here - Kosovo Roma Oral History Project
Transcription
here - Kosovo Roma Oral History Project
Annual Report 2004 BALKAN SUNFLOWERS May 2005 Looking back at 2004 OUR WORK TOUCHES BOTH PEOPLE ON THE FRINGES, WHOSE NEED IS GREATEST, AND THE LEVERS THAT CAN MOVE THE BROADER POPULATION TOWARD A MORE JUST AND DECENT SOCIETY. Inside: Message from the International Coordinator Dear Friends, The south Balkans is a beautiful region. The land is fertile, rich, and promising. The mountains crest above our horizon, capped in snow from October to May. Hillside villages of white walls and red tile roofs are surrounded by walls with carved gates and well-tended gardens. Gradually, since the 1999 war, the grazing cattle and sheep are increasing. There are medieval monasteries and mosques. Rocky gorges, high meadows, waterfalls, lakes … landscapes change rapidly through even short journeys. More important, the people of the region leave a lasting mark on the heart. Warmth, generosity, particularly hospitality, are part of the fabric of this area. Those of us who have had the privilege to live and work in the region want to continue to support our friends, (Continued on page 2) COMMUNITY ACTIVISTS NETWORK 4 ROMA AND ASHKALIA DOCUMENTATION CENTER 6 GJILAN HANDOVER 7 SONCOGLEDI SCHOOL 8 WORLD OF WONDERS COMICS 10 SMALL INITIATIVES 12 GRACANICA EDUCATION CENTER 14 NOVO SELO 16 SCOUTING FOR CHANGE 18 PLEMETINA PROJECTS 19 SUNFLOWER SCHOOL ALBANIA 20 FINANCIAL REPORT 22 Annual Report 2004 Plemetina village neighbors, and colleagues here who are themselves committed to rebuilding their communities and their lives. THE CHALLENGES ARE GREAT. THE The challenges are great. The catalog of post-communist and post-conflict problems the region faces is sobering: CATALOG OF POST- ◊ Environmental destruction COMMUNIST ◊ Collapsed economies AND POST- ◊ 57% unemployment in Kosovo CONFLICT ◊ Low wages for those working PROBLEMS THE ◊ Ethnic hatred REGION FACES IS ◊ Ethnic discrimination SOBERING. ◊ Deterioration of infrastructure: roads, electric, water. ◊ Lack of opportunity and prospects for young people ◊ High drop-out rate from school ◊ Disillusionment ◊ Undeveloped civil society ◊ Corruption ◊ Poverty ◊ Hunger ◊ Poor health care delivery ◊ Early marriage ◊ Potential for renewed warfare ◊ Refugees and internally displaced people Housing destroyed during March riots 2004. Since rebuilt. Page 2 ◊ Forced refugee returns ◊ Destruction of heritage sites ◊ Trauma remaining from conflict Nevertheless, the region demonstrates the possibility of progress and the broad commitment to peace and stability. Balkan Sunflowers makes an invaluable contribution. Our work touches both people on the fringes, whose need is greatest, and the levers that can move the broader population toward a more just and decent society. The programs detailed in this Annual Report for 2004 improve thousands of lives. The Community Activists Network expands the core of people who will work for their communities – exploring and responding to many of these problems. The Roma and Ashkalia1 Documentation Center gives voice, direction, and support to two of the most marginalized ethnic groups. The Soncogledi School, the Gracanica Education Center, and the Sunflower School (BSF Albania) all keep some of the poorest and most disenfranchised children in school, with affection and support, and with better prospects for their future. The World of Wonders comics reaches into thousands of homes weekly with inspiration, education, positive examples, activities, and themes for reflection and growth. The Scouting for Change program sup(Continued on page 3) Scout campouts make nature experience possible. ports the growth of the international scouting program in Kosovo, the program for children and youth that has the most chance for sustained growth and a powerful positive impact on young people. The Novo Selo program was an example of responding to a 2004 emergency. In 2005, we are again responding to a humanitarian crisis – assisting people whose refugee camp was built on toxic waste. The Plemetina programs have helped families create new income, kids stay in school, young people to be the first in their family to go to college, a kindergarten prepare children for school, and a community group begin to take a broader responsibility for their future. With minimal support and little or no compensation, they often work harder and longer hours than many who receive a normal salary. They identify problems that others do not address. They gain extraordinary experience—not least being that it is possible to do great work with intention and little else. They trust that new initiatives can bring results. They often leave our work more idealistic than when they started. While, thankfully, all