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Showing posts with label Charity Travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charity Travel. Show all posts

Moving to South Korea

December 16, 2016. Seoul, South-Korea.
We have once again moved to South Korea. This time we hope to find a home that will be permanent enough to call it ours and develop the higher level of creativity we dream about.
As creatives - and I don't mean to use that term in an arrogant way - our contribution to the advancement of humankind would consist of making things our fellow beings regard as beautiful, which might instill them with a sense of purpose, and such fluff.
If, contrary to previous experience, our plans take root this time, we will be living in South Korea for years to come. Here, we will set up a base from which to launch our plans to take over the world, every night.

A fixed location will also allow us to be more responsive to inquiries regarding the concept of Charity Travel. We hope the idea will evolve further and inspire more people. As digital technology seems to grow exponentially, with abundant Internet and cell phone coverage in the global South, it becomes easier to make fruitful connections between global citizens where it matters.

Malaysia/Korea: The Road Ahead

June 6. Kuala Lumpur/Seoul, Malaysia/South Korea.
What are the initiators of CT doing? Tomorrow, Yeon will be giving a talk at a University in Seoul about Charity Travel, while Kamiel is in Malaysia to travel, meet old friends, make new ones, and get in touch with sustainable living initiatives in the region. They will reunite mid July in Germany.

Happy New Year!

December 31. Seoul, South Korea.
On the verge of the new year, we would like to wish everybody a bright and hopeful future and a very good start of 2013. As for Charity Travel, we hope that more people will share, especially their knowledge, with those who need it most. And there is other news.

Flying to Kenya tonight

12 March 2012. Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Finally, plans materialize and we are flying one-way to Nairobi tonight. We're very much looking forward to seeing our friends again, helping the "Joy Valley" orphan home cum school in Kayole and learn a lot about hands-on local development. We don't have exact plans in Nairobi. All we know is a place to stay during our first days, with couchsurfers of course, and we'll take it from there.

Book Publishing - Traversing Africa

Book Publishing - Traversing Africa

29. September 2011. Rabat / Seoul
Yeon and Kamiel have decided to work from different locations for a little while. Yeon will be promoting her book about Charity Travel in South Korea the coming month, while Kamiel will try to travel from Morocco to Kenya overland on a budget. If internet is available, he'll post on www.kindmankind.org; you can follow Yeon by looking closely at the nr. 1 position of your local best seller list.

charity travel goes kindmankind

Charity Travel goes Kindmankind.

May 2, 2011. Berlin
We the people of charity travel have created a platform where independent volunteers can find and share grassroots initiatives around the world. Thanks to some amazing people, the collection of free and no-fee "volunteering opportunities" is already huge and our kind community of independent changemakers is contributing more.

Real grassroots change starts here: http://kindmankind.net


October 4 - 18. News Update

News Update

October 4-18. Tilburg, Amsterdam, Utrecht.
After our presentation in New York, we traveled to the Netherlands to attend the wedding of Kamiel's brother and meet his family. On October 15, we presented Charity Travel at the Monticus Montessori school in Amsterdam. Meanwhile, we started writing on the CT-book and worked on the last articles about Koeju, ~nanta, and COMPA.

OCT 4th: Presentation in Manhattan

Our presentation in Manhattan

teatro circulo, 64 East 4th Street. October 4th, 7pm ET
After a year of travelling for the Good, it is time for a presentation.
You can expect a clear TED-like presentation of our idea, an anecdote-packed recount of our journey, tips on how to do-it-yourself, and a discussion about the virtue of independent charity traveling.

Charity Travel

チャリティ・トラベル


チャリティ・トラベル(CT)は、エキサイティングな旅行と小規模のチャリティ・プロジェクトのサポートを掛け合わせ、世界中を旅する一大冒険プロジェクトです。私たちはより多くの(若い)旅人たちに、このプロジェクトに参加してほしいと考えています。いまや政府や国際機関を通じなくても、本当に助けを必要としている小さなチャリティ活動に参加することができる時代。チャリティ・トラベルの目的は、まさにそれを証明することです。チャリティは人の役に立てると同時にエキサイティングでクールなものなのだと、一人でも多くの旅行者たちに向かって声を大にして言いたいと思います。

この旅行プロジェクトは200910月から201010月に行われます。中央アジアから始まり、トルコからエジプト、11月の末にはアフリカに到達します。3カ月間アフリカのナイロビやマプトの近くで過ごします。2月下旬にはインドに飛び、そこで1カ月暮らします。そこから旅は東南アジアやオセアニアへと続き、夏の初めにはオーストラリアに到着する予定です。ニュージーランドでの小休止の後、ボリビア、ハイチで再びボランティア活動を行い、クリスマス頃に旅を終えます。

