WOMAN of ACTION – Rachael Tengbom Taking Action!

 

YOU AND YOUR FRIENDS ARE INVITED TO A

 

VOICES OF HOPE
  
 

 

 HOLIDAY “PARTY WITH A PURPOSE” OPEN HO– USE

(FUNDRAISER & AFRICAN BOUTIQUE)

Saturday, December 4th * 4:00 pm-7:00 pm

At the home of Vanessa Watson (Hills West: 296 Riverwood St. Richland)

Cost: $25 (Cash/Check ONLY)

Prepayment to the address below is encouraged, but tickets will also be sold at the door.

Please honor your RSVP.

(All proceeds go to support the Voices of Hope Project)

Invite your Friends & RSVP by Monday, November 29th to:

Theo_dobie@yahoo.com

or

CALL: Theo Dobie @ 509-438-7898
    

Kenyan Food, Wine, African Boutique/Holiday Shopping, Drawings

 

Meet Rachael Tengbom, VOH Founder, Maasai Tribe, Kenya

 

Not able to attend?

 

Donations may be mailed to:

Voices of Hope

* P.O. Box 6563 * Kenewick, WA 99336 

 

To find out more about

 MAASAI VOICES OF HOPE

  

 

As a teacher in Kenya, Rachael Tengbom couldn’t stop the genital mutilation of her female students.

Now she does, one girl at a time.

After moving to Kennewick, Tengbom started Voices of Hope, a nonprofit that aims to stop female genital mutilation by funding education for Kenyan girls and offering them a safe house. Her mission is particularly pertinent today, which is International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation.

Once Kenyan girls finish boarding school, there are few job options and most return to the villages where they were born, Tengbom said. There many are forced to go through the cultural circumcision practice that marks a girl’s entry into adulthood in the Maasai culture. Then they are considered ready for marriage.

“It is an abuse of women, and it should stop,” said Tengbom, a member of the Maasai tribe.

The World Health Organization defines female genital mutilation as the partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or injuring the female genitalia for nonmedical purposes. WHO estimates 3 million African girls are at risk of mutilation each year. The procedures can cause lasting problems, including increased risk of childbirth complications, infertility and recurrent bladder and urinary tract infections.

Tengbom said some girls bleed to death from the cutting, which is traditionally, not medically, done, and does not involve anesthetics. Tengbom was in Kenya last month, checking on the 17 women the nonprofit supports who are now attending college. They will graduate in September.

Of the 11 women who graduated from college in 2008, eight have jobs and the other three work with Voices of Hope, she said. Education translates to empowerment, Tengbom said. Once a girl is educated and has a job, she is safe. Tengbom said she has received support in the Tri-Cities for her mission. People can help sponsor girls through college, which costs $100 per month for school and housing.

Tengbom hopes to expand the organization’s safe house, in the Kajiado district of Kenya where Tengbom grew up. She said more girls came to the group this year than it could help. It has property but needs to build a building, she said.

 

What is

Voices of Hope“?

Voices of Hope is a non-profit organization that provides educational opportunities to vulnerable Maasai post high school young women in the Central Division of Kajiado District in Kenya.

 

 

 

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