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Closing this Chapter

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I have loved writing this blog and all the special people it has allowed me to connect with, to learn from and to honor through my stories.  It has been fascinating to chronicle my journey working with Acumen Fund and AtoZ, the mosquito net manufacturing company in Tanzania.  Just a few weeks ago, AtoZ unveiled a new facility which will allow it to produce over 11 million nets per year as the only African manufacturer of long-lasting insecticide-treated nets to battle malaria.  Many came to celebrate in Arusha, including the President of the Unites States.  And of course, the debate over public vs. private market distribution of nets continues (click to see latest BusinessWeek article).

I have decided to wrap up this chapter of my blog From Tribeca to Tanzania and take a break for a few months before I write again. 

In the meantime, I will still be storing up stories to tell you later as I continue to help build Bamboo Finance (www.bamboofinance.com) in Switzerland.  As many of you have read, my newest adventures are in designing a new Swiss-based asset management company that specializes in social entrepreneurship.  We have a great team that provides debt and equity investments to social ventures globally which are addressing critical problems (health, education, shelter, energy, etc.).  This company is looking to fill the gap in risk capital for social enterprises described in the article I co-authored this year published by Oxford (click here). We were recently mentioned in the magazine BusinessWeek with our sister company Blue Orchard (click to see BusinessWeek article).  If you know of entrepreneurs looking for finance, please don’t hesitate to send me a message!  We work globally, and next month I am headed to Ghana, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda.

As promised, I continue to read interesting books and will share my opinions when I blog again.  The most recent book is called When a Crocodile Eats the Sun (a gift from a special Zimbabwean family-thanks) and another book I just peeled open is called MicroFranchising: Creating Wealth at the Bottom of the Pyramid (a gift from Troy at Coast Coconut Farms in Kenya-thanks).

Thanks so much to the community who has been reading my blog, contributing and supporting me.  Please continue to contact me to share your ideas.  And thank you to the Skoll Foundation and Social Edge team, especially Sally, Victor, Jason, Phil and Cristina for all of the creative ways they supported my opportunity to reflect here.

Here`s a round-up of my most interesting posts:


Asante Sana

MyC4- investing in African Entrepreneurs

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Our world is constantly changing.  We are closer and closer to each other although we may live thousands of miles away.  One of the most fascinating examples of this to me is how social ventures are leveraging the Internet to engage the global community in raising resources to support their mission.  We are seeing new platforms for peer-to-peer online lending such as Zopa, Prosper or RangDe in India.  We are also seeing exciting developments of online platforms to raise capital for microfinance institutions and micro-business owners such as Microplace, Kiva and 51Give in China.

 

So, I was encouraged when I heard recently about a new venture in beta testing which is focused on Africa, called MyC4. MyC4 is an online community which provides a dynamic platform to create and support new enterprises and commercial innovation in Africa.  The vision of the site is to end poverty, and MyC4 has a strict selection process which identifies entrepreneurs looking to develop companies that provide healthy economic prospects for growth.  The screened entrepreneurs then post their ideas labelled as an Opportunity online so that visitors to the MyC4 website can bid on (to invest in) any open Opportunity on MyC4. The bidding process is based on a ’Dutch’ auction which basically means, the more people that are interested in investing, the more favourable the terms (e.g. interest rate) become for the African business.  Check it out and give them feedback on the beta by clicking here: http://www.myc4.com/


Update on Believe Begin Become in TZ

Some of you may remember me announcing the application process for the Believe Begin Become Business Plan competition in Tanzania, sponsored by Google.org and managed by Technoserve.  It is an incentivized, practical training and business development program to help entrepreneurs turn their business ideas into fundable and implementable business plans.  It turns out that it has been a smashing success and the final winners have posted their ideas via video online.  

Here are two examples of the 20 final winners:


 

You can find others here:  http://www.youtube.com/believebeginbecome

Tracking the Millennium Development Goals

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A new site was launched last week that I have really found interesting.  The MDG Monitor shows how countries are progressing in their efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). With the 2015 target date fast approaching, it is more important than ever to understand where the goals are on track, and where additional efforts and support are needed, both globally and at the country level.

The MDG Monitor is designed as a tool for policymakers, development practitioners, journalists, students and others to:
TRACK progress through
interactive maps and country-specific profiles
LEARN about countries' challenges and achievements and get the latest
news
SUPPORT
organizations working on the MDGs around the world

...on another related exciting note, the World Bank also released the African Indicators Report on Wed, which showed that several African economies are now showing signs of the positive growth needed to end decades of poverty, poor growth and stagnation in the continent.  African countries had recorded strong growth between 1995-2005, reversing the trend of economic collapses and stagnation between 1975-1995.

