Sunday, March 20, 2011

A letter to you!


         
                I am writing not as a woman /man with statutes or special rights but as a human being with feelings and heart beat. My heart bleeds each day I wake up and I am not sure of what to make of my  thoughts or feelings. I feel for the pain and anguish the poor has to go through every day. I used to be a victim myself. It's heard to tell what I feel. What You are about  to read is not to be ignored please share or make a donation. 

                     There are millions of babies born everyday without a chance of making it the third world countries, some of those babies could be future lawyers, doctors, scientist that might discover the best cure to the diseases and plagues that has befallen humanity, some could be super stars that will win our hearts and make us happy just by listening to them or watching them in TV’s shows. The list is endless but do they deserve it? Neither do we but we still can turn the tables around if we think deep and feel deeper. 

There are women who are hard working and good mothers but poverty has rid us of such amazing women. Women are the pillars of our society they are our back bone and we can’t do without women. What makes them special? To start with you are conceived by a woman and she nurtured you. Even if she left us due to circumstance. Sometimes we blame our mothers for living us to grow up alone. Sometimes we ask why she has to die when we are so young, well lets not forget that life has it’s own faces as such we can’t predict the future but surely women generally are special people and such we should respect them.                                        
     
                                                      Women in Poverty
To understand the plight of poor women around the world, consider the stories of Ade,
Runa, and Reina. On the outskirts of Ibadan, Nigeria, Ade cultivates a small, sparsely
planted plot with a baby on her back and other visibly undernourished children nearby.
Her efforts to grow an improved soybean variety, which could have fortified her
Children’s diet, failed because she lacked the extra time to tend the new crop, did not have a spouse who could help her, and could not afford hired labor. Runa, a young woman with boundless energy, piercing eyes, and a  warm smile, founded and runs the Self-Employed Women’s Association in the Indian city of Luck now, one of the country’s most disadvantaged regions.

 Until a year ago, she had been unable to obtain credit from local banks for her impressively well organized business, which now employs  about 5,000 women home workers who sell chikan embroidery in national and international markets. Reina is a former guerrilla fighter in El Salvador who is being taught how to bake bread under a post-civil war reconstruction program. But as she says, “The only thing I have is this training and I don’t want to be just a baker. I have other dreams for my life.”

A farmer, an entrepreneur, and a former guerrilla— the working lives of these three women have little in common, except that they, along with most women worldwide,
face similar obstacles to increasing their economic power: no “slack” time to invest in additional work that could bring in needed income; lack of access to commercial credit; and training in traditionally female— and mostly low-wage—   skills. These obstacles differentiate the work experiences of men and women, exacerbate women’s poverty, and sustain a vicious cycle of impoverishment from one generation to the next. 

They also help to account for a disturbing global trend: the feminization of  poverty. When the yardstick used to measure the degree of people’s poverty is their level of well-being, women are traditionally found to be more impoverished than men. But poverty is more commonly defined according to income, and today, although the gap between the two sexes is decreasing in terms of wellbeing, it is increasing in terms of income. The evidence is imperfect, but current trends suggest that women account for a growing proportion of those people who are considered poor on the basis of income, not only in industrial countries such as the United States, but also in the developing world.
  
POOR WOMEN, POOR WORLD
This feminization of poverty should be considered a legitimate foreign policy concern. Because women are increasingly economic actors and heads of households as well as mothers, their poverty slows global economic growth. Moreover, in poor countries, their disadvantage feeds a destructive spiral of poverty, population growth, and environmental degradation. In a world of blurring borders, women’s poverty
creates enclaves of want in the midst of wealth and puts rising pressures on the developed world, whether by fueling costly humanitarian crises or by unleashing— for the first time—   waves of females who migrate without spouses to seek work in richer countries.

  
Global literacy statistics show that in 1990 there were only 74 literate women for every 100 literate men. Schooling statistics reveal a similar trend. Worldwide, 77 million girls of primary school age (6-11 years old) are out of school, compared with 52 million boys— a gap that becomes even larger when girls’ higher overall dropout rates, absenteeism, and repetition levels are taken into account.

