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Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good (Part 3)



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"Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good"

is an ongoing series about travelers who give...

***

Meet Jennifer.

 Jennifer James (far left) in Ethiopia visiting health workers at a rural health post.
Name: Jennifer James
Age: 38
State: North Carolina
Occupation: Entrepreneur
Age When You Got Your First Passport: 35
Languages: English and just enough French and Chinese to get by.


Bio:  Jennifer James is the founder and CEO of Mom Bloggers Club, one of the largest social networks for moms who blog at over 19,000 registered users and Social Good Moms, the leading site for moms who use social media and blogging for good. Jennifer has been featured in Philanthropy, Forbes, Brandweek, CNN.com, the New York Times, AOL and on NPR’s All Things Considered. She was recently named a Fast Company Most Generous Social Media Maven, a Top Blogger Changing the World by Babble.com as well as a Blogger Out to Change the World by Water for People. She currently serves on the ONE Moms Advisory Council. 

Tell us about your last volunteer experience:  I just returned from Delhi, India where I visited Social Good Moms' partners Save the Children, WaterAid, and Pratham’s work in the field. It was a fantastic trip. I was able to observe each of the NGO’s work helping Delhi's poorest firsthand. I saw the triumphs and learned about their acute challenges. It's a never-ending journey of working in partnership with others and scaling up to help those in abject poverty.

Tell us about your first volunteer experience (travel or otherwise):  My very first volunteer experience was with the Red Cross during junior high and high school. I loved every minute of helping people give blood to help others in need, even those who were giving blood for their own operations. 

Jennifer James visiting Protsahan, a NGO school for at-risk girls in a Delhi slum.
Tell us about your next travel volunteer experience: While it's not a volunteer trip per se I will be traveling to Zambia in a few days with John Hopkins' International ReportingProject. I will join nine other new media journalists to learn more about HIV/AIDS, malaria and TB in the country. I am really looking forward to visiting another African country, but also seeing how differently the country deals with global development and communicable disease. 

Best and worst thing about volunteer travel: I haven't had any bad experiences with volunteer travel. Knock on wood. The best thing about volunteer travel is learning along the way and meeting wonderful people. The relationships you forge are worth every bit of volunteer travel. 

Advice for those that want to travel + giveIf you want to travel and give back, just do it! Determine to go off the beaten path of traditional tourist circles and have an open mind. Most importantly: make sure to coordinate everything well in advance of arriving in the country and get recommendations from people about their volunteer experiences there. That may mean a lot of Net scouring. Do your homework before you leave home!

Why you travel + giveI travel and give back because it's a really great way to get to know a country. Plus, it's a part of the work I do as the Founder and CEO of Social Good Moms. I love getting to know those who help and those are being helped. 

Your favorite travel quote“The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.” – Lao Tzu


Meet Nadia.

Nadia Jones in Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti during her second #Bloggers4Haiti press trip.
Name: Nadia Jones           
Age: 30s
City/State: Jacksonville, Florida         
Occupation: Niche Parent Conference Founder/Social Media Strategist
Age When You Got Your First Passport: 3
Languages: Proficient in Spanish, French, and Haitian Creole

Blog:  Justice Jonesie and The Niche Mommy


Bio: Nadia, known affectionately as Justice Jonesie by her blogging friends, is a savvy mom to three that loves to share her passion for motherhood, fitness, traveling, and food. A veteran blogger and social media enthusiast, Jonesie started blogging over six years ago at her first Mamalaw.com, an award winning about “three mothers that happen to be lawyers too.” Of both Haitian and Latina descent, she was named a top Latina blogger by LATISM and invited to Washington D.C. for a special, White House Retreat.

Tell us about your last volunteer experience: I went on the #Bloggers4Haiti trip to help raise awareness about sustainable economic programs for Haitian artisans.

Tell us about your first volunteer experience (travel or otherwise): I volunteered at a high risk elementary school after school program. I helped middle school children complete homework assignments and school projects. It was eye opening to see the impact that a lack of decent education had on these children, right here in America.
Nadia with Danica Kombol visiting the women of OFEDA in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Tell us about your next travel volunteer experience: I will return to Haiti with #Bloggers4Haiti.

