KGRKJGETMRETU895U-589TY5MIGM5JGB5SDFESFREWTGR54TY
Server : Apache/2.4.62
System : FreeBSD fbsdweb2.web.rcn.net 14.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE releng/14.1-n267679-10e31f0946d8 GENERIC amd64
User : www ( 80)
PHP Version : 8.3.8
Disable Function : NONE
Directory :  /domains/rcwsweb1/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Current File : /domains/rcwsweb1/sam_harding.htm
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>RCWS.org | Recent Grants</TITLE>
<META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html" charset="iso-8859-1">
<meta name="keywords" content="russian orphans, orphanage, russia children, vocational training, sponsor a child, homeless children, charity">
<meta name="description" content="The Russian Children's Welfare Society (RCWS) has been helping disadvantaged Russian children in Europe, South America and Russia since its�establishment in 1926.�Since inception, the RCWS has raised over $16,000,000 in donations and bequests.">
<meta content="index, follow" name=robots>
<meta content="14 days" name=revisit-after>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="rcws.css" type="text/css">

<script type="text/javascript">

function showsubmenu(id){
	submenu=document.getElementById('s'+id);
	for(i=1;i<=6;i++){
		if(i==id){
			submenu.style.display="block";
		} else{
			document.getElementById('s'+i).style.display="none";
		}
	}
}
</script>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="mymenu.css" type="text/css">

</HEAD>




<BODY>
<table width="753" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="center">
  <tr>
    <td>&nbsp;</td>
  </tr>
</table>
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0000 width="753" bgColor=#ffffff border=0 align="center">
  <TBODY>
    <TR>
      <TD vAlign=bottom align=center><div align="left"><a href="/index.htm"><img src="images/logo.png" alt="Children charity" width="350" height="74" hspace="10" vspace="5" border="0"></a><IMG src="images/1ptrans.gif" alt="image" width=15 height=30></div></TD>
      <TD vAlign=middle align=left width=200><div align="center"><a href="donate.htm"><img src="images/donate_but.jpg" alt="" name="Donate" width="130" height="61" border="0"></a></div></TD>
    </TR>
  </TBODY>
</TABLE>
<table width="753" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="center" bgColor="#ffffff">
  <tr>
    <td><img src="images/collage_programs.jpg" width="754" height="122"></td>
  </tr>
</table>
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="753" border=0 align="center" bgcolor="#26435F">
  <tr>
    <td>

<div id="navigation">
  <ul id="mymenu">
    <li><a href="index.htm" onMouseOver="javascript:showsubmenu(1)">Home</a></li>
    <li><a href="programs_orphanages.htm" onMouseOver="javascript:showsubmenu(2)">Program Areas</a></li>
    <li><a href="donate.htm" onMouseOver="javascript:showsubmenu(3)">Take Action</a></li>
    <li><a href="events_petroushka.htm" onMouseOver="javascript:showsubmenu(4)">Events</a></li>
    <li><a href="news_latest.htm" onMouseOver="javascript:showsubmenu(5)">News</a></li>
    <li><a href="/aboutus_contact.htm" >Contact </a></li>
    <li><a href="ru/index.htm"><img src="/images/Russia-flag.png" name="" hspace="4" vspace="5" border="0" align="left"> Russian</a></li>
  </ul>

