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New Hope Newsletter 2016

Greetings as the year 2016 comes to an end. Thank you for all that so many have helped New Hope during the year. Thank you to those who have read our last Newsletter and given for the Love Bundle appeal; much appreciated. We still have Love Bundle Virtual Gift Cards available.

Eliazar New Hope India.

The CHRISTMAS LOVE BUNDLE APPEAL 2016

As always we are stepping out in faith to ask if you could help with New Hope Trust India. Its our annual Love Bundle Christmas appeal.

I am writing on behalf of Maggie sister who is not well at this time. Hopefully we can all share part of the incredible efforts Maggie sister put into fund raising for New Hope. Graeme Harris who recently took on the voluntary task of Treasurer will help organise sending you the Love Bundle Card. (You can pay by PayPal or Bank Transfer). Other friends will also have them to promote the appeal. Deanne Chatt who previously was a Trust Secretary is back in Australia and will have cards for friends in her group.

Leprosy is still a real health problem in India, its not historical, it real today sadly.

See Leprosy & Colony Support

Please support us in this Annual Appeal that changes the quality of life of some of the poorest people imaginable.

THE CHRISTMAS LOVE BUNDLE…What is it?

Christmas Love Bundles are given out to aged Leprosy patients and you receive a card to pass on as a gift to others, for every Christmas Love Bundle purchased.you receive a hand-made Christmas Card from New Hope which can be given instead of a gift.

Maybe you will buy a Love Bundle card on behalf of your family or to give as a gift to a friend or family member who you know would rather see that you have, on their behalf given a gift that will change a life, than be given another $20 gift voucher for yet another CD!

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In the Christmas Love Bundle the patient gets:

  • New Bed Sheet and Towel.
  • A Sari and Blouse or Loongi and Shirt for men
  • New specially made Sandals for their deformed feet.
  • Soap, Scented Powder, Coconut Oil, a special Comb, Sweets.

ALL WRAPPED UP WITH LOVE & A BIG RED BOW!

Love Bundle 2016

Love Bundle 2016

$20 dollars is all it takes to give something so treasured to people in much need of items so simple; their excitement in receiving a Love Bundle and it is amazing to be there to witness.

Maggie Sister

Maggie Sister

In January 2016 a group of Australians together with a couple from England joined us in a 15 day off the track Bike Ride that covered all major projects of New Hope where the Love Bundles were distributed. It was an incredible experience for them. It was a pleasure for me to see how both the bike riders and the aged who received the Love Bundles smiled and enjoyed the giving and receiving .One of the hi-lites was seeing the joy on leprosy patients and aged tribal women, people who come for cataract eye surgery and homeless women in the city near to New Hope, receive the Bundles of Love. (We also gave the children of Jhan Jhur Colony a children Love Bundle)

Maggie sister enjoys this part of New Hope visits as she sees what a difference to the quality of life this small bundle makes to people. New Hope India Relief Australia Inc.

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This is what you gave with every $20 Gift Bundle of Love

Each Love Bundle gives each elderly Leprosy patient. New comb, sandals, sari, bath towel, soap, coconut oil, scented powder, hair clips and sweets. Bundles of Love are really more than just presents or a gift. They contain practical needed items* A comb with a long and wide handle, that is easy to hold as many of the aged leprosy patients have deformed hands. A pair of sandals, Velcro tape straps, inserts made from soft flexible runner. The soles are tough recycled car tyre rubber. Each is made to fit the foot as almost all the aged have a serious foot deformity. The sandal prevents ulcers caused through the now curable disease. For the women, a bright Indian sari, which they swap with other women to get the colour that ‘suits’ them. The men are just as enthusiastic to get a new ‘western’ shirt and the traditional loongi. A cotton bath towel is a must too. It’s a great time to be here when the Bundles are distributed. For the aged who receive these Bundles; Soap, hair oil, scented powder, hair clips for the women – are all luxuries. They all like a card with the gift: it binds them to the idea of it really being a gift, from friends that they never will meet who have included them in their Christmas.

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May You have a Wonderful Christmas and Happy Peaceful 2017.

Eliazar T Rose, Director, New Hope India
Maggie Sister, OAM, Patron of Friends of New Hope Australia.

