SCHARP 'Bite' benefits AIDS orphans

Center News


June 2007

Statistical employees' annual potluck supports rural Malawi community

Wendy Brown, Hsiu-Ying Huang and Donna Robinett
Photo by Stephanie Cartier
From left, Wendy Brown, Hsiu-Ying Huang and Donna Robinett, clinical research nurses, explore the ethnic-food flavors of SCHARP's Bite of 1616. The potluck included a PowerPoint presentation on the impacts SCHARP employee fund-raisers have made in Malawi.

What can individuals do to improve life for children orphaned by AIDS in Africa? Four years ago, employees from the Center's Statistical Center for HIV and AIDS Research and Prevention asked the question and discovered starting small is better than not at all. Through grass-roots events such as raffles and potlucks, SCHARP employees are working to prevent more than 80 orphans outside of Lilongwe, Malawi, from becoming statistics.



Aftrican children
Photo Courtesy of SCHARP
To date, SCHARP employees have given these children, 3 to 8 years old, wool blankets, clothing, a school building and basic school supplies.

Since the group's fund-raising efforts are 100 percent volunteer-based, there are no overhead costs. Donations to events, such as last week's Bite of 1616 ethnic-food potluck, are sent straight to the community near Lilongwe, known as Dzama. To date, SCHARP has raised more then $7,000 to accomplish the following:

Construction of the school is now complete. Proceeds from the Bite of 1616 will purchase blackboards, doors, bookshelves, books and pens for the school and help fix the village's water drainage system.

To learn more about SCHARP's community project, send an e-mail to sc.community@scharp.org.

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