  </div>
<div id="sublinks" align="center">
	<ul id="s1">
        <li><a href="aboutus_mission.htm">Mission Statement</a></li>
        <li><a href="aboutus_statistics.htm">Statistics</a></li>
        <li><a href="aboutus_history.htm">History</a></li>
        <li><a href="aboutus_directors.htm">Board of Directors</a></li>
        <li><a href="aboutus_financial.htm">Financial Data</a></li>
        <li><a href="aboutus_privacy.htm">Privacy Policy</a></li>
    </ul>
    <ul id="s2">
        <li><a href="/programs_orphanages.htm">Orphanages</a></li>
        <li><a href="/programs_medical.htm">Medical projects</a></li>
        <li><a href="/programs_rehab.htm">Rehabilitation Centres</a></li>
        <li><a href="/programs_scholarship.htm">Educational Programs</a></li>
        <li><a href="/programs_beslan.htm">Beslan Fund</a></li>
        <li><a href="/programs_yelka.htm">New Year Party</a></li>
   </ul>
    <ul id="s3">
        <li><a href="programs_grants0607.htm">Grant Recipients</a></li>
        <li><a href="programs_letters.htm">Feedback</a></li>
        <li><a href="donate.htm">Donate</a></li>
        <li><a href="other_help3.htm">Get Involved</a></li>
        <li><a href="programs_sponsor.htm">Support a project</a></li>
 </ul>
    <ul id="s4">
        <li><a href="/events_supporters.htm">Friends of RCWS</a></li>
        <li><a href="/events_more.htm">More Events</a></li>
        <li><a href="/events_petroushka.htm">Petroushka Ball</a></li>
        <li><a href="/events_hudson.htm">Petroushka on the Hudson</a></li>
        <li><a href="/fashion_show1.htm">Fashion Gala</a></li>
        <li><a href="/events_acknowledge.htm">Acknowledgements</a></li>
    </ul>
     <ul id="s5">
        <li><a href="/success_stories.htm">Success Stories</a></li>
        <li><a href="news_newsletter.htm">Newsletter</a></li>
        <li><a href="news_latest.htm">Latest News</a></li>
        <li><a href="events_gallery.htm">Gallery</a></li>
        <li><a href="/news_videos.htm">Videos</a></li>
     
    </ul>
</div>
</tr>
</td>

</TABLE>
<TABLE width="753" border=0 cellPadding=0 cellSpacing=0 bgcolor="#FFFFFF" align="center">
  <TBODY> 
  <TR> 
    <TD valign=top width="175" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">&nbsp;</TD>
    <TD vAlign=top align=left width="30"> </TD>
    <TD vAlign=top></TD>
    <TD width="30" vAlign=top></TD>
  </TR>
  <script type="text/javascript">

function toggle(id) {
  var e = document.getElementById(id);

  if (e.style.display == '')
    e.style.display = 'none';
  else
    e.style.display = '';
}

function toggle2(id, link) {
  var e = document.getElementById(id);

  if (e.style.display == '') {
    e.style.display = 'none';
    link.innerHTML = 'Expand';
  } else {
    e.style.display = '';
    link.innerHTML = 'Collapse';
  }
}

</script>
  <TR>
    <TD class="leftcol" valign=top><div class="block block-rcws" id="block-rcws-0">
      <h2>Program Areas</h2>
      <div class="content">
<ul>
  <li><a href="/index.htm">Home</a></li>
  <li><a href="/programs_orphanages.htm">Orphanages</a></li>
  <li><a href="/programs_medical.htm">Medical Projects</a></li>
  <li><a href="/programs_rehab.htm">Rehabilitation Centers</a></li>
  <li><a href="#" onClick="toggle('node1')">Educational Programs</a>
    <ul id="node1" class="link" style="display:none">
      <li class="link"><a href="/programs_scholarship.htm">Scholarships</a></li>
      <li class="link"><a href="/programs_educationmore.htm">Other</a></li>
    </ul>
  <li><a href="/programs_beslan.htm">Beslan Fund</a></li>
  <li><a href="/programs_yelka.htm">New Year Party</a></li>
</ul>
    </div>
        <p align="left"><a id="button2" href="/other_help3.htm"></a></p>
        </div>
    </div>
      <!--
				<div class="block block-quotes" id="block-quotes-1">
		   
					<div class="content">
			
						<div class="quotes-quote">quote</div>
				
						<div class="quotes-author">&mdash; source </div>
		</div>
						</div>
-->

						
</TD>
    <TD vAlign=top align=left width="30"></TD>
    <TD vAlign=top> 
            <h1 id="pagetitle"><strong>Trip Report by Sam Harding</strong>, May 2008</h1>
<br />
  