                                  Women Care Group101/ Planting Seeds of Hope
Despite the important role that women in developing countries play in agriculture, they have often been
denied the attention and assistance given to their male colleagues. The question is why should women work hard while men take the credits.
                                                              

Our voice
The majority of women obtain low-wage work because of persistent sexual discrimination in terms of employment and wages. In Honduras, for example, coffee and tobacco farmers prefer to hire girls and women as laborers because they are willing to accept lower wages and are more reliable workers. Especially in poor countries, female labor is primarily sought for low-paid positions in services, agriculture, small-scale commerce, and in the growing, unregulated manufacturing and agribusiness industries, which pay their workers individual rather than family wages, offer seasonal or part-time employment, and carry few or no benefits. Hence, this explains the seemingly contradictory trends of women’s increased economic participation alongside their growing impoverishment.

BREAKING THE VICIOUS CYCLE
The vicious cycle of poverty that unfolds when women work more and earn less and children, as a result, get less food and maternal time, is both commonplace and hard to break. But recent studies have also made clear that while households headed or maintained by women may lack resources, they are generally more  “resourceful”  than their male counterparts. In Brazil, for instance, economist Duncan Thomas has found that income in the hands of mothers has an effect on child health that is almost 20 times greater than income that is controlled by the father. Similar results have been reported in Chile, Guatemala, Kenya, and Malawi. The key appears to be that in households where women control resources, they prefer (whether for reasons of nature or nurture) to invest scarce resources in child well-being. In Jamaica, for instance, studies have found that female-headed households spend more on food and other family-oriented goods than male-headed households. 

These differences in the way that men and women prefer to spend scarce resources in poor households suggest that the income that poor women earn can yield higher health or social benefits than that earned by men. They are a strong argument for the desirability of expanding poor women’s economic opportunities— precisely the area where there has been little, if any, advancement in recent decades. In short, the question before individual nations and the international community at large is not why they should invest more in women, but how. Nations need to take measures that reinforce the virtuous cycle between poor women’s and children’s well-being. They also need to avoid actions that aggravate the obstacles that 
women and children already face.

A good place to start would be avoiding the unintended consequences of social and economic policies that can increase women’s work burdens— such as reducing those public services that cushion the impact of negative economic shocks (see Ricardo Hausmann’s article  “Will Volatility Kill Market Democracy?”  on pp. 54–67 in the Winter 1997 issue of Foreign Policy). Taking such measures without providing complementary policies that adequately “protect” poor women in their multiple roles as producers and reproducers is likely to set in motion, or intensify, the poverty cycle. 

Enlightened approaches such as providing women with access to reliable credit and savings can have multiplier effects that raise poor women’s productivity in the home, as well as productivity and earnings in the market. With that in mind, policymakers should also stop promoting well-meaning programs that ignore women’s traditional productive roles, the economic value of their time, and their domestic time constraints. One project, for
example, established a cooperative for rural women in western Kenya that produced potholders for sale in Nairobi at a price lower than the cost of the banana fiber that was used to make them. There are several other specific areas of national and international policy where changes and improvements could yield great dividends for poor women and for the developing world in general. 

Governments in all countries 
should take the following measures: Expand substantially the access of poor women to family-planning and  reproductive health services. Many successful reproductive health programs offer women a package of health services for themselves— and sometimes their children— bundled into one visit, in one location, which saves them both time and transportation costs. Boosting women’s capacities to generate income will also increase their access to higher quality health services that may be purchased through private providers. Adopt education reform agendas designed to increase the quantity and quality of, first primary, and then secondary, schooling for girls. With the support of international agencies, innovative efforts to increase girls’ access to schools are under way in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and other countries. These include giving scholarships and engaging families and communities in the task
of getting and keeping girls enrolled. 


