Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Janet Littlefield

Janet first went to Malawi when she was in the Peace Corps. This is just some information about her and what she is doing.

RPCV Janet Littlefield has built an orphanage in in the village of Chigamba to shelter, feed, and give medical care to homelss children


RPCV Janet Littlefield has built an orphanage in in the village of Chigamba to shelter, feed, and give medical care to homelss children

Littlefield said during the next few years she would like to raise between $30,000 and $40,000 annually to expand the orphanage and build a medical clinic, dining room and library, a roof for the schoolhouse and more living facilities to take in more orphans.

RPCV Janet Littlefield has built an orphanage in in the village of Chigamba to shelter, feed, and give medical care to homelss children

Hebron Academy teacher founder of African orphanage

By Rebecca Goldfine, Staff Writer
Thursday, September 7,2006

HEBRON - Before there was an orphanage in the village of Chigamba, Malawi, homeless children had to survive by begging, often wearing the only clothes they owned.

But since 2003, with the dedication and donations of a 30-year-old teacher at Hebron Academy who has built an orphanage there, local children have been sheltered, fed and given medical care.

And the orphanage is impacting more than just children in Malawi. This summer, Janet Littlefield brought four teenagers from the academy with her to Chigamba for a month-long trip that affected the students and fortified her mission.

"It changed their lives going there; they think differently," Littlefield said about the students. "The other part was for the orphans and to show them that we care and others care and to trust that we will be there to support them."

Littlefield, a science teacher originally from Union, started the home in 2003 with money she donated from her teaching salary and from fundraisers. Since then, the orphanage has grown from 20 children to 56. They are cared for by a staff of 14 teachers and workers.

An international AIDs charity called Avert reported that in 2005 more than half a million children in Malawi had been orphaned by AIDs. By 2003, roughly 14 percent of the country's adult population had been infected with HIV, according to data from the United Nations Development Programme.

Littlefield first went to Malawi as a Peace Corps volunteer after she graduated from Skidmore College in 1998. She was assigned to teach in the Ntaja region in the small, landlocked African nation tucked between Tanzania, Mozambique and Zambia.

While there, she funded the education of an orphan almost her age name Shaibu Kaliati, who today is the director of the Little Field Home, named by the staff in honor of its founder.
Submitted photo Janet Littlefield of Hebron Academy is surrounded by children from the Littlefield Orphanage, which now shelters and educates 50 children. .

Littlefield sends the money, Kaliati oversees the orphanage. Littlefield guesses so far the investment into the orphanage has totaled $15,000.

During the recent trip to Chigamba, the four Hebron Academy students slept on the cement floor of the home along with the children, living without electricity or running water. They taught seminars on nutrition, AIDs, goat husbandry and health.

The group was met with singing by the villagers.

Sarah Irish, an academy senior, said the rough living conditions were made bearable by the hospitality of the villagers. "There is no running water, the bathroom was a hole in ground, but the people were really nice, so you didn't notice," she said.

"It's always been my dream to help other countries and impoverished places," Kelley Hilton, another student on the trip, said recently. While there, she taught basic health care, such as how to wash hands, apply band-aids and use toothbrushes.

Hilton graduated from the academy this spring and is studying pre-med at the University of New England. She described being astonished by how much the people in Chigamba appreciated small things, even what she considered trash.

"We had a flashlight container, a plastic case you carry flashlights in," Hilton said. "The next day it was a toy."

Irish taught a course in nutrition. "It was just stuff I knew from living in America, from having access to things." She continued, "Going to third world countries you think people are going to be very upset, but they just want to be able to live where they live, but healthily."

Amanda Robinson, now a freshman at the University of Maine, helped workers with their goats to improve breeding and successfully birth healthy kids, based on her own experience raising sheep, Littlefield said.

Laurisa Barthen, a senior at the academy, ran an AIDS/HIV workshop in Chigamba Village. She also recently raised $1,500 for the home in a fundraiser in her hometown of Atlanta, Ga. held at a restaurant that allowed her to throw a silent auction and wine tasting event.

Littlefield said during the next few years she would like to raise between $30,000 and $40,000 annually to expand the orphanage and build a medical clinic, dining room and library, a roof for the schoolhouse and more living facilities to take in more orphans.

A spring walk-athon in Hebron raised $5,000, and matched with $2,000 from other donations, the orphanage was able to buy a minibus. The bus provides an income to the home because it serves as a taxi for locals.

The home costs about $1,000 a month to run and to feed even more children than it houses. Last spring, Littlefield officially launched a nonprofit called Friends of Little Field Home, and information is available on the home at www.littlefieldhome.org .

And Littlefield hopes to keep going, creating a chain of orphanages based on this model.

"My goal is this is not the last orphanage to help," she said. "It is so hard for me to watch kids who have no opportunity to improve their life. Every kid deserves to have all that."

http://peacecorpsonline.org/messages/messages/467/2059360.html

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The Kids at the Littlefield Home

The Kids at the Littlefield Home
This is a link that will show you pictures of all the kids currently living at the Littlefield Home. http://www.littlefieldhome.org/Orphan%20Photos.html

Bibliography

"Building a Dream." 2008. 12 Feb.2008. http://oprahwinfreyleadershipacademy.o-philanthropy.org/site/PageServer?pagename=owla_homepage

This is the website for the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls. You are able to donate money, books, other things that the school needs and learn about the school and its campus and curriculum. The website was not as helpful as I thought it was going to be. I wanted more information about the history, who went and what the girls thought. Overall, however, I thought the the site was pretty helpful.


"Building a Dream." NEA. 2008. 11 Feb. 2007 .http://www.nea.org/reviews/building07.html


This site just had some questions and answers about the school and about South Africa in general. Some of the information was interesting and helpful to know, but other information was not really helpful. A lot of the information was not about the school, but about South Africa.


