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Jirapa Project

Country

Ghana

Region

Africa

Programme Summary

The Jirapa Project is run by the RAY Foundation, a Ghanaian-Italian non-governmental organisation (NGO) and aims to tackle rural poverty by supporting orphans through information and communication technology (ICT). The project aims to equip Jirapa orphanages with telecentres to provide orphans with facilities that nurture them and help children become village leaders and micro-entrepreneurs.

Communication Strategies

The Jirapa Project was involved in the construction of the St. Joseph Knowledge Centre an orphanage housing up to 40 children combined with an internet centre. The knowledge centre aims to:

  • reduce current rates of orphan mortality by providing modern housing equipped with satellite-internet schooling facilities;
  • integrate pupils’ national curricula with vocational courses in rural enterprising, thereby facilitating orphans’ acceptance into respective village communities;
  • provide the orphanage with the means of financial self-sustenance, ie., a Knowledge Center equipped with 40 computers, copiers, printers, audio-visual equipment, training classes, etc. that sell affordable services such as
    • provide email, internet, VoIP for thousands of students and framers alike (distance courses, weather forecast, new markets or suppliers, etc.);
    • provide video teleconferencing for local businesses and entities (government, private, clerical). Diagnostic telemedicine for millions;
    • provide telecom and document management support for long-haul commercial transport (between Sahel and maritime ports of Ghana).

The RAY Foundation believes that orphans are fundamental resources to creating human capital knowledgeable enough to stimulate and self-sustain a village. The Foundation's activities include:

  • building orphanages equipped with modern schooling facilities, including AC generators, access to drinking water, telemedicine programmes
  • integrating children's national curricula with vocational training programmes in village enterprise and management. This is made possible with distance-learning programmes received via satellite internet connection.
  • creating micro-credit opportunities for students holding a diploma, in order to encourage them to start their own business in their respective villages, making it also possible to limit rural emigration.

Development Issues

Economic development, Children, Rights, Technology, Youth.

Key Points

Jirapa is a town located in the Upper West Region of Ghana. The town, with a population of 30,000 inhabitants, is second only to the regional chief town of Wa.

The St. Joseph Orphanage hosts newborn orphans coming from local hospitals, giving them shelter for their first six-years of life. After this period children are returned to their relatives in their native villages, but 80 percent of them die, because of poor living conditions. According to the Ray Foundation a majority of them also die in villages due to the stigma derived from a superstitious belief that orphans are omens of the gods. The organisation believes that this superstition can be tackled by empowering orphans through knowledge and job creation.

Partners

Carat Italy, Cor Unum, Ernst & Young, Fondazione Unicredito, Humanitas, Il Sole 24 ORE, Interpromos, Mazzali, Mediafriends, Nava, Propaganda Fide, Publitalia’80, RCS Corriere, Regione Lombardia, StudioProgettazioni, The Dream Co., University of Milan, Wa Diocese.

Contact

Paul de Sio Naebo
Ray Foundation
CEO / Chairman/ President
c/o Studio Legale Associato Bosio & Pirotta
Via Cernaia
4 20121
Milan
Italy
Tel: +39 02 45472118
Fax: +39 02 700409726
info@rayfoundation.org
inforay@hotmail.com
Ray Foundation website

Carat Italy, Cor Unum, Ernst & Young, Fondazione Unicredito, Humanitas, Il Sole 24 ORE, Interpromos, Mazzali, Mediafriends, Nava

Placed on the Communication Initiative site November 09 2006
Last Updated November 02 2007

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