Quote
As World Bank vice president Mieko Nishimizu has said,  “If you educate a boy you educate a human being. If you educate a girl, you educate generations.” Create incentives for the private sector to expand women’s access to agencies that offer credit and savings services. Microfinance operations, like the well-known Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, have succeeded in providing access to reliable credit and savings services to more than 3 million female borrowers in developing countries, but such operations still reach only about 5 percent of those in need of their services. They also provide benefits in other areas. One female microcredit client in Bangladesh, for example, mentioned that the profits from her expanded business had enabled her to buy a rickshaw for her unemployed husband to use as taxi. As a result, she mentioned in passing, he had stopped beating her.





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Women Care Group101 is a small charity standing like a candle in the wind.Wcg101 shining light represents a glimpse of hope to those living in darkness.


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Friday, March 18, 2011

Home - womencaregroup's JimdoPage!

Home - womencaregroup's JimdoPage!

               To a great friend and a true hero. Adieu.R.I.P- T.
Give your love and watch it heal our land..

Friday, March 11, 2011

did you feel the quake?

did you feel the quake? 
 Please visit red cross and make your donations http://www.redcross.org/
WCG101 Seeking for online volunteers..
Here's how you can volunteer to help Women Care Group101. Our project benefits very poor women and children living in abject poverty world wide. You can also help a lot by telling others about our class room’s campaign to build more class room and provide books for free. For just $2, anyone can donate a brick or book to help build a class room and library. Please spread the word! Do you want to help the world’s neediest read or help the poorest homeless women get accommodation? You can help us meet increasing requests for aid.
We currently need or anticipate needing help from volunteers with skills in the following areas:
                                visual arts (painting, drawing, ...)
                                graphic design
                                 videography (YouTube masters)
                                 publicity
                                 legal
                               translation from English to other languages
                                fundraising
             Forum moderator
            website skills in marketing and eCommerce
       you have any matching skills, please tell us.  If relevant, please include a link to  your portfolio or website. We would also like to hear from you, if you have personal connections with:
                                 corporate public relations or charitable giving officers
                                 publishing company executives
                               booksellers
                                groups of hobbyists or enthusiasts, who might like to organize an event related to their interest to benefit wcg101 projects
                               media personalities
                               celebrities who might be interested in helping women care group101 projects
If you would like to help us with skills or through connections not mentioned here, please do tell us. , but keep in mind that we might not be able to utilize your help, yet. We do not want to waste our volunteers' time, and will only ask for your help if we think it will make a significant difference.
At the minimum, you can help us right now by:
        Sharing our website links and inviting your friends to join our facebook page, and encouraging your friends to do so, too. This Charity is new following us on Twitter, becoming a fan on Facebook, or friending us at MySpace
                                telling your friends about Women Care Group101
                              using the Share button below to add us to social bookmarking or news sites.      donating part of your eBay sales to us, or donating an item for us to sell on our website
Whatever you do, thank you for supporting Women Care Group101!

Give your love and watch it heal our land..

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Are you seeking for fund ?Join our peer to peer charity giving..PTPSNACGP


An 8.9-magnitude earthquake hit northern Japan on Friday, triggering tsunamis We are sending this massage to our Japanese friends. Our heart and prayers goes out to the people living in Japan. 
To all the Japanese people We here would like to say you are not alone we are with you in prayers please be strong...








BROKEN HEARTS FANS..

We are on facebook join us..



ABOUT WCG101-PTPSNACGP:

What most charities don't do is they won’t follow the traditional olden day’s way of charity giving we are now focused on all relative aspects of charity giving that actually works.


   Hello welcome to Women Care Group101 (wcg101) Non Profit  Peer to peer social networking and charity giving program.
  
             If you are wondering how you will get out of your present situation e.g you are out of job and your bank account is empty, you are owing your rent and you need to buy a present for you son or daughters wedding then this group is for you. You are broke and you desperately need a push to start your own business and you hate your present job the list is endless but to cut the story short you have come to the right page you are here because you are meant to be.  We here are christens and we believe in giving to the needy but we welcome any religion and any nationality to join us.

