Support the Emma Academy

Support the Emma Academy

NEWSFLASH

Support and Networking Summer Newsletter 2010
Get the latest information on the Support and Networking Program here.

 
CharityHelp International YouTube Channel
View the new updated CHI YouTube channel here:http://www.youtube.com/charityhelp

 
Introducing Gua-Africa's New Look
Gua-Africa has a new look on the CHI website.  Take a look at the new and improved Gua-Africa Section.

 
March 2010 Gua Africe Newsletter
The Gua Africa Team just returned from a successful trip to Africa.  Download their latest newsletter.

 
The New York Times Magazine, 'The Women's Crusade'

Magazine
The Women's Crusade
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF and SHERYL WuDUNN
Published: August 23, 2009

The liberation of women could help solve many of the worldâ's problems, from poverty to child mortality to terrorism.
Read more here: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/23/magazine/23Women-t.html


 
AFCECO Director Graduates from 10,000 Women Program

Read Andeisha's story here:
http://knowledgenetwork.thunderbird.edu/walker/2009/07/30/andeisha


 
A Global Opportunity for Significant Positive Change

CharityHelp International (CHI) is using the power of communication technologies and the Internet to assist individuals and organizations in the most challenging of developing nations.

Like Afghanistan.

"By combining several available technologies and services such as mobile data communications, mobile banking, and others with 'tele-mentoring,' CHI is creating a self-reinforcing process that can accelerate sustainable development," says Paul Stevers, CharityHelp International's founder and president.

You can view the video outlining this potential here.


 

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we are

 

GUA Africa was founded by Emmanuel Jal, an ex-child soldier turned rap artist. The word GUA (pronounced gwaah) means peace in Nuer, a tribal language of Southern Sudan.

Our mission is to work with individuals, families and communities to help them overcome the effects of war and poverty. Each of our projects focus on providing an education to children and young adults who would otherwise be denied such opportunity.

founder

 

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Emmanuel Jal was born in Southern Sudan, and spent the early years of his childhood in the midst of its longrunning civil war. At the age of 7, after the death of his mother, he was recruited as a child soldier for the Rebel army (SPLA).

Amazingly, he survived front line action and eventually managed to escape with 300 other "lost boys", enduring a 3 month trek on foot without any supplies to reach safety. One of only a handful to survive the journey, Emmanuel was rescued by Emma McCune, a British Aid Worker, who smuggled him to freedom in Kenya and enrolled him in school for the first time. Tragically, Emma died shortly afterwards in a car accident.

Somehow Emmanuel survived all this turmoil and trauma, and twelve years later he is now an international rap artist. He has performed at the Live 8 Eden Project in Cornwall, and on 27th June 2008 he sang his song “Emma” in Hyde Park London at the 90th birthday concert for Nelson Mandela. War Child, a documentary film telling Emmanuel's life story, and his album and biography of the same name are all now on worldwide release. Throughout all this, Emmanuel has worked tirelessly with the United Nations, Amnesty International and Oxfam to campaign against the employment of child soldiers and the illegal trade of arms.

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our projects

 

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build a school

 
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