Student Sponsorships Have a New Look!

An example student profile from our new sponsorship sheet.

Rainbow Network has a new Student Sponsorship sheet; open it up and take a look!

The new sheet’s benefits are twofold; it makes it easier for you to share students with friends and family as well as streamlining our office’s  tracking process for unsponsored students.

The sheet includes 8 students, a description of our education program, and a mail-in form for sponsorship. We will periodically update the document as students are sponsored.

Print one for yourself, one for your Sunday School class, one for your men’s or women’s group, one for your reading circle, and one for your softball team; get excited about these bright young students, and what you can do to literally transform their lives through education, leadership, and support in love.

The classic individual profiles will still be sent to sponsors after payment is received.

Posted in People, Education | Tagged , , , , ,

Success Story: Eunice

A woman uses a sewing machine purchased with a Rainbow Network micro-loan

 

Upon returning from his most recent trip to Nicaragua, Keith was excited to share success stories and words of thanks from people impacted by Rainbow Network programs.

One such story is that of Eunice, a 29 year old woman living in the  Nagarote network. When Rainbow arrived in her community 12 years ago, Eunice was newly orphaned and raising her two younger brothers in a tiny mud hut. She said they survived on handouts from the kindness of similarly impoverished neighbors, but there often wasn’t enough food to share.

With Rainbow scholarships, she was able to attend first high school  and then trade school for a year to become a professional seamstress.

Five years ago, she moved into a Rainbow house, where she now lives with her husband and 2 year old son. They make much of their living with a sewing machine bought on a RN micro-loan, using cloth from another loan.With the profits from each piece of clothing, she is on track to paying off their mortgage. She was grateful for the opportunities afforded through Rainbow, speaking of answered prayers.

Think now of her son, who at two is watching his parents, educated entrepreneurs, pay off their home. He has a safe place to play, grow, and learn the value of education and hard work from his mother and father. When the opportunities of Rainbow combine with the hard work of people like Eunice, the impact ripples through generations.

Funding a micro-loan is a sustainable way to change lives; you really can’t go wrong with a program that cultivates work ethic, takes steps toward self-sufficiency, provides business training, bolsters local economies, and, when paid off, repeats the whole success story by providing the funds to another family. A family’s way of life can be transformed with a micro-loan for only $300. Click the donate button to the right or contact our office to fund a micro-loan.

Posted in Education, Housing, Micro Loans, Nicaragua News, People | Tagged , ,

New School Year, New Students

In Nicaragua, the school year starts at the beginning of the calendar year and ends in December, which means it’s Back-to-School time in Nicaragua!

Our offices have just compiled the lists of all the new students accepted into the scholarship program, and each of these students needs a sponsor.

There are 2 ways you can help:

These three young ladies volunteer in the medical clinic in their community, but only one of them was able to go to school last year. Photo credit: Rochelle Collette, Springfield, MO

Sponsor a student for $25 a month. Bright students often wish to continue their education, but without financial means, end up working in the plantation fields. A scholarship of $25 a month ($300 a year) provides tuition, transportation, 2 uniforms, and supplies for one student in need. To give back, the student will write at least 2 letters per year and will do volunteer work in the community.

Volunteer to visit an adult Sunday School class with student profiles. This is so easy, anyone can do it, and the impact of sponsorship ripples through every group that hears about it.  Get your profiles here!

Our scholarship program grows or shrinks based directly on the number of sponsors; I challenge you to take action and make sure that the program grows in 2012. Every student sponsored has the chance to earn a degree, develop leadership skills, and create a relationship with a sponsor that reminds them they are loved; could that sponsor be you?

Posted in Uncategorized

100 Gardens

Rainbow Network would like to send a big Thank You to Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company in Mansfield, Missouri, whose donation will start about 100 new community gardens in Nicaragua.

Community gardens are a source of fresh fruits and vegetables for families and feeding centers, as well as a source of income for those who trade or sell extra produce in the market.

Freshly picked produce contains more nutrients than shipped produce harvested before it is allowed to ripen. These gardens also add variety to diets that would otherwise be little but rice and beans.

You can multiply Baker Creek’s donation of 100 gardens by adding to the gift! Click the give button to the right, call 417-889-8088, or mail a check to our office to make a donation.

Posted in Feeding, Nicaragua News, People | Tagged , , , , , ,

December Magazine available online

In case you haven’t received our printed copy in the mail, click below for our PDF version and check out all the great things happening with Rainbow Network in Nicaragua.