Economist on Poverty (featuring Acumen & AtoZ)

Last week’s Economist magazine featured a series of articles on global poverty and takes a critical look at the UN’s Millennium Development Goals and their impact on poverty thus far.   Acumen Fund has been mentioned in the article on healthcare (“More Money Than Sense”) with reference to our investment in AtoZ.  AtoZ is the company I have been working with in Tanzania this year.  Click the titles below to read:

More Money Than Sense, Are We Nearly There Yet?, The Eight Commandments.

Does the Y Chromosone = Corruption Juice?

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There she was.  In a polka dot shirt listening intently to the headphones perched on her slicked hair.  Pauline Nyiramasuhuko. Rwanda's Former Minister for Women's Affairs.  I watched through a glass window as a slow tennis game of translation for the trial proceedings of the Butare case occurred in Arusha, Tanzania,  last week in the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda ("ICTR").  Pauline is accused of using her official capacity to incite Hutus to rape thousands of female Tutsis during the 1994 Rwanda Genocide- the first woman to be charged with rape as a crime against humanity by an international tribunal.

She ruins the suspicion that I have had for many years that somewhere along embryonic development, the Y chromosome seems to alter good judgment when it comes to greed and the power of political and corporate leadership.  Yep, there is a part of me that always wondered what the world would be like if it was led by (official) female leaders?  Would leadership influenced by the maternal instinct translate into a more peaceful world?  Right now in the US election race, we are wondering, would Hilary lead America into unnecessary war…how would she handle conflict and peace issues if she was President… would she do anything about the genocide in Sudan?

The World Bank announced a report on 14 June stating that women politicians are less corrupt.  "Some studies undertaken on women in public office have indicated that women could move countries into shying away from corruption and towards good governance," said Dr. Shimwaayi Muntemba, the gender adviser of the World Bank.  "Studies indicate that women in business are less likely to pay bribes to government officials."

As a woman, I would love to believe that we just naturally are more ethical leaders.  As a feminist, I am not so sure it has as much to do with genetics as it does with historical experience of oppression.  See, as a feminist, I believe that we are pretty much capable of achieving the same goals as men…and by the same means.  Humans are humans- capable of the wildest possibilities given equal opportunity and access to resources- proven not only by Pauline’s accused atrocities in Rwanda, but also by the amazing strong ethical fibre of the many female leaders who spoke out in action against genocide, against slavery or against apartheid.

As I sat there in the courtroom, 13 years after the genocide in Rwanda, watching the expensive process of justice being carried out, I wondered what difference it is really making.  Are others deterred from conducting massive genocide because they see that leaders in Rwanda are now being held accountable by the international community?  Is this process making any difference to those in Sudan who are actively choosing to slaughter other human beings?  If not this, then what other options do we have to show the crazy people in power they cannot mass murder and get away with it?

More information on the International Criminal Court can be found by clicking here

Nikusaidiaje: How Can I Help You?

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Some of you may remember my Tanzanian friend Mike, who sang his song for my blog about creating a future which has light.  We talk a lot about music and one of the Tanzanian hip hop artists that he says represents everyday life of Tanzanians well is Professor Jay.  I thought it would be fun to share Professor Jay’s video of his song "Nikusaidiaje" meaning “How can I Help You?” The video has some great scenes, so click the arrow below to view.

An Artist in Tanzania ::: Filex's Batik Workshop

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One of the things I have enjoyed most about Tanzania and Kenya has been learning about how small businesses survive and thrive. 

I learned a lot from a good friend of mine, Filex Jacobson.  Filex has been passionate about art since he was a child.  It is what makes him happy and he is good at it.  He has told me about how he used to sit at his father’s feet drawing pictures as a youngster, and how as an adult, his father disowned him because he wanted to be a professional artist instead of a driver, mechanic or other form of “normal” work in Arusha.  Filex did not give up and he struggled to get the resources for training in several art forms, including that of the Batik painting. 

Batiks are made with a special wax painting process and a layering of different paint colors.  Originally from Indonesia, the Batik was used as a form of communication to send messages and was brought to Congo, Uganda and Tanzania through traders and missionaries.  It takes a half of a day to make one Batik, and I had the chance to catch Filex in action and film it for you here.  

