The Future is Equal

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Love in the time of COVID

Darren Brunk
LEFT: Oxfam humanitarian specialist Darren Brunk; RIGHT: Oxfam New Zealand’s partner, the Tonga National Youth Congress put together a team of youth volunteers for their emergency response work in Tonga after Hurricane Harold struck last week. Here a TNYC worker uses Oxfam equipment to clean contaminated water for a community of 100 on the remote island of Nukunuku Motu.

I write this on a laptop propped up in a hastily-cleared space on the kitchen table, during that small window of opportunity that is a two-year-old’s afternoon nap. Only just a fortnight ago, rapidly rising infection rates of the coronavirus made a country-wide lockdown essential and upended the working world as we knew it. 

Everyday life has been turned upside down here and around the world, and while sheltering mostly at home, Kiwis across the country are quietly worrying about the devastating impact of the coronavirus crisis on the future of work and exactly how we’re going to pay the bills, if and when this is all over. Given the unprecedented disruption and the evident health risks, it’s hard not to focus our concern on those closest to us.

Through my work as an international humanitarian, the focus of my attention is often jolted far from my immediate situation to places where the need is the greatest. For people already living in poverty or crisis situations, any spread of this coronavirus will be far deadlier than what we’ve seen already, elsewhere in the world. And some of these people living in crisis are closer to our shores than we think. 

It’s hard enough here in New Zealand getting ahead of this tricky new disease – where water is free, we have space to distance from each other, and soap is cheap and plentiful. Imagine being a parent of young children in the world’s slums or refugee camps, where dwellings are crowded and soap, or even water, is a scarce commodity. In refugee camps where Oxfam works, hundreds of people share a single water tap.  

Or right now in the Pacific, where Cyclone Harold has raced through the region as a monster Category 5 storm – that means big and mean – and carved a high-velocity path of destruction through the heart of Vanuatu, before hitting Fiji and Tonga. When it comes to cyclones, the slow-moving ones like Harold are the worst kind, causing mayhem in the way of landslides, significant flooding and storm surges, and leaving behind smashed buildings, torn-up gardens and broken power and water systems. 

Meanwhile families face the terrible choice of staying home to face the storm, or cramming into over-crowded evacuation centres along with thousands of others, where they are vulnerable to infectious diseases like Covid-19.

Pacific Islanders know if coronavirus gets a foothold, the impacts could be especially bad. For now, island communities are keeping the global pandemic at bay, but coronavirus represents an ominous new threat for many of our Pacific neighbours living in already at-risk communities. The basic tools and protections we take for granted in our fight against this pandemic – healthcare, handwashing and physical isolation – are simply out of reach for many people living in extreme poverty or grappling with the devastation of a disaster such as Cyclone Harold. 

Many Pacific communities are using this time to do what they can to prepare, though any such preparations are blown out the window when a cyclone sweeps through the village. For starters, disasters such as Cyclone Harold sabotage any preventative measures such as lockdown or distancing. It also totally undermines a country’s ability to fund their already thinly-stretched public health services. Economically, the cyclone is a double disaster for Vanuatu, as almost half of this island nation’s economy is reliant on the tourism and hospitality that was just stopped in its tracks by the recent border restrictions.

A coronavirus outbreak in the Pacific may also disproportionately affect women and girls. Women are the primary care givers in the family and are key health care frontline responders placing them at increased risk and exposure to infection. Coronavirus risks increasing women’s workloads, as they care for children as schools close and the sick. There is a risk of increased family violence when families facing huge economic and mental stress are forced into isolation, especially in a region where pre-existing rates of violence against women are already very high. 

In most Pacific countries, access to quality health services including intensive care is limited. In PNG for example, there is 0.5 doctors for every 10,000 people; by contrast, New Zealand has 30. Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) including diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases, represent the single largest cause of premature mortality in the Pacific. These are some of the conditions for which this coronavirus presents the greatest risk. 

The challenges are real, but the situation is not without hope. A pandemic of this size and speed is not something we have seen in recent times, but the world has plenty of experience fighting disease. And Oxfam, alongside other NGOs and local agencies have much experience to draw on in supporting Pacific communities to deal with the devastation and aftermath of cyclones. While at-risk communities in the Pacific and elsewhere in the world lack access to even the most basic coronavirus-fighting tools, it’s one problem that humanitarian organisations like mine can help fix. 

There are basic things that save lives. We can distribute emergency sanitation and water kits, locally-sourced soap and other hygiene supplies from local markets; we can build hand washing points; we can install water purification plants in vulnerable communities to make contaminated water safe. We can build emergency toilets to improve sanitation conditions; we can use local water committees to share hygiene messages and identify people who may be at risk or infected. We know we can, because we do it every day, for millions of people around the world.  