December 2011 Online

Best to you in the New Year,

The Rainbow Network

Posted in From the Magazine, Nicaragua News, Uncategorized

Graduation!

December. The month brings to mind holidays and colder weather here in the U.S., but in Nicaragua, December is time to celebrate the graduation of high school students.

This year, 116 students earned high school degrees in the face of disparaging adversity. Often, Rainbow scholarship students are the first generation of high school graduates from their families, or even from their entire villages.

Meet the Graduates

Yusemi is 19  and lives in Flor de Piedra with her mother and 3 siblings. There is no elecricity or running water in her agricultural village. She works hard helping her mother with her siblings and studying, and she still finds time to volunteer as a tutor and mentor to elementary students. “[My sponsor's] family are such nice people because they worked hard so I could continue going to high school and make my dream come true that I’ve had since I was a little girl.”

Rolando is 20 and lives with his Aunts, Uncles, and 3 little cousins on his grandparents’ small farm in La Trinidad.  He helps plant corn, cut firewood to sell, tend the animals, and draw water from the well.  His family would not be able to afford his schooling without Rainbow, but he studied hard to earn his degree and now plans to be a teacher and improve the futures of young people in La Trinidad.

Rosa is 17 and lives in the small agricultural community of Cabo de Horno.  Her father works hard doing seasonal farm labor to provide for his wife and 4 children, but the family still cannot afford school.  With Rainbow’s help, she graduated a year early and hopes to go on to technical school. “Education is very important to me because I want to have a better future and improve the living conditions of my family. Education is the best way to help our families and our communities to live better in the future.”

There isn’t room to tell every student’s story, but the other 113 graduates are listed here by village in the 2011 Rainbow Network “Honor Roll” of graduates. (PDF file)

Sobering Truth

As the U.S. office assigns new students to sponsors whose student graduated, a sobering truth is clear; along with the list of 116 graduates to be removed from the scholarship program came another list of 28 students dropping out of the program.

Poverty is often described as a cycle, and rightly so, as it is so difficult to stop it in its tracks. Some students leave school to work and supplement the incomes of their struggling families, or are too overwhelmed with adult responsibilities at a young age to continue their studies. But Rainbow Network is reversing negative trends in rural education, and we are here to stay.

Hope

The success of these graduating students is a product of years of hard work and support from the families and staff in Nicaragua and sponsors in the U.S. Their education is a step toward hope; the leadership skills, sense of self-worth, and economic stability these graduates are developing are the key to one day erasing poverty in Nicaragua.

Join us in celebrating this hope for the future of Nicaragua by providing an un-sponsored high school student with a scholarship of $25 a month ($300 per year) to cover the cost of tuition, uniforms, transportation, and supplies. You can sign up online through Paypal here, or by calling our office at 417-889-8088.

Congratulations to all the graduates for their hard work; their families, sponsors, and the staff are proud of their accomplishments!

Posted in Education, Events, Nicaragua News, People | Tagged , , , , ,

Of Backpacks and Bootstraps

This backpack is nondescript, simply designed, individually manufactured, and has limited availability – In fact, you’d have to travel to Nicaragua to find another one. But you must look beyond the sewn-on patch to see the whole story. Even though they’re sold empty for around $4 each, each backpack contains something magical. They’re full of ambition & promise, with Rainbow Network’s common thread of Hope woven into every seam.

This backpack was made by a microloan recipient in our El Crucero project, just south of Managua. Stitched together on Wal-Mart sewing machines costing less than $100 total, the resulting business now employs multiple individuals, and provides for the families far beyond what the typical seasonal labor allows.

Representing the hundred of success stories from our Microfinance program, this backpack will be on display at our Rainbow Network office during two upcoming Holiday Receptions:

  • Thursday, December 23 , from 3:30 – 5:30
  • Thursday, December 29, also from 3:30 – 5:30

The gatherings are your chance to visit with Keith Jaspers, the Rainbow Network founder who has recently returned to the organization. There will be light refreshments, good conversation and updates on the state of our Ministry in Nicaragua.

NO RSVP is necessary, just stop by 3834 South Avenue (just north of Campbell 16 Theaters) during either of the times. If you have questions please call us at 417-889-8088, and we hope to see you there

Posted in Development, Micro Loans, Microfinance