Mgbala Agwa Youths Forum

Community Chief loses wife

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in village life

By Nduka Ozor, MAYF
October 3, 2005

MGBALA AGWA, NIGERIA: The Mgbala Agwa community was thrown into mourning last week, the 26th of September following the death of Chief Mrs. Eunice Ukwu , Mrs.Ukwu wife of chief Charles C. Ukwu the traditional ruler of Mgbala Agwa Autonomous community died after a protracted sickness at the age of 68.

Mrs. Ukwu was an advocate of women Liberation and women empowerment was instrumental to the inclusion of women in decision making body of Mgbala Agwa. She has been described by many of her followers as a focused woman who goes extra miles in meeting the objectives of her project.

She was a dedicated Catholic, a Christian mother, and one time leader of Agwa Women’s Organisation. She worked tirelessly to see that Mgbala Agwa gained her autonomy from the Government of Imo state.

She is a mother too many, she offers succour to the less privileged, and was working with MAYF on Family Planning issues.

She will be missed by the Mgbala Agwa Youths Forum and the entire Mgbala Agwa Community. She is survived by her husband, Chief Charles C. Ukwu and her children.

May her soul rest in perfect peace.


Internationellt KulturUtbyte Participates in MAYF’s ‘Catch Them Young’ program

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in catch them young (cty), iku, village life, volunteering

By Stephan Bren, MAYF
Tuesday, November 15, 2005

LAGOS NIGERIA: Representatives of the Swedish youth organization, Internationellt KulturUtbyte (IKU), traveled to Lagos, Nigeria, to participate in MAYF’s Catch Them Young, a program for educating Nigerian youth with regard to HIV/AIDS.

IKU Östersund is a non-governmental youth organization working to address international issues and to establish relationships with other non-governmental organizations around the world. IKU began collaborative efforts with MYAF earlier this year, by observing and assisting with MAYF educational programs, and meeting with MAYF and local government leaders.

MAYF and IKU Ostersund members during the pilot CTY planning

IKU representatives returned to Lagos on June 6, working with MAYF and local government to further develop MAYF’s Catch Them Young program. During this period, MAYF and IKU representatives visited primary and secondary schools throughout the Mgbala Agwa region to introduce the program to school children.

IKU also helped organize local activities, including a street walk and football tournament in the town of Mgbala Agwa. The street walk provided interested townspeople with information and counseling on HIV/AIDS. IKU representatives concluded their visit by touring the region’s health care facilities.

Emma and Turid of IKU Ostersund presenting a discussion on HIV/AIDS awareness at a school, while members of ICYE Nigeria listen. The discussion was a part of the CTY pilot program.

IKU noted the challenges that MAYF faces with regard to HIV/AIDS, identifying lack of education on HIV/AIDS as one of the most signficant challenges. For example, some children that IKU interviewed thought that HIV/AIDS was contracted through toilet use, while another disliked using contraceptives and believed that God would protect her.

Another challenge was cultural and involved the varying status of men and women, were young women are not encouraged to educate themselves on such matters. Such challenges underscored the need to “catch them young,” in order to install early education and awareness of the dangers of HIV/AIDS and how to protect oneself from these dangers.

Female soccer teams compete as a part of the CTY program, HIV/AIDS awareness strategy.

Such challenges also highlighted the importance of women’s participation in MAYF organization and educational activities, in order to help women make more informed choices regarding sexual activity. In general, IKU found considerable enthusiasm among the youth that participated in MAYF events.


Mgbala Agwa Gets Parish

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in village life

By Nduka Ozor, MAYF
August, 2005

MGBALA AGWA, NIGERIA: The people of Mgbala Agwa were recently granted parishood by the Owerri Catholic Archdiocese after 25 years of agitation. According to Mr. Pascal Uzoma, the Station Council Chairman, he said, “For over 25 years, the Catholic worshippers in Mgbala Agwa have been in the struggle to have a Catholic parish of their own from the Archdiocese of Owerri Ecumenical”. The reason for this is not far fetched. First, the worshippers he said trek over 3 km to worship at the central parish in Agwa. This sometimes has made them miss better part of the gospel, or sermon . Again, they claimed that they have been making enormous contributions to the development of other communities.

