📄 Extracted Text (1,190 words)
THE PROJECT
Rwanda Project USVI began in the Spring of 2008 when a group of Ivanna Eudora Kean
High School students asked their teacher and advisor, Barbara Young, to help them find a
way to go to Rwanda to meet the 9-year-old orphan they were sponsoring.
Victoria "Vickie" Umuhoza was about to be forced to leave the boarding school she was
attending because she could not pay the tuition when the IEICHS World Religion club
learned of her plight and decided to raise the money to cover Vickie's school fees. Not
long after raising enough to cover Vickie's school for two years, they approached Ms.
Young about the possibility of going to Rwanda.
Realizing that it would take more than bake and t-shirt sales and car washes to raise the
money and the consciousness of the students, Young reached out to first lady Cecile
deJongh for help.
Together with Young's friend, photographer Sonya Melescu, the fund raising and
planning for the trip began..Young and deJongh understood that for the trip to be
meaningful and worthwhile the youngsters would need to do more than meet Vickie.
And they did!
The group of 11 Virgin Islands teenagers painted, hauled rocks, dug in the dirt, served
meals, played with and read to impoverished children and dug some more at several
orphan centers around the country. As they watched with amazement at the connections
being made between the V.I. teens and the Rwandan children Young, deJongh, and co-
founder Shaun Pennington, knew the project had to be ongoing. And not just because of
the connections between the children, but also the connection between cultures and
values.
The teens had quickly made other connections; connections about what is important in
life, and about what brings happiness. Connections about what it means to have nothing
materially, and still have joy. They experienced a country and the people that in 14 short
years had risen from the dead. And they were changed.
"The Rwanda Project USVI raises consciousness of all involved by fostering an ongoing
relationship between the Rwandan people and the people of the USVI ."
EFTA01221132
Virgin Island Friends
The dream of Rwanda Project USVI could not have happened without major and
minor contributors...we wish to acknowledge all of those people, organizations and
institutions that made the dream a reality in 2008 ...
Patricia La Corte - Oceana Restaurant
Prior Family Foundation
J. Epstein V.I. Foundation Inc.
Virgin Islands Lottery
Elizabeth Anderson Warren Et Carmen Partridge
Antilles School Penates Foundation
Anonymous donor from Antilles Marjorie Rawls Roberts
School Terrlyn P. Smock
Karen Bertrand Et William WilsonStandard Pacific Holdings
J. Bozzuto Chris and Barbara Teare
Charity Girls Lori Thompson
Dockside Bookshop James and Rebecca Tunick
Susan H. Hancock Angela Et Raymond Walters
Michael Et Chari B. Ward
Kazi Management V.I. Source
Jane Higgins Et Jay Lammering
Julie Paiewonsky-Cassinelli
Joan Amerling Kirst Et Gina Feddresen
Antilles class of '08 James C. Martin
EFTA01221133
F. Dean Apple Paradise Pax Inc.
BGM Engineers a Surveyors Trust of Edyth a Ralph Pasek
Joyce Bailey Patricia Saxon
Yanick Bayard Sandra a Jeffrey Smith
Leslie Faulds-White
Dinner and a Cause
Advertising Production Services Kim Chisholm
Joan Amerling Ruth Anne Coe
Dorothy E Anderson Major Et Tanya Coleman
Anointed Worship Restoration Custom Canvas, Inc.
Church cap Davis
F. Dean Apple Robert a Joan De Lugo
Brenda Armstrong J a C DeJongh
Gerald Et Becky Bahlman Dellia Holodenschi
Colleen or Ludlow Bailey Karin Donaldson
Susan Baker Margie D. Duncan
Walter a Nancy Bauer Lorraine E. Baa Elisha
Daniel a Gita Beck Esannason Family Living Trust
Erica Benjamin Ivanne Farr
Claude or Linda Berry Richard a Debra Farrelly
Blackhall a Co. Real Estate Yugonda M. Ferroro
Alicia S Boatwright Bridget Gallagher
Bonnie Braga Julia C Gardner
Elizabeth Buckalew Janet Geesen
Pamela Reid Bussard Katherine Gibson
Lisa C. Butler Mary Gleason
Deborah Carnaroli L a H Goldman
Darby Carstarphen Shansi Grabfelder
Tricia S. Cassinelli Bonnie Gray
Susan H Hancock Jude Roeder Gumbs
Veronica J.Handy Lara Halliday
Michael a Linda Hantman Terry Halpern
Susan J. Harmer
Jonetta Darden Hill Ruth A. Magnuson
Cherre E. Hughes Liza J. Margolis
Akan a Brenda Iniama Stephen a June Marsh
Carol a Terrance Jacobs Leslie Maxwell
N a J Jones Dolace Nicole McLean
Judith Kaplan James P. a Georgeann P.
