Street Child Support Fund

Save a War Affected Child From the Street in Liberia Today!!

People entering with a committment to help in all possible way, to contribute to child's survival from the street, either by cash or kind.   Your ideas, little cash donations, and mentorship to the development of the search for better aid stactegies that would lead to creating a better future for some of the over 3,445 street children working and living in t ...learn more

GROUP DETAILS

Created: Oct 03, 2008

Updated: Oct 23, 2009

Membership: Open

Semi-Private

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Created: Jun 29, 2007
Updated: Aug 03, 2009
Viewed: 21 times

David Chamberlain

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User Info 

Address: 735 Hickey Boulevard STE 304
Pacifica, California 94044
United States
 
I Am: Social Entrepreneur
 
Member Since: June 29, 2007
 
Local Time: Sun Nov 22 04:22:22
 

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Areas of Focus 

Social Entrepreneurship (3664 people)  |  Sustainable Livelihoods (2708 people)  |  Leadership Training (2491 people)  |  Cultural Diversity (2547 people)  |  Women's Vocational Training (557 people)  |  Women's Education (1074 people)  |  Women's Safety from Violence (969 people)  |  Conservation Policy (743 people)  |  Cultural Heritage Conservation (1237 people)  |  Traditional Culture (1636 people)  |  Women's Empowerment (1836 people)  |  Philanthropy (1379 people)  |  Community Enterprise (1846 people)  |  Democracy and Civil Society (1959 people)  |  Culture and Sustainability (2701 people)  |  Gender Equality (1675 people)  |  Indigenous Rights (1677 people)  |  Film (1537 people)  |  Water Rights (905 people)  |  Conservation and Recreation (1192 people)  |  Practical Conservation (962 people)  |  Wilderness (1759 people)  |  Community Service/Volunteerism (2366 people)  |  Fundraising (1583 people)  |  Endangered Plant Species Protection (950 people)  |  Conflict Resolution (1848 people)  |  Community Resources (1762 people)  |  Community Participation (3626 people)  |  Sustainable Living (3469 people)  |  Human Population Growth and Impacts (1438 people)  |  Indigenous Peoples and Cultures (2789 people)  |  Television (819 people)  |  Women's Health (1191 people)  |  Women's Rights (1300 people)  |  Photography (1708 people)  |  Journalism and the Press (1497 people)  |  Media and Communication (2708 people)  |  Video (1196 people)  |  Internet (2554 people)  |  Radio and Audio (905 people)  |  Indigenous Lands (1198 people)  

About

In the beginning
In 1972 my grandfather, grandmother and I visited the poorest country in the western hemisphere: Haiti. Much to my grandmother's dismay, my grandfather decided that our adventure for the day would be exploring the countryside with a Port Au Prince taxi cab driver as our guide. After an hour driving down a dusty rutted gravel road we stopped in at a rural marketplace to experience life in rural Haiti. It was along the side of that dirt road that we had our first personal philanthropic travel experience.

Soon after the dust from our cabbie's Toyota had settled, un-clothed children, adults and their livestock emerged from the surrounding area, undoubtedly to closely examine my aqua and orange tailor made Miami Dolphins leisure suit with white leather loafers. We were surrounded by smiling faces wondering who we were and why we had stopped by to say: bonjour. Ten minutes later, after just about everyone in the crowd had a chance to smile at us, touch us and make direct eye contact with us a soccer ball flew through the air. I trapped it and quickly passed it back to my new teammate who received it effortlessly after it had flown right over the heads of several adults.

"When we are very young children we know how to feel. It's innate. But as we lead a lifetime, we pick up so many thoughts, impressions, feelings, and ideas, that our sensitivity goes away." -F.L. Ph.d

Connecting
I bonded with the local kids and my grandparents stood side by side with adults from the village while the cabbie lit a cigar. My grandmother, initially fearful of the unknown was now smiling, calmly and communicating in sign language with local women, and enjoying her experience. We all seemed to connected for those brief moments. The spontaneous transcendent events of that morning's cross cultural experience are still vivid today, as they were so many years before. Those few moments changed our lives.

Deja Vu
During my first trip to Africa while driving between Maun, Botswana and Windhoek, Namibia I was moved to pull over at a village in a remote area of the Kalahari Desert, much to my friend Linette's consternation. She declined my offer to join me for a walk into the center of the grass hut village and decided instead to stay in the car -with the doors locked. Ten minutes later I returned to the car with a crowd from the village: children running, mothers talking, fathers trailing the entourage and once again soccer balls flying through the air. Linette gracefully emerged from the car with a smile and began to open the clothes intended to gift.

Captivated by everyone's curiosity, kindness and easy laughter Linette and I spoke of life in their village and life in our village in Switzerland and the USA. We felt our guests humanity and warmth, we were welcomed and felt safe as guests of the community. An hour later after sharing gifts of Nike tee-shirts and old Levis we had agreed to deliver two men who needed a ride to their cousins funeral in a village 25 kilometers away. Sent off with with an open invitation to return completed with smiling faces, vigorous handshakes and waves we set off down the Trans-Kalahari Highway towards Namibia.

A New Journey
While driving I realized that the seed for Exquisite Safaris Philanthropic Travel, planted 27 years before in rural Haiti, had just awakened in Africa. That afternoon as I drove through the Kalahari Desert with Linette and our two new acquaintances on their way to celebrate an ending, I began again on a new journey: introducing travelers to locals with the intention of uplifting those local people and their communities through health, education and sustainable development.

If you are a traveler I encourage you to become a philanthropic traveler. Exquisite Safaris has developed partnerships with humanitarian outreach projects in Africa, Asia and South America: Orphanages, AIDS and medical clinics, schools, women's entrepreneurial initiatives, and clean water NGO's that will open their doors to you and connect you personally with the people they serve.

"Life changing luxury travel experience for you: health centers, clean water, schools and women's rights for those less fortunate in the locales you traverse: philanthropic travel".

-David Chamberlain

"Don't follow the crowd. The crowd doesn't get there. They just run round and around in a crazy race. It never ends." -F.L. Ph.d

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dellyvil 5 months ago
I would like you to be my rolemodel.please reply!
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