私はインターネットを駆使して、世界中で活動するチャリティ団体の中でも信頼のおける団体とコネクションを得ました。とりわけ役立ったのがこちらのサイトです。

10年前には考えられないようなスピードで、私たちの活動にふさわしい信頼のおけるチャリティ団体と直にコンタクトをとれるようになりました。本当に助けを必要としている貧しい人々に手を差し伸べたいのに寄付金は先進国にばかり入っていくという状況を歯がゆく感じていた私にとって、インターネットによってチャリティの可能性が一気に広がったことは大きな推進力となりました。

チャリティ・トラベルは世界中の約20の小規模なチャリティ活動に参加し、1001000ドル相当の寄付を行います。私たちはそのお金をどのように使うかを共に考えます。私はそれぞれのチャリティについて研究し、記録します。もちろん、滞在中は可能な限り建築作業、料理、農業、教育などもお手伝いします。
このような方法で、私は若い旅行者たちから、チャリティへの興味を引き出したいと考えています。チャリティ・トラベルは、貧しい人々のお手伝いをしながら旅行することがどんなに刺激的な冒険旅行になるかを教えてくれます。いつか、他の旅行者たちが私よりもさらに長い旅に出かけ、行く先々で今本当に必要な人道支援・環境プロジェクトに参加して、よりエキサイティングな冒険をしてくれることを心から願っています。
このプロジェクトに欠かせないのが、メディアの関心を集めることです。なぜならチャリティ・トラベルの成功は結局はその知名度にかかっているからです。より多くの新聞や雑誌がこのプロジェクトのことを取り上げれば、それだけ多くの旅行者の目に触れ、問題意識を持ってもらえる機会が増えるのです。そうすればチャリティ・トラベルは本当に世界を変える力になると信じています。

Charity Travel

Charity Travel to samodzielna, wielka, pelna przygód podróz dookola swiata, laczaca ekscytujace podrózowanie ze wspieraniem maloskalowych projektów charytatywnych, w ten sposób inspirujaca innych (mlodych) podrózników do podazania za naszym przykladem. Charity Travel pragnie pokazac, iz w obecnych czasach mozna ominac wielkie biurokracje i pracowac indywidualnie z malymi organizacjami charytatywnymi, które naprawde potrzebuja pomocy.

Kladziemy nacisk na zainspirowanie tak wielu podrózników jak to mozliwe, pokazujac im, ze praca spoleczna moze byc jednoczesnie ekscytujaca, fajna i efektywna.

Projekt podrózy rozegra sie miedzy pazdziernikiem 2009 i 2010 r.. Rozpoczynajac w Azji Centralnej, z Turcji na poludnie do Egiptu, dotre do Afryki do konca listopada. Spedze 3 miesiace w Afryce mieszkajac kolo Nairobi i w poblizu Maputo. Póznym lutym polece do Indii gdzie pozostane miesiac. Stamtad podróz bedzie kontynuowana do Poludniowo-Wschodniej Azji i Oceanii, do Australii przybywajac wczesnym latem. Po krótkiej przerwie w Nowej Zelandii polece do Boliwii i Haiti pomagac ponownie i zakonczyc podróz okolo swiat Bozego Narodzenia.

Zdobylem kontakty do licznych, wiarygodnych organizacji charytatywnych na calym swiecie poprzez umiejetne korzystanie z zasobów internetu, zwlaszcza ze strony couchsurfing.org. Mozliwosc nawiazania w ten sposób i tak szybko bezposrednich kontaktów z zasluzonymi, godnymi zaufania organizacjami bylaby nie do pomyslenia dekade temu. Upowaznia mnie to do przeprowadzania mojego planu bez przekazywania pieniedzy zachodnim agencjom w zamian za dostarczanie ich na realne potrzeby dla biednych.

Charity Travel odwiedzi okolo 20 malych organizacji charytatywnych w róznych krajach i na róznych kontynentach i zaoferuje kazdej wsparcie 100-1000 dolarów amerykanskich. Razem zdecydujemy jak wykorzystac pieniadze. Bede badal kazda konkretna organizacje i ja dokumentowal. Podczas mojego pobytu bede oczywiscie pomagal na ile to mozliwe przy pracach budowlanych, gotowaniu, rolnictwie i nauczaniu.

W ten sposób mam nadzieje zainspirowac innych mlodych podrózników i pobudzic ich apetyt do zaangazowania sie w dzialalnosc charytatywna. Charity Travel pokaze jak pelne przygód moze byc podrózowanie, kiedy jest polaczone z pomoca ludziom ubogim i pozbawionym srodków do zycia. Mam nadzieje, ze pewnego dnia inni podróznicy zaplanuja swoje podróze nawet na dluzszy czas niz moja wlasna, laczac wiecej naglacych humanitarnych i ekologicznych projektów z wieksza iloscia ekscytujacych przygód.