We don’t care what your beliefs or are we just want to help and show love to humanity why? Because that is  why I started this charity in the first place , that’s right you are reading a massage from the president and founder of Women Care group101 so wipe your tears  join me let end the  hold of poverty and ridicule , Come all lets end the tiny cruel voice in your head that said it can’t be done ! , I am telling you today by the power of God that it can be done if you work with me and keep to the strict rules.  The rules is simply be honest and share with others what you are going through and don’t forget to follow our internet safety rules to avoid being scammed.  Keep reading to learn how our power of giving works.

   HOW IT WORKS:
The is meant for members who are interested in either seeking for a micro-loan or donations to solve their various problems such as business investment, educational, travelling and holiday vacation, health reasons, social gathering , wedding party or other projects e.t.c.

The social peer to peer charity giving program wcg101 members can now donate any amounts of money to WCG101-PTPSNACGP purse which in turn will be giving to the member seeking for fund. 
Before you will be fully registered as a member you must like all our facebook pages, reason is to create as much membership and fans so we can easily spread our act of giving through you. You must add your real life friends to join you will share the page as much as possible so that we will have more members who are interested to join for help or to donate.  Its easy just invites your close friend to the group through your email or facebook   with this  page which is our  members  page ask your friends to request for add and that’s it

facebook.com/Wcg101 /  this are our fans pages click on links and click like on each one.





HOW PEER TO PEER (
PTPSNACGP) FUND WORKS:

WCG101-PTPSNACGP works when members decided to donate for a particular cause within the members this decisions will be entirely based how crucial the request is and we will then decide on whose need is most urgent before we issue the money donated for PTPSNACGP The only thing you need to remember is you are not the only one who needs help and it will make a great different if you respect others needs as well. If you choose to donate for others then you have done a great good in someone’s life.

We also provide minimum members external donation link for our staffs who work hard to make this project come true and also to keep our site running. For sponsors who wish to sponsor this program and keep it running please contact us for more details we are also open for advice.

Join our fan club we will be glad to get in touch with you and attend to you meanwhile visit our website for more information.
http://womencaregroup.blogspot.com

DO YOU DESERVE IT?
We have discovered a more information geared specifically towards people suffering a broken heart over a break-up or career wise, live TV competition or in schools abuse e.t.c . While this information is good and useful, at some point we realize that creating a space where we will bring together people from all works of life will be nice in other to do this we created a fan page knowing that’s where will be able to keep track of our members and attend to them more faster then when we choose a specific spots after all, its for people from all nationality that means online or social networks is our bet source to reach out to millions of members who are looking for such free and easy site they could come and bare their soul and get help fast..

If you are looking for a place to get healing through prayers, through our fans club activities or tourism & vacations then join us we have special professional staffs who are willing to listen to you. 
International visa, health evacuation and migration will be made available soon ….

These questions and more will be addressed in this four part series designed to help people recover from heartbreaks. Contact us to share your stories..


· Raising funds for pregnant moms Pledges
· Raising funds to  support  individual projects
· Raising funds to support wcg101 staff members
· Raising funds to support host site
· Creating a group banking for emergency relief


To send your donations to our staffs that keep our website running please click on our donation links donate, remember no amount is too little.
Free ads for struggling business persons.


Note !
Members can only join if they have a facebook id, please create one is quick and easy to join our wonderful traditional charity giving program. GO TO FACEBOOK http://www.facebook.com/Brokenheartfans. What are you waiting for you to  join our fan page and leave a comment.. http://www.facebook.com/Wcg101
Please visit our disclaimer notice before you comment as this are real people we are here to heal not to hurt anyone's feelings.. 


Thank you!




Amazing paintings for sale click to continue....

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Terrible happenings you must know about please read...


