Last chance to support our fourth-quarter beneficiaries

The year is swiftly drawing to a close—this is your last chance to distribute your donations among our five featured beneficiaries for the fourth quarter of 2013. Here’s a quick look at this quarter’s amazing beneficiaries:

Water EcuadorWater Ecuador is working to improve access to clean water in rural Ecuador. Their water centers help the local communities in a number of ways: Each center provides affordable, clean water (up to 8,000 liters every day) at about one-fifth the price of water shipped in from a major city, and then they use the revenues generated by water purchases to pay for maintenance of the water center and the water manager’s salary. Pathfinders Project will be working with Water Ecuador in 2014 to help with clean water education and construction of their newest water center. 

Bat Conservation InternationalBat Conservation International is leading the crusade to educate people about the importance of bats to our ecosystems, and to protect bats from the many threats facing them today. White-nose syndrome is an epidemic decimating North American bat populations—BCI is working to stop the spread of the disease through education and outreach. They also work to protect bat habitats, like the Bracken Cave in Texas, where a new housing development could mean disaster for the local bats.

Roots and WingsRoots and Wings International improves access to education for indigenous people in Guatemala. Their college scholarships allow students to train for skilled professions and then return to their home community to put their education to work. In 2011, FBB members funded a grant to RWI that established their Foundation Beyond Belief scholarship. Our FBB scholar, Miguel Lamberto Sohom Tzáj, has used the scholarship to study medicine at University Rafael Landívar en Xela. Each donation of $3,800 is enough to fully fund a scholarship, so FBB member donations in the fourth quarter of 2013 will likely be enough to fund two or three new RWI scholarships. 

ApopoApopo approaches human rights with a unique blend of science, technology, and animal activism—they train African giant pouched rats to search for landmines and screen for tuberculosis. Apopo’s HeroRATs start their training at just four weeks old, beginning with socialization and moving on to honing their exceptional sense of smell. The program creates local jobs in areas such as Thailand, Angola, and Dar es Salaam, where trainers are hired from local populations to work with the organization.

RCRCThe Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice is an interfaith coalition that promotes reproductive health and choice. They focus on the ethical reasons for choice and personal responsibility, using their beliefs to support reproductive rights, and they fight against the often religiously motivated reasoning used to oppose reproductive access on both national and state levels. Recently they’ve been speaking out against overly broad religious exemptions in the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and calling attention to the plight of immigrants and undocumented workers, who are vulnerable to violence and have limited access to contraception and reproductive health care.

KivaThis quarter’s Small Grant is funding our new FBB Kiva.org account. Starting in 2014, funds raised for this grant will be used to create a Foundation Beyond Belief microfinance account, which will immediately make a significant number of $25 loans. Our goal is to use only secular microfinance institutions (MFIs) and concentrate on loans that have fast repayments (6 to 9 months). The Foundation Beyond Belief Kiva account will join the Atheists, Agnostics, Skeptics, Freethinkers, Secular Humanists and the Non-Religious team.

Pathfinders ProjectThe Pathfinders are currently in Ghana working with Leo Igwe’s camp for those accused of witchcraft. According to Conor Robinson, the director of Pathfinders Project, “The visit to the camp for alleged witches has been even more meaningful than expected. Internet is limited, but we are working hard to collect the heartbreaking stories of these victims of superstition and prepare them to be shared. The human rights abuses suffered by these women are unimaginable. There is no redress and very little aid.” Earlier this quarter, they worked with Kasese Humanist Primary School, Mustard Seed School, and Isaac Newton High School in Uganda, and the Alliance for African Women’s Initiative in Ghana. Click here to support their ongoing worldwide service trip.

Our year-end fund drive is off to a great start! Thanks to generous donors, we’ve raised about half of our goal of $15,000. Your donations to our year-end drive support our Humanist Giving program, the 80+ secular teams doing volunteer service as part of our Beyond Belief Network, our Humanist Crisis Response program, and the Pathfinders Project and Humanist Action: Ghana, launching in 2014. Click here to make a donation and get our fifth year of compassionate humanism off to a roaring start.

Don’t forget to sign in to your account and allocate your donations for the fourth quarter (on the right side of the page, choose “Manage Donation”).