Kluczowym aspektem projektu jest zainteresowanie mediów, od kiedy wreszcie sukces Charity Travel zalezy od jego rozglosu. Im wiecej gazet i magazynów pisze o projekcie tym wiecej podrózników zerknie nan okiem i wezmie pod uwage. Mysle, ze wraz z nimi Charity Travel moze naprawde zmieniac swiat.

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Join Charity Travel

Charity Travel is about friendship and inclusion
We are promoting a concept/movement rather than an organization. You can join us simply by incorporating the idea of "charity travel" in your own journey. We have done our world trip in 2010 and hope we can inspire you. Personally, we will keep doing what we can whenever we travel to empower the poorest communities on this planet knowledge.

What we offer here is a step-by-step guide for the beginning charity traveler.

0. Be motivated for Travel as well as for Charity

Everybody has their own motivation to go make the world a better place. This motivation can be kindled by a person, a book, a movie, an article, personal loss, or a travel experience. We have compiled a list of resources that have inspired us in the course of our journey. Of course, we hope you are a little bit inspired by our own journey as well.

1. Find the right charitable projects

Use online platforms that profile charitable organizations. Bear in mind that smaller organizations might benefit more from your visit because they will benefit from the publicity (and trust) you can generate for them. To start, sign up for couchsurfing.org, (or hospitalityclub.org, or bewelcome.org, or trustroots.org).
Use their "keyword search" to find members that are involved with charitable projects/ngo's. We use keywords such as: "charity volunteer volunteering ngo environment orphanage street children"

Also become a member of platforms like
www.kindmankind.net (Our very own platform made after Charity Travel)
www.idealist.org (American. They are working on a vouching system)
www.causes.com (high tech, facebook-related)
www.wwoof.org (well-known platform for "willing workers on farms")
www.helpx.net (cultural exchange for working holiday, sign-up fee)
www.couchsurfing.org/group.html?gid=9949 (rural couchsurfing in the developing world)

An Internet search will quickly yield many more results. It is essential that you use a platform that has a working system of references/testimonials to generate a network of trust. Feel free to use another platform, and please do suggest it to us. Remember, Charity Travel is an idea, not an organization. Also, you could browse the projects that we worked with, they  are generally open towards volunteers/contributors.
Knowing all this, you should be able to find a relevant, deserving, and efficient project.

2. Decide what you want to do

Volunteer
Yes you can! You can teach, translate, build, paint, cook, clean up, sew, make music, repair, dig a well, set up an Internet connection, organize a library, ghostwrite, drive, write, knit, make manure, install a solar panel, introduce rainwater catchment, play with children, make theater, sing, dance, lay bricks, make a bio gas tank, pickle, sensitize people on child abuse, women's rights, HIV and other issues, teach how to make handicrafts, help someone setting up a micro business, and so on. Browse the Charity Travel projects for examples.
Make sure you behave responsibly and discuss things with the local people whose guest you are.

Even without "professional experience" you often have more resources than you realize or can prove, but once you learn how to use them you can make a valuable contribution. There are many smaller ngo's (where the decision makers are actually on the ground!) that value this.

Donate
You can donate in cash or in kind. If an organization has a convincing program, such as a scholarship program or income generation, then you can simply donate your money, or the money you raised back home, to that program. In other cases, where you work with small startup initiatives, you better donate goods you buy locally or bring with you from home. Examples of things to donate are a sewing machine, a tricycle, tools, paint, stationary, library books, computers, solar panels, clothes, mobile phones, building materials.

But you can also donate something that you get for free: knowledge and ideas. For example, the best practice how to start a small library project at a rural school, how to grow low-maintenance crops on dry soil, or how to do effective HIV sensitizing in a slum, and so on. Bear in mind that donating expertise and ideas can often make a sustainable difference.

Connect
For already established ngo's it doesn't harm to have some extra connections. But for the really small organizations you support, connections can be vital. Once they are given a chance to present themselves, they will often do a much better job, distinguishing themselves from the scams.
Travelers - even if they don't want to invest much time or any money - can make a small detour, and visit projects and write references and recommendations for them, thus connecting them to the world.

Publish
Only networking is not enough. We advise you to keep an up-to-date travelblog as well. If you use the right keywords, it will be found by others and read by people who take your story as their example. Also make sure to share your audience with other bloggers by exchanging links.