of these qualities can be found in many places, our unique approach has meant that our international volunteers—more than 500 since 1999—and our local staff and volunteers have had an impact well beyond their numbers. WE HOPE THAT YOU, OUR SUPPORTERS, WILL TAKE SATISFACTION IN THE WORK THAT YOU HAVE SUPPORTED AND WILL CONTINUE TO MAKE IT These efforts are very important in many lives and for the future of the region. In many respects Balkan Sunflowers is unique. We bring international volunteers from many countries together with local staff and volunteers from diverse communities, communities that are often in conflict. They have different religions, languages, and beliefs. The volunteers live with host families in their various communities, to more closely share the realities and challenges of everyday life. They work with some of the most difficult situations of daily life. They work to build local grassroots activism and commitment so that far more people will have the courage and tools to keep working for their communities. We hope that you, our supporters, will take satisfaction in the work that you have supported and will continue to make it possible for our work to continue. POSSIBLE. Poverty, unemployment, refugees, conflict and the potential for conflict—the war is past, but we—the aid workers, the international donors, the good neighbors and friends—must finish the work that we have begun to ensure its lasting impact. Rand Engel Roma is a non-pejorative term for the peoples sometimes known as “Gypsies”. 1 Page 3 BSF programs make a difference in their lives. Annual Report 2004 Community Activists Network Nicolas Puvis, Ramadan Lahi, Agnieszka Gawronska and Valentin Girard are community activists. CAN IS AN IDEA THAT HAS BEEN DEVELOPED AND NURTURED FOR YEARS WITHIN BALKAN SUNFLOWERS. CAN training reached above the clouds. We have all heard “Give a man a fish and is that, through these projects, the volunteers you feed him for a day; teach him to fish and and program staff will seek out, support, and you feed him for a lifetime.” It is true – as far mobilize local community activists. as it goes. If there are no fish where he lives, Community activism means people – and in he will starve. If there are barely enough fish this program, particularly young people – are to support him and no possibility of trade, he gaining training, experience, and positive will survive in poverty. If the fish are con- results; that they are looking at their trolled by venal institutions, he may fish for communities with new eyes, and with others, with little hope for himself. He also increased expectations. They have the right to needs to see that he has possibilities, that he expect better and the responsibility to can work together with others, that he can actively work for a better life. think, plan, cooperate, advocate… Nine young Kosovars have paired with One of the fundamental objectives of the nine international volunteers (from Bulgaria, “international mission” in post-war Kosovo is England, France, Poland, Romania and Spain) the development of a functioning civil society in the first phase of the project. As the project that is democratic, human rights-oriented, and started in October 2004, the 2004 Annual effective. Without this, the conditions that Report can detail some of the work begun: created the 1999 Kosovo conflict and the resulting human rights catastrophe remain. ♦ Gjilan/Gnjilane CAN volunteers and activWithout a functioning civil society, the ists developed and implemented Tolerance in prospects for the return of refugees to their Our Schools, an innovative school-based prohomes, or a safe future for minorities, is ject, in conjunction with the American Refugee limited. Indeed, there is still a possibility of Committee (ARC). This project brought torenewed conflict and its resulting tragedies. gether youth of mixed ethnicity to create Balkan Sunflowers’ commitment to social workshops that discussed issues of ethnicity, reconstruction is realized by empowering racism, and acceptance. Ultimately, these individuals and groups to shape their own youth held these workshops for school children lives combined with the sharing and nurturing in Gjilan/Gnjilane. of humane values. The Community Activists Network is a BSF project that helps people, ♦ In Gjilan/Gnjilane, the CAN volunteers are particularly young people, take an active role working with the residents of the Abdullah in the development of their society, and Preshevo neighborhood and ARC to develop a community center. Abdullah Preshevo is contribute to a future of peace. The Community Activists Network (CAN) home to many “returnees” – refugees who is an idea that has been developed for years have recently returned to