Emerge Blog

Reflections

As we move into 2009 and I think of all that Emerge has accomplished in the past year, it's hard to believe that it was just a year-and-a-half ago that Emerge expanded from one student's project to an organization of many hearts and minds. Today, it's hard for me to imagine Emerge without our incredible team.


Rewind. 20 months ago.
I remember walking at night, knee-deep in water. My arms were filled with plastic bags, packed with beads and toolboxes. Rats squealed as they swam next to me. I remember noting that it was interesting that rats could swim. "I hope they don't bite me," I remember thinking. Somehow, in that moment, the rats and the darkness meant little. It had been much harder for me to deal with the checkpoints and escalating war, and the fact that, despite my best intentions, I had been cheated financially, threatened by the police, and sexually harassed. Moreover, the rats were nothing in comparison to the heartbreaking emotions that swept through me as I tried to comfort the girl whose child had passed away that month. So I kept walking, my arms filled with beads.

On that trip, I taught jewelry workshops, built partnerships, and researched the legal system and social landscape that these girls faced during the day. At night, I planned the next day's curriculum and designed new jewelry products. Sometimes, I walked through knee-deep water filled with rats. Somewhere in there, I managed to eat, sleep (occasionally), and share a great deal of tears and laughter with 20 wonderful girls. I had confidence we could succeed, but still did not know how we would make the community and program we were building sustainable.

It was on this trip that I met Nirukshi de Lanerolle, a woman who has remained the backbone of our jewelry workshops, and a woman who the girls of Emerge often call "amma" (mother). We wouldn't be where we are today without her. She was the beginning of our growing team.


Fast Forward. Today.
Our programs have grown, sustained, and thrived, now enabling 45 girls to participate in our programs at any given time. This year, with the efforts of countless volunteers who have spread the story of these remarkable young women, we sold nearly $25,000 in jewelry, directly benefiting 73 past and current participants of our Bead Program. We have a powerful team of three inspiring women - Nirukshi, Ellen, and April - running our programs in the field. Other volunteers have built our organizational and operational infrastructure and designed program curriculum. A dedicated team of lawyers has provided pro-bono legal support. And, the story of these inspiring and strong girls is spreading in a way that I never could have imagined as I waded through water 20 months ago. People are beginning to see the girls of Emerge for who they are and can be, looking beyond their past. It's hard to remember ever feeling alone when we, as a community, are making tremendous impact.


What Now?
This year, we will focus on developing our Bead Program such that all goals are fully realized, sustainable, and scalable at our current level of 45 participants. We also aim to create a comprehensive exit, reintegration, and follow-up strategy to serve girls in their transition into society. Finally, we will both be developing our sales strategy, with the goal of increasing this year's sales revenues to more than $100,000, and will be developing meaningful ways to engage the ever-growing community interested in supporting Emerge.

With 45 girls participating in our Bead Program this year, I hope you will consider participating in our 2009 Sponsorship Program for $250 by completing our sponsorship form, which can be downloaded here. For those of you who sponsored girls in 2008, portfolios are on the way soon!

As always, thank you for being an invaluable part of our community.

Best wishes,

Alia

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Reflections on Emerge Global's Growth

Last week, as inspired MIT students crowded around a table to discuss the direction of Emerge Global, I couldn't help but think back to the spring of 2007. Just a year and a half ago, I took a semester off from MIT to make my third trip to Sri Lanka to conduct beading workshops for 20 persevering young girls. At the heart of these workshops were the emerging voices of the girls I had encountered and my eager optimism to restore their sense of hope and to help them accomplish their dreams.

I cannot say that my four months in Sri Lanka were easy. Having my computer harddrive crash was the least of my problems. Despite my best intentions, I was pushed through excruciating circles of beurocracy, sexually harassed, cheated financially, and threatened by the police. I witnessed an escalating war, waking up one night to gunfire outside my window. And, I struggled to build a program for girls fighting an unforgiving system, girls who didn't speak my language but I so desperately wanted to comfort.

Sometimes, these challenges made me feel alone: alone in my ideas and optimism, and sometimes alone as a human being. But, I drew strength from every girl that I worked with. Each girls' aspirations, fears, and stories motivated me. And, as I held their hands in times of need, they too took my hand to provide me with support. I realized none of us were alone. We were all connected through our yearning for purpose, meaning, and community.

One year later, the Emerge story is bigger—much bigger. What began as my own passion to help a few girls define the course of their own lives has grown to an organization of many minds and hearts that aims to one day support girls and women around the world who have survived abuse. Today, Emerge is the story of countless women in both Sri Lanka and the United States.

In the past year, Emerge has grown tremendously, girl to girl and woman to woman. In the US, more than 20 individuals volunteered their time to Emerge every single week. And, in Sri Lanka, our original Emerge girls began to teach girls of different backgrounds to make jewelry. Beading became more than a form of art-therapy, creativity, and savings generation; it became a mechanism to break down the walls of ingrained cultural stigmas.

As I hosted our first team meeting of the academic year last week, I couldn't help but smile. Emerge is no longer an idea; Emerge is a movement. It's hard to imagine ever feeling alone as I watch so many passionate individuals coming together to construct a new reality. And, with an incredible team in both the United States and in Sri Lanka, I know that the Emerge story will not only continue to grow, but thrive.

EmergeLove to our growing community,

Alia



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