3. Prepare your journey

If you have a limited time frame, it is better to plan your journey. Here is a list of typical preparation steps:
- Booking tickets. Try to avoid flying if possible. If you need to, a round-the-world ticket is an affordable option, and can be booked through STA travel or any other agency. Also consider carbon-offsetting.
- Contacting couchsurfers/organizations in advance. Sometimes it is better to plan ahead at least a month. However, you can also be spontaneous and contact your project on short notice once you are in the country.
- Visa issues. Some countries require you to issue a visa in your country of residence. In our case, India did. Other countries don't issue visas at the border. For a comprehensive overview of EU visa requirements, see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_visa_lists. Americans can use travel.state.gov.
- Vaccinations. I went to a German doctor specialized in travel medicine. For information on specific countries, browse http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/destinations/list.aspx
- Store your stuff if you don't keep your apartment. There are plenty of selfstorage companies. Alternatively, you can organize a charity auction of course.
- Pack your bags. We suggest you travel very lightly: only one medium-sized 8 kg backpack is enough. It is accepted as carry-on luggage. Make sure it has a rain pouch. The contents, apart from clothes and hygiene stuff:
  • netbook. Any brand would do, however look for the longest battery life. Don't forget universal adaptors (US, UK, OZ, EU);
  • miniprojector. A nifty gadget that allows you to show movies on a large surface, ideal to 'edutain' children in rural areas. We use the tiny samsung mpb200; for example on aliexpress.com.
  • travel medicine. Mosquito repellent, disinfectant, aspirin, plasters, broad-spectrum antibiotics, (Imodium in case of sudden diarrhea), (malaria pills), painkillers (aspirin). Read about toothache relief. Don't forget international vaccination pass if you're visiting to tropical countries. Use a transparent bag for medications if you fly;
  • mobile phone+charger. For international SIM-cards see http://www.onesimcard.com/ or any other provider;
  • camera. A handheld camera is all we need. Don't forget charger and spare battery;
  • light sleeping bag (1.2kg) - just in case. You can buy  blankets and warm sweaters along the way and donate them to someone living on the street before flying out ;
  • personal cards with your email and blog addresses, to hand out en route. Easy to order online;
  • t-shirt with your own logo. Most photocopying shops can print t-shirts from a PDF file;
  • plenty of pens and paper - believe us.
- Keep your valuables safe. Best get a strong wallet and sew a strap to it that attaches it to your belt, hidden under your pants. It is invisible and some extra cash (US-dollar or euro) can really save the day.

4. Go!

Once you are on the road, your perspective will change and the new cultural context will give you wings.
To cut down the cost of traveling, we suggest the following:
  • go couchsurfing, of course, read their Newschannel-article on budget-traveling;
  • hitchhiking. use hitchwiki.org for basic information and the best spots;
  • use one of the many ride sharing-platforms if you don't feel like thumbing;
  • buy food in local stores, not in expensive tourist areas;
  • read the blogs of experienced travellers such as our affiliate bloggers;

If you are supporting a special project, please let us know so that we can showcase it on our website.

Thank you for learning about Charity Travel!

We wish you GOOD travels...

...and in case you stay at home, you can still contribute to kindmankind.net!

Text six minutes Presentation

Hello everybody, I am happy to be here today. What I want to share with you a concept that I call Charity Travel. It's actually very simple: the idea is to combine exciting traveling with simply doing something good.
Together with my girlfriend Yeon I set out on a yearlong journey (October 09 til October 10) to 30 countries to demonstrate this concept. We were able to support over forty projects like orphanages, streetkids projects, ecological initiatives, refugees, migrant workers, and in the process we created an amazing network of likeminded people around the world. Today, I hope to explain to you how it works and why this is a good way to go.

First, our Vision statement:
"A world in which social networks empower people to follow their inclination to do something good without unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles. A world in which charitable work is exciting and effective at the same time. A world in which expertise and knowledge of all kind is shared among the neediest communities everywhere. A world in which young people find professionals responsive to their idealist intentions so that they are sensitized themselves, do a good job and have a rewarding experience."

So, how to get started?

You need to find a trustworthy, deserving project. Let's use the Internet. There are many platforms profiling organizations, but they are often - only virtual. And all kinds of people can sign up on those platforms. I saw a lot of commercial and abusive accounts, and you won't want to rely on that when traveling abroad. Of course a website doesn't have the resources to visit all the initiatives themselves.

WHO DOES? Travelers! And they are very well connected too, through hospitality websites (free homestay exchange) like couchsurfing with 2 million members and over 99% positive feedback. It is a no-brainer that we should put that to use when we are connecting goodness.
You simply look for a member using keywords like volunteer, ngo, charity, orphanage, find a bunch of people, scrutinize their profiles and references and contact them.

So, once you have your project, what can you do to support it?

1. Volunteer.
You can do more than you think with your western education. Just make sure you behave responsibly and discuss things with the local people. You can teach, translate, build, paint, cook, set up an internet connection, organize a library, and so on.

We have been organizing fun children workshops. We did this with kids in Cambodia, Laos, India, Kenya, Malaysia. We could always apply in the next place what we had learned before.

Even without "professional experience" you often have more resources than you realize or can prove, but once you learn how to use them you can make a valuable contribution. There are many smaller ngo's (where the decision makers are actually on the ground!) that value this.