Chideya, Farai, and Charlayne Hunter-Gault. "Africa Update: Oprah Winfrey's Work with Schoolgirls." 8 Jan. 2007. 6 Feb. 2008 .http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6741388


This was part of News and Notes on NPR. It was very interesting. I got a lot of information about the school and also about the girls going there. I heard some of them talk and tell NPR how happy they were to have been chosen to go to Oprah's school. It was cool to actually hear their voice and not just see their name and some words in quotes.


Farell, Denis. "Oprah Winfrey Opens School for Girls in South Africa." USA Today. 1 Jan. 2007. 6 Feb. 2008 .http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2007-01-02-winfrey-school_x.htm


This article was very helpful. It was chock full of both information about the school, how it got started and quotes from Oprah and some girls. I really got a sense of how much this school changed the lives of these girls and that Oprah really cares for each individual. She didn't just build the school to waste money and to get publicity, she did it because she wanted to help.


Goldfine, Rebecca. "Peace Corps Online." 7 Sept. 2006. 27 Feb. 2008 .

The information that I got off this website was very useful. It just explained what Janet Littlefield was doing simply. It also had quotes from her that I had not read anywhere else. It was easy to read and understand.


Hunter-Gault, Charlayne. "Oprah Opens Leadership Academy in South Africa." NPR. 2 Jan. 2007. 6 Feb. 2008 .http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6716116

This was part of Morning Edition on NPR. It was really good. The other story that I listened went into more detail, this story gave me a nice overview. I learned about the school, what Oprah thought, and what a few girls thought. Although not as helpful, it was still nice to listen to.


"The Little Field Home 2006." You Tube. 1 Nov. 2006. 27 Feb. 2008 .

I really liked watching these videos. They really showed what life was like at the orphanage. I especially liked seeing the children and the smiles on their faces. The videos were not only about the orphanage, they had some information about Malawi as well with was very useful.


"Little Field Home 2007."
You Tube. 15 Dec. 2007. 27 Feb. 2008 .

I really liked watching these videos. They really showed what life was like at the orphanage. I especially liked seeing the children and the smiles on their faces. The videos were not only about the orphanage, they had some information about Malawi as well with was very useful.


Littlefield, Janet. E-Mail interview. 24 Feb. 2008.

Littlefield, Janet. E-Mail interview. 22 Feb. 2008.

Littlefield, Janet. E-Mail interview. 21 Feb. 2008.

Littlefield, Janet. E-Mail interview. 11 Feb. 2008.

Littlefield, Janet. E-Mail interview. 7 Feb. 2008.

Most of these interviews were just little messages me asking if she was willing to help me or her asking when she needed to have the answers done. Overall the interview on the 24th was the most helpful. This was when she answered the questions that I had previously e-mailed her. She answered them with more detail then I could have ever imagined. This was some of the most useful information that I have ever received. I learned not only about the history, but how what she has done has personally effected her. I also heard about a couple of the children who have been at the orphanage and who have touched Janet very deeply.


Littlefield, Janet. "The Littlefield Home." 31 Jan. 2008 .http://www.littlefieldhome.org/LittleField%20Home.html

I used this website for quite a bit of the information that I got about the orphanage. It has a brief history, the short and long term goals and tons of pictures of the school, the kids, and also of some of the students that have been there. The best part of the site, however, it where it shows a picture of each child that is staying at the orphanage. When you saw the smiles on their faces and the happiness in their eyes, you could tell that this life and the Home was a lot better then the life they had before they came to the Littlefield Home. After searching though the site, I still had a ton of questions, but they were all answered by Janet herself via e-mail.


"Love is in the Details." Oprah.Com. 2008. 6 Feb. 2007 .http://www.oprah.com/presents/2007/academy/dream/building_101.jhtml

This site had over 20 pictures of the school. Some were of the early stages of the school when it was only half done, others were of the finished school both outside and inside, and still others were of the girls grinning faces at their new life at the school. Although I did not really gain any information about the school, I gained a lot of what the school looked like and how much Oprah really does care about the girls who go to her school.


"Meet the Girls." Oprah.Com. 2008. 6 Feb. 2008 .http://www.oprah.com/presents/2007/academy/girls/girls_main.jhtml


These were videos of some of the students at the school. Out of all the information that I gathered about Oprah's school, this was the most beneficial. You hear and see about a couple girls stories of their lives before their went to Oprah's school. You see their fear and sadness from living in dangerous places or the loss of family member, but you also see hope and light because they have a dream, a dream to have a new and much better life not only for themselves, but for their families as well. It was these stories that made me realize that you do not have to be super rich to make a difference, you just have to have a heart and dream.


"Oprah Winfrey's Biography." Oprah.Com. Sept. 2007. 6 Feb. 2008 .http://www.oprah.com/about/press/about_press_bio.jhtml

This site was not very helpful. There was only a little paragraph about the school. It basically just summed what I already knew up.


Van Gelder, Lawrence. "Oprah Winfrey Opens Her South African School." New York Times. 3 Jan. 2007. 12 Feb. 2008 .http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9806E2DE1730F930A35752C0A9619C8B63&scp=4&sq=Oprah+Winfrey+Leadership+Academy+for+Girls&st=nyt

This website was also not very helpful. There was a paragraph on the school and it gave some quotes but just summed up what I already knew.


"Visit to Little Field Home 2007- Video Collage "Slow Motion"" You Tube. 16 Dec. 2007. 27 Feb. 2008 .
This video was a lot of pictures of the orphanage. They really told you what life was like. Out of all the videos, this one was my favorite.

Books and People

  • Janet Littlefield