Kosovo. The commuwithin BSF. The premise is simple. The first nity center as a venue for social services, emprogram objective is that volunteers w i l l s up p or t a n d d e v el op Funding from the European Union Youth Directorate supcommunity-based projects. This ports the Community Activists Network volunteers working means that the volunteers with BSF and partners. The grant of € 110,000* supports: € 31,800 participate in and enhance, if Volunteer travel and stipend: possible, on-going projects within Volunteer support (housing, partner, food): € 40,440 their comm unities, such as € 5,220 kindergartens, the arts, Scouts, or Sending organization costs: community centers. It also means Training: € 24,000 that volunteers will support the Coordination (SCI and BSF): € 8,760 development of new projects with adjusted in 5) (Continued on page the community. The second objective * For October 2004-October 2005. Budget 2005 as fewer volunteers than provided for. Page 4 During 2005, we will look closely at ways to improve the program and build on the successes of the work thus far. Our primary focus will be improving “activist education” - such as issue analysis, leadership development, and transforming theoretical knowledge into practical action. How can we best help young, motivated, and often inexperienced young people contribute to their communities. The answer lies in moving beyond a network of youth activists, to a network of young leaders who support each other, have been trained in the theory and practice of posing objectives and achieving results, are knowledgeable on the issues affecting their communities, and have a passion to make positive change for their neighbors as well as themselves. ployment support, children and youth activities, and women’s programs is a vitally important support to the success of this return effort. ♦ CAN volunteers are active in the community centers in Lipjan/Lipljan and Plemetina. Arts and English classes have been useful community contributions. The volunteers have helped with youth workshops, and the Scout programs in both communities. ♦ In Lipjan/Lipljan, Scouts and CAN volunteers are organizing a work camp to take place in late summer 2005. The work camp participants will construct a house in a national forest near Lipjan/Lipljan to be used for Scout activities. By the end of 2004, architectural planning, work camp organization, and solicitations to local businesses and organizations for building materials and other support was well under way. ♦ BSF CAN volunteers have worked with existing Scout groups in Lipjan/Lipljan, Plemetina, and are helping two new Scout groups, Priluzjie and Gracanica. ♦ The electric power to Priluzhe village was cut for many weeks. The volunteers organized a “Nema struje” (no power) party and other activities. ♦ Priluzhe also saw starting of a kindergarten for Roma children several days per week. The support to local activists was vital to this activity beginning. ♦ The Priluzhe activists also developed a virtual community internet training project – which has been funded for implementation in 2005. ♦ CAN volunteers supported the Gracanica education center, doing teacher training, helping with children’s activities, and organizing exchanges with other education centers. ♦ The Mitrovica CAN volunteers and activists are developing the Gazivoda Lake BSF/SCI work camp, to take place in July 2005. The 16 local and international volunteers will clean a large portion of the lake, install receptacles for trash, and build a swimming platform. This project is supported by the municipality, KFOR and many organizations. This project is important for the environment as well as for community development. Are the CAN objectives being met? Should this program be continued? The answer to both question is yes. Not only are the objectives being met, they are being exceeded. Continued development in the spheres of environment, ethnic tolerance, peace, and youth activities are vital to Kosovo’s civil society. CAN activists have the ability to influence even more in their communities: improving quality education, developing the arts, and increasing community access to information and resources. These are all “common cause” issues, bridging the deep divisions that separate people. While much has been done, much remains to do. Page 5 Priluzhe children overfill the tiny room used by this new CANsupported activity. CAN ACTIVISTS HAVE THE ABILITY TO INFLUENCE EVEN MORE IN THEIR COMMUNITIES BRIDGING THE DEEP DIVISIONS THAT SEPARATE PEOPLE. Tolerance in Our Schools participants created workshops for primary and secondary schools Annual Report 2004 Roma and Ashkalia Documentation Center Ambassador Pascal Fieschi, OSCE, at the RAD Center’s art exhibition. THE