2. Donate.
Don't worry, this is not gonna make you poor. You can donate in cash or in kind. If an organization has a convincing program, such as a scholarship program or income generation, then you can simply donate your money, or the money you raised back home, to that program. In other cases, where you work with small start up initiatives, you better donate goods you buy locally or bring with you from home.
We like to donate things like a sewing machine, a tricycle, tools, paint, stationary, library books, bags of cement, window frames, buckets, bricks, board, iron sheets...

But you can also donate something that you get for free: knowledge and ideas. You bring them from back home or from the other projects you visit.
For example, the best practice how to start a small library project at a rural school, how to grow low-maintenance crops on dry soil, or how to do effective HIV sensitizing in a slum, and so on.

Keep in mind: you can give more than you think.

But it doesn't stop there.

3. Connect.
For already established ngo's it doesn't harm to have some extra connections.
But for the really small organizations, connections can be vital. Travelers - even if they don't want to invest much time or any money - can make a small detour, and visit projects and write references and recommendations for them, thus connecting them to the world.

What we need is not a new website, we just need to use the established websites effectively.

4. Publish.
Only networking is not enough. We advise you to keep a travel blog as well. If you use the right keywords, it will be found and read by people who take your story as their example.

So, Charity Travel is about independent doing-simply-something-good-out-there. It is exciting and it is a humanly rewarding experience. It is also very effective if you make smart use of social networks in order to identify your deserving projects, and reflect upon what you can do in terms of 1) volunteering, 2) donating, 3) networking.

Thank you very much for your attention.

Traveller können mehr als nur konsumieren.

Kann man die Welt mit Reisen verbessern? Klar, es gibt Exzentriker die einbeinig um die Welt hüpfen und wir dürfen dann pro Kilometer spenden. Oder reiche Philantropen die eine Armenküche auf dem Deck ihrer Yacht organisieren. Aber als Normalverbraucher? Neben Selbstverständlichkeiten wie ökologisch und sozial verantwortlich reisen können wir doch nicht viel tun, oder wir müssen uns bei einer großen Organisation bewerben auf eine teuere "Platzierung", irgendwann in zwei Jahren.

Dass wir selbständig viel mehr machen können, wollen zwei Idealisten mit ihrer abenteurlichen Weltreise "Charity Travel" zeigen. Kamiel Verwer (Philosoph, Niederländer, 1979) und Yeon Choi (Bühnenbildnerin, Südkorea, 1973) bereisen seit Oktober 2009 bis Oktober 2010 etwa dreißig Länder um dort klokale Initiativen und gute Zwecke zu unterstützen. Das ist zum Beispiel ein Kinderheim, ein Naturreservat, ein Flüchtlingslager, Seuchenbekämpfung, Bildung oder Menschenrechten. Sie wollen damit zeigen, dass Traveller im Vorübergehen effizient und sinnvoll aushelfen können, dort wo es nötig ist, und dass dies einen angenehmen Aufenthalt nicht im Wege steht.

Charity Travel hat sich bis Ende Juni für fünfunddreißig gute Zwecke eingesetzt, wie Peace Groups in Westjordanland, wo ein junger Palästinenser über hunderd Kinder aus Dörfern nahe Ramallah den Wert des Friedens beibringt, oder ein von ihnen selber erbautes Kinderheim am Viktoriasee in West-Kenya. Sie klärten Waisen in Slums über Ihre Rechte auf und unterstützten ein ökologisches Kompostierprojekt in Mosambik. Sie hilfen einem Kinderheim in Tirunvannamalai, Südindien, ein eigenes Einkommen zu generieren, und spendeten für die Erdbebenopfer von Sichuan. In Laos unterstützten sie eine Schule und in Vietnam und Kambodscha verschiedene Projekte die im Bereich Ausbildung und Armutbekämpfung.

Was tun sie aber konkret? Sie bauen, malen, unterrichten, kochen, und übersetzen. Sie gehen zu lokalen Märkten und Läden um Stühle, Matten, Werkzeug, Bücher, Einmachgläser, Nähmaschinen, Holz, oder einem Dreirad zu kaufen und zu spenden. Sie beraten und teilen ihr Wissen. Sie schreiben über die Initiativen vor Ort auf ihrer Webseite und in einem Buch dass sie über das Konzept schreiben. Auch stellen sie Kontakte her zwischen den besuchten Projekten und Traveller. Das hat sich als besonders wertvoll erwiesen.

Diese Art von helfen ist für nahezu jeden Traveller zugängig, und durch effizienten Einsatz des Internets kann es schnell und effizient organisiert werden. Es muss nicht viel Geld gespendet werden, oft sind gerade die Kontakte und die Begeisterung viel wichtiger für die Projekte vor Ort. Traveller mit ein wenig Phantasie können mit geringem Einsatz viel für ein kleines Projekt bedeuten. Gar ein kleiner Umweg während der Sommerferien kann so etwas Wesentliches beitragen und zu einem unvergesslich menschliche Erfahrung führen.