New Hope Newsletter June 2016

It has been a long time since Maggie sister has put out a newsletter for the subscribers of New Hope Australia. At this time Maggie sister is very ill and we are filling in to take the pressure off her. With her present health problem we are hoping that she can take a break from the intensive fund raising she usually does and others will take a ‘share’ in this important role.

Like Maggie sister we are stepping out in faith and to quote her “I’m stepping out in faith to ask if you could help with New Hope Rural Leprosy Trust – India. I know that this year I have failed in being able to send enough money to New Hope India and that because of this some projects have had to have been pulled back a little. I haven’t had good health this year and so I haven’t been able to actively raise funds as much as I have over the past 26 years”. Maggie sister.

It’s a long newsletter, but in the end I wish you to know that we appreciate you simply being part of our ‘New Hope family’ – Please feel free to email any question. I think you all know that donations over $2 Donations to New Hope Australia are Tax deductible with DGR Status.

Let me go back to October 2014 and use the Hud Hud Cyclone as a marker. Its destruction was indescribable. The picture we had sent became real for Maggie sister and Allan (now Mr and Mrs McMullen) when they arrived in January 2016. They saw how many of the giant old mango trees that you would have thought could never be shifted even by a cyclone had gone. Sandy Furtado and Gary Urquhart had been at New Hope in January 2015 and we appreciate beyond words the work they did helping to ‘clean up’. Yet in all the effort you can still see things not like they used to be. Pieces of small broken cement sheets on the ground here and there. Stacks of pruned trees that will be sent to the timber mill for cutting to use later. It’s hard to imagine what would not have happened if the people (you) in the New Hope Australia network had not given so generously.

Hud Hud Cyclone

Hud Hud Cyclone

Hud Hud Cyclone

Hud Hud Cyclone

The Bike Ride four ten days in January of this year were fantastic bearing all things in mind. As the Director (under work pressure) I was so happy that Allan had volunteered to be the ‘organiser’ and co-ordinate with the Indian team who did a great job. For those on their second ride it was also sad because of the passing of young Vasu Gabriel in March 2015. His passing could be seen in so many ways it was hard to grasp. In all 14 Australians and 2 Brits came for the event. The couple from England had been volunteers when we were ‘young Indians establishing a rehabilitation leprosy project and treating more than 2,300 positive leprosy patients across 23 leprosy colonies in north west Orissa (now Odisha)

2016 India Bike Ride

2016 India Bike Ride

In these ten years we have changed from giving an education in a tutorial system to a recognized school in a very modern building donated by a couple in Japan; retired teachers. Although we lost a lot in the cyclone and a subsequent tornado the ‘garden’ – from vegetables to grass for the cows and grazing for the goats held its own. The garden was the easiest repair job as nature showed us and our pumpkin harvest was great.The bike riders met all of the children, one on one in Kothavalsa. Many are sponsored and I hope those who are sponsoring received a photograph of the child with Maggie sister. Let me know if you didn’t. It allowed me to reflect on the changes that Maggie sister has seen over just the last 10 years. It was amazing to see so many grown up young people, not shy to speak to visitors in their Indian English – which is not Aussie at all! Little girls are now teenagers and going to College. I will keep this simple. Not one child going to school comes from a so called ‘normal’ background. These children are well cared for by New Hope but the children are self achievers, as a team, a group, a younger generation community. It gave us a sense of what we dreamed of years ago; independent and educated with their own personality. New Hope doesn’t portray hungry children in rags. That is how many of them actually do come to New Hope but New Hope sees that as yesterday. Tomorrow is what counts for the child.

Vegetable Garden Pumpkins

Vegetable Garden Pumpkins

Self sufficiency is an important goal. More and more solar is being added as funds come in.