CENTER’S FIRST MAJOR EFFORT WAS HELPING ENSURE MAXIMUM INVOLVEMENT OF THE ROMA AND ASHKALIA Aferdita Berisa was a BSF volunteer in her village, Plemetina, in 2002. Now working for RTK television, she covers the Roma and Ashkalia artists exposition, organized by the BSF RAD Center in the halls of the Kosovo Assembly. COMMUNITIES IN THE KOSOVO ASSEMBLY ELECTIONS. First Ashkalia forum. Usually Balkan Sunflowers develops its own projects and looks for grants to realize the project. This can take months, even a year or more, involve a dozen project rewrites, investigation, preparing proposals often on a variety of different donor formats. Sometimes, though, agencies have a program that they want implemented. Perhaps a partner will come to us with exactly the kind of program we believe in – such as the Roma and Ashkalia Documentation Center. The set-up of the Roma and Ashkalia Documentation Center (RAD) began in July. Page 6 BSF was asked by the OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) and the OSCE’s Office of Democratic Initiatives and Humans Rights, Warsaw (ODIHR) to select and work with new managers who will develop the Center, and lead it to an independent status. The Center is intended to become a focal point and resource for two Kosovo ethnic minorities - Roma and Ashkalia. Before the Kosovo conflict, there were 100150,000 in Kosovo. Today, there are fewer than 40,000. As elsewhere in Europe, Roma (“Gypsies”) suffer from poor health, reduced life expectancy, discrimination, unemployment, poverty, and poor education. They are particularly at risk from any renewed ethnic violence. The Center functions in a variety of ways: as a resource center for activists; as secretariat for the Roma and Ashkalia Forum, particularly in confronting issues of common concern; for developing projects and initiatives; for providing objective and comprehensive information on these communities to government and international agencies; for informing the communities of opportunities relevant to them (calls for As 2004 was coming to a close the proposals, trainings and seminars, Center was actively engaged in negotiating scholarships and internships, etc.) to have an exhibit of Roma and Ashkalia art In July, the first month of the RAD, the Center organized a The Roma and Ashkalia Documentation Center (RAD) roundtable of Ashkalia community was supported financially by the Office of Democratic leaders from around Kosovo. Initiatives and Human Rights (ODIHR), based in Warsaw, of the OSCE. Further, they presented their pro- The July 2004-March 2005 expenditures of the RAD gram to Roma community leaders Center were € 16,020 ($ 20,500). This included: at a meeting on 2 August. One € 5,400 important result of the meetings Program managers (local) was identifying the need for more Rent, administration, office € 2,220 polling places in minority areas. € 2,000 The Office pursued this important BSF volunteer support objective in the following days, Roundtables, conferences, actions, etc € 6,400 but it was too late to make a difference in 2004 - but perhaps New ODIHR and OSCE Kosovo grants support the Roma and Ashkalia Documentation Center through December not too late for future elections. The Center’s first major effort 2005. Funding is needed for 2006. was to register voters and help ensure maximum involvement of the Roma in the halls of the Assembly of Kosovo (the and Ashkalia communities in the Kosovo parliament), as a representation and recogAssembly elections on 23 October 2004. nition of the participation of these comAs the first public project, support to the munities in the life of Kosovo. The exhibit was elections was an important step in held in January 2005. The RAD Center is now a registered nonestablishing the Center as an effective servant of Kosovo’s Roma and Ashkalia governmental organization. Plans for 2005 citizens. The managers, Bekim Syla and include continuing to work together with Adem Osmani, recorded radio interviews, Balkan Sunflowers and for BSF staff to organized a televised debate, visited partner in consulting roles with the RAD, communities, lobbied for new polling places while it develops its independence and more convenient for minorities, developed capacity to grow as a major advocate for information pieces, brought the head of the the full and equal participation of Roma and Kosovo Central Election Commission to talk Ashkalia citizens in the life of Kosovo and with leaders, and supported dissemination Europe. In 2005, the RAD objectives include: and discussion of the Roma community • Train and support activism and advopolitical platform. cacy—effective Roma and Ashkalia Through 2004 the Center organized activists working with government and several forums for activists