Filex now owns and operates Sunset Art Studio which is located across from the Arusha International Conference Centre.  In addition to selling paintings and providing workshops, he employs six people in his studio and his work supports the livelihood of several street vendor distributors.

If you are in the area, it is worth stopping by to say hello to Filex, to look at his work or perhaps to take a workshop.  He has a great sense of humor.  If you cannot find the studio, just go nearby to Via Via restaurant and ask since he also supplies their art (check out the stage murals at Via Via and art in the outdoor entry halls of AICC).

For those of you who cannot come visit, Filex and I created a video of how to make a Batik.  Click on the arrows below to view.

A Slideshow of Batik Art By Sunset Art Studio

.Batik Workshop

Some of you may remember my earlier post about Ubumama (www.ubumama.org). They also have Tanzanian women from Mbezi beach just outside Dar Es Salaam who run the Unique Handcraft Boutique where they also sell Batiks they have made

A Screwtape Letter

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Dear Wormwood:
I am very pleased indeed by what you tell me in your last correspondence about your patient’s recent discovery of the ease of bribes.  You chalk up the incident to minor progress, but Our Father below is very encouraged.  You see, once the patient justifies a small bribe to make their life a bit more comfortable, he is that much closer to the complacency which allows him to fill his life with many more- and this only strengthens the incentives for those “enforcers of justice” he pays to inch further from their jobs.  And as I told you before, it is not the major sins such as murder or rape that win us the most souls, it is actually the partaking in the small temptations over time that fuels our victory over the Enemy.

I urge you to continue infusing opportunities “to pay someone off” to get rid of the uncomfortable pin pricks and exhausting bureaucratic barriers in life that you learned in our Tempter’s Training Programme.  Those will eventually erode away at the patient’s patience until he gives in and gets comfortable with using his wealth to buy his way out of any problem or any sense of accountability.

Don’t underestimate the power in this.  It is even better to hear that he is an ex-pat in this country and can blame the situation on having no other choice in this “graft infested Africa.”  His birth privileges and wealth mean that he can exploit someone else’s system run by poorly trained, poorly compensated humans with unstable work paths.  Its perfect, Wormwood- you are making good progress –evidenced by how you were whispering in your patient’s ear when he slipped the traffic cop 100 shillings to let him continue driving after racing through the school zone.  And again when he slipped the government official in the immigration office 200 dollars to “move things along at a proper pace.”  Or even when he paid the doctor to take care of his sister before attending to the sick people who had been waiting there for four days to be seen.  And when he laughed with his American friend who paid the security guard “to look the other way” in that drunken incident in town last week.

All small things which in his mind seem to be harmful to no one.

Your patient was so engulfed by the nagging demands of the superficial world, that he dismissed the rather large snowballing impact of these small little bribes- writing each off as one little foul that would make life smoother- and rushing back to the “oh so vital” hussle and bussle that he won’t even remember a month from now.

So, my dear nephew, stay strong because it is working.  You see, we know this from the community mobs who tried to burn Ben alive written about in Keely Stevenson’s blog titled, “Justice Like a Hot Dog,” and we see further proof in Transparency International’s latest global survey of attitudes towards corruption.  The report reveals that in more than 25 countries, at least one in 10 households had to pay a bribe to get access to justice.  People are losing hope in their fellow human beings and suffering greatly. 

And I just heard from Triptweeze that his patient, the one who has been operating that tiny kiosk shop after her husband died of malaria....well, she feeds her five kids from the $2 per day of shop income, and had to close her shop because the police were getting bribes from everyone as a “protection fee” on the street and she couldn’t afford to pay them anymore.  She is now so desperate to feed her children that she is talking with her cousin about becoming a prostitute.

Your patient is really helping us and he doesn’t even realize it!.  It is as if a silent revolution is occurring and the system of corruption- even the small stuff- fuels a better road to “Our Father” than ever.

Now I am not talking about breaking those “unjust laws” spoken about by one of the Enemy’s greatest wins, MLK, but in fact those who are breaking the "just laws" and paying their way out of it—those are where we find victory.  I could show you a pretty cageful down here.

Your affectionate uncle,


SCREWTAPE

_____________
This letter was inspired by recent frustrations at ex-pats in developing countries using bribes to make their lives easier as well as a literary masterpiece given to me by my friend Sarah Caddick.  First published in 1941, C.S. Lewis’ book The Screwtape Letters is a satirical account of human life through the letters of Screwtape, a highly ranked assistant to the devil.  He writes to his nephew, Wormwood, advising on the best methods to sway his “Patient” (a young human) to damnation.  Demonstrating a subtle battle between good and evil to win over human souls, the letters bring to life the psychology of temptation through the Patient’s experiences with war, sex, gluttony, and greed.  Luckily, in the end, good wins out and the Patient goes to heaven.