  
            <div class="content">
							<div class="padbcont_C5D606EA" align="left">
								<img src="images/photos_sam1.jpg" alt="" height="139" width="111" align="left" border="0" hspace="6">
								<!--agl:cssobject id="C5D606EA" type="Padded Box"-->
							</div>
							<p>
			  At the request of Vladimir Fekula, RCWS President &amp; CEO,  I recently spent two weeks visiting various institutions in Moscow, Pskov,  Velikiy Novgorod, and Yaroslavl that are presently recipients of RCWS grants  with particular emphasis on our Scholarship Program.&nbsp; My goals were to meet and become acquainted  with those responsible for administering grants, to observe and evaluate their  use of our funds, and to meet with participants and potential participants of  our Scholarship Program in each city. Thanks to Ludmilla Koroleva, Director of  RCWS Moscow Office my travel arrangements and accommodations in and from Moscow  to V. Novgorod were excellent.&nbsp;  Throughout my travels, I met with an impressive array of dedicated professionals  - all enormously grateful for our support and eager to demonstrate how they  were putting it to good use. &nbsp;&nbsp;It was an  honor and a pleasure to represent RCWS in Russia.</p>
								<br>
								<h5><em>
									Moscow:
								</em></h5>
                <p><strong>Center &quot;Bolshaya Peremena&quot;</strong>
							<br/>This school, founded by its  director, Irina Ryazanova, serves about 60 orphans ages 15 to 25 no longer  living in orphanages, who are trying to complete their education and find a  profession. The school with its faculty of 20 is located in the basement of a  large apartment building.&nbsp; Its basement  location precludes financial support from the city government, but through Irina&rsquo;s  tireless efforts the school garners substantial support from United Way, Ernst  and Young and numerous other local and international organizations. Despite its  location the school is bright, neat, and buzzing with well directed  activity.&nbsp; The teachers are an impressive  lot.&nbsp; B.P. accepts orphans of all  abilities; 85% are delayed and psychologically needy.&nbsp; The school stresses basic skills and self  discipline, and endeavors to help its students learn to think, plan, learn and  solve problems on their own (&ldquo;<em>samo-uch</em>&rdquo;  - little of which is ever taught in orphanages).&nbsp; Their motto is &ldquo;Achieving the impossible&rdquo;.<br>
                  <em>B.P.</em> uses extracurricular activities and trips to foster self-sufficiency and initiative.&nbsp; Their most impressive project was a weeklong  trip to Prague completely organized and financed by the kids, including raising  money, making reservations, purchasing tickets, etc.&nbsp; The participants returned to write articles  and make presentations on different aspects of the city.&nbsp; This year they are working on a trip to Kiev.  &nbsp;Irina plans to submit a grant proposal  to enhance her extracurricular activities.<br>
                I talked with four of the five RCWS  scholarship students. One was sick in the hospital.&nbsp; <strong>Nadia</strong> was 27 years old, had just earned her 9th grade diploma and was  trying to decide whether to continue to the 11th grade or to go to a  college (middle professional school).&nbsp;  Now, she is receiving only a $50 stipend since she does not technically  qualify for our program. <strong>Vasya</strong>, 20,  is noticeably delayed and lives at an <em>internat</em> for older kids.&nbsp; He also receives  $50.&nbsp; He is working for his 9th  grade diploma and hopes to attend a technical college.&nbsp; <strong>Misha</strong>,  21, is studying at a technical college while preparing for his 11th  grade diploma.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s bright and  articulate.&nbsp; His stipend is $100.&nbsp; <strong>Natasha </strong>is 22, very bright and attractive and soon to take her 11th  grade exams.&nbsp; She is studying at an  institute of tourism and receives a $100 stipend.&nbsp; All four participated openly in our  discussion.<br>
                I was very positively impressed by B.P.  &ndash; its professionalism, its faculty, its publications, its focused but friendly,  supportive atmosphere, its innovative approach towards socializing  post-orphanage children.&nbsp; Irina Ryazanova  is a remarkable woman, a pioneer in this area of post-orphanage education &ndash;  strict but caring, brilliant but approachable, tireless, resourceful.&nbsp; I feel RCWS money is being well spent.</p>