Eine ausführliche Beschreibung aller unterstützen Projekte und Tipps um selbst gut zu verreisen findest du auf
charitytravel.blogspot.com.

Travellers can be more than consumers alone.

Can you change the world by traveling? Sure, there are eccentrics who hop around the world on one leg and allow us to sponsor them, or rich philantrophes who organize a soup kitchen on the deck of their yacht. But the normal tax payer? Apart from self-evident things like ecologically and socially responsible travel we can't do much, or we'd have to apply with a big organization for an expensive "placement", sometimes in two years or so.

That individuals can do much more than that is what two idealists want to show with their adventurous world journey called "Charity Travel" . Kamiel Verwer (philosopher, Dutch, 1979) and Yeon Choi (set designer, Korean, 1973) are traveling from October 2009 until October 2010 to about thirty countries where they support local charitable initiatives and small scale ngo's. Their causes range from nature conservation, orphans, refugees, education, healthcare, and human rights.
They want to show that travelers can help en route in a meaningful and effective way where it is needed the most, and that it can be easily combined with a very pleasant stay.

Charity travel has supported thirty-seven causes by the end of July 2010, like Peace Groups in the West Bank, where a young Palestinian holds Peace workshops for over a hundred children near Ramallah, the construction of a Community Center near Lake Victoria in Western Kenya. They sensitized at risk children about their rights in a Nairobi slum and supported ecological composting in Mozambique. They helped an orphanage in Tiruvannamalai, southern India, to generate their own income, and donated to earthquake victims in Sichuan. In Laos they supported a school and in Cambodia several projects related to education and poverty eradication. After planting mangroves near Bangkok on Earth's day, they moved on to work with a children's center in Bali.

But what do they actually do? They build, paint, teach, cook, write, play, and translate. They go to local markets and shops to buy chairs, mats, tools, stationary, books, glasses, footballs, sewing machines, wood, or a tricycle they donate to their current project. They advise and share their growing knowledge. They write about the projects on their website and in the book they are working on. They also establish contacts between different projects and potential volunteers. This has proven to be particularly valuable.

This way of helping is possible for almost every traveler, and can be organized quickly by  making efficient use of the internet. Nobody needs to donate a lot of cash, often the right contacts and an enthousiastic approach are more important for the projects on the ground. Travelers with a little imagination can mean a lot for a small scale project. Even a small detour during a summer holiday can contribute something essential while leading to an unforgettable and humanly rewarding experience.

A detailed description of all supported projects and concrete tips and weblinks about how to become a "charity traveler" yourself are available at: charitytravel.blogspot.com.

Organizations

Apart from the supported projects, Charity Travel currently affiliates with the following organizations and initiatives:
If you are an organization working in a related field and want to affiliate with us, please send us an e-mail or leave a comment here.

About Charity Travel

Charity Travel is a large adventurous journey around the world, combining exciting traveling with supporting small-scale charity causes, thereby inspiring other travelers to follow our example. We want to demonstrate through Charity Travel that it is possible to bypass large bureaucracies and individually work with small charities that really need help. The emphasis is on inspiring as many travelers as possible, showing them that traveling can be more than self-indulgence, and that charitable giving can be exciting, cool, and effective at the same time.

...imagine independent charity
bypassing bulky bureaucracies
and reaching the people, while
being incredibly exciting...
We find our causes mainly through the hospitality website couchsurfing.org, which offers reliable contacts to people who are often involved in charitable projects themselves or know how to get to those trustworthy orphanages, streetkids' projects, ecological farms, disease prevention programmes, charity hospitals we intend to support.
...thinking globally, acting with
locals - using young websites
to reach the right people
and help effectively...
In times of all-encompassing economic and touristic globalization we think it becomes important - and possible - for so-called first-world citizens to experience the real world beyond what they see on television and become sensitized about it.
Blogs with personal reflections are available at: kamielverwer.blogspot.com and yellow-duck.tumblr.com

- Vision -
A world where social networks empower helpers to follow their inclination to do something charitable without
unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles. A world where charitable work is exciting, cool, and effective at the same time. A world where expertise and knowledge of all kind is shared among the neediest communities around the globe. A world where young travelers find professionals responsive to their idealistic intentions so that they are sensitized and will make a rewarding experience.

- Mission -
It is our mission to spread the concept of Charity Travel. We hope that one day other travelers will set out on journeys even longer than ours, combining even more urgent humanitarian and ecological projects with even more exciting adventures.