Dear Nairobi Suicide Bomber

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Dear Nairobi Suicide Bomber of 11 June 2007:

I wish I could have known about you under different circumstances. 

Instead, I got into the office on Monday to hear my colleague mumbling something on the phone in Kiswahili- one word I clearly understood: BOMB.  She was talking about you.  The whole city was…talking about how you ignited yourself with a bomb over on Moi Avenue, killing and hurting others to make your point.  Your selfish actions made my heart skip a beat for the wrong reason.

I wish I could have known about you under different circumstances.


I wish we could have instead talked about your frustrations and furiously worked toward a more peaceful solution.  I wish we could have found a way for you to be heard without killing yourself and others.  The truth is, I don’t think most people even know why you did it- so, ultimately, your life was wasted for nothing.  I wish we could have worked together to find some hope in the fabric of society.  Something that could make you get up in the morning and target your energy and passions toward all of the many good things happening in Africa, so the world doesn’t look at your life as just another reason why this continent should continue to be ignored.


I wish I could have known about you under different circumstances.

Sincerely,
Keely

http://www.dispatch.co.za/2007/06/12/Foreign/abomb.html

Human Hunting

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I am back in Nairobi for work this week and people are very much on edge. The police have been raiding neighborhoods and killing anyone suspected of being related to the Mungiki sect. It is a scary human hunting safari through the slums.

The Mungiki (meaning united people or multitude) is a religious sect known for its organized crime which has left many dead and terrorized, over decades, particularly in relation to the extortion of Matatus (minibuses used for transport by most Kenyans) in more recent years. A few weeks ago in the news, the Mungiki were blamed for the beheading of Matatu drivers and fare collectors who refused to pay the Mungiki. It is very much a secret underground group focused on “fighting foreign ideologies and uniting Kikuyu” (Kenya’s largest tribal community). Some of their traditional rituals have included tobacco snuff sessions and bathing in blood mixed with urine and goat tripe. The most likely members-- unemployed youth in the slums. Does it really change anywhere in the world? Youth in poor communities are at huge risk of trying to meet their social needs through the acceptance of gangs.

The government banned the gang in 2002 after knife-wielding members killed more then 20 people during a clash with a rival gang in Nairobi's Mathare slum. So after recent events, the police are “fighting back,” and just within the last two days the police killed 30 people - no trial- in slum raids. Many fear that the Mungiki are trying to take over the government and that their activities will affect the general elections in December.

President Kibaki has vowed to wipe out the Mungiki and his police force has made progress in that direction. As I watched people being dragged out of their homes on the television, I wondered how many of those people are really Mungiki. No one will ever know now- they are dead and no one will challenge the police about it. I was reminded of George Bush’s approach to the war against terror. I also wondered what it would have been like if police raided my neighborhood back home in California killling the many gang members there. Would I feel justice was served?

Picture Caption: Residents of Nairobi's Mathare slum lie on the ground as Kenyan police search the neighborhood yesterday for Mungiki. (AFP)


Tanzania Launches National Business Plan Competition

The President of Tanzania, Kikwete, came to visit us in Arusha this week to make the formal announcement of the "Believe Begin Become" national business plan competition.  My friend Kim Brearley along with her colleagues at Technoserve and Google.org have been working hard as the designers and sponsors of this exciting programme to support Tanzania’s economic development.

I already know so many smart Tanzanians full of potential who will jump at the opportunity to take advantage of this business plan competition!  250 eligible contestants will take part in a one-day intensive business management and consulting program and 60 will go on to write investment ready business plans and meet and network with the leaders of Tanzania''s business and financial community. Finalists will win awards that include seed capital, business development services and links to loan and investment capital through the networks they develop.  The first prize is $20,000.
 
Please help us spread the word!  For more info, click here:
  http://www.believe-begin-become.com/Tanzania/index.asp

Redefine Normal :: G8 :: African 8

I love it.  Social Edge member, Gillian, asked us to expand our horizons, redefine “normal” and live in a whole new world.  Through her blog, she shares with us all a glimpse of “normal” in Arusha, Tanzania where the School of St Jude provides quality education to 850 children from the poorest families.  She tells us that she has become an activist and encourages us to think about our lives differently.