According to Mr. B. C. Ogbonna, a Catholic movement leader, said that the community has contributed to the development of Catholic faith in Imo state and therefore deserves a Catholic parish of their own. “This”, he said, “Will bring more converts into the Catholic family in Mgbala Agwa and draw more people to God.”

He said that the community has produced over 5 Reverend Fathers, 3 Reverend Sisters, a Monk and other Catholic Clergies.

In a celebrated mass to thank God for granting them the new parish, the Rev. Father of Christ the King Parish Agwa, the pioneer parish in Agwa enjoined Mgbala Agwa community to maintain their faith in Almighty God. He charged them to be prayerful and work in line with God principles which is all about the love of God and Love of mankind.


MAYF Wins Online Volunteer of the Year for 2005

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in volunteering

BONN, Switzerland

Stephan Bren, MAYF Volunteer

Awarded for Contribution to achieving MDG6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases and MDG8: Develop a global partnership for development

Millennium Campaign: “No Excuses, Promises Must be Kept”

Stephan has provided the Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum (MAYF) with a professional website, that the organization is very happy with, and that has been favourably commended by several visitors. MAYF operates a resource center on prevention, control, and management of HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted diseases in rural Nigeria.

Stephan approached his website development assignment just as he would have dealt with any business project. As a starting point, he took the basic ideas of the already existing MAYF website, that had also been developed by online volunteers. Stephan re-designed its structure from the ground up, applying standard design guidelines and instituting a typical development and testing process, to arrive at significant improvements with regard to site usability, scalability, and maintainability. During all development stages, Stephan has made sure that the new website truly represents a team effort. He closely involved MAYF staff in every step, ensuring that the site would perfectly meet their needs and expectations, and included contributions from fellow MAYF online volunteers.

Since the completion of the website, Stephan dedicates about an hour per week on maintenance tasks, a time commitment that is more than sufficient because of the stability of the site. With this arrangement, he is happy to still stay involved with MAYF, while he can dedicate more time to his newborn baby daughter, who he often carried on his lap while developing the MAYF site.

A Swedish development organization recently found the Mgbala Agwa website via a search engine. Its professional design caught their attention, so that they investigated further the activities of the organization. As a result, MAYF is now developing a joint programme with this Swedish organization in their local community in rural Nigeria.

“It still amazes me to think, that through the Internet, I have had a positive impact on an organization half way across the world! … The Online Volunteering service has provided me an opportunity to volunteer my skillset, computer information technology development, in ways I couldn’t have imagined previously. It has enabled me to accomplish a desire to contribute to meaningful causes while still being able to meet my own family and professional obligations by working from home.”


Internationellt KulturUtbyte Visits Mgbala Agwa Youth Organization

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in catch them young (cty), iku, village life, volunteering

By Stephan Bren, MAYF
Wednesday, June 6, 2005

LAGOS NIGERIA: A representative from the Swedish youth organization, Internationellt KulturUtbyte (IKU), recently traveled to Lagos, Nigeria, to meet with Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum (MAYF) and community leaders, to explore ways to improve AIDS education and other health issues through collaborative projects and workshops.

IKU Östersund is a non-governmental youth organization working to address international issues and to establish relationships with other non-governmental organizations around the world.

For many years, IKU Östersund has searched for an organizations in Nigeria with which to collaborate in addressing such challenging social issues as HIV/AIDS. After learning about MAYF through its website, IKU Östersund contacted MAYF to explore possible collaborative projects together.

MAYF then invited representatives from IKU Östersund to learn more about MAYF and its community first hand. Marielle Paulove was sent by IKU Östersund to meet with MAYF and community leaders and initiate a partnership between IKU Östersund and MAYF. Marielle has been to Lagos before, while working as a volunteer over a six month period the previous year.

