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Please click on the following links to download recent articles about Zest4Kidz:
Evening Herald 18th June 2009
VOX Magazine
The Meath Chronicle 10th January 2009
The Meath Chronicle 29th November 2008
Face Painting in Nutgrove
IRISH TIMES ARTICLE: December 27th 2007
'I WANTED TO GIVE, BUT I GOT SO MUCH BACK'
Donating money to charity is vital, but increasingly people want to give their time. Rosita Boland looks at one new way of doing this
We probably noticed it first in this country after the 2004 tsunami: people wanted a "hands-on" involvement with aid work. For decades, Irish people have donated money to NGOs such as Trócaire, and various non-profit charitable organisations, leaving it up to those bodies to administer, carry out and support the aid work needed on the ground.
After the tsunami, many people volunteered to go and work for a short time in one of the affected countries. Some organised the trips themselves. Others linked up with tour operators such as responsibletravel.com, which combined holidays with beach-clearing, boat-building, or house reconstruction. Many of these projects have since wound down. However, due to the huge media coverage of the tsunami at the time, volunteering by untrained people to do short-term aid work in developing countries is something that has continued.
Earlier this year, an Irish organisation, Zest4Kidz (www.zest4kidz.com), started leading volunteer trips out of Ireland to visit what they term the "forgotten children". Zest4Kidz is a non-profit Christian organisation with charitable status. It was founded by husband and wife Stuart and Maggie Wilson, who also run ZestLife, a company that focuses on motivational corporate and personal development coaching.
Among the trips they organised this year or are planning for next year are: a football camp in Bosnia with the aim of bringing Serbian and Muslim children together; visits to orphanages in Georgia; working with child soldiers in Uganda, who have suffered rape, kidnap and torture; and children in Azerbaijan who live as refugees in railway carriages. All the trips are short, mostly between two and four days.
Those going on each trip fundraise both for themselves to go and for the Zest4Kidz psychotherapists and psychologists who accompany them. To date, there have been two kinds of groups volunteering to go on these trips: corporate team-building groups, many of whom are clients of ZestLife; and individuals who go for reasons of personal development.
"We're not doing NGO work on these trips," Stuart Wilson explains. "The kids have a terrific time for the couple of days we are there. It can be very emotional for the people making the trip, so we have a debrief at the end of every day, with trained psychotherapists."
ON A RECENT trip to Georgia (formerly part of the USSR), the group visited two orphanages. during their time there they took the children on a trip to McDonald's, spent time playing with them, took them to a theme park, and had a barbecue. The Zest staff worked with the carers at the orphanage. The excess money from that trip was used to buy a large new oven for the orphanage kitchen to replace a small old one, and to replace rotting windows. They also link with local groups, to sustain the projects on an ongoing basis.
One of the people who has been out with Zest4Kidz is John Ryan, managing director of a company that makes industrial tape. He went to Bosnia, where a football camp was organised between Serbian and Muslim children.
"After 25 years in business, you cotton on that it's not all about personal success. When you give something back, that's personal success," he says, explaining his reasons for going.
"If you connect kids and make them understand that everyone is the same, you allow them to develop. With the football camp, hopefully it was allowing the kids to build a little bridge between each other. It was beautiful to see their little faces light up. It was life-changing for me.
"Most charities tend to create dependencies. People in Africa are used to getting stuff all the time - food aid, whatever it might be. It's not dissimilar to social welfare. Our objective is to provide people with a way of connecting with other people, not to give them things."
Ciara Kearney is a freelance management consultant, who's been on two trips so far, one to Bosnia and one to Georgia. "I spend a lot of time in the corporate world. What I do is about making money - I'm not giving anything back," she says. "I went on those trips because I wanted to give, but I ended up getting so much back. It's possible to go because you don't have to give up your job, as the trips are only for a few days."
Jo Donovan is a HR manager at Citrix Systems, a software development company. She went on the Georgian trip. "I had always donated to charity, but there was nothing personal about it. Prior to my going to Georgia, I was quite sceptical as to what we could do for those kids in a few days. But when we were there, we realised what they most wanted was attention and time, and we spent all our time with them. We left things behind - we painted murals over their beds."
