Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Leaving with Books


My husband, Ricky, leaves for Manila today. He brings with him hope, optimism for a good project in the Philippines, and some books for Synergeia--to be brought to the elementary school provinces in the Philippines.

Many thanks to all our donors, this time to Ruby and Ed. They sent a lot of young boys' books: Goosebumps, Pokemon, science books, classics. It has become quite obvious that Ed's boys are very well read. Congratulations and more power!

Ricky will take the books in personally. It is my dream to one day bring the books to the children myself. Meantime, I am excited to receive pictures soon. . .




Also, don't forget, there will be an Antioch Library Book Sale this Friday from noon til 6 p.m.

See you there!

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Books delivered to our porch

I would like to acknowledge our donors, Devin, Logan, and Mikayla, and mom Christina, for their usual kindness and generosity.

Look what they brought in:


Congratulations for having these beautiful books once.

Many thanks! Rest assured, these precious books will reach the children in the Philippines, who have no access to colored picture books like these.

Kids on my Mind



I am excited to ship out a new box by end of September. I can imagine the faces of the many children who will get a new book to read. . .

It's not too late! Just keep sending me your used children's story books. I will send another box out in January, too!

Monday, September 3, 2007

What Are Books Without the Light?

Rolex Laureate 2002 award-winning electrical engineer Dave Irvine-Halliday is a man with a mission: bringing light to homes, schools, and temples throughout the developing world.

In 1997, at a colleague’s invitation, electrical engineer Dave Irvine-Halliday spent his sabbatical leave from Canada’s University of Calgary in Nepal, helping the University of Tribhuvan in Kathmandu launch its electrical engineering degree.

(David Irvine-Halliday)

While there, he took a side trip into the heart of the Himalayas, on a trek along the Annapurna Circuit. Along the way, he visited a small village where he noticed that children were forced to study in the dark—or more likely, were not able to study at all—after the sun went down because there was no electricity.

Irvine-Halliday saw the light in his mission. If you were his wife, would you allow him to pour your family’s entire life savings, and the maximum limit on three credit cards into an organization that would Light Up the World?



Yes! Apparently, you would!

Working from his lab at the University of Calgary, he devised a plan for bringing low-cost lighting to villages without any reliable power supply: He would create energy with a pedal-powered generator, a hydro generator, or solar panels, then run lines into homes and connect them to low-energy (LED)lamps. In 1999, Irvine-Halliday went back to Nepal with his wife and one of his two grown sons to try out his idea. It worked.

By the end of 2001, Irvine-Halliday’s rechargeable, battery-powered, white LED cluster lamps were illuminating more than 700 homes, schools and other community buildings in remote villages in Nepal, India and Sri Lanka.

Today’s high-brilliance, white LED lamps can light a Nepalese village of 60 households consuming the same amount of energy as a single 100-watt light bulb in a Canadian home.

Light Up The World is not only donating light to the very poorest, but is also promoting job creation and assuring long-term viability for the project.Irvine-Halliday founded, financed, and turned-over Pico Power Nepal, a LED manufacturing firm, to Nepalese locals to ensure its sustainability and to generate employment and income in the area.

The average "one-time" cost of equipping a home with lighting is set to fall below $40. Not to mention the environmental benefits the system has versus the 300 million batteries discarded in Nepal each year, makes for truly a brighter alternative.

Light from kerosene lamps is poor, inefficient and unsafe. Toxic fumes inhaled because of close proximity to the lamp cause respiratory illness. Kerosene lamps also cause many fire catastrophes, burning both homes and bodies.
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Check out the countries Light Up the World Foundation has impacted here.



Irvine-Halliday defines his success in his interview:

"I suppose success is when the 2 billion people in the world presently without any electricity of any sort actually have some form of safe, healthy, and affordable lighting. . .Light the Wolrd has refocused my life. I am turning 60 and this, without a doubt, is the next chapter in my life."

How can we change the world today?