MAYF is a community-based organization (CBO) registered with the local authority as a Youth Forum. It is the first of its kind in Nigeria to function as a resource centre for in-depth research into history, prevention, control and management of HIV/AIDS and Sexual Transmitted Diseases. It targets an estimated population of about 450,000 Nigerians in rural extensions and is focused on HIV/AIDS, Educational Awareness, Environmental Technology, Youths empowerment in Mgbala Agwa, a rural community in Imo State, Nigeria.

Over an event-filled four day period, Marielle met with MAYF and community leaders and youth, observed community health practices and education programs, and worked with MAYF staff to develop two projects: one involving the development of an awareness campaign on community health issues and the second focusing on teacher training in HIV/AIDS at government schools in the surrounding area.

Mgbala Agwa Nigeria Health Center - Staffed by only 1 Nurse

Marielle noted the significant challenges facing the MAYF with regard to community health issues. One challenge involves healthcare. The Mgbala Agwa region has a rural population of approximately 100,000, but is served by a single government subsidized health center, which is staffed by a single nurse, and having few medical supplies.

Another challenge involves funding for development of the new MAYF library, as the local government is not able to fully provide due to limited resources. Lastly, one of the greatest challenges that the community faces is simply inadequate education. the Mgbala Agwa region has just three small schools serving over 600 children. So small are the school facilities that not all children can fit into a classroom at once, during instruction.

school in mgbala agwa nigeria

Additionally, some classrooms are not adequately equipped with tables and chairs and only feature a blackboard and a stone floor. Community families cannot send all their children to school at once, since they are needed to assist with farming, which is the primary means of livelihood in the region. Despite such challenges, Marielle was impressed by the commitment and dedication of MAYF and community leaders to address these challenges and find solutions to them.

The lack of adequate education in the community is one of the primary challenges that MAYF faces in its efforts to fight AIDS. The importance of education in addressing AIDS was clearly noted by Marielle in her many conversations with community members. For example, one young girl that Marielle interviewed thought that AIDS was a disease transmitted through dirty toilets.

marielle paulov with mgbala agwa children

The importance of education is well-understood by the MAYF coordinator, Nduka Ozor, who considers education the principle and most effective means by which he can address the painful impact of AIDS within his community. Nduka is particularly interested in educating the young, since “If no one teaches them, sooner or later someone will teach them the wrong thing, and that is why we have to catch them young.”

Currently, IKU Östersund is working to obtain financial support for a future project with MAYF, planned for 2005.


MAYF Volunteer wins UNV Online Volunteering Award!

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in volunteering

United Nations Online Volunteering Service, 2004

Blandina applied with the Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum to research donors that would fund the establishment of a library on HIV/AIDS in a small Nigerian city. Since then, the Nigerian organization has been on her mind, inspiring her creativity, and accompanying her throughout her daily life.

When choosing the assignment to search for donors for Mgbala Agwa, she thought it was a good fit, as she could make use of her network of contacts around the world that she had created by living in various places. Her application was accepted within two days, and she got started immediately.

Blandina started telling her friends about her new involvement with Mgbala Agwa – and was surprised to encounter a lot of prejudice. Why of all places had she picked to support Nigeria, they commented, where so many Email-scams have their origin, and where corruption is so prevalent? She realized that if people around her had their doubts about the value of investing time in a small Nigerian organization, it would be most difficult to convince donors to invest money.

A website would be a good place to refer donors to and would add credibility and transparency to the organization, Blandina thought. She started talking to anyone she knew about her website idea, until eventually, through a friend of a friend of a friend, she found an online volunteer to configure Mgbala Agwa’s website.

The website was soon followed by more projects that Blandina came up with in support of Mgbala Agwa. Currently, she is writing a self-help manual for new online volunteers to the organization, based on her own experience and that of the other online volunteers – who are in regular contact with each other via email and online forums.

“When I signed in, it was 5 hours a week, but with time I realized that you can’t really put time to anything but just do the work and try to make a difference.”


