girls Foucs Group with Lifeline radio

Girls Foucs Group with Lifeline radio

We asked the focus groups if had Rf 2000 (about $30) what would be the three things they would buy? I heard something that I never heard before – bottled water, which costs about 50c for a small bottle.  Food was mentioned and thirdly, kerosene.

The group had a lively discussion about lighting and all the problems it causes.  Several said that from firewood, candles, kerosene tin can lamps called ‘italas’, they had lost their belongings to fire. They are particularly worried about their sisters and brothers having to study with kerosene because of the harm it does to the eyes and lungs.

We then asked if they had a clean and safe lighting source how would their lives be different. Nearly everyone raised their hand – “I would go to the toilet at night”; “I could see when I eat to make sure there are no bugs in my food”; “I would not have as much stress worrying about accidents and fires”; “I could cook in the dark.”

I then demonstrated the Lifelight and spontaneous applause broke out.  Unfortunately, I didn’t have enough to give to everyone, so we visited several homes after wards and distributed them privately.

Hope – It’s Breaking Out All Over

We ended by talking about the future and again, I heard something that I’ve never heard so emphatically before – they have a sense of hope – mainly from listening to President Kagame on the radio. They felt strongly that he had brought peace and stability to Rwanda and with that had comes development. They felt that before they had no future but now believe that he will lead them to a better one. They gave him credit for everything good that has happened to Rwanda.

*Phil Goodwin is the Executive Director of Lifeline Energy’s for-profit trading arm, Lifeline Technologies Trading Ltd.

Village Savings and Loans Project in Burundi

July 23, 2009

This post was written by Chhavi Sharma, Lifeline Energy’s Project Manager, after a recent trip to Burundi.

Last week I visited Burundi in the Great Lakes region of East Africa for a village savings and loans project in which our Lifeline radios will play a role. Targeted at adolescents girls aged 14-22, this project seeks to provide financial literacy, sexual and reproductive health, human rights and essential life skills information to enable girls to make informed choices and decisions to ensure their economic and social well-being – critical skills if you live in one of the poorest countries in the world. The project will have a radio component to supplement face-to-face training, as educational programming is being developed and Lifeline radios procured to distribute to the girls in the interactive Solidarity Groups.

Conducting a focus group with adolescent girls in a slum outside of Bujumbura

Conducting a focus group with adolescent girls in a slum outside of Bujumbura

Georgette, a 20-year-old I spoke to in Gitega province, said she had joined her group of 30 girls to learn how to save money, manage her finances efficiently and escape her misery. A secondary school drop-out, she was unable to complete her education as she began suffering from weak eyesight, a direct result of studying by the fire at night. So often my colleagues and I hear heartbreaking stories like this – and of how candles and kerosene have damaged people’s eyesight.

A mother of two young children at the age of 19, Irene in a slum outside Bujumbura echoed Georgette’s sentiments. She said she wants to get into the habit of saving money regularly to expand her small business – buying palm oil and reselling it at a higher price – and providing for her children. She presently lives with her parents, who help with living costs. Irene is excited that the girls in her group get together every week to talk about the problems they face in their day-to-day lives.

A woman giving her testimony during a Solidarity Group meeting in Gitega

A woman giving her testimony during a Solidarity Group meeting in Gitega

Georgette, Irene and the other girls I met were particularly interested in receiving Lifeline radios, as they will provide dependable access to programming especially created for them and their needs. In addition to reviewing savings and loans principles for the girls, the broadcasts will introduce these concepts to their families and larger communities, thereby increasing support and acceptance of the project. Discussions around the programmes will also help solidify relationships within the Solidarity Groups and ensure that the girls strive together for a more promising future.


Lifeline Energy @ the People’s Festival – a tribute to Bob Marley

June 5, 2009

bobmarleypeoplefest

This summer, Lifeline Energy will be at the 15th annual People’s Festival – a tribute to Bob Marley. The day will be filled with music, activities, international food courts and a childrens village.