              <p><strong>Moscow Center for Maxillofacial Surgery:</strong>
              <br/>Ludmilla Koroleva and I visited Dr.  Vitaly Roginsky in his clinic at the Moscow Center for Maxillofacial Surgery.&nbsp; This large, energetic, 74 year-old  maxillofacial surgeon greeted us enthusiastically in his modest office.&nbsp; He spoke in detail about his work with  children&rsquo;s deformed or injured faces.&nbsp; In  his computer room, where all surgeries have been pictorially recorded in minute  detail from initial diagnosis to conclusion, Dr. Roginsky led me through each  of the carefully planned-out stages of two of his most difficult cases.&nbsp; He and his team are miracle workers.<br>
                Dr. Roginsky introduced me to most  of the children in his clinic, explaining in some detail each one&rsquo;s diagnosis  and progress to date.&nbsp; This gentle giant  has a wonderful rapport with his young patients and transmits to them a real  sense of hope for their futures.&nbsp; His  incredible work deserves our support.</p>
                <p><strong>New Moscow RCWS Office:</strong>
              <br/>The new office is located not far  from the center of the city in the NE section between Baumanskaya and Electrozavodskaya  metro stations. It is across the street from the newly rebuilt St. Nicola  Church, which used to belong to the royal family.&nbsp; The building, which also contains a chapel  and the church Sunday school, is fresh, quiet, and clean.&nbsp; RCWS Moscow staff has an excellent new work  place, but they really do need a new printer to replace their ten-year-old  antique.</p><br/>
              <h5><em>Pskov:</em></h5>
              <p>Radio broadcasts, press releases and the  honored name of RCWS preceded my arrival in Pskov thanks to Tatyana Bodrova, deputy  director of the Pskov Children&rsquo;s Fund and our trusted representative in the  area.&nbsp; I felt more like royalty than a  retired school teacher.&nbsp; Tatyana,  supported by her full-time staff of three, well deserves the respect of RCWS  that she has so well earned; she is bright, educated, energetic, resourceful,  and genuinely committed to helping Russian children in need. During my stay in  Pskov we accomplished the following:</p>
                <p><strong>Bobrovsky Orphanage; TV interview</strong>
              <br/>I visited the distant Bobrovsky  Orphanage for 100 children ages 4-18 with severe motor disabilities and mental  retardation.&nbsp; Run by an energetic,  optimistic and proactive, middle-aged man, Viktor, and his social-worker wife,  this institution for extremely needy children is working hard to meet its  enormous challenge.&nbsp; What I met of the  staff (75 half-time) seemed to share Viktor&rsquo;s optimism and exhibited genuine  interest in their work.&nbsp; Viktor counts no  child out and his staff has often exceeded doctors&rsquo; expectations for improving  children&rsquo;s capabilities. He works and lobbies aggressively to improve his  facility with notable success.&nbsp; The large  quantity of colorful soft furniture purchased with their RCWS grant ($12,975)  is in most exercise, instructional, and gathering rooms and is in constantly  use.&nbsp; It is an excellent investment. Many  children simply cannot walk or frequently fall.<br>
                A TV crew arrived to do a piece on  the orphanage and on our grant.&nbsp; It was a  good opportunity to answer their many questions about the RCWS.</p>
                <p><strong>RCWS Scholarship Students</strong>
              <br/>At Tatyana&rsquo;s office we met with nine  of her scholarship recipients &ndash; a group of neat, fairly confident, very  appreciative young adults.&nbsp; Some had  traveled long distances to attend the meeting.&nbsp;  I gained a clear sense of the mutual respect and affection in the  relationship between Tatyana and her students.&nbsp;  She cares very much. Tatyana presented a series of questions for each to  answer, and all did.&nbsp; Not only did they  appreciate the financial support from their scholarships, but they valued  highly the control and discipline created by their obligation to report monthly  on their expenses and academic progress, knowing that at least one caring  person maintained high expectations of them.&nbsp; </p>
                <p><strong>Opochka </strong>
              <br/>After a 1 &frac12; hour drive to the  isolated town of Opochka we visited two institutions:</p>
              <div class="list">