Despite the many challenges, Oxfam is right now supporting community health workers to help the people worst hit by this crisis. Today, like every day, teams are working hard to channel life-saving resources into some of the world’s toughest places, helping to save and change lives. The people living in these places desperately need help from all of us. 

This global pandemic suggests a new era of solidarity and care for strangers. Troubling times remind us how much we love our friends and family – it’s also a moment to respond in a loving way to people we haven’t yet met.

– Darren Brunk works as a Humanitarian Specialist with Oxfam New Zealand.

Help stop the spread of coronavirus by donating today.

 

 

Pandemics know no borders. Neither does compassion.

Covid-19
Sometimes a week can feel like a very long time. As we watch the global spread of coronavirus and see our country and our world changing daily in front of us, we naturally feel concern, and even fear, for ourselves, our family, friends and beyond.
 
Everyone is impacted, whether feeling the distance of loved ones far away, anxiety for those in isolation, uncertainty around a job, or disappointment of having a big life event cancelled.
 
Take heart: while the pandemic knows no borders, neither does our compassion.
 
As someone who is part of the Oxfam community, I know you care deeply about how disruptive global forces can impact other’s lives. Thank you for how you care and look out for others – your aroha and ability to look beyond yourself is more precious now than ever.
 
This pandemic highlights how interconnected we are; our own health depends on the health of the person next to us, and the person next to them. And the same connections that make us a global village also mean we can overcome this challenge as a community, cooperating together.
 
Though we may have to be physically distant, we can practice social togetherness.
 
Thank you for being together with us. We appreciate your ongoing involvement with Oxfam in this tough time – your support means we can respond to the ever-growing needs. As experts in water, sanitation and hygiene during crises like the current pandemic, we at Oxfam New Zealand are preparing to respond to the compounding impacts of Covid-19 on those in developing countries who are already living in crisis situations.
 
We’re doing more of what we do best:
  • working with local community partners to save lives and meet basic human needs in global crises, including to prevent, slow and stop the spread of coronavirus
  • maintaining our existing overseas work to secure safe water, grow crops and other such needs, that are even more acute in a crisis like this
  • speaking up for strong, connected communities, with robust public services and governance that leaves no one behind, and that promotes community resilience to better face pandemics and climate destruction.
 
The challenges ahead are real. Here, in the Pacific, and globally, the impact of the virus will be much worse for people who are poor, not in regular employment or in precarious living environments. Women will be hit hard by this crisis. They make up 70% of the world’s health workers and shoulder the vast burden of unpaid care, which will increase dramatically with caring for sick family members.

Our response to tough realities such as these can strengthen our capacity for connecting across humanity, and demonstrating compassion and kindness.
 
The good news is that we know we can pull together to get through such crises. Just this week, communities in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo were celebrating the containment of a major Ebola outbreak, working hand-in-hand with humanitarian organisations including Oxfam.
 
Thank you for your commitment to forging a better world and kinder communities. We will let you know of our work to combat this pandemic as the situation unfolds, and we will keep up our efforts to eradicate injustice in all its forms. Strength and kaha be with you in keeping yourself and your loved ones healthy. 
 
Together we will keep working with courage and compassion in the face of this challenge.
 
Ngā manaakitanga,
 
Rachael Le Mesurier,
Executive Director, Oxfam New Zealand
 

How To Wash Your Hands Video

Washing hands saves lives, put your hands together and learn how. Oxfam has been providing safe clean water and helping prevent disease around the world since the 1960s. With Coronavirus being declared a pandemic by the World Health Organisation, there is no better time than now to learn how to properly wash your hands. 

Be part of something big

Volunteering for Oxfam Trailwalker is a unique experience; it’s fun, exciting, emotional, and rewarding.

As a volunteer, you get to support people to take on perhaps one of the greatest challenges of their lives, while at the same time helping people across the Pacific to overcome poverty. To put it simply, as a volunteer you are part of something BIG.

Over 1000 people will be doing the walk this year, aiming to raise close to $1 million for the work that Oxfam New Zealand and our partners do in the Pacific region. The outcome of this event can make a difference to people’s lives in Aotearoa and beyond. We could simply not do this without the help of our amazing volunteers. Join us!

Things you need to know:

The 2020 event will take place in Whakatāne, on 21-22 March, 2020.

You can sign up for as many – or as few – volunteer shifts as you like. Even taking on one shift is a big help, and a great way to be part of the event.


You choose your shift(s).
All the available roles and shifts are published in the online registration form. You can view the different positions and shifts that need to be filled throughout the weekend and pick the one that works with your schedule and skills – or whichever you think will be the most fun to do. Most shifts are 4-6 hours long.