Football 1 – HIV 0

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in campaigns, football, village life, volunteering

By Emily Grogono, ActionAid
2004

Football matches provide an opportunity to teach people about prevention of HIV/AIDS in the town of Mgbala Agwa in South Eastern Nigeria.

Nduka Ozur is the founder and co-ordinator of Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum, a community-based organisation that uses football and books to tackle the problem of HIV/AIDS.

Nduka established MAYF because he was worried about the rising death rate in the town of Mgbala Agwa in South Eastern Nigeria. ‘I am attending a funeral this weekend for someone who died of AIDS-related disease,’ he tells me.

He decided to focus on educating young people because ‘they are the most active and the most vulnerable.’ He points out that if the youth is destroyed, the whole community will suffer.

Poverty is rife in Mgbala Agwa and access to basic facilities like health and education is limited. UNAIDS states that HIV/AIDS prevalence in Nigeria currently stands at 5.8% but could increase rapidly. ‘Initially people did not understand what HIV/AIDS was about.

“Some people thought that I was trying to expose their extra-marital affairs! I wanted to abandon the idea, but I am talking about my own people, I have a social responsibility.” While Nduka admits that has been frustrating at times, it is never an option to quit.

MAYF initially set up a library with literature on HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases. “The Community Library is for youths and rural users. We have over 50,000 books and CDs. The library is an invaluable way for people to learn about AIDS and in turn share information with their peers. Unfortunately illiteracy means that the library is not accessible to all.”

This is where football comes in. “Through football, we address nearly all the community and reach people that would not otherwise have sought information.” MAYF members are on hand to talk about HIV/AIDS while people cheer on their teams.

Since the first event in 2001, the football match has become a successful annual event, pulling large crowds. “The winners of the competition don’t matter, but hopefully we’ll kick the virus out.”

football1

“MAYF is not a one man thing!” Nduka jokes. It has an executive body and over 150 members. Netaid online volunteers also support MAYF by collecting books for the library and researching funding for new programmes.

“Catch Them Young”, MAYF’s latest project, targets children aged 6-15. ‘Our aim is to educate children on the dangers of unprotected sex. We want to preach abstinence.’ There is no money for contraception and anti-retro viral drugs here.

We are talking online because I couldn’t get through to Nduka on the phone. His internet café is closing. I ask him what keeps him going? “‘To hear people discuss HIV/AIDS. To see my members become more productive young people with hopes, contributing to the community.”

“It is my dream to have every youth here participate”. Nduka is determined not to let HIV/AIDS win in Mgbala Agwa.


Fundraiser at the Q Bar in London

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in fundraiser, volunteering

By Fatima Kola, MAYF
2nd November 2004

The Q Bar in London is opening exclusively on Wednesday, 11th February 2004 for a fundraising party to benefit the development of the HIV/AIDS library in Nigeria.

The party is being hosted by a number of University of London intercollegiate societies, including the UCL Law and Economics Societies, UCLACS and the SOAS Law Society.

Julian Johnson has kindly donated his time and expertise to promote and organise the event, with the aid of the UCL/SOAS Fundraising Team for Mgbala Agwa.

Tickets are on sale in advance and at the door, with prices to be announced. All tickets will, however, be priced at under £10. To purchase tickets, please contact Fatima Kola.


Volunteers Stay Awake for 24 Hours for Charity

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in fundraiser, volunteering

By Angela Han, MAYF
August 2005

Online Volunteer Administrator, Angela Han, has organised the Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum’s Worldwide Online Volunteer Team to participate in Project Blog.

Project Blog is a worldwide charity event where participants stay awake for 24 hours, blogging for every hour to help raise funds for their chosen charity.

You can view their blogs by visiting mayf.blogspot.com and blog04.blogspot.com.

To sponsor these participants, please go to www.project-blog.org and create an account. Once you have activated this account, click Sponsor (on the left), and then choose the blog that you want to sponsor.