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Charlene M. Kehoe McNicholas
Kelly Krause Dave & Margaret Miller
Kerry Klein Daniela Miller
Knot's Away Studio Caryl Ayn Mitchell
Denise S. Kurg Martha or Curtis Lee Moron
Desiree Lacharite Molly Morris
Jean Lambert Amalia H. & George E. Morrissey
Jane Higgins & Jay Lammering April Moran Newland
Amelia Lamont & Bruce Linda Nogales
Marshack James Et Linda O'Toole
Evelyn Larocque Diana M Parker
Donna J Liska Teri Pearsall
Hugh and Suzanne Mabe Shaun Pennington
RM Beachfront LLC Peggy Simmons Sarah N. or
Gary Rosenthal & Judith Slosky Mary L. Huskey
Marshan Sam Patricia C. Phelan
Sea Grape Spa Et Fitness Center Jackson Purkey
R.& V Silver Pamela R. Tepper
Caron Sirhakis Frances S. Thomas
T & B Tyne
Michelle A. Smitherman Carolyn Tyson
Soft Touch Boutique, Inc. Rhea T. Vasconcellos
Mariaclara Stryker VI Desserts LLC
Fiona M. Stuart Rebecca E. Weiss
Eunice Summer Roger & Diana White
Amanda M. Symkens Kimberly A. Young
Elena Tagini
Thanks to Sonya Melescu for her contributions to Rwanda Project 2008
Special thanks to:
Lambert Media
Billy D
Dee Baecher-Brown, Carlyn Wesley and the Community Foundation of the Virgin Islands
Sally George
Ruth Caplin of Happy and Free Studios
Ivanna Eudora Kean High School
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And a very special "thank you" to our dear Rwandan friends who made our trip safe,
comfortable, well informed and unique!
Frederic "Freddy- Budaramani
First Lady Jeannette Kagame
EFTA01221136
Rwanda is a poor rural country
with about 85% of the
population engaged in (mainly
subsistence) agriculture and some
mineral and agro-processing. In
2008, minerals overtook coffee
and tea as Rwanda's primary
foreign exchange earner. The 1994 genocide decimated
Rwanda's fragile economic base, severely impoverished the
population, particularly women, and temporarily stalled the
country's ability to attract private and external investment.
However, Rwanda has made substantial progress in
stabilizing and rehabilitating its economy to pre-1994 levels.
GDP has rebounded and inflation has been curbed.
Nonetheless, a ;majority stilt live below the poverty line of
250 Rwandan francs per day (about US$0.43). Despite
Rwanda's fertile ecosystem, food production often does not
keep pace with demand, requiring food imports. Rwanda
continues to receive substantial aid money and obtained
IMF-World BankHeavily indebted Poor Country (HiPC)
initiative debt relief in 2005-06. Rwanda also received a
EFTA01221137
Millennium Challenge Account Compact in 2008. Africa's
most densely populated country is trying to overcome the
(imitations of its small, landlocked economy by leveraging
regional trade. Rwanda joined the East African Community
and is aligning its budget, trade, and immigration policies
with its regional partners. The government has embraced an.
expansionary fiscal policy to reduce poverty by improving
education, infrastructure, and foreign and domestic
investment and pursuing market-oriented reforms, although
energy shortages, instability in neighboring states, and lack
of adequate transportation linkages to other countries
continue to handicap growth. The global downturn hurt
export demand and tourism while poor rains this year have
lowered growth in agriculture.
EFTA01221138
ℹ️ Document Details
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Bates Number
EFTA01221132
Dataset
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