To accomplish this, Charity Travel helps its causes on four fronts:
1. Volunteering and donating our expertise and knowledge. We do construction work, artistic work, teaching, farming, daily chores, writing proposals and translating.
2. Making a financial contribution, typically between 100 and 1000 USD (with the exception of the Rainbow CEC). In many cases this amount should be considered a gesture, though sometimes it represents a substantial contribution.
3. Spearhead a movement of Charity Travelers making use of social networks like 'couchsurfing' and 'facebook', and attracting attention from media houses, so that our causes get some publicity. We will produce detailed documentation in the form of the website and a book about all aspects of the journey and spread it around as much as possible to spur the movement.
4. Establishing linkages between needy communities worldwide. We emphasize creating a multi-ethnic inter-religious exchange. For example, agricultural expertise from Kenya could benefit a rural community in Cambodia, a Korean way to preserve food can be applied in Africa, composting knowhow gathered in Mocambique could be used in India, and so on. Expertise from many areas such as HIV/aids prevention, farming, food preservation, community organizing, special education, human rights campaigning could and should be shared worldwide. We encourage travelers to facilitate this sharing by presenting the expertise to communities en route.

- Identification of Causes -
Charity Travel has been gathering expertise in identifying viable charities and will publish a report about this.
Mainly, we are using the social network 'couchsurfing.org'. However, we have also tried alternative ways of identifying Causes using contacts of friends and established websites such as '
voluntourism.org' and 'idealist.org'.
- Why so many causes? -
We support a variety of causes because it is our goal to inspire as many young travelers as possible and convince them of the fact that getting involved in independent charity is one of the most exciting things you can do; by picking a multitude of destinations we hope to get some media attention and inspire other travelers to follow our example.

- Why is Charity Travel unique? -
Charity Travel identifies worthy Causes through social networking sites, notably 'couchsurfing.org'. Currently, Couchsurfing has 1.7 million members in February 2010 and through their sophisticated system of vouching and writing each other references, it generates a high standard of trust and safety. This way of identifying causes was simply not possible half a decade ago.
The explicit emphasis on inspiring travelers and creating a Movement makes Charity Travel more than just a noble initiative. According to our own research, this has not been done before.
- Who are we inspiring? -
Charity Travel is seeking to encourage and inspire as many travelers as possible to follow and improve our example. These travelers are typically young highschool or college graduates, looking for adventure, though the concept is not restricted to them.
Often, those young travelers would like to support a charitable Cause, yet they don't have the time or financial resources to apply for an official volunteering program as they often require a minimum duration of stay and a substantial financial contribution. These intrepid travelers, exploring the world before they start working or while taking a career break, could however contribute significantly to many charitable project. Furthermore, the aspect of their own sensitization should not be underestimated.
- Funding -
We have the means to plan, organize, and execute Charity Travel all by ourselves.
Currently we have received about 450$ and spent about 6300$ (as of April 15th, 2010)

- How to support -
We are looking into possibility of making Charity Travel an official non-profit organization in order to make sure donations are tax-deductible. Apart from that, we are open to constructive critiques, suggestions and established organizations that would be willing to cooperate with us or that consider sponsoring our project. Spreading the idea of Charity Travel by word of mouth will be the most effective way that you can help.

- Charity Travel in the Media -
We have written to numbers of media during different stages of the project. We do welcome media attention since it is part of our mission to encourage travelers to follow our example. Charity Travel has a facebook group and a twitter page.
http://twitter.com/CTkamielyeon

- Multilingual publishing -
This website is entirely in English. However, friends have kindly offered us their help to translate the main outline in French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Russian, Korea, Portuguese, Mandarin and Turkish, that can be found by clicking on the corresponding flag.
We are looking for a translation of the main page into Arabic, Indonesian, Italian, Vietnamese, Polish, Swahili and more. We would greatly appreciate your help.


Thank you.

Charity Travel


Charity Travel (CT) ist eine unabhängige große Reise um die Welt, die aufregendes Reisen und kleinere Charity-Projekte kombiniert. Ziel ist es, andere (junge) Traveller anzuregen, diesem Beispiel zu folgen. Charity Travel möchte zeigen, dass es heute möglich ist, große Bürokratien zu umgehen und direkt mit kleineren Charities vor Ort zu arbeiten, die unsere Hilfe wirklich brauchen. Der Akzent liegt darauf, möglichst viele Traveller zu inspirieren, indem ich ihnen zeige, dass Charity aufregend, cool, und effektiv zugleich sein kann.

Das Reiseprojekt wird zwischen Oktober 2009 und Dezember 2010 stattfinden. CT fängt an in Zentralasien, von Georgien über Land nach Ägypten. Anschließend drei Monate Afrika. Ende Februar geht es dann nach Indien, wo ich einen Monat bleiben werde. Danach folgen Südost-Asien und Ozeanien. Australien im Sommer, kurze Pause in Neuseeland. Abschließend hilft CT in Bolivien und Haiti. Das Projekt soll vor Weihnachten 2010 abgeschlossen werden.