Donovan's company, like many others, offers occasional corporate team-building events. "Mostly a seminar in the morning, golfing in the afternoon, and then drinking. It's a lovely day out, but the night is over before you know it. I'd definitely be recommending these trips as an alternative. It would be much tougher, but it would be much more fulfilling."
But however well meaning, is it really helpful for untrained people to arrive into a new culture for a few days, to work with children who are often both vulnerable and traumatised, and then depart? And what about the ethics of a team-bonding corporate away trip, visiting children in prisons and orphanages and refugee camps, where the overall idea is for company members to work more efficiently together on return?
"We go out with big hearts. What the kids want is love and attention above everything else," Wilson responds.
The company's mission statement says: "We believe that it is our moral duty to at least show these children that they are not forgotten and to give them the emotional tools to cope with issues like abandonment, abuse and neglect. We know that if we don't make this happen then nobody else will and we hope to share this responsibility. This creates the ultimate win/win for the children and our volunteers.
"Most of our volunteers are highly successful people and are top achievers in their field. Our trips give them the opportunity to marry their business achievements with a sense of fulfilment and purpose that is breathtaking and life changing."
'I DON'T KNOW anything about Zest4Kidz at all, so my comments about these kind of trips are general," says Eamonn Meehan, deputy director of Trócaire.
"There is an increasing trend in this kind of trip, and it is not necessarily a bad thing, but it needs to be properly organised. In general, I do feel that anybody who chooses to become involved with these kind of trips needs to be extremely cautious. These are highly sensitive situations. Children in orphanages or child soldiers are extremely vulnerable, and probably traumatised.
"By and large, this is an area for trained professionals only. And all those going on trips like that should be asked to produce police clearance.
"There is the trend of the gap-year, or going out to teach in a developing world for a time. My view of many of these trips is that they are more to do with individuals and self-help than providing a genuine contributions to the people they come in contact with. The time period they are there for is too short, and they have no skills. A lot of the Zest4Kidz trips are only days. It's very difficult to make a valid contribution in two or three days."
For further information on Zest4kidz and Trócaire, see www.zest4kidz.com and www.trocaire.org
© 2006 The Irish Times
Fingal Independant: November 2006:
IMAGINE a child of eleven being imprisoned for stealing a piece of toast. Or a young girl forced into prostitution and then jailed for her Œcrime¹.
These are just some of the horror stories of the childrens prisons of Belarus that go unheard of elsewhere, where girls and boys as young as ten are locked up for the pettiest of offences.
Next month, Sharon Hutchinson, a Balbriggan native, will visit one of these prisons in an effort to bring a shed of hope to the lives of the Œinmates¹.
Together with a group of 16 other volunteers, Sharon will talk to the children, play games and above all try and have some fun with them. She painted a picture of what can be expected.
ŒMountjoy is a palace compared to what is over there,¹ Sharon explained. ŒThere is every kind of prisoner there, from high security to those locked up for practically nothing.
ŒIt¹s the closest thing to a concentration camp and there¹s a hierarchy scale based on how long they¹re there.
ŒThe prisoners are all made to wear numbers; for example somebody wearing the number four would be close to the guards and protected, where somebody wearing the number one - well, it¹s a free for all with them.
ŒHalf of the kids are in there for stealing a bit of bread or so on. There are girls in there who were forced into prostitution, then arrested and locked up. When they get in there, they get to the point where they lose all hope.¹
The volunteers who will travel over - all of whom are working professionals giving up their own time - will not only try and help the children, but also the guards.
ŒI will be working with the children directly, to try and show them that we care,¹ Sharon continued.
ŒMore importantly, another group will also be working directly with the guards, trying to give them a second chance too.
ŒWhen we leave, instead of the children looking at them as guards, hopefully they will look at them as guardians. And rather then beating the children, we hope they can learn to treat them in a humane way.¹
Sharon, who works for the Irish Times, will be travelling as part of the Zest for Kids programme, a branch of the Zestlife company.
