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Home > Find a Project > Zambia > Sport > Empowering 1000 girls through Sport in Zambia

Empowering 1000 girls through Sport in Zambia

Summary

The program provides 37 Committees for girls with information on the realities of HIV/AIDS, gender equality and equity and the use of life and Sports skills to benefit 5000 girls in Zambia. progress reportread updates from the field


How Donors Like You Helped

Thanks to donors like you, a total of £3,598 was raised for this project.

Received £3,598 from 122 donations from people around the world like:

More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

The project intends to address female by men/boys over girls during development stages, they also address elements of empowerment in decision making and challenging traditional gender myths that is subjected to women as well as sponsor them to get back and stay in School. Beneficiaries are youths drawn from 22 disadvantaged communities in both Lusaka and Livingstone. The benefits are at individual, community and national level.

Activities

* Leadership and life skills training is the driving force behind project implementation. * Community exchange program. * Capacity building in decision making and project implementation. * Sports skills training in different Sports codes.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: £3,598

Funding Information

This project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding. Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the "Progress Report" tab as they become available.

Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled £3,598.  The original project funding goal was £51,924.

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

The project will educate and empower 37 action teams and allow them to increase their capacity to make independent decisions and reduce vulnerability so as to produce self assertiveness and liberated women through sport.

Project Message

Playing a male dominated sport and play it well develops a positive attitude in me about my ability to compete and excel in life.
- Annie Namukanga Musonda, Go Sisters Coordinator/National Football Team Capt

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Bevine Sangulube,
Executive Director
EduSport Foundation
Lusaka, N/A 51334
Zambia
+ 260 - 221919
Email:

Project Sponsor

GlobalGiving

Organisation

EduSport Foundation (Education through Sport) Logo EduSport Foundation (Education through Sport)
LCC Community Devept. Headquarters Building Burma Rd
Lusaka, Lusaka 51334
Zambia
+260-211-250662
http:// www.edusport.org.zm

Learn more about EduSport Foundation (Education through Sport) and the project team.



Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in Zambia and can also be found under Sport.

For more information about Zambia, read the Human Development Report on Zambia or the Wikipedia entry for Zambia.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 18, 2010.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on January 23, 2007.

Latest Update from the Field

Sports? Education? Yes. The perfect combo.

By Troy Smith - In-the-Field Traveler, June 22, 2010 10:51 AM

Spectators
Spectators

Toyota compacts are fantastic cars.

I know what you all are thinking. “But Troy the brakes, all that stuff was in the newspapers. The reputation is shot, man. You.sound.stupid.right.now”

O ye of little faith. Last week I found myself in a Toyota compact ripping through a dirt path, jumping hills that were quite possibly unfit for motorcross. Unreliable? Please.

I was “four-wheelin’” with my buds Paul Zulu and Kelvin, both of whom work for the Edusport Foundation, a sports-based NGO that is huge throughout every province of Zambia. Their work? Teaching children, adolescents, and adults about such issues as HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, gender roles, women’s empowerment, environmental issues, etc. However, their medium of delivery is definitely unique. Edusport uses the power of sport to first bring individuals together, and then educate those who come.

It is almost too simple—Edusport equals education plus sport. Sports bring people together from all walks of life, so they take advantage.

Bottom line--It works. Let me assure you. Any one here in Africa right now can attest to the fact that sports bring people together. I myself will shortly be the lone American representative here in my hostel for U.S. vs. England, and I promise you I will be super obnoxious. Just listen for the guy singing Mellencamp, and I’ll be there.

We were traveling to the tiny village of Kalundu, approximately 60 kilometers out on Great East Road (about 18 kms off the main road; we drove about 30, but no worries, we backtracked). Edusport has done extensive work in the Kalundu community, using funds to build a large, one room community school. This ensures that kids will not have to walk unbelievably long distances to school. Often, and I’ve seen this in several towns, lack of transport is a huge contributing factor to kids dropping out of school. A child dropping out after seventh grade is shockingly common.

After talking with several children (mostly using Tonga translators), and the two teachers who work at the school, I could tell the huge effect Edusport has had on this small, tight-knit community.

Through Edusport’s POWER (People Organized Working for Economic Rebirth) sport program, people have been given goats, which they can later sell for quick income. According to GlobalGiving project leader Paul Zulu, “These people are farmers, they know what to do when given an animal.”

True to Zulu’s word, the animal husbandry program has proved hugely successful, and often the income rendered can be used to further go towards children’s education.

However, the main reason for my visit was to check out the “Go Sisters” program, which strives to educate young ladies on women’s issues.

Sports, typically an idea thought taboo for women and reserved solely for men, are now being used to empower young women in a developing nation. Watching the two teams, dressed in the odd combination of soccer jerseys and chitenge skirts, was literally watching women break new ground.

The “Go Sisters’ program has been a great success, and after talking to the women, has become a huge part of their lives. Providing them with an outlet of some sort, in a nation with fairly rigid gender roles, has proven invaluable.

The girls are now training for a nationwide tournament.

To take the time to describe all that Edusport would take a lot longer than you all are willing to pay attention. Just after a few hours in Kalundu, I could see the impact Edusport is having, and trust me, it is huge.

As I was leaving a woman pulled me aside and said, “You see? People giving money really can make a difference.”

While Edusport is doing well, donations are still desperately needed. The Kalundu School is in need of expansion, as they are outgrowing that tiny, one-room, thatched roof classroom. The Edusport programs are solid, but could need some more fine-tuning. With your help Edusport can continue to grow and be a role model for all Zambian-based NGOs.

More often than not, one sees NGOs that are pumped full of USAID money. However, this is a perfect example of a Zambian non-profit taking initiative and creating a truly amazing organization.

I’ll have you know, the ‘Yota got a flat tire. However, I blame the giant rocks, not the fine Japanese engineering.

To learn more about Edusport's project on GlobalGiving, check out www.globalgiving.org/1647.

Troy Smith, a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is currently an In-the-Field traveler visiting GlobalGiving projects throughout Zambia, Malawi, and Tanzania. Follow his trip at http://troygivesglobal.tumblr.com/.

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