Ich habe Kontakte zu einer Reihe vertrauenswürdigen Charities in aller Welt hergestellt, wobei sich das Internet, insbesondere die Seite couchsurfing.org als sehr nützlich erwiesen hat. Die Möglichkeit, so schnell einen direkten Kontakt zu zuverlässigen Charities zu knüpfen, war vor einem Jahrzehnt noch nicht möglich. Es ermöglicht mir, meinen Plan durchzuführen, ohne Geld für den Verwaltungsapparat auszugeben.

Charity Travel wird etwa zwanzig kleinere Charities in verschiedenen Ländern und Kontinenten besuchen, und ihnen einen Betrag zwischen 100 und 1000 USD spenden. Wir werden vor Ort entscheiden, wie das Geld einzusetzen ist. Ich werde jede Charity einzeln dokumentieren. Während meines Aufenthalts werde ich selbstverständlich möglichst viel helfen: Konstruktion, Kochen, Landwirtschaft und Unterricht.

Auf diese Weise hoffe ich junge Traveller zu begeistern und dafür zu sorgen, dass sie selber Lust auf Charity bekommen. Charity Travel zeigt wie abenteuerlich Reisen sein kann, gerade wenn es mit Hilfsprojekten für die Bedürftigen verbunden ist. Ich hoffe, dass eines Tages andere Traveller noch größere Reisen antreten, noch dringendere humanitäre und ökologische Projekte unterstützen und noch aufregendere Abenteuer erleben werden.

Ein wesentlicher Aspekt des Projekts ist Aufmerksamkeit in den Medien, da der Erfolg van Charity Travel letztendlich von seinem Bekanntheitsgrad abhängt. Je mehr Zeitungen und Zeitschriften über das Projekt schreiben, desto mehr Traveller überlegen es sich. Ich glaube, dass Charity Travel zusammen mit ihnen wirklich etwas verbessern kann.

체리티 트레블

Charity Travel은 (CT) 작은 규모의 자원봉사활동과 세계여행을 합친 새로운 컨셉의 여행입니다. 큰 규모의 NGO(비정부기구)단체를 통할 때 겪을 수 있는 복잡한 절차를 피해 진짜 도움이 필요한 곳을 개인적으로 직접 찾아가 봉사활동을 하는 것이 충분히 가능하다란 걸 보여줌으로써 다른 여행자들도 그들의 여행을 단순히 즐기는 것에 그치지 않고 봉사활동을 통해 더 가치있게 만들 수 있도록 만드는데 이 여행의 목적이 있습니다. 자원봉사활동이 흔히들 생각하는 '무겁고 지루한' 것이 아닌, 여행과 합쳐졌을 때 신나고 흥미로우며 그와 동시에 보람도 동시에 느낄 수 있다는 것이지요.

Charity Travel은 2009년 10월부터 2010년 10월까지 1년간 진행될 것이며 터키를 비롯하여 중동, 아프리카, 인도, 중국, 동남아, 호주, 뉴질랜드, 남미 등지를 여행할 것입니다. (자세한 여정은 Itinary에서 찾아보실 수 있습니다.) 각 나라를 방문할 때마다 큰 단체보다는 작은 NGO 단체나 자선단체, 문화단체, 고아원 및 현지인들과 연락하여 그들이 진행하는 여러 프로그램에 자원봉사활동을 하거나 미화 100불에서 1000불 사이의 기부금을 기부할 예정입니다. 기부를 할 경우 그 기금을 어디에 쓸 것인지는 각 단체와 협의하에 결정될 것이며 공정성을 위해 모든 것을 블로그에 기록할 것입니다.

우리가 하고자 하는 활동은 다음과 같이 요약할 수 있습니다.
1. 시간이 허락할 경우, 그리고 어떤 단체에서 운영하는 프로그램이 있을 경우 직접 자원봉사자로 참여.
2. 소규모의 기부.
3. 각 단체에 대한 소개글을 블로그에 포스팅.
4. 단체과 단체, 개인과 개인 사이의 네트워킹.

과거 힘들었던 네트워크 활동이 인터넷의 엄청난 발전으로 가능한 요즘, couchsurfing.org나 Facebook 같은 인터넷 네트워크 사이트는 소규모 단체나 개인과 직접적으로 연락할 수 있게 만들어 주었습니다. 이렇게 인터넷을 적극적으로 사용하여 진짜 도움이 필요한 곳에 직접적이고도 효과적인 자원봉사활동을 하고자 합니다. 우리의 작은 여행을 통해 큰 꿈을 안고 세계여행을 하는 많은 젊은 배낭여행자들이 자극을 받아 그들만의 또 다른 Charity Travel을 할 수 있다면, 그것이야말로 우리가 진정으로 바라는 것입니다.


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