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How do you select a HeroRAT?

ApopoBy Stephanie Jackson-Ali, LMSW

If you’re going to build your nonprofit around a rodent, it’s crucial to select just the right rodent for the job. For Apopo, our current Human Rights beneficiary, that rodent—the HeroRAT—is the African giant pouched rat.

So how did Apopo come to select these specific rats to detect land mines and tuberculosis?

The Founding Idea

Apopo HeroRATThe idea was not accidental—from the beginning, Apopo founder Bart Weetjens, a rat owner himself, was certain his beloved creatures were up for the job. According to Apopo’s own foundation story, Weetjens was reading an article about using gerbils as mine detectors. He made the jump to rats, having owned them and trusting their intelligence and availability, and set out to make it happen.
It was a contact of his, Professor Ron Verhagen of the University of Antwerp, an expert on rodents, who first suggested the African giant pouched rat. Verhagen stated the rats had a long life and originated from the area Weetjens wanted to work in, so they would not be a burden on the area.

A Bit About the HeroRATs

The African giant pouched rat, also known as the Gambian pouched rat, is indeed indigenous to Tanzania, where Apopo is headquartered. The rats range across most of sub-Saharan Africa and can often grow up to three feet in length (including their tails).

They’re omnivorous animals, but prefer palm fruits, which you’ll notice in many of Apopo’s pictures of the animals in training. The pouches are important to their eating habits—the rats store food in their cheek pouches while gathering food on their nightly runs.

Apopo HeroRAT trainingTwo of the more important characteristics of the African giant pouched rat, for Apopo’s sake, are that the animals do not have great eyesight, instead relying on their impressive sense of smell—which is how they are trained in mine and tuberculosis detection. Additionally, the animals are very social and, in the wild, live in large colonies. Both are important in training the animals for their lifesaving tasks as HeroRATs.

A HeroRAT Is Born This Way

After years of trying, Apopo now breeds their own African giant pouched rats, and they start their training at just four weeks old, learning to socialize with people and get used to the stimuli around them.

From there, the rat’s exceptional sense of smell is honed, as they are conditioned with a clicker and given food as a reward when they find a target scent (either TNT or tuberculosis). The rats have to be very discerning—they’ll be tested over and over again until they are accredited and can move on to working in the field with their pet humans and be certified HeroRATs.

Apopo took one man’s love of a childhood pet and used it to tackle a worldwide problem, all while making use of a natural species and innovative science—we couldn’t imagine a better fit for Foundation Beyond Belief.

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Bats, rats, and water — resources for kids

By Brittany Shoots-Reinhard

FBB staff have been hard at work compiling resources that will help your entire family learn more about our fourth-quarter beneficiaries. We have found online games, books, and even put together kids’ activity sheets. Children can learn more about the natural world, geography, and environmental issues as well as understand the importance of charity as a value. You can find resources to learn more about Bat Conservation International, Apopo, and Water Ecuador below.

Bat Conservation International
Bat Conservation International has a Kidz Cave with bat-themed crafts and educational activities. Bats 4 Kids has even more information about bats and an echolocation game.

Shadows of the Night Shadows of the Night follows the life of the Little Brown Bat over a year and features beautiful watercolor illustrations.
National Geographic: Bats National Geographic Readers: Bats has pictures and information for early readers about all types of bats and their habitats.
The Bat Scientists The Bat Scientists describes the work of Bat Conservation International scientists and how they’re combatting white-nose syndrome and saving the lives of hibernating bats in North America.

 

 

Apopo
First, check out the kid’s activity guide about Apopo put together by FBB staff.

Apopo founder Bart Weetjens talks about the founding of Apopo in this TED talk. The Apopo website has accessible information about why they use rats and videos showing a day in the life of a HeroRAT detecting landmines and tuberculosis. For younger children, National Geographic Kids: Amazing Animal Heroes describes Apopo’s HeroRATs and two additional stories.

Landmines and war are difficult to talk about with children. Secrets in the Fire and Dear Olly are two novels involving themes of war and the harm done by landmines.

Apopo uses clicker training, which is an effective means of training pets, too. You can find out how to clicker train your pet on the ASPCA website.