You don’t need to be super fit or strong – anyone can be a volunteer. If you’re keen, there will be a role for you, however you want to help out.

Are you bubbly and excited? Consider being a Finish Line Host, presenting medals and giving the occasional sweaty hug to the walkers that have finally completed their journey.

Friendly, always with a smile, and patient? Be a Trail Marshal and be the face that tired teams see after many kilometres of sand dunes, stop-banks and hilly forests. You’ll give them that extra spring in their step, while also making sure they cross the road safely.

Want to literally give a helping hand? Grab that Jet Boat shift and help people up from the shortest jet boat ride of their lives. Love driving? Help with the logistics of the event and be a Courier. Read more about the different roles on our website or directly in the online registration form.

The most interesting ones are the graveyard shifts. According to the team average times, many of them are expected to finish their journey very late on Saturday or in the early hours of Sunday. Though this is not a time most of us are used to being awake and functional, it’s exactly why the presence of volunteers along the trail is valued even more by our amazing Trailwalkers.

Whakatāne is GORGEOUS! Totally worth a weekend away and reasonably close to most major cities in the North Island. Sunshine more often than not (oops, hope we haven’t jinxed it), stunning scenery and native bush, the beautiful Ōhope beach nearby and the most welcoming people. During the event weekend, the whole area gets transformed into “Trailwalker town” and the vibe is just incredible.

If you’re still thinking about it, read the following quotes from the 2019 volunteers, about why they signed up to help at Oxfam Trailwalker:

· “I’m a local and want to share our amazing place with others.”

·I have been a walker twice and needed a year off, really wanted to give back to the event and share my experience.”

· “I have grown up very community centred. I help at the local holiday programmes and primary schools of West Auckland to increase the learning opportunities for the children of our future. This will be an exciting opportunity and I would like to step out into the wider community to aid the walkers in achieving their goals with Oxfam. I am very passionate about being active and would maybe like to participate in the trail myself one day.”

· “I love encouraging people for their achievements! And making people feel so good on the inside about the amazing progress they choose to do for others and also themselves, plus I get excited over the smallest things so easily 😀 I have always heard about this from many of my friends in Australia and I finally get a chance to be a part of something that’s not just life changing but also plays a huge part in fighting poverty.”

· “I heard Oxfam Trailwalker is the only team challenge charity event in NZ to raise funds to end the injustices of poverty in the Pacific region. I think it will be a life-changing adventure and it would be meaningful if I could participate and be of help to someone.”

Head over to our website for more information on volunteering for Oxfam Trailwalker or get in touch! Olga, our lovely Volunteer Coordinator, can be reached at otwvolunteer@oxfam.org.nz and is happy to answer your questions.

See you in Whakatāne?

Give back by signing up to volunteer at Oxfam Trailwalker.

Farmers helping farmers

A Kiwi sharing skills in Timor-Leste

Lou Bird, a Kiwi ex-farmer and a Volunteer Service Abroad (VSA) volunteer, is working together with Timorese farmers and their families to improve nutrition, yields and income generation.

Oxfam’s project in Timor-Leste focuses on supporting Timorese farmers to become self-reliant and to thrive. Working through local partners, Oxfam delivers tools, training and advice so they can boost their income and secure a steady supply of food.

“My role is working with the local NGOs that deliver the project at the grassroots level. That suits me down to the ground, because it’s hands on and I’m interacting with farmers,” says Lou.

“There’s something about farmers worldwide that whenever farmers get together, they always have something talk about – climate, soils, pests, nature…”

Shelling machine
One of the candlenut shelling machines provided to rural Timorese communities.

One of the initiatives Lou has helped deliver alongside Oxfam involves a new candlenut shelling machine, which saves women the laborious task of cracking the nuts one by one.

“Deshelling candlenuts is hugely time consuming. It’s typically women’s work. A sack of candlenuts in the shell would typically take one person a day and a half to shell. One by one, on a rock,” he says.

“One and a half day’s work for one person can now be completed in 10 minutes. The women are thrilled. It’s a radical transformation and potential for that crop.”

Mung beans
A farmer holds nutritious mung beans from a recent harvest.

Lou has also used his expertise to help farmers grow nutritious crops that can be easily stored and eaten during the low season: “We’ve been promoting the growth of dry bean species – mung beans, soy beans, red beans – and peanuts, onion species, shallots, that in the right conditions can be stored for a very long time.”

Umbelina de Araujo Ximenes & Francisco Bensasi
Farmers Umbelina de Araujo Ximenes and Francisco Bensasi with their son, 6.

These new crops help tide families over through the hungry months, when cassava – a filling but nutrient-poor staple – would usually be the primary component of their diet.