Set up by Stuart and Maggie Wilson, the programme offers corporate team bonding exercises, but with a big difference.
ŒInstead of sending people out to Wicklow for the weekend, they¹ll send them out to Bosnia, to paint an orphanage for a week,¹ continued Sharon. ŒIt¹s certainly a way to change your life.
ŒBusinessmen and people from all walks of life will be heading to Belarus. We¹ll be travelling on a Friday and coming back on a Wednesday; we have an agenda, but when we get out there, that can change at the drop of a hat.¹
It¹s the first time that the Belarus government have allowed such an event to take place, but Sharon is quick to stress that the purpose of the trip will not merely be once-off.
ŒIt is an on-going process; after this someone else there will pick up the slack. For example, we will try and get the Red Cross involved. We will also be linking up with Dave Cook, who started the well-known shoe box appeal.
ŒIt¹s important that we follow up the projects. Recently, some orphans in Bosnia were asked what they wanted and they replied, ³friends². So we sent over two lads who are over there now, living with them and teaching English.
ŒThe same orphans had never seen the beach and we sent them off an a trip to the seaside for ten days - in fact they are there right now.¹
Sharon previously helped build houses in Alabama, USA and next month will be first trip to the former USSR. Over the weekend, herself and her fellow volunteers packed bags in Clare Hall shopping centre to raise funds and are still on the lookout for more help.
If you would like to make a donation .............
The Meath Chronicle 13th June 2007
Zest4Kidz trip to Uganda.
Peter Flood from Wilkinstown, Navan and Winifred Farry from Trim who took part in a Zest4Kidz trip to Uganda last November wish to thank all those who helped in fundraising for the trip. The group visited a school for Aids orphans, two Internally Displaced Persons camps and the Rachele Centre for former child soldiers in Lira, northern Uganda.
A team of 22 people worked directly with the children, child soldiers and displaced persons in providing Summer Camps (football, art, crafts, discussion groups, music, dance etc.) and showering them with love. The visit also incorporated Life Coaching for the volunteers going on the trip, the staff of the Rachele Centre and the children themselves. The trip was very successful and made a big impression on the volunteers. What impressed them most was the poverty of the area. People were living in mud huts with little or no worldly possessions.
In the Rachele Centre for former child soldiers they heard gruesome stories. They met an 18 year old who had been abducted by the LRA (Lord’s Resistance Army) and had been brutalised. His fingers, ears and upper lip had been cut off. These boys and girls have suffered unimaginable torture. Some have even witnessed the murder of their parents and siblings.
In one of the displaced persons camps they held babies in their arms, semi-naked or naked babies whose stomachs were swollen. Very young children were carrying babies. Three year olds had babies strapped to their backs. They have little sanitation, the toilets were holes in the ground and human excreta was all around, attracting worms, flies and mosquitoes.
Winifred and Peter will visit Uganda again this July. They will be joined by Lorna and Mairead Fagan from Kildalkey. They will visit the AIDS Orphans Project in Masaka, where Zest4Kidz currently partners with the Just Care school. The children at this school are aged between 4-14 years old and 90% of them are affected by AIDS, having either been orphaned or having lost a parent. They will be continuing the work with former child soldiers in the Rachele child soldiers’ camp in Lira, northern Uganda.
Various fund-raising activities have been planned for June and early July including charity bag packing this weekend in SuperValu, Johnstown, Navan, a Wild West fancy dress party in the Village Inn in Kildalkey on Saturday 16th and an information stand at the Haymaking Festival in Trim on Sunday. Please give generously to help this worthy cause. For further information phone Winifred at 087 2808820 or see the website: www.zest4kidz.com, email:
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or telephone: (01) 206 3872
Pictures attached:
Uganda 1: Winifred Farry and Stuy Wilson, founder of Zest4Kids with some former child soldiers.
Uganda 2: Peter Flood with some former child soldiers.
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