Bunnies to the Rescue | Rapid Reproduction Activate!
The entire Project HOPE Art team would like to thank Brian Peltz of ISEC, Inc for single-handedly jump starting our new Bunny Rabbit Husbandry Program.
Want to help us continue our dynamic education and arts training?
CLICK HERE: Sponsor one of our Hardworking Students!
Download our 2012 Gardening HandBook, There Grows The Neighborhood here
In March 2014, our Gardening Class will take place each Saturday at the Project HOPE Art Center at Haiti Communitere from 8am-11am.
The goal of the class is to teach fundamentals of gardening to 12 students and one class Supervisor so they may return to their neighborhoods and spread knowledge about urban agronomy. We want to prepare each student to grow their own food at home.
How Rabbits Can Save the World (It Ain’t Pretty)
With no religious taboos against consuming bunny meat, the animal may be a key ingredient in the fight against hunger. It also can be raised grain-free. It is a fact universally acknowledged that rabbits reproduce at a rapid rate. But did you know that rabbit meat is kosher, halal and acceptable for Hindus who decline beef for religious reasons? All of that is good news for the world-wide war on hunger—if bad news for bunnies.
Over 1,700 Haitian rabbit producers now maintain some 1,250 rabbit facilities, Dr. Steven Lukefahr says, which are home to 32,650 breeding rabbits.
The program has grown by 142% in the last two years and has helped increase family income by an average of $19.95 a month per family with some producers seeing as much as $200 a month in income from meat sales, a significant boost in a country where the average annual family income is $1,700.
Read more: How Rabbits Can Save the World (It Ain’t Pretty) | TIME.com
Measuring Success: Each student in the class will keep a journal. In it they will be asked to write down notes, ideas, recipes and activities. We will invite local artists to attend the class and help the students learn botanical drawing. The students will take a field trip to the the Jaden Tap Tap Garden in Cite Soleil to see a working garden. At the end of the class, each student will be given seeds and asked to start their own mini-garden at home.
Download our 2012 Gardening HandBook, There Grows The Neighborhood here
Want to help us continue our dynamic education and arts training?
CLICK HERE: Sponsor one of our Hardworking Students!
{Dreams} a photo exhibit with PotoFanm+Fi
We were recently introduced to Anne-christine d’Adesky who tells us that her project PotoFanm+Fi brings urgent attention – and action – to the needs and voices of Haiti’s girls. We’ll be featuring 10 photographs from resident photographer Melissa Schilling’s series: Afrolicious.
Join Us!
Exhibition date: Saturday, November 23rd – 10am to 4pm
Location: Petionville, Place Boyer
PotoFi is focused on helping Haitian girl survivors of sexual violence access timely, holistic services. PotoFi is a project of PotoFanm+Fi (‘Women and Girls Pillar’ in Kreyol), a Haiti solidarity coalition of Haitian, diaspora and global women’s rights advocates that formed after the January 2010 earthquake to support the voices and rights of women and girls in Haiti’s recovery.
PotoFi Haiti Girls Initiative formed in 2011 to address the impact of the earthquake on adolescent and younger girls and particularly the problems of sexual violence, early pregnancy, displacement and hunger among young girls.
PotoFanm + Fi participants include: Edwidge Danticat, Berlotte Israel, Leonie Hermantin and Karen Ashmore (Lambi Fund for Haiti), Anne-christine d’Adesky, Janet Feldman, Taina Bien-Aime (Equality Now), Martha Wallner (Media Justice History Project), Alice Backer and Georgia Popplewell (Global Voices), Soleil Pheonix, Régine Michèle Roumain, Julie Sutherland, Marie Bonheur-Gulotta, Regine Jean-Charles, Gina Ulysse, Michele Stephenson, Carla Murphy, Ann Rossetti, and LigPouvwaFanm.
Ongoing Outreach to Haitian and women’s groups includes: LigPouvwaFanm, SOFA,Fanm Deside, MPP-Femmes, MUDHA, FANM (Miami), Ezili Danto forum, CAFRA, Lakou, ATIS Fanm Matemwa and more.
Haiti Photo Exhibition with PotoFanm+Fi
We were recently introduced to Anne-christine d’Adesky who tells us that her project PotoFanm+Fi brings urgent attention – and action – to the needs and voices of Haiti’s girls. We’ll be featuring 10 photographs from resident photographer Melissa Schilling’s series: Afrolicious.
Exhibition date: Saturday, November 23rd – 10am to 4pm
Location: Petionville, Place Boyer
PotoFi is focused on helping Haitian girl survivors of sexual violence access timely, holistic services. PotoFi is a project of PotoFanm+Fi (‘Women and Girls Pillar’ in Kreyol), a Haiti solidarity coalition of Haitian, diaspora and global women’s rights advocates that formed after the January 2010 earthquake to support the voices and rights of women and girls in Haiti’s recovery.
PotoFi Haiti Girls Initiative formed in 2011 to address the impact of the earthquake on adolescent and younger girls and particularly the problems of sexual violence, early pregnancy, displacement and hunger among young girls.
PotoFanm + Fi participants include: Edwidge Danticat, Berlotte Israel, Leonie Hermantin and Karen Ashmore (Lambi Fund for Haiti), Anne-christine d’Adesky, Janet Feldman, Taina Bien-Aime (Equality Now), Martha Wallner (Media Justice History Project), Alice Backer and Georgia Popplewell (Global Voices), Soleil Pheonix, Régine Michèle Roumain, Julie Sutherland, Marie Bonheur-Gulotta, Regine Jean-Charles, Gina Ulysse, Michele Stephenson, Carla Murphy, Ann Rossetti, and LigPouvwaFanm.
Ongoing Outreach to Haitian and women’s groups includes: LigPouvwaFanm, SOFA,Fanm Deside, MPP-Femmes, MUDHA, FANM (Miami), Ezili Danto forum, CAFRA, Lakou, ATIS Fanm Matemwa and more.