to work on their international institutions common objectives and ways of working • Documentation initiatives to ensure together. Efforts included a phone conferlegal status and standing for minority ence of Ashkalia leaders in Kosovo with citizens those in the Diaspora, who wanted to find more effective ways to support activities in • Support youth early marriage Kosovo. In December, the RAD organized • Development of the website Kosovo’s first Roma and Ashkalia Youth Conference. The youth decided to focus on • Development the RAD resource library changing attitudes toward early marriage, • Support and development of the which they see as a major cause of poor Roma and Ashkalia Forum education and poverty. Page 7 Prizren, Kosovo. Turkish bathhouse. THE YOUTH FOCUSED ON CHANGING ATTITUDES TOWARD EARLY MARRIAGE, WHICH THEY SEE AS A MAJOR CAUSE OF POOR EDUCATION AND POVERTY. Bekim practicing his remarks for the opening of the Roma and Ashkalia art exhibit. Annual Report 2004 Soncogledi School, Skopje, Macedonia Soncogledi’s school goes on! She is going to school. THE LONG-TERM EXCLUSION OF ROMA FROM DIFFERENT ASPECTS OF SOCIETY HAS CREATED MISTRUST AND DOUBTS ON BOTH SIDES. Senjur, Mushe, Rifce To those of us who work for NGOs, that a pilot project survives brings a new optimism: our work is positively recognized after all. For Soncogledi, the Macedonian delegation of Balkan Sunflowers, getting funds for a further three years for the education of Roma children is more than anything giving us confidence that the work we have started can be completed. In September 2004 Soncogledi became part of the Foundation Open Society Institute Macedonia’s (Soros) network of four NGOs that are implementing Roma school inclusion in Macedonia. Soros’s “Program for Education of Roma”, together with the Decade of Roma Inclusion (officially opening in Sofia on February 2nd 2005), aims to improve the socio-economic situation of Roma in Eastern Europe. After Soncogledi was informed that our project had three years more life, we could restart the educational center for children from Klanica, a scattered Roma settlement in the southeast part of Macedonia’s capital, Skopje: intensive field work, interviews with children’s parents, getting to know new children, making lists, reorganizing school space, etc. Effort was made to find a new place for school closer to the children’s homes, but finally the old location was kept. This causes concern since children have to be transported to school with the BSF van, usually during rush hour and the traffic in Skopje is unorganized and chaotic. We were amazed to realize the success in raising the educational awareness level within the community that we achieved during the pilot year. From the parents’ side there’s been far greater interest in enrolling their children in our program than two years ago, our comPage 8 munication was much more fluent, and their interest for active participation in our program was remarkable. Together, we’re trying to overcome issues connected with children’s hygiene and health. These are crucial for our program. In one part of Klanica there is no running water resulting in children having many skin conditions. Since most don’t have any health care, infections were serious and we had to put on hold some of the activities to deal with the situation. Nevertheless, realization of the pre-school program has been good. Through the activities we were monitoring and following children’s individual abilities in terms of socialization, adaptation, language and vocational The Soncogledi School is supported through 2005 and 2006 by the Foundation Open Society Institute Macedonia (a Soros Foundation) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). skills, memorization, etc. New children in the preschool group are already very well integrated and comfortable with us; coming to school has become their daily routine, most of the parents have developed the habit of sending them to school with clean clothes; children are fast in learning Macedonian, disciplined, relaxed, and excited. We have been focusing a lot on conversation with them. Children from our Literacy Program on the other hand have always been a bit more difficult to organize. Since most of them are working (collecting waste material around Skopje, begging, washing cars), a great deal of flexibility from our side is necessary. The number of those who participate in Soncogledi’s school has escalated this year. For those children we have been organizing different games and creative workshops, with focus on learning the alphabet, improving practical thinking, and getting them to articulate as much as possible. Besides that, we have been exploring ways for reducing violence among them, and this remains