MUNIGUDA – This remote and isolated place in western Odisha where from my own 25 plus years know how much change has happened because Australians gave funds for Safe Delivery Kits, Anti-Tetanus immunization and Polio immunization. What a great sense of satisfaction for New Hope; for a backward State like Odisha, for a nation that was so far behind has now eradicated Polio. Leprosy and Polio and Safe Delivery Kits were the main targets of our collaboration with Maggie sister and goes back 25 years to days when we trekked up hills on paths to isolated villages where the idea of a ‘white person’ was unknown! Leprosy patients lived and were treated terribly in those days and it is a kind of celebration to see positive changes. Sadly the disease is far far away from eradication. Namaste House – was once almost 75% of Polio crippled children. The corrective surgery offered in those times was made possible through support from Australian donors. Namaste House is now a Home for Challenged Children. Reality is this is the only place for such children in western Odisha. Part of the mental disability was resolved with the introduction of iodized salt by us 15 years ago. What a riot of joy and simple ‘this is me’ attitude of the children. They love social activates of music and singing and to entertain. The people who care for these young people are to be admired for their patience and devotion. These young people are simply a part of the New Hope family, sentimentally and in reality of the situation they live in. We have been able to keep our links with the Dongria Kondh tribal community in the surrounding hill forests against the odds of anti-social interference caused by the threat of mining in the hills that is considered sacred to the tribals. Its complex and we see beyond that in being links to non formal education. Through New Hope efforts formal education and care centers are now possible. We have maintained our links with better sustainable agro activities too. For women we have been their key to better mother and child health. We have had to change our working plan for cataract eye operations. It’s been a challenge but the number who have had the opportunity to cataract eye surgery as not decreased. The Community Centre is their link for both health and to access rights that they are entitled too. People who give virtual gifts on line for seeds and tree seedling would see the result of that in the 55 tribal villages we cover.

LOVE BUNDLES: Of the many Love Bundles pictures I like this one of Tribal Women Health Workers giving out bundles to destitute women in Muniguda Community Centre.

Tribal Women

Tribal Women

The woman on the right is the senior Social Worker and has incredible responsibility for handling pregnant women and ensuring they have Safe Delivery Kits (One of the great ongoing projects that Maggie sister keeps herself involved in)

Thank you to all of you who faithfully give to our Love Bundle appeal once a year and many who give at different times during the year. We hand out these gifts close to Christmas. Your Bundle goes out to people at a leprosy clinic taken over from Gandhi Memorial Leprosy Foundation by New Hope in a remote rural area. Rural people with cured leprosy and having ulcers; part of the disease problem. Truth is that the disease is not eradicated as we are often led to believe and I we see again, young people at the Outpatients Clinics we organize.

It worries us all that young people are coming with early deformities – self reporting to our Clinics. I mention the gratitude for the Love Bundles because these simple gifts change the quality of life of some of the still poorest people, especially aged in leprosy colonies and aged in the tribal villages, to homeless women in the city shelter we are now assisting.

Kindest regards
Eliazar T Rose.

Chairman New Hope India.

Maggies News 2012

Hello Friends of New Hope, It’s been a while since I wrote a newsletter. That’s because I have felt a bit down and I know why. In February I was to take my annual trip to New Hope India, and my partner Allan was coming with me.I was so looking forward to it as Allan hadn’t been to New Hope with me for 4 years. Allan is also Chairman of Friends of New Hope Australia so it was important that he see the changes too. Unfortunately Allan badly damaged his left shoulder,  had surgery and is fine now, we are planning to go for Christmas and the way the year is rushing by, it will be here in no time. But it has left me with a feeling of ‘missing out’ which is ridiculous really because New Hope in Indian is very well organized with the work. I have been going to New Hope for 23 years and the problem is, because Staff, Patients and Children are like my Indian family now, so I’m missing them. One of the main things that we have accomplished in Australia was being passed by Aus Aid and the Taxation Department to be TAX DEDUCTIBLE. We are hoping now that business people and you our supporters will have tax relief when donating to us.

Venkatesh is an orphan child in need of sponsorship support.

Venkatesh is an orphan child in need of sponsorship support.

Child Sponsorship has always been important and with Education being the greatest gift that we give to our children, I had hoped sponsorship would be better than it is.I knowit’s easy to be swayed emotionally when you see the big organization’s on TV with their emotive adverts. The thing is, we don’t want to spend money like that for Sponsorship because it means the child won’t get the full sponsorship amount. That’s something we pride ourselves on. All sponsorships with us get 98% of that money for them, as we all volunteer our time and pay our own way, no allowances.2% is for simple administration, a cost that is inevitable. Next time you are thinking of sponsorship and what it means to a child, please come to our website and sponsor.