Shadowy figures lurking on the fringe



The boys' choir from Zambia sang in churches, schools and shopping malls across the United States. In exchange for their hard work, the boys were promised an education, wages that could be sent home to family and a school that would be built in Africa.
People who heard the 12-member a cappella choir were touched. They reached into their wallets and purses and offered up donations. The boys, ranging in age from 12 to 17, sang a mixture of gospels in English and their native tongue. They brought in more than $1 million, yet saw little of it. They received room and board and the occasional token payment, but no wages, no education, no school back home.
The boys are among the faces of modern-day slavery - in their case, trafficked into the United States under the guise of a faith-based organization that preyed on them.
"They were brought here for a specific purpose and that was to get as much out of them - with no regard for them or their futures," says Sal Orrantia, a U.S. immigration agent who worked the case.
The number of people ensnared in modern-day slavery ranges from 12 million, according to the United Nations, to 27 million, according to leading anti-slavery activists like Kevin Bales. Another prominent activist, Siddharth Kara of Harvard, estimates the number could be as high as 30 million. The broad range is the result of challenges associated with tracking a practice hidden in shadows and finding a consensus on how best to define and measure it.
Experts agree the vast majority of slaves today live in Asia and the Pacific, where they are held against their will as a result of debt bondage in agriculture and domestic work. Millions of others across the globe are used for sexual exploitation.
"To me, slavery means one person who is completely under the control of another person, that they use violence to maintain that control, they exploit them, make money out of them and that the [victim] just can't walk away," says Bales.
"Those are the fundamental criteria really for what slavery has always been about throughout all of human history."
Bales heads Free the Slaves, an organization that works to liberate exploited men, women and children across the globe and make sure they remain free.
"Our ultimate goal is the end of slavery on planet Earth. We really believe that's possible," Bales says.
He says modern-day slavery must be attacked on four fronts - politics, business, religion and society - for it to be eradicated. He compares the current fight to the global determination to eradicate small pox decades ago.
Today's slavery differs greatly from the trans-Atlantic slave trade, when from 1501 to 1867 an estimated 12.5 million Africans were shipped to the Americas. Back then, slave owners were typically prominent members of society, and a massive economic system was based on the global institution of slavery.
Today, enslavers are mostly shadowy figures lurking in the fringes.
"Slavery has been pushed to the very edge of society," says Bales. "It's really standing on the brink of its own extinction. And if we understand that and get together and give it one really hard boot, we can kick it over the edge into extinction."
Bales' mission began more than a decade ago when he first met a young woman named Seba in Paris. At age 9, Seba was taken from her home in Mali by a family friend, who promised the girl a better life in France. Seba cooked for the friend's family, looked after her children – and was often punished with beatings.
"Once in 1992, I was late going to get the children from school; my mistress and her husband were furious with me and beat [me] and then threw me out on the street," Seba told Bales in his 1999 best-seller, "Disposable People."
"I had nowhere to go; I didn't understand anything, and I wandered the streets. After some time, her husband found me and took me back to their house. There they stripped me naked, tied my hands behind my back, and began to whip me with a wire attached to a broomstick."
Seba was freed when a neighbor heard her screams and called police. She had been held for so long she didn't know her age when she was freed.
Across the globe, the stories of modern-day slavery bear a similar theme.
In Ghana, a 9-year-old boy hauls heavy equipment from boat to shore in a fishing village under the midday sun. At the end of a long, hot day, sometimes he'll only get a beating.
In Haiti, a group of teens stand frightened just before they're raped - initiation into forced prostitution. The ring is run by criminals in Port-au-Prince's notorious Cite Soleil slum, a trade that survived last year's massive earthquake and continues to thrive.
And in Texas, the voices of the Zambia Acappella Boys Choir were used to profit their captor, a Christian missionary who recruited the boys from Africa and brought them to the U.S. in the late 1990s.
The missionary, Keith Grimes, ran a faith-based group called TTT: Partners in Education. The federal government began investigating in 1998 after church members in Texas filed complaints raising concern about the treatment of the boys.