This week as the eight men representing the major industrialized nations of the world convened at the G8 Summit in Europe, she encourages us to look at the Guardian newspaper’s highlight of Eight African Women.  Not a "normal" G8 coverage, it profiles eight women whose lives have been profoundly affected by some of the key issues the G8 has the power to control.  "Their lives are very different, but they all want one thing- an end to poverty and unfair trade in Africa." 

I was fascinated by reading the story of Tanzanian nurse, Sabina Nicholas, as she talked about the challenges her family faces in accessing water.  Her daughters fetch 10 buckets of water in the morning and 10 in the evening.  They are buying it from private vendors who are actually quite expensive.  Her message to the G8 is: "Give priority to woman and girls in providing safe water.  Make sure that when you give money to help Africa, it is used to help poor people."

This week, I myself felt the hardship of water and sanitation in Africa.  I stayed in the home of a Maasai family who are very special friends of mine, and for seven days I had to shower by pouring a bucket of water on my head because they have no indoor plumbing and no electricity.  I was always so careful not to use too much water, and if I had to go to the toilet in the middle of the night, it wasn't a flushable system, but a hole in the ground I would have to squat on in the dark.

I have visited so many homes like this over the years, but rarely have I lived in one myself, and as I tried to operate my "normal" life of going to town for meetings, I was reminded of how much time it takes to do just about anything when you live without good access to water or electricity.  After cutting grass for the cows to eat, we could then begin chopping wood for the fire to cook breakfast, milking the cow (since there was no refrigerator to keep it from yesterday), going to buy some vegetables/cut bananas from the tree, getting the water and boiling it to drink, etc.  I take for granted the fact that most days of my life growing up in a G8 country, I have stumbled out of bed to hit my electronic alarm clock, switched on the lights, jumped into a hot shower (sometimes with a radio on), popped some instant oatmeal in the microwave and headed out the door to work/school in a comfy car-- all in a matter of a few minutes.  After a week with this wonderful family (who also has two week old twin babies), this new routine started to feel normal. 

It inspires me to think about how strong people are here- especially women and girls who burden most of the household duties.  I think you will enjoy these stories and the voices of eight African women to the G8.  There are also some great video and audio options.       

 Click here to view profiles of eight women in Africa.


New Malaria Treatment & Going to Scale

Tanzania’s government rolled out a new treatment for malaria nationwide this year:  Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (ACT).  The introduction of ACTs is due to the major problem with resistance of malaria parasites to the most common and affordable antimalarial drugs such as chloroquine, Sulfadoxine-Pryimethamine and amodiaquine. 

Drug resistance is mainly the result of inappropriate use of antimalarial drugs.  The drugs were deployed on a large scale, always as monotherapies, introduced in sequence and generally poorly managed (used even after high levels of resistance were found).  The primary challenge in getting this new solution of ACTs administered throughout Africa now is simply the cost as they are ten times more expensive than the conventional drugs used as monotherapies (one drug alone rather than a mix).

As I mentioned in a previous post, Acumen Fund has invested in an interesting social venture, Advanced Bio Extracts (ABE), which trains farmers in Kenya and Tanzania and then manufactures the raw material (Artemisia annua- sweet worm) used to make these new malaria drugs.  This herb was actually used in Chinese traditional medicine for over 200 years to treat malaria fevers.  Globally, its doses in the form of ACTs have increased from 4 million in 2004 to 45 million in 2006.

Acumen Fund Fellow in Kenya, Jocelyn Wyatt, just created a short video of her work with ABE (click arrow below to view):

If you have problems viewing it above, you can also find it by clicking here.  Jocelyn and I have talked about how impressive ABE's process of taking the company to scale has been.  In just a few years, ABE has develped a supplier network of 7, 500 farmers.  Why has ABE been so successful at scaling?  Here is a quote from Jocelyn:

"What can other social enterprises learn from ABE’s example? My sense is that a primary advantage ABE had was an enormous influx of capital (in the form of a loan) from Novartis who pushed the company to expand rapidly. With millions of dollars up-front, ABE could open country offices, hire extension workers, purchase vehicles, and procure the inputs necessary to enable the farmers to begin growing artemisia.

Second, the company’s founders and directors knew they had to reach scale to succeed. A small producer of artemisinin was not going to sell its products to the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world and a measured approach to growth would not work. Therefore, they scaled quickly because that was the only option.

Third, artemisia offers returns to farmers that are far greater to what they previously saw growing maize, wheat, beans, or other crops. Without having to work much harder, farmers could double or quadruple their incomes. This was an easy conversion to convince farmers to try and farmers were encouraged to continue using some of their land to continue growing the staple crops.