Online Volunteer in Turkey Helps Build HIV/AIDS Library in Nigeria: Armed with facts, villagers work to halt spread of epidemic

February 19th, 2009 | Posted in library, volunteering

By Tony Iyare, United Nations Development Program’s ‘Choices’ Magazine
December 2003

Mgbala Agwa, Nigeria – No one is sure just how many people have died due to HIV/AIDS in this town of 15,000 but to the people who live here, the deaths are adding up. The rising death rate here as well as across sub-Saharan Africa, where 29 million people are living with the disease, were enough evidence for 36-year-old Nduka Ozor, a Lagos-based business man and coordinator of the community’s Youth Forum, that people needed to get the facts about the disease.

Working with online volunteers from the United Nations Volunteers and NetAid, Mr. Ozor has been able to stock a library at the village health centre with reading materials on HIV/AIDS and other sexually-transmitted diseases. Mr. Ozor found out about the UN Online Volunteering Service while surfing the Web, registered, and was able to find volunteers.

“I conceived this idea in June 2001 after seeing the alarming rate of deaths in my village. I got in touch with online volunteers to support us in our programmes to educate our people and we got more books than needed,” Mr. Ozor says.

Initially, his idea was not well received. “When I first mentioned the idea of educating the community about the negative effects of HIV/AIDS at the village assembly, I was almost booed and jeered,” he recalls. “Some locals even thought I was out to expose their murky extramarital affairs to their wives,” he says.

Some 4,133 kilometres away in Istanbul, Turkey, Yasemin Gunay, a 21 year-old engineering student at Bosphorus University, was the first to respond to a Web posting for volunteers.

“I found an assignment that I had in mind right away,” Ms. Gunay says. “Mgbala Agwa had posted an assignment for online volunteers to search for book donors for their newly opened library.”

Today there are about 3,000 volumes that line the shelves of the tiny library, which is housed in a closet-sized room in Mgbala Agwa, a town that can be reached via a five-kilometre dirt road that joins the main highway to Onitsha, a major market in the south-east, the nexus of Nigeria’s oil industry in the stormy Niger Delta region. This Igbo homestead is located about 700 kilometres south-east of Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital, and sits on table-land in a green belt spiced mostly by palm and gmelina trees. Its vast green and serene nature and motley collection of thatched houses were obviously spared from the devastation wrought by the three-year-old Nigerian Civil War, which raged between 1967-1970.

The library, along with a local HIV/AIDS awareness campaign, have helped slow the advance of the disease in Mgbala Agwa, which is in Imo State, where the HIV/AIDS prevalence rate is 4.2 percent out of a population of 3.3 million. That rate is expected to rise to seven percent within two years.

Online volunteers coordinate donations

Donations to the library, books and computer CD-ROMS, were coordinated by online volunteers under the aegis of a service run by UN Volunteers and NetAid, a non-profit organization. In addition, the project has been supported by various organizations, including the World Health Organization, UNAIDS, Johns Hopkins University, The Hesperian Foundation and other organizations based in Australia, Canada, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom, the United States and Zambia.

After several e-mails from Mr. Ozor outlining the needs of the new library, Ms. Gunay established an online Yahoo group that allowed various volunteers to communicate and share files. Through Ms. Gunay, who spent close to 1,000 working hours on the library project, the efforts of several volunteers were coordinated and the various outreach activities aimed at organizations and authors produced significant contributions.

Ms. Gunay believes that through the books, the people of Mgbala Agwa “will be more cautious and the new generations will have more knowledge about how HIV/AIDS is threatening their lives.”

NetAid Online Volunteering, a service jointly managed by UN Volunteers and NetAid, has been offering volunteers the chance to do “virtual fieldwork” since February 1999. According to Jayne Cravens, who heads up the service at UN Volunteers, online volunteering allows people to become involved in UN Volunteers without having to leave their homes and helps to support non-governmental organizations working in the developing world. Online volunteers can perform a range of important tasks such as fundraising, Web site building, translating, research and writing, and marketing—basically anything that doesn’t require a physical presence in the field. Working by e-mail and telephone, UN Volunteers and NetAid offer guidance and ideas to volunteers and host organizations alike.