During the festival, we will be raising money for communities in Haiti who were affected by Hurricane Ike. The disaster caused major flooding, creating a deeper humanitarian and food crisis. Many families relied on radio but now have no communication with the outside world. We aim to change this by providing Lifeline radios. This will give families sustainable access to vital information and news.

Join Lifeline Energy at the People’s Festival on Saturday 25th July at Tubman Garrett Riverfront, Wilmington, Delaware. The event will be fun for the whole family! For more information, please visit: People Festival

Filed under: Fundraising events,News — Tags: , , , , , , — Lifeline Energy @ 1:48 pm
Freeplay Foundation to feature on thequietriot.com

April 2, 2009

The Quiet Riot will feature Freeplay Foundation on their homepage this weekend. The website features innovative designs which are energy efficient and sustainable. Read how Lifeline radios have made a difference to child headed families in Rwanda by visiting http://www.thequietriot.com

Filed under: Media Coverage,News — Tags: , , , , — Lifeline Energy @ 2:01 pm
A Day in the Life

February 5, 2009

Photo: Chhavi Sharma/Lifeline Energy 2009
When you ask a person in Rwanda what they do, most will say they are a farmer. Its easy to see why – Rwanda is lush and green, and every inch land seems to be used for agriculture. Most child-headed households in the countryside have small parcels of land left from their parents and on which they grow food. For most of these “farmers” the activities associated with farming – such as selling your produce at the market – simply do not apply. All of them are growing food for subsistence only – they eat what they grow. Some of the kids are supported by extended families that will share extra crops if they have them, or give the children some kerosene. This subsistence life means that these hardworking children are extremely poor – there is no money for school fees, kerosene or candles, or any extra food. A day in the life for these children means fetching water (which could be an hour’s walk each way), working in their garden, cooking a basic meal and going to bed when it gets dark, which in central Africa is between 6:00 and 7:00 pm.

As soon as I met them and listened to their stories, it was clear that the radios would have a tremendous, positive impact on their lives. The children spoke about how they felt isolated and lonely, how they were uncomfortable imposing on neighbours to listen to radio programmes, how they were tired of relying on others to pass on information. They wanted to listen first-hand from the voices they trusted on the radio. They were eager to learn and spoke of their plans to invite people over to listen to programmes and of how they were going to share with their friends as they worked in the garden everyday. The more the kids spoke about what they were going to do with their radios, the more they became visibly and excited. A day in their lives was about to change for the better with their radio!

Filed under: Updates from Field — Tags: , , , , — Lisa Carl @ 6:35 pm
Off to a good start
Photo: Chhavi Sharma/Lifeline Energy 2009

Photo: Chhavi Sharma/Lifeline Energy 2009

For two days now we have been working with Trust & Care, a local organisation run primarily by volunteers providing a variety of support to vulnerable children. Over two days we have met 40 children who are the heads of households, looking after for their younger siblings. Most have been orphaned by HIV/AIDS.

For today’s distribution we are travelling a little further off the tarmac road – taking a turn onto a little used dirt track that would eventually lead us to a small school where the children would be waiting. The winding, bumpy road went past garden plots of banana trees, bean stalks and coffee plants and where turning a bend we came across a group of young people – one of whom was carrying a bright blue Lifeline radio.
Laurence, 20, looks after three younger siblings and attended our training session the day before. As a subsistence farmer, she was taking her new radio with her to listen to while she tended her garden plot. It was great to see her putting her radio to use, but I had to have a bit of a laugh as well – despite the big handle on the radio and our cheerful instructions during the trainings to “carry it like a handbag!” Laurence was holding the radio in her arms like a baby, with the bottom of the radio nestled in the paper packing carton that came with the box.

Filed under: Updates from Field — Tags: , , , , , , — Lisa Carl @ 5:04 pm
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