University of Michigan’s Museum of Diversity runs an amazing website called Animal Diversity Web. They have information about a variety of animals, including giant pouched rats, like the ones used by Apopo, and many, many species of bats. For younger children, Bats and Rats is a phonics book comparing bats and rats—they’re both nocturnal mammals, but have many differences, too.

Water Ecuador
FBB staff developed an activity guide about water use and conservation for children that is a great starting point. The Syrian Crisis Response beneficiary International Rescue Committee is providing Syrian refugees with water, and the Pathfinders are also working with Water Ecuador and other charities on their international service trip. All of these are referenced in the FBB Water Activity Guide for Kids.

National Geographic has a variety of resources about freshwater conservation, including a kid-friendly water calculator, an interactive guide to freshwater, information about hidden water use in consumer goods, and water conservation tips.

Water Use It Wisely is a great online source of games, resources, and conservation tips.

The EPA has learning resources organized by age group, so you can select the most appropriate tools for your children and games that are fun for everyone.

Water Ecuador focuses on clean water, rather than lack of fresh water. There are tons of microorganisms in drinking water, some harmless and some harmful. Children can explore the amazing life forms hidden in a simple drop of unfiltered water by watching the video referenced in this article or collecting their own sample. They can then try to identify the microorganisms using this guide.

It’s important to help protect our own domestic watersheds to ensure our own supply of freshwater. EPA’s Adopt Your Watershed program lets you find your local watershed and find ways to help.

The Water Hole The Waterhole by Graeme Base is a gorgeous picture book that shows animals from all over the world visiting a shrinking water hole. It is a counting book, an animal book, a geography book, and an excellent way to start a conversation with your children about the importance of fresh water.
Make a Splash!Going Blue Cathryn Berger Kaye and Philippe Cousteau’s Make a Splash! and Going Blue educate kids and teens (respectively) about water ecosystems, environmental threats, and protecting oceans and freshwater all over the globe.

 

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The making of a HeroRAT

ApopoBy Stephanie Jackson-Ali, LMSW

When you picture a hero, certainly the first image that comes to your mind is a rat – yes? Well, once you learn about Foundation Beyond Belief’s current Human Rights beneficiary, Apopo, you probably will!

These rats are not your average city-dwellers, or even your less-average cuddly pet. These truly are heroes. What else would you call an animal that detects mines in some of the world’s most dangerous countries and provinces? What else would you call these critters that are using their innate skills to detect tuberculosis before it gets out of hand?

Apopo approaches human rights with a unique blend of science, technology, and animal activism. They are pioneers in Mine Detection Rat technology. The inventive technology focuses on the attributes the rats already possess (they are intelligent, too light to set off the mines, and easily transportable) with innovation by creator Bart Weetjens to create a unique new program.

The question of how is intriguing for all the scientifically minded, and the organization is very focused on research and evidence. See how they train their rats for mine detection and tuberculosis detection.

The program also creates local jobs in areas such as Thailand, Angola, and Dar es Salaam, where trainers are hired from local populations to work with the organization. And don’t worry about the rats. Founder Weetjens kept them as pets as a boy in Belgium and has a special affinity for the animals – he created the program with their safety in mind as well.

To learn more about how the HeroRATs work, spend a day in the life of one of their HeroRATs-in-training. Whether you’re there for the cute factor or to see the little heroes at work, it is definitely worth the click to check out Apopo and their HeroRATs.

 

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Learn more about our Q4 beneficiaries and programs

In the video below, learn more about Foundation Beyond Belief’s programs and our featured beneficiaries for the fourth quarter of 2013: Water Ecuador, Bat Conservation International, Roots and Wings International, Apopo, and the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice

 

 

If you’d like to adjust your donation allocation, click on “Manage Donation” under “Manage Account” on the right (make sure you’re logged in first). And if you’re not a member yet, why not join now?

Many thanks to FBB member David Beadle of The Secular Human for creating this video for us!

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Introducing our Q4 beneficiaries

Now that fall is well underway, it’s time to introduce our fourth-quarter slate of beneficiaries. This inspiring collection of organizations is working around the world to improve access to education and safe drinking water, to protect the health and habitats of bats and other endangered species, and to defend reproductive choice. And just wait until you see how our Human Rights beneficiary is using giant trained rats to make the world a better place.