NetAid’s Online Volunteering programme manager, Benjamin Stokes, explains that to benefit from the initiative, organizations have to show their non-profit status, confirm that they are working on development issues in developing countries and express willingness to work with online volunteers. Mr. Stokes adds that the commitment to working with volunteers and integrating them into an organization is key to maximizing the value of online volunteers.

“Our job is working to raise awareness about extreme poverty and offer people concrete ways that they can help improve the lives of the world’s poorest people,” Mr. Stokes says. “Online volunteering is a great way to get people involved in this cause.”

Putting the library to work

Loveth Egbulugha, a high school student, has been a regular caller at the library every Saturday and Sunday for two months. “Since I’ve been coming to the library, I’ve come to grasp with the reality of what HIV/AIDS is about, ways of contracting it and how to prevent it. I’ve also read about gonorrhoea.”

Perusing the book Making an Impact in HIV/AIDS by Jocelyn Dejong while clutching How to Write a Radio Serial Drama for Social Development: A Script Writer’s Manual, Ms. Egbulugha, 21, says she initially paid little attention to the local campaign against HIV/AIDS. “One day I came to visit someone who gave birth to a baby at the Health Centre and decided to check the books. I found out that they had interesting books and have been visiting twice a week ever since.”

Dickson Mgborokwu, 20, a student of Urban Development Secondary School in the nearby town of Owerri, says after he was given an assignment on the origin of HIV/AIDS, he rummaged through the library of Alvan Ikoku College of Education, a prominent teacher training school. But he was unlucky in his research until a student directed him to the library at Mgbala Agwa.

“I got more than enough materials about the origin of HIV/AIDS, how you can treat it in the early stage, how it can be controlled and how it can be prevented,” says Mr. Mgborokwu, who now visits the library during his lesson free period on Tuesdays and Sundays.

John Smart Anumaka, 24, a student of Political Science of Imo State University, says the library has been useful in providing materials to enrich his project on Third World’s Nations View of HIV/AIDS. “When my supervisor picked this topic, I stared to the skies thinking how I will get the materials to write the project,” he says. “Then I came here.”

Anselm Uche Ononogbo, 30, President of Mgbala Agwa Youth Forum explains that because of financial constraints, no one is in charge of the library full time. “We rotate it among members of the executive committee on a weekly basis. We also have some volunteers who usually assist on weekends.” Despite the absence of a librarian or a catalogue, “No book has been pilfered, lost or defaced,” he says.

Mr. Ononogbo wishes for a bigger library and more shelves to hold all the books belonging to the Youth Forum. “We need a bigger library and shelves to keep the books. Since the world is a global village, there’s need for computers, Internet facilities, photocopy machines, and so on.”

For a community whose local economy centres largely on subsistence farming that hardly produces enough to meet the needs of the people, and where water, paved roads, electricity and other social infrastructure are very scarce, the library has become an impromptu meeting place, and provides some refuge for the teeming army of jobless youths who tend to congregate near the library there to meet and share ideas.

Mr. Ozor is overwhelmed by the volume of books his campaign has elicited and he’s planning a bigger project. He is now thinking of expanding the scope of the library beyond the community because of the magnitude of books received from different international organizations. To give some bite to Mr. Ozor’s pet idea, he is thinking of floating an NGO to embark on a national campaign. “Since the books we got are beyond our scope, we now want to expand our work to touch the lives of other Nigerians.”

—Tony Iyare has been a stringer for The New York Times in Nigeria for 11 years.

Nigeria at a Glance

Population: 117.8 million
Area: 923,768 sq km
Human Development Ranking: 152 of 173 countries
No. of telephone mainlines per 1,000 people: 5
No. of cellular subscribers per 1,000 people: 3
No. of personnal computers per 1,000 people: 7
No. of Internet users per 1,000 people: 2
GDP per capita: $850

Sources: Human Development Report 2003 and UNDP Global ICT for Development Factbook



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