Best and worst thing about volunteer travel: Worst thing is that due to travel expenses you can only go a few times a year which never seems enough. Best thing is that you are making a difference.

Advice for those that want to travel + give: You can apply for a grant to help offset expenses. Friends are a great resource for helping to raise money or provide donations.

Why you travel + give: I feel it’s my duty to give back and give in some way. When you see how the rest of the world lives, you realize you are fortunate and have really won the lottery of life.   When you do volunteer travel, you realize things such as there are millions of people with no access to clean water. When you travel to make change, you become aware of alarming stats such as millions of people live with no access to clean water.

Your favorite travel quote“He who does not travel does not know the value of men.” – Moorish proverb

***


“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.” 




Click here to read Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good (Part 1)
Click here to read Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good (Part 2)
Read more »

Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good (Part I)



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Photo Credit: @DeSuMama
I have wanted to start this series for a long time now.  I even pitched it to a national online magazine (and I'm not big on blind pitching either).  I had previously taken a stab at sharing the works of humanitarian bloggers on Thoughtful Thursdays, but stopped.  Since I never heard back from the magazine I pitched to (not even a no-thank-you-very-much-maam-and-of-course-we-promise-not-to-use-your-idea-ourselves), I figured I might as well just get my own travelanthropy party started.  After all, I DO have a blog, I have often had to remind myself. Besides, as a traveler + giver I know there are a bunch of other travelers + givers too, and I think everyone should know about them, don't you? 

In this new series Travelanthropy: People Who Travel Good (which has a format similar to my Black Women Expatriates series), I'm going to introduce you to some of the travelers + givers I run in to from time to time both in real life and on the Web.  I think they're fantastic and I bet you will too.
  

Meet Ruby.

Photo Credit: @AThinkinTravelr
I met Ruby on my Facebook page. I saw her photo in my Newsfeed and asked her to post it on #BrownGirlsGive. She was at a Global Climate Change rally in DC that marched to the White House. Ruby was 1 of 30,000 who got out that day.

Name: Ruby Melton
Age: 27
Location: Pomfret, Maryland
Occupation: Contractor, National Institutes of Health - Department of Human & Health Services
Age When You Got Your First Passport: 26
Languages: English, Spanish (Beginner, Conversational)

Bio: Ruby Melton has a B.S. in Business Management and is an avid explorer, volunteer, adventure seeker, and photographer. She is TEFL Certified and is currently transitioning from a life in the corporate world to a life where she can serve others, travel and run her own photography business location-independent. Her additional hobbies include creating videos, photographing weddings and newborns, rafting down class 5 rapids, and jumping out of airplanes.

Tell us about your last volunteer vacation: I signed up to volunteer to teach English through International Volunteeer HQ based in New Zealand. They are partnered with a local agency in Costa Rica called Maximo Nivel (Maximum Level). I spent one week teaching English and serving the community of San Pedro at the Hogar PANI Orphanage.

Hogar PANI Orphanage
Photo Credit: @AThinkinTravelr


Tell us about your first volunteer experience (travel or otherwise): My first earnest volunteer experience was in 2010 with D.R.E.A.M.Life, Inc. (Delivering Resources to Empower A Mothers Life) in Washington, D.C. where I was the Communications Director. 

Tell us about your next travel + volunteer experience: My next volunteer exposure will be in Cuzco, Peru in September 2013. I will be participating in the Teach English program for one week through International Volunteer HQ.

Best and Worst thing about volunteer travel: The worst thing is that the volunteer has no input on where they are placed and is somewhat going in blind not truly knowing what to expect. The best thing is that through the experience of not fully knowing your placement, you learn to let go and enjoy the opportunity to the fullest and adapt in ways you never knew you could.

Advice for those that want to travel + give: Find the right agency and program and narrow it down to a particular region that's right for you. Choose something that you would love doing without getting paid and is close to your heart and also easy on the finances. Prepare yourself mentally and spiritually because volunteering in less fortunate parts of the world call for the volunteer to be strong-willed, opened-minded and very adaptable. Do what you have to do to make it happen; if that's raising the funds to afford the trip, then don't give up until you've reached your goal and always do your best.