one of our priorities. Tutoring, a third activity that is being realized through the Soncogledi program, has been quite successful considering children had to use public transport or walk to our center. For that activity we have support of more than five new local volunteers. They’re mostly helping first-year pupils from the state school in doing their homework and practicing alphabet and mathematics. In some cases, volunteers visit children at their homes. The interest from children’s side for Soncogledi’s tutoring is growing, so we’re constantly searching for new tutors. In the past we have established a lot of contact with the state school “Braka Miladinovci” in which Roma children from Klanica are enrolling. The communication with this school has always been difficult. Since it’s very important for us to have information about Klanica children’s progress in the state school - there is still much prejudice and discrimination against Roma in Macedonia - we asked the school director for cooperation. So far, she has not wanted NGOs to “interfere” with her work. As Roma school inclusion within “The Roma decade” will be obligatory for the state and not only something for the NGOs to do, we’re hopeful that our cooperation will improve soon. Soncogledi is aware that for Roma School inclusion more than just a decade of World Bank and Soros funding is needed; government attention and hard work by the NGOs will be necessary. Still we strongly believe Klanica community DEVELOPING RESPONSES TO DISCRIMINATION AND THE that a better future for Klanica children is ahead. Supporting information: Through its daily educational activities Soncogledi provides basic education and school assistance to approximately 120 Klanica children age 3 to 15 years. The project provides kindergarten, preschool activities, literacy program, and tutoring. Parental education, working with local Macedonian schools, and developing responses to discrimination and the segregation of Romani children in mainstream schools are also Integral parts of this program. The program is being performed by three professional teachers, four local assistants, and one Romani translator. The Program is managed by two coordinators, an international coordinator from Slovenia, and a Macedonian coordinator. SEGREGATION OF ROMANI CHILDREN IN MAINSTREAM SCHOOLS ARE ALSO INTEGRAL PARTS OF THIS PROGRAM. Soncogledi (“Sunflower” in Macedonian) is locally registered and locally managed in Macedonia. It is part of the Balkan Sunflowers Network. It’s funding is independent and therefore is not included in this Annual Report 2004’s Financial Statements. Rabije, Serdzana, Denis For more information on the Decade of Roma Inclusion, see www.romadecade.org, www.soros.org/initiatives/roma/focus_areas/decade; and www.romea.cz/english/index.php?id=servis/z_en_2004_0137. Page 9 Annual Report 2004 World of Wonders—Comics The Sakharov issue includes kids conscience questions. Also: “To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men.” Abraham Lincoln “FEAR GROWS IN DARKNESS; IF YOU THINK THERE'S A BOGEYMAN AROUND, TURN ON THE LIGHT.” DOROTHY THOMPSON Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein, in the page on “Consequences”. Balkan Sunflowers cooperates with the Children’s Discovery Museum of Kosovo to create a full-page comic, World of Wonders, that appears Sundays in Koha Ditore, Kosovo’s leading newspaper. Koha Ditore estimates that they have half of the newspaper sales in Kosovo daily and 70-80% on Sundays. Each week of the comics includes a theme, illustration and a biography of someone who exemplifies that theme, activities, challenges, games, or puzzles, etc. The themes have particularly, though not exclusively, focused on values, on big theme questions presented so as to interest young people. The first sixteen issues: Olympics. The runner Wilma Rudolph who overcame disability and racial discrimination to be a gold medal winner; Olympics history; geography; Olympic facts. Science. Marie Curie, a woman who was an early pioneer in science; science facts; two do-ityourself experiments. Environment. Nobel Peace Prize winner for environment and community rights, Wangari Maathai; things kids could do to help the environment; how to save water from the toilet tank; Kenya. Music. Beethoven; music facts including about the Euro- Page 10 pean hymn; musical do-ityourself. History of Comics. Walt Disney; comics in history. History of the Book. Gutenberg; book and printing facts through history; doit-yourself printing experiment. Conscience. Andrei Sakharov; questions for kids, what they would do in certain moral dilemmas; a puzzle; a pollution experiment. Fantasy. Lewis Carroll; quotes from Lewis Carroll; Cheshire cat story from Alice in Wonderland