
CEN is
pleased to share exciting new developments in its work in the Brazilian
Amazon.
Thanks to the generous support from our donors, CEN will
be partnering with Brazilian NGO Link
Social,
and US-based Teachers Without
Borders to post Angela
Viehmayerto
Santarém, Brazil beginning at the end of April, 2008.
Angela, a
Brazilian who has served as CEN’s Board Vice-President,
will focus on the deployment of our Creating
a Culture
of Learning and Empowerment in the Amazon Region (cCLEAR)
Program.
Angela’s
new position will enable CEN to maintain a regular presence in the
communities
of Maguari,
Surauca and Xixuau,
where we’ve been working since late 2004 through the CEN Amazon Pilot Project.
Until now, our contact with the
communities was limited by short-term visits by interns and staff. With
Angela on board full time, we expect to make a greater impact on the
communities and extend our work to engage and benefit more individuals.
Another
component of the CEN toolkit that Angela and Link Social will expand is
the Rede Amazonia (Amazon Network),
where
participating communities learn from each other through peer-to-peer
exchange.
The network is promoted through physical exchanges between members of
the
communities and workshops, and strengthened and maintained through
electronic
tools such as chat and e-mail. Maguari and Suruacá have
already hosted
Francineide Pinheiro, a nurse from Xixuau, as well as members of each
others’
communities. An expansion of the network will promote an even greater
sense of community
empowerment and allow for more extensive collaborative problem solving.
Because
CEN has already been working in these communities, we anticipate that
some of
the participants will be ready to move on fairly quickly to initiatives
such as
putting in place a community micro hydro-electric generator, expanding Couro Ecológica
handbags, eco/social- tourism and increasing handicraft
production.
Within the
next twelve months, we intend to develop a second phase, tentatively
called the
Integrated Entrepreneurship Development Program (IEDP). The IEDP will
build
upon the general skills developed in the cCLEAR program to assist with
entrepreneurship development, as well as address the market failures
facing local
entrepreneurs by helping them to build value chains, gain new markets,
and increase
their access to capital.
In addition
to their work on cCLEAR, Link Social also expects to expand their
support of
the Teachers
Without Borders'
Certificate of Teaching Mastery (CTM) project in Suruacá,
which began with a
pilot of the program in Suruacá last year. The
CTM provides free teacher development courses, which feature an
e-learning and
collaboration platform. This will utilize the soft skills developed
through
CEN's program and will serve to sustain and broaden our work in the
communities
over the long-term by institutionalizing the teaching of the skills to
future
leaders.
We would like to thank you for
your support and
participation in our petition to save a large area of intact Amazon
rain
forest, the Xixuau-Xiparina reserve, from certain destruction through
the
opening up of a road and a plan to colonise the area proposed by the
government
of Roraima. Several months have passed since we launched the petition
and we
are pleased to be able to inform you that it has had an effect and up
to now
the area is still being protected and conserved. The struggle to
transform the
area of the Xixuau, and also the Rio Branco and Rio Jauperi region,
into an
Extractive Reserve continues and we are now close to a final decision
by the
federal government. The fight continues to be hard. The government of
the state
of Roraima does not want to give up control of the area and is
doing
everything
in its power to stop it from becoming a national reserve. But for the
time being it has had to shelve its plans for opening roads
and
allowing settlers to
move in thanks to pressure from the local people, the national
government and
the international community. The bureaucratic procedure for the
creation of the
reserve is now practically complete, only a few details are still
required and
the federal government is declaring its support.
Last week some of the inhabitants of the reserve met with Brazilian President Lula (see photo above) and had important meetings at high levels of government in Brasilia. They discussed the final steps that need to be taken and received support and assurances regarding the central government's intentions to create this reserve."
For more information about the creation of the Xixuau reserve, please see the article Amazon Protection Begins With Its Own People: Xixuau Takes Matters into its Own Hands
Beyond having an interest in local history Robert Bortner, who attended the recent Noble County Historical Society annual picnic while visiting parents Don and Bettye Bortner of Albion, is also interested in helping make some Brazilian history.
Through the latest in information and communication
technology, including solar-powered telecenters and information portals
providing computer and internet access, he is working to empower three
rural
communities in the Brazilian Amazon to lift themselves out of poverty.
Read the full story from Kendallville (IN) News-Sun By
Dave Knopp (Friday, August 31, 2007) Locally-tied
Techie Helps Empower Brazilians.
Our Board Secretary, Jessie Brown and Vice President, Angela Viehmayer will travel to the Rio Tapajós next week to hold a teacher's workshop in Suruacá. The workshop will support a pilot project with which CEN is partnering with Teachers without Borders and Brazilian NGO Link Social to improve teacher's skills and to help institutionalize a culture of learning and empowerment in schools.
During their stay in the region Angela and Jessie will also visit the community of Maguari
This visit in also preparation for Angela's likely move to the region later this year to assume a role as Field Manager and begin implementation of the cCLEAR program. We will have more about this development this Fall.

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