            <ul>
                  <li><u>The Opochka Pedagogical        College</u> has two dormitories that serve 110 out-of-town students and        40 orphans.&nbsp; It appears to be well        managed and in good repair.&nbsp; In the        short 30 minutes that we had there I had tea with the director in a neat        and well appointed student kitchen &ndash; the result of a RCWS grant.&nbsp; She seems to be a strict but personable        leader.</li>
                  <li><u>The Opochka        Specialized Internat</u> for 100 children, most with mental or physical        disabilities, is an impressive operation.&nbsp;        Its director, Ludmilla Chusheva, an attractive, ambitious woman        has worked aggressively to improve her orphanage through effective        fundraising from Scandinavia, the Netherlands, and from RCWS. &nbsp;She has created workshops, an infirmary,        a new banya, a greenhouse and a large garden with tractor, a guest house        for visiting relatives, etc. - many equipped with tools and appliances        bearing the RCWS logo&hellip;and a tired RCWS van with 150,000 km stood in the        courtyard.&nbsp; Visits to classrooms, a        long, polished variety show by the children, and a very slick PowerPoint        presentation all left a lasting impression. RCWS funds have been put to        good use here.</li>
              </ul>
              </div>
              <p>On the long trip back to Pskov we  detoured through the Pushkin Hills and stopped to pay our respects at the tomb  of Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin.&nbsp; The  Pskov <em>oblast&rsquo;</em> is about the size of  France with its children&rsquo;s institution spread far and wide&hellip; and difficult to  visit in a short time.</p><br/>
              <h5><em>Velikiy Novgorod:</em></h5>
<p>Ludmilla Kozlova, an experienced  administrator and director of the Victoria Rehabilitation Center since its  opening 13 years ago, is another dynamo.&nbsp;  She had accepted the responsibility of shepherding me around  Novgorod.&nbsp; Again, preceded by newspaper  articles and radio broadcasts, I felt a bit overwhelmed by my presumed  importance.&nbsp; Ludmilla had a tight  schedule for me and kept me to it:</p>
              <p><strong>Rehabilitation       Center &ldquo;Victoria&rdquo;</strong>
              <br/>The Victoria Rehabilitation Center  is another extraordinary institution, providing over 200 severely disabled  children with medical treatment, psychological and educational support, and  social rehabilitation.&nbsp; Located on the  outskirts of the city and not connected by public transportation that accepts  wheelchairs, many must stay at home. But, many are wheeled daily to the center  by parents (none live in the center) who stay with them during treatment.&nbsp; Recently, RCWS voted to grant the center $17,363  to purchase a van that will provide necessary daily transport to the center and  to various activities for children throughout the city. Previously, the Society  granted money for a colorful Jungle-Jim that is already in use.<br>
                It is a credit to Ludmilla Kozlova  that most of her administrative staff has been working at the center since its  founding.&nbsp; They are a committed group of  professionals who seem to take pleasure in their work with children with grave  disabilities.&nbsp; They are experts in each  of their fields, many having studied abroad in their specialties. The tone in  the large building is light and positive &ndash; a multitude of activities, classes, various  procedures and therapies.&nbsp; RCWS is  contributing significantly to the rehabilitation of these needy children.</p>
                <p><strong>Novgorod Scholarship Candidates; TV       interview:</strong>
              <br/>Three young men (teenagers) came to  the Victoria Center from &ldquo;Podrostok&rdquo; (a municipal educational center for  teenagers who have left orphanages) to interview with me for the RCWS  Scholarship Program.&nbsp; A TV team had  arrived earlier to film the center and interview me about the Scholarship  Program.&nbsp; The students seemed focused,  mature and well adapted, and come highly recommended by Podrostok.&nbsp; After reading their applications, I am  inclined to recommend their acceptance into the Scholarship Program.&nbsp; </p>
              <p><strong>Tsvetik-Semitsvetic Educational Center for Disabled Children</strong>