Finally, ABE has seen that once the early adopters in a region do well, the followers are eager to jump onboard. Other models, like Scojo and SHEF, can only take on one entrepreneur in an area, limiting the bandwagon phenomenon that ABE could take advantage of.

Some of these factors are particular to ABE’s case, but I do believe it can be viewed as a good example of rapid growth in the social enterprise space. I would love to hear comments from others about what we can learn from this example and how it could be adapted to other organizations."

Toast: "To Rotary World Over!"

“To Rotary World Over!” is the toast we make every Wednesday at the end of our Rotary meetings.

I was inducted into the Rotary Club of Arusha (Tanzania) this year as a Paul Harris Sustaining Member.  Founded by Paul Harris, Rotary is a worldwide organization of business and professional leaders that provides humanitarian service, encourages high ethical standards in all vocations, and helps build goodwill and peace in the world. Approximately 1.2 million Rotarians belong to more than 32,000 clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas.  The Arusha, Tanzania chapter is celebrating its 50 year anniversary this year.

Rotary is about fellowship.  We meet weekly for lunch, learn from each other, and enjoy each other’s company.  It has been a great way for me to understand the perspective of the Arusha business community.  Our club also has many interesting projects, including the distribution of mosquito nets to prevent malaria, a rainwater harvesting project, a cataract surgery and more.

Internationally, Rotary played a huge role in eradicating polio.  Which, according to our recent Rotarian Magazine, is a disease that has popped up again in certain African countries.  Since establishing its PolioPlus program in 1985, Rotary members have helped to immunize more than 2 billion children in 122 countries, and have contributed more than US$500 million toward a polio-free world.  Rotary is the lead private sector contributor and volunteer arm of the global partnership dedicated to eradicating polio, which includes the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

Not bad for a group of people who (for the most part) do not do social work as their day job.

Before joining the Arusha Rotary club, I was a guest once of a Rotary Club in Silicon Valley under the invitation of Sally Osberg.  I was thinking about the difference between Rotarians in East Africa vs. those in the US.  In our club, many of the business leaders are likely the wealthiest in town.  Much of their formal philanthropy (time and money) happens through the club.  However, their connection to poverty is many degrees closer than those Rotarians I met in Silicon Valley (also likely to be well-off business people and civic leaders who typically donate to good causes).  

Indigenous philanthropy in Africa is very different than what I know of philanthropy in the US.  It is part of the reason why Acumen Fund will have to think carefully as it considers a strategy for raising capital from Africans for its activities here.  In the US, emotional stories sell.  Most Americans (and Western Europeans for that matter) have never met someone who lives on $2 per day and are so far removed from the realities of the people portrayed in those emotionally charged fundraising stories, that they will trust in the avenue that is in front of them to donate (given it is legally incorporated…and of course, the tax break helps). 

The African philanthropist however, likely sees the realities daily because his/her cousin, neighbor, employee, grandma, etc. is asking him/her directly for money to treat malaria, to pay for school fees, to get access to family planning services, to treat HIV, or to pay for food because lack of rainfall didn’t yield good crops this season. All deserving cases for financial support from a charitable soul.

Therefore, formal donations to institutions like Acumen or Rotary, have to do much more than portray a good story to raise money from Africans.  They have to show results at a scale where these realities knocking on their door are actually lessening in tangible ways. This is my perspective based on very limited exposure to philanthropy here- the bar is very high for the performance of philanthropic funds.   Acumen fund’s metrics (such as the BACO and other performance metrics) are critical to the demonstration effect required to channel funds into effective social enterprises solving poverty in Africa.

Kids In My Neighborhood

I decided to video tape the children in my neighborhood in Arusha to share a glimpse of their lives through the streets they play on.  They are such happy kids, running up to give me a hug or greeting me respectfully when I walk by.  I am most impressed with their creative toys.  You will see the marble pool table set on the stool their mother sits on when she cooks corn over the fire for dinner… and the round wheel they chase around.  One of the coolest toys was a set of leaves cut in a special manner so to flutter like an airplane, but I missed the picture of that one.  The girls seemed to be hiding this day, too!  This reminds me so much of playtime for the kids in my mother's first grade classroom in California, yet most of these kids live in very different circumstances with no electricity or water in their homes.

I have often wondered who these kids will grow up to be....wondered if the children I know in America today will cross paths with these little ones as adults someday.

Click the arrow below to view:

 

Patient Capital in Africa