Why you travel + give:  I travel because the world is too diverse to only see a fraction of it and because it opens my mind to different ways of living. I volunteer because I want to assist those who are less fortunate. Half of the world's population is living on less than $2 a day and I want to do whatever I can to help them help themselves and secure a better future for their families and generations to come. The world can be cold and very unfair; I want to change that.

Favorite travel quote: "A woman who follows the crowd will usually go no further than the crowd. The woman who walks alone is likely to find herself in places no one has ever been before." ~Albert Einstein

***

Meet Dana.
Dana Carmel with girls from the Para Ti School in Rio de Janeiro's Vila Canoas favela
Photo Credit: @TimeTravelPlans
I'm still figuring out Google+, but I found Dana there, so I must be doing something right. I wasn't even looking that hard, and there she was.  I saw her travelanthropy post in my feed and shot her an email and here we are. She's from my home town. #random Technology rocks.

Name: Dana Carmel
Age: 32
Location: Los Angeles, California
Occupation: Contracts management
Age When You Got Your First Passport: 3
Languages: English, survival Spanish

Bio: Daughter of an Air Force dad, Dana Carmel moved to Panama when she was three years old where she lived for three and a half years before her family returned to the U.S. A world traveler, cultural explorer, and a frequent volunteer both in Los Angeles and abroad, Dana works as a full-time corporate professional.

Tell us about your last volunteer vacation: My husband Jave and I traveled to Vancouver BC in December 2012 where we spent half a day preparing and serving lunch to residents of the Salvation Army’s Belkin House, a shelter and transitional housing facility that provides meals and career/educational workshops to help the homeless transition from life off of the streets. The experience drove home the reality of how big the homeless problem really is.


Dana volunteering at Salvation Army's Belkin House
Photo Credit: @TimeTravelPlans


Tell us about your first volunteer experience (travel or otherwise): I volunteered as a child both in Girl Scouts and at church. In 2008, I volunteered with LA Works doing everything from homeless feedings, wheelchair refurbishing, dog walking, beach cleanups, etc. My first volunteer experience abroad was in 2009 in the Dominican Republic for Passporters Expeditions (PE) - a company my husband and I helped build with my brother - working on a neighborhood beautification project with the Dream Project in Cabarete where we spent the day painting a neighborhood baseball diamond side-by-side with a local youth baseball team.

Tell us about your next travel + volunteer experience: In December, we will travel to Tanzania for Passporters Expedition 2013 where our first stop will be in the Moshi/Kilimanjaro region at Art in Tanzania, an NGO founded to support local artists who don’t have the resources to develop their talent. We will throw a holiday-themed party for local orphans and street kids, so we’re looking forward to it!

Best and Worst thing about volunteer travel: The worst thing is that most volunteer travel organizations charge a hefty fee and volunteers have to pay their own travel expenses making volunteer travel seem out of reach, so I seek out my own opportunities. The best thing is that volunteer travel provides an opportunity to form relationships with locals who you might not otherwise have a chance to connect with in such a meaningful way.

Advice for those that want to travel + give: Start with a short term project so you don’t feel completely overwhelmed. Volunteers are more productive and motivated giving on their own terms. If you work full time, travel during paid holidays and spend no more than a day or two volunteering so that you still have plenty of time to explore and enjoy the destination. 

Why you travel + give:  Travel used to be about collecting passport stamps and seeing sites, but I wanted it to be more purposeful, and giving back to local communities is the best way to have a purposeful travel experience. Volunteering creates a bond with locals as most are quick to embrace travelers who are genuinely interested and concerned about uplifting their communities.


Favorite travel quote: “Travel is more than the seeing of sights; it is a change that goes on, deep and permanent, in the ideas of living.” – Miriam Beard

***

Use your voice for kindness,
your ears for compassion,
your hands for charity,
your mind for truth,
and your heart for love.
~Unknown


Don't forget to show your love by liking Ruby and Dana's blogs and this post, because these two givers are definitely showing their love, that's for sure. And if you know a traveler + giver worthy of a travelanthropy profile, shoot me an email.


And so do the people who love us. =)

#BrownGirlsGive is on Facebook.


Read more »
 

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