              <br/>Located upstairs in the same  building as the Victoria Rehabilitation Center, this school supports about 135  children (no orphans) ages 6-18 who have physical disabilities, but whose  mental capabilities seem intact.&nbsp; They  have a good record of their kids entering higher education.&nbsp; RCWS provided a $5,000 grant to make  computers and the Internet accessible to visually impaired children.&nbsp; I had an interesting visit with six teenagers  and their teacher in their well appointed computer room &ndash; complete with a  Braille keyboard. They were an impressive, articulate group - spirited and  ready to talk about the advantages of their new &ldquo;Window on the World of  Information&rdquo; program.</p>
              <p><strong>Specialized Orphanage for Children with Learning Disabilities:</strong>
              <br/>This orphanage houses and cares for  43 children ages 2 mos. to 7 years.&nbsp;  Again, it is clean, well cared for by organized, appealing women.&nbsp; Their most recent of four grants bought  smaller beds for the younger children and a digital camera.&nbsp; They proudly steered me to them.&nbsp; They are particularly pleased that the beds  are made from real wood (not from the usual, &ldquo;foul-smelling, noxious chemical  materials&rdquo;).&nbsp; They also pointed out their  popular clothes dryer and dentist suite, all in good repair and bearing the  RCWS logo.&nbsp; A very positive impression.</p><br/>
                <h5><em>Pavlov School-Internat:</em></h5>
              <p>This large orphanage school has never  applied for RCWS support.&nbsp; It is known  for its strong athletic program.&nbsp; A  number of its teen-agers have won national competitions; as a result the city  of Moscow presented them with a field house.&nbsp;&nbsp;  I was taken there to meet three more candidates for our Scholarship  Program.&nbsp; <br>
                I also met with a representative of  the Committee of Guardianship and Guidance, Elena Selika, who pledged to give  her opinion of the candidates and to forward on the digital copies of their  applications.&nbsp; She is prepared to give  guidance to the winners. </p><br/>
                <h5><em>Internat for Deaf and Hearing-impaired  Children:</em></h5>
              <p>This boarding school houses 82  children ages 2-20 with another 100 attending on a daily basis.&nbsp; It is my understanding that no orphans attend  the school. In fact, it closes for vacations. The school was constructed by  Novgorod and Moscow governments in 1996 because the <em>oblast&rsquo;</em> had no such facility.&nbsp;  This is a large, well appointed school with a sizeable gymnasium and a  new dormitory building soon to be opened.&nbsp;  A large, well-qualified staff, small classes, and some modern technology  are helping deaf children to communicate.&nbsp;  I had a good visit, enjoyed the classes, and felt that the school is  well run.&nbsp; Apparently, they do not  receive government funds for equipment and are hoping to purchase an expensive,  leading-edge Verbaton machine ($40 K).&nbsp; <br>
                The school had received a $5 K  grant from RCWS to create a &ldquo;Sensor Room&rdquo; in their new dormitory building.&nbsp; At the time, they had received only parts of  the equipment, but showed me the room it would soon occupy. </p><br/>
              <h5><em>Yaroslavl (Tutaev):</em> </h5>
              <p>My  purpose for being in Yaroslavl was to evaluate the progress of Friends of  Russian Orphans after its first half year of independence. Being so close to  Tutaev, I took the opportunity to visit the nearby Orthodox school, which has  long been the recipient of RCWS grants.</p>
                <p><strong>Tutaev Orthodox School: </strong>
              <br/>Tutaev Orthodox School is putting  RCWS support to excellent use; without it the school might not have survived to  this date.&nbsp; But, I feel that my visit  served a good purpose.&nbsp; I arrived on the  holiday of St Nicholas just after the church service.&nbsp; Father Viniamin greeted me warmly and  immediately introduced me to the large gathering of local parishioners who were  feasting outdoors.&nbsp; RCWS&rsquo; good work is  well known to them and I was received with enthusiasm and gratitude. Later at  the school, the students treated me to a delightful program of song, dance and  folktales.&nbsp; When they asked for some  words from me I spoke again of the RCWS Board and its supporters who work hard  to provide resources for their great school, and how they also need to work hard  to keep up their side of the partnership.&nbsp;  I felt that I was able to put a human face on our organization for the  present staff and student body.&nbsp; The older  children gave me a detailed tour of their school, stopping to show me the many  RCWS logos on various equipment, books, etc.&nbsp;  After a long lunch with the headmistress and Father Viniamin, who later  visited me at my hotel, I returned to Yaroslavl with the sense that it had been  a worthwhile visit.</p>