Nookalu – A girl in need of care and education

Nookalu – A girl in need of care and education

That’s something we pride ourselves on. All sponsorships with us get 98% of that money for them, as we all volunteer our time and pay our own way, no allowances.2% is for simple administration, a cost that is inevitable. Next time you are thinking of sponsorship and what it means to a child, please come to our website and sponsor.

In India Eliazar (Indian Director) has been busy as usual. He never stops doing, thinking and acting for his patients,the children and everyone that comes for care or help. Eliazar is inspirational to all he meets. He and Ruth are also very impressed that their daughter Honey is taking an administration responsibility at our new school. Honey has been working in Dubai, for some years and in that time learnt many skills that make her perfect for this position.

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We supported three senior girls to Nursing and all qualified and Pavani has decided to work with us both in the Hospice for the HIV children and also in Muniguda every month for a few days when the Cataract eye surgery is going on. The surgeons do on average 30 patients at one time and we have been doing 60 to 90 a month this year. Pavani is still ‘recovering’ from the incredible surprise for her, of meeting the man whose family had sponsored her Training. Michael Avery who we think of as ‘the keeper of the website’ made a short but memorable visit and by seeing all the pictures he had been dealing with on the website ‘came to life’ in his visit. The Cataract eye surgery is all sponsored, and I smile when I think that the dear old folks who ‘suddenly see again’ have had it all paid for ordinary people like us around Australia. The funds we raise go to all kinds of projects. New Hope is a well run organisation that has externally audited accounts – every nut and bolt so to speak is accounted for .When funds are donated it enables us so to fix a pump, buy a wheel chair, purchase second line HIV drugs, fix a motorbike that a Paramedic uses, repair the bathroom doors on the aged leprosy patients home – endless and almost mind boggling what we see done with the donations.
I would like to thank the friends from different places across Australia for holding ‘morning tea’ fund raisers for the cataract eye surgery projectand for the Tribal women nutritional programme that targets pregnant women aiming to reduce child low weight births that is the main cause of infant mortality in their community. One thing is clear we need to go on doing everything to help these women as it has long term repercussions on the number of pregnancies they have due to the loss of a baby. In all throughout the Tribal villages, New Hope has visited and helped over 500,000 people. Isn’t that amazing?
I have said many times that we can’t improve their poverty but we can improve their quality of life.

Giving Medicine

Giving Medicine

Rohini- RIP, The senior Citizen of New Hope Muniguda.

In 1995 when we were working independently through the Government of Orissa permission to eradicate leprosy we covered 2,500 villages, most were remote, in hills and forested area with no roads. One pioneered area of eradication of leprosy and immunization of women and children is called Raghubari. FIOH and New Hope Rural Community trust helped fund the construction of a First Aid Centre and Community Centre. Rotary assisted in us putting in a Solar, then rare vaccination ice box. Mr. P. K. Patro who is still with us kept reporting a man who was living in a tree branch hut at the end of a path in the furthers village. The man already grossly deformed had been evicted form his village. He lived by village people putting food scraps in a pot which he was permitted to collect only in the nights as seeing him would be ‘bad luck’. After being told by many villages in the area that we could not take water from their wells as we too were contaminated by working with leprosy patients we all became more and more determined that the ‘man at the end of the path’ would be convinced to take medication and also be encouraged to come and stay at our Community Centre. It took a lot of everything and eventually he started treatment, was declared negative and then left his hut and came to stay with us at the Community Centre in Muniguda. In Raghubari area where all this happened, years and dates and age have no meaning. You either lived to be married or died and then you lived to see you’re your own children born to live or die. No event ever took place in Raghubari that would let you say ‘I remember this or that” – The first date was established by us – starting a Clinic. There was a path up through the hills to the plateau and we kept widening it and making it a little easier because of our long time volunteer Maggie sister who kept encouraging us to make it more accessible for women to come down to the Government Hospital or to market, and so the Maggie Track started.

Over the last two years his care was given from the Rotary Club of Midland, as are all of the Aged Leprosy Affected in the Custodial Care Centre were – Thank you.

