distracted by sparkly things since 1969

Raising Money for Hope…and a Cow

Buy a Farm Animal: Change a Life
Donate a buck or a billion at ChipIn

< Original art by Jen Lemen
for Let’s Help Ourselves and Others

It’s a rare day that I find a project so solid and so personal that I’m ready to champion it from the rooftop – but this is one of them! My soulsister Jen Lemen has fallen in love with every African immigrant in her D.C. neighborhood. They inspire her ever day, and she in turn extends a loving hand of assistance whenever she can. From springing someone from human trafficking to getting a sick daughter in Rwanda to the hospital, Jen and her network of passionate folks gets the job done.

Now Jen and Odette are on a mission to take Rwandan school girls the supplies and inspiration they need to be the next generation of leaders in their struggling, determined country. The inspiring Grace McLaren passed the opportunity to Jen to go to Rwanda; Jen asked her blogging pals for some financial support; and in 24 hours there were funds for the trip AND enough to print a book. What kind of book? A full color zine in two languages depicting the story of Odette and her brother Innocent’s clever microbusiness…in a Ugandan refugee camp…when they were 7 and 9 years old. (I cry every time I hear it.)

If this doesn’t convince Rwandan schoolgirls (and middle aged American ladies!) that small attempts can bring significant change, I don’t know what will.

Now that the books and supplies are taken care of, Jen is doing one last ask for a little more money. Innocent needs a cow. I know. It doesn’t sound like much, just one cow. But his niece (Odette’s daughter) is sick, and the meager little house flooded this year, and the cow, well, it will keep his family afloat in a highly tenuous situation.

Do you know what a cow costs in Rwanda? $600 – the equivalent of three trips to Costco or one really crappy dresser from IKEA. Now the Cotsco thing might keep you rolling in frozen lasagna, which I will admit, feels like a lifesaving act some nights in Americana. But a cow will produce enough income to keep this large extended family feed for as long as it lives.

Paul and I are down for $100. Let’s see if we can get her the rest of the way there, shall we?

Donate a buck or a billion at ChipIn.

Friends, thanks so much for reading this. Hold on to hope: all is not lost, Africa can thrive, Rwandan schoolkids can change their world, and one cow can make a difference.

In Kindness and Hope,

Rachelle Mee

For the whole Rwandan Project in orderly detail click here.

3 comments

1 Silvia { 6 May 2008 at 3:12 am }

i’m so in love with this project of Jen.
i cannot inmagine her not finding a way to bring a cow to innocence.

2 krystyn { 6 May 2008 at 5:07 am }

I received your Hope Notes today! It was heartwarming to see your name and to see the stamps and certifications as your package made its way here from across the pond. <3

Something worth mentioning — to “simulate the economy” the US government is sending us all money this month. http://www.irs.gov/irs/article/0,,id=180250,00.html

I know money’s tight for a lot of us — but you’ve gotta admit, money showing up in your post box the same time you’re being asked to help buy a cow — well that’s just too much of a coincidence.

I mean really, when does the government GIVE us money — and how often are you asked to pitch in for a cow?

3 Jen Lee » The Web of Hope { 6 May 2008 at 2:37 pm }

[...] artist’s work, people joining hands and hearts to empower and educate the girls of Africa, to buy a cow for a family in need, or the reuniting (in spirit, if not yet in body) of a mother with her [...]

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