              <p><strong>Friends of Russian Orphans &ndash; Yaroslavl:</strong>
              <br/>FRO<strong> </strong>received several grants through RCWS.&nbsp; Thanks, especially, to the hard work, resourcefulness  and devotion of Galina Evstifeeva, the newly independent organization continues  to have a positive effect on the lives of many of the city&rsquo;s &ndash; and, now, the  entire <em>oblast&rsquo;s</em> &ndash; children.&nbsp; The organization manages a wide range of  activities in the areas of education (including RCWS scholarships),  post-orphanage support for orphans (<em>patronat)</em>,  community events showcasing orphans, equine therapy, a website, fundraising,  enlisting volunteers, and public relations.&nbsp;  In general, the organization has been doing excellent work these  areas.&nbsp; Recently, it solicited a new van  from a local donor for an orphanage without one; garnered a $5,000 grant from  its local bank; staged a large, successful orphans&rsquo; art festival; successfully  promoted in the <em>oblast&rsquo;</em> Department of  Education the <em>patronat</em> concept of  family upbringing for orphans.&nbsp; <br>
                Project &quot;Preparing Orphans for  Patronat&quot; has been presenting throughout the Yaroslavl<em> oblast&rsquo;</em> a series of two six-hour seminars designed to teach personnel  from 26 orphanages to prepare orphans for<em> patronat</em>.&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;Attendance has exceeded expectations.&nbsp; <br>
                Equine Facilitated Therapy is a  pilot program for 10 high-risk orphans.&nbsp; Twice  a week two psychologists and a recognized (pro bono) equine therapist work  together with the ten children at an established riding academy (pro bono) to  provide psychological therapy.&nbsp; The pilot  is being evaluated by the psychologists in regular interviews and with  occasional written psychological testing.&nbsp;  The program is proceeding according to schedule with marked  optimism.&nbsp; <strong></strong></p>
                <p><strong>RCWS Scholarship Program: </strong>
              <br/>We had an excellent meeting of the seven current students plus the four new candidates.  We were pleased to note the increased maturity and self-confidence in the veterans and the warm welcome and support that they gave the four new young women.  Some of the older generation have been visiting orphanages with Galina to encourage study and future applications to the program.  The new candidates appear to be a strong, focused group.</p><br/>
              <h4>Conclusion:</h4>
                This non-stop, two-week, four-city  tour of institutions receiving RCWS support gave me a clear sense of the breadth  and depth of the Society&rsquo;s positive effect on needy Russian children.&nbsp; I wish that each Board member could have such  an opportunity. &nbsp;I was able to speak  personally and on behalf of the Society with many of our grantees and with the  children whom they support. I think they have a clearer idea of who we are and  what are our goals and expectations.&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;From what I saw and heard, the people who  represent us in Russia are doing a brilliant job of selecting honest, worthy  recipients of our assistance.</p>
            </div> 
		<p>&nbsp;</p>
</TD>
    <TD width="30" vAlign=top>&nbsp;</TD>
  </TR>
  </TBODY> 
</TABLE>

<p class="copyright">Site copyright &copy;2007 Russian Children's Welfare Society.<br>
Website by <a class="copyright" href="http://www.danbatten.com/" target="_blank">danbatten.com</a></p>
<!-- Google Analytics Tracking Code BEGIN -->
<script type="text/javascript">
var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www.");
document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
</script>
<script type="text/javascript">
try {
var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-8312294-1");
pageTracker._trackPageview();
} catch(err) {}</script>
<!-- Google Analytics Tracking Code END -->

</BODY>
</HTML>

Anon7 - 2021