When Grimes died of natural causes, the investigation ended. In 2001, the U.S. Department of Labor ruled that Grimes' group was liable for nearly $1 million in back wages and civil penalties for the members of the choir. To date, none of the boys has received any of the money because Grimes died and his company was bankrupt.
Across the globe, dozens of organizations like Bales' work with governments and groups on the front lines to crack down on slavery.
In northern India, a rehabilitation center called Bal Vikas Ashram helps children ages 8 to 14 recover from enslavement by carpet loom owners. It also helps organize raids on slave owners. In the last year, the group helped free 111 children.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, human rights groups work to free slaves being used by warring factions in mines rich in gold and other metals. In some cases, villagers are snatched at gunpoint and forced to work; other times, women and girls are forced into the sex trade around the mines.
In the United States, groups work with women and girls to recover from the trauma of forced prostitution, where they are raped and held against their will by pimps.
Shamere McKenzie says she became enslaved at 19. She needed $3,000 for college and met a young man on the campus of St. John's University in New York who said he could help. He turned out to be a pimp who kept her captive for a year and a half.
"When I told him I didn't want to do this anymore, I remember being choked until I peed on myself," McKenzie says. "I was just choked, beaten up, thrown on the floor and beaten.
"A lot of people asked why did I do it for so long if it was something I didn't want to do. But being in a situation like that, you're controlled by fear."
She says her pimp had anywhere from three to 12 women and girls under his control at any time. On a typical day, McKenzie says she would wake up around 9 a.m., be sent to a strip club around noon and work the streets until 7 p.m.
She and the others would then sleep until 10 p.m. before being sent back out. McKenzie tried to run away three times, but her pimp would threaten to kill her and harm her family. "All the girls were afraid of him."
McKenzie's prostitution ended when police stopped the car she was driving. Her pimp and other prostitutes were in the car, including a 12-year-old girl. Even though she was being held against her will, she was charged with transferring a minor across state lines and convicted. The pimp was convicted as well.
Tina Frundt is now helping McKenzie in her recovery. Frundt is the founder of Courtney's House, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit group that helps women and girls who have been exploited by the sex trade.
Frundt says she was forced into prostitution at age 13 in Cleveland, Ohio. Since Courtney's House began in 2008, the organization has helped 500 victims escape sex trafficking. The average age of girls being forced into slavery in the U.S., Frundt says, is between 11 and 14.
"In the U.S., we commercialize forced prostitution and pimping - we glamorize it with 'pimp this' and 'pimp that,'" she says. "And so, of course, we make it look like it's a choice. ... And overseas we make it look sad and that these girls are forced in.
"But the truth and reality is: In Thailand, girls call their traffickers 'pimp.' In Honduras, girls call their traffickers 'pimp.' In the U.S., the girls call their traffickers 'pimp.' So there is no difference."
She says Americans need to wake up about the realities of what is happening on the streets in their country. "We have an epidemic."
"Being raped, held hostage, tied up is not something that you choose to do," she says. "How did I get out? Unfortunately, it's how many of our kids get out. I ran to the police and they arrested me."
Even though she was a child, she spent the next year in juvenile detention because prostitution is illegal. Her pimp remained at large, Frundt says.
It's an all-too-common theme for those combating human trafficking.
"These are people, whether they're from another country or whether they're enslaved at home … who have been trapped in a situation that they can't get out of," says Luis CdeBaca, who heads the State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, an office created in 2000.
CdeBaca, an ambassador-at-large, was appointed by President Obama in 2009 to coordinate U.S. government activities to bring an end to modern-day slavery.
He says traffickers prey on the vulnerabilities of the victims - who many times are seeking a better life - and "they pervert it."
"Instead of being the opportunity that the victims want, it becomes the trap," says CdeBaca. "One of the things that's horrible about the human trafficking situation in the 21st century is that you can sell a person over and over and over."
He says governments must better train law enforcement about the proliferation of human trafficking, and that non-government organizations must continue pushing governments to do more.
"If you don't have a cultural impact where people have decided together to say 'no' to modern slavery, there's no reason why law enforcement should be out there doing this on their own," he says. "It really starts when the cultures change."

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