Members, don’t forget to log in and distribute your donations for the fourth quarter of 2013. Not yet a member? Join today!
 

Roots and Wings International

Education: Roots and Wings International

Roots and Wings International, our Q4 Education beneficiary, provides educational opportunities for indigenous people in Guatemala. They offer after-school tutoring for elementary school students, computer literacy for older students, and full-tuition scholarships for university students from low-income households. If RWI seems familiar, that’s because they were also our featured Education beneficiary in the first quarter of 2011. They received a grant of $3,390 from member donations that quarter.

 

Human Rights: Apopo

Apopo, our Human Rights beneficiary, is an innovative organization that uses trained detection rats to tackle a surprising variety of humanitarian challenges. Their approach to using trained rats for landmine and tuberculosis detection is innovative, interesting, and ground-breaking. (Don’t worry — the rats are too light to set off the landmines.) Apopo’s landmine program is functioning in four countries on two continents and has detected and deactivated more than 3,100 landmines, 13,000 small munitions, and 1,800 bombs. The tuberculosis detection program has identified more than 4,000 cases of TB during outbreaks in Africa, where quick diagnosis and treatment are crucial.

 

Poverty and Health: Water Ecuador

Water Ecuador, our Poverty and Health beneficiary, develops strong local connections in Ecuador to fight waterborne illness with education and equipment. Their founder noticed, while volunteering at a hospital, that many of the same children regularly came to the clinic with the same recurring problems. He worked with local communities to establish water centers, finding a fresh water source and installing water systems that are easy to maintain and have simple purification systems. They also provide water education that covers how to determine whether a source of water is safe and how to maintain the water systems after they are installed.

In February 2014, Pathfinders Project will spend a month conducting water education and installing water systems with Water Ecuador. Our grant to Water Ecuador will cover the cost of materials needed during the residency by Pathfinders Project. The grant will also support Pathfinders Project by covering housing, food, travel, and other necessities while they are volunteering with Water Ecuador.

 

The Natural World: Bat Conservation International

Bat Conservation International, our Natural World beneficiary, works to protect bats and their ecosystems through education, research, and conservation initiatives. Their programs include direct conservation projects such as protecting water access for wildlife and managing habitat and resources for endangered bats, but also include educational initiatives such as scholarships, grants for academics conducting bat research, and addressing superstitions that can lead to the abuse of bats. The range of their programs and their educational approach are outstanding, as well as the work they do in a neglected area of conservation. They have a highly developed internal scientific research process.

 

Challenge the Gap: Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice

The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC), our Challenge the Gap beneficiary, is an interfaith coalition with both an advocacy arm and a 501(c)(3) arm focused on education and mobilization to build responsible policies and resources for reproductive health and choice. They focus on the ethical reasons for choice and personal responsibility, using their beliefs to support reproductive rights, and they fight against the often religiously motivated reasoning used to oppose reproductive access on both national and state levels. Foundation Beyond Belief is supporting their education and outreach program.

 

Small Grant: Kiva microfinance

This quarter, Foundation Beyond Belief’s Small Grant program will fund a new microfinance initiative within the Humanist Giving program. Starting in 2014, funds raised for this grant will be used to create a Foundation Beyond Belief microfinance account via Kiva.org. FBB’s Kiva account will join the Atheists, Agnostics, Skeptics, Freethinkers, Secular Humanists and the Non-Religious team. We will immediately make a significant number of $25 loans. Our goal is to use only secular microfinance institutions (MFIs) and concentrate on loans that have fast repayments (6 to 9 months).

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Help us select our next slate of charities

It’s time to help us choose our next slate of featured beneficiaries! Because Foundation Beyond Belief is a member-driven organization, and member donations will support the selected beneficiaries, we welcome our members’ comments and preferences to help us make beneficiary selections.

We’re seeking member input to help us choose an encore Education beneficiary, as well as our Human Rights and Challenge the Gap beneficiaries. Click here to take the survey. The survey will be open until August 5. After the jump, keep reading for a look at the nominated charities.

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