 

He recently passed away peacefully in his sleep.

He lived the last 15 years with a better quality of life, more services than even 90% of the population in Raghubari – which still has a high Infant Mortality rate, but NO leprosy. Sadly malaria is a major killer. Rohini was grossly deformed and always made us aware in those days that ‘early treatment prevents deformities’ – He rarely complained, mostly smiled and laughed everyday at something and was respected by everyone and certainly loved by the children in Nameste House as he was a great teller of forest stories. Age unknown – but very old!

The senior Citizen of New Hope Muniguda

The senior Citizen of New Hope Muniguda

We will always have a wish list as New Hope is about improving and maintaining a quality life for all our patients and the children.

1. THE $500 WISH LIST

We have planned well and have grass well organized ready to get a new COW to increase the milk for children, especially the HIV.

We are coming close to break even with our POULTRY project. If we had a donation it would been we had the cash flow to sell the non laying hens and take in new chickens. Its easy to manage if we had the funds to turn over the programme.

4. PROTECTIVE FOOTWEAR for LEPROSY PATIENTS 
Whenever I visit a Leprosy Colony, usually with Eliazar – I see the Cobbler fitting specially made protective sandals. I have known the cobbler since he was a child at Nameste House. His legs grossly deformed by Pilio – (now eradicated.) Now married with 2 children Bhakti was trained for the job and he does it well. I still feel sad when I see these older children, now grown up of course, but sadly deformed by Polio. I think of the many times I would go with the Health Team uo to a Place called Raghubari. It was a path through the hills and forest. There is still a sign ‘The Maggie Track’ – but now not a bad road like out the back of Broome.

5. CATARACT EYE SURGERY
If I am still volunteering for New Hope when I am 90 – we will still be asking for money for cataract eye surgery! The situation is that sad and that bad. We are in contact with more than 2,000 leprosy patients all aged or aging and New Hope is their only chance in 9 out of 10 cases for getting the simple operation. The number of aged poverty line Tribals will be ongoing for at least the next 20 years as the ‘fall behind statistic means there are always 4% aged blind with cataract. Without a charitable organization like us the problem will never be resolved. The Government knows the problem and is thankful for what we achieve in helping them. New Hope is a Government recognized Hospital. The Surgeons come from Government hospital to operate. In the simplest terms – we are restoring vision Its simply needs $50.

6. The TEN and TWENTY DOLLAR wish list.
New Hope India still amazes me with what they do with $10 and $20 dollars – I even feel embarrassed when I see how little I get today with even $20 when I go shopping – and yet with the exchange rate difference and Eliazar and Ruth careful buying – well it amazes. 2 Bedsheets, thick cotton long lasting $10.. Everyday reasonable quality rice for children or aged leprosy patients – or to supply food to two aged homelsss people who live ‘squat’ in the New Hope Bus Shelter $10 gets 25kg. To supply 25 rural Tribal women in the hills a Safe Delivery Kit to help reduce Infant Mortality Rates $20. All children need footwear in the Homes and Care Centres – It not fashion but a need to help cut back on parasites (hookwork=msthat feed on the childrens blood in the stomach) $20 – gives 5 pairs of sandals.
If you made a PayPal or Bank Order for $10 a month – a girl would get education that will change her future life and the family she will eventually have. $20 given every month would simply ensure that 12 aged leprosy patients got a care pack that we call a Bundle of Love. OR – If you would like to give any amount at all and would like to tell us how.

  • $10 2 Bedsheets for Aged Leprosy Patients or HIV+ Children
  • $10 25 Kg of Rice or 6 litre cooking oil or 6 kilo of a legume for protein
  • $20 Safe Delivery Kits for 25 women in a rural tribal village
  • $20 Children’s Footwear – Sandals for 5 girls

Thank you all for all that you do in supporting New Hope, we appreciate every donation, prayers and thoughts that you show to us.

Maggie Sister.

Ps Don’t forget that I love to talk about New Hope and have been visiting clubs, churches and women’s groups for many years. It is not a fund raising talk, but a sharing with you my passion for New Hope India. This is a great way to spread the word about New Hope and I’m told that people enjoy it and my sense of humour. Please contact me via email here.