“When people have got good nutrition and adequate food and things, then you’re stronger and you can accept more challenges.”

Decades of experience as a farmer in New Zealand has given Lou a special insight into the many challenges of small-scale agriculture, but also how rewarding it can be.

Lou Bird_Anna Mosley ONZ 2
Lou Bird with Anna Mosley, Timor-Leste portfolio manager at Oxfam New Zealand.

“One of the big things I have in common [with local farmers] is understanding cycles… understanding risk from a farmer’s perspective, because the buck stops at the farmer. Farmers are at the very bottom of every value chain within the food complex.

“The other element is that I recognise the ability of the farmers. They are good farmers. They have been successfully growing food crops for hundreds, thousands of years – I don’t know how long.

“And it’s really satisfying for me to be able to turn to these farmers, and say to them, ‘Well, you know how to grow food. You’re good farmers. So where is it you want me to give you some support and help, and we can talk about things?’”

The impact on rural Timorese communities has been deep and widespread. Thanks to the generous donations backing Lou’s work, many small-scale Timorese farmers have been given the support they need to feed their families nutritious food all year round.

The IMPACT project is co-funded by Oxfam New Zealand’s generous donors and the New Zealand Aid Programme. Lou is on a VSA assignment with Oxfam in Timor-Leste.

To support Oxfam’s work in Timor-Leste and around the world, visit www.oxfam.org.nz/donate.

Edgecumbe woman takes on Oxfam’s 100km trailwalker for the third time

Kate Casey Oxfam Trailwalker
Kate Casey, centre-right, with fellow walkers at the finish line of Oxfam Trailwalker in 2018. Photo: Photos4Sale/Oxfam

 

Edgecumbe local Kate Casey (and third time Oxfam Trailwalker participant) lost her home and most of her possessions when a breach in the Rangitāiki river stop bank unleashed a wall of water on the small community. To keep her spirits up, Casey decided to take on the 100km Oxfam Trailwalker in 2018 after completing the 50km with her sister before the flood. “We went through a lot, and putting my all into training helped me immensely. It helped me to stay positive on down days when I didn’t really want to go for a walk, but then I would and I’d feel better.”

This year Casey will be doing the 100km for the third time, with her current team Quads of Fury, who are all based in Whakatāne. Completing the 100k trail is no small feat, but the same will and perseverance that got Casey through the devastation from the flood helps keep her going when training gets hard. “I keep walking even when I’m sore, because I’m too determined not to finish. I don’t like to give up.” The Quads of Fury ladies have a unique way to motivate each other to keep going while on the track. “One funny thing our team does is that we sing a version of 99 bottles, but instead it is how many kilometres we have walked.”

Oxfam Trailwalker is being held in the Bay of Plenty region for the fifth and final time – for now. It features 100 kilometres of trail through Whakatāne, Ōhope and Edgecumbe on a track that sees participants walking along coastal tracks, sandy beaches, farmland and native bush. Seeing the 2017 event kick off in Edgecumbe meant a lot to Casey after everything the community has been through. “It was really neat seeing a lot of the locals around the Whakatāne walkways cheering us on. That was awesome. Last year the event started one street over from where my house was in Edgecumbe. We had a laugh that I could have rolled out of bed late and still made it!”

Despite the obstacles she has faced on and off the track, Casey has been able to successfully complete the track each year, proving hard work truly pays off. “This experience has been amazing, it’s shown me that I can achieve whatever I put my mind to. Despite everything going on, I did it, and my kids saw me do it.”

Oxfam Trailwalker has now become a family event for the Caseys. This year, Kate’s sister will be doing the 50km event with her mum, niece and eldest son in their own team. “Everyone in my family has had their high points and low points, and Trailwalker has helped us to support each other through tough times.”

Late last year, Kate and her family embarked on a year-long trip around the South Island. “With everything that happened, we made a big decision to give up work, sell up, and buy a caravan. We just needed a change to help us heal after everything we’ve been through. But we’ll be back in March for the walk.” Quads of Fury plan to stay connected despite the distance until they are reunited in March for the big event.“We had tears when I said goodbye the other day. We’re planning on video-chatting while we train, so that we’re still walking together.”

Casey firmly believes that anyone can participate in Oxfam Trailwalker, and highly recommends the event to anyone looking to give it a go. “It is the experience of a lifetime. I’ve been able to do something to help myself. I have built life-long friendships, we’ve done something together that is so memorable and will never forget, but also you are helping a great cause. It’s a win-win. If you think you can’t do it, just try.”

Entries for Oxfam Trailwalker close on 31 January, 2020. The event is being held on 21-22 March, 2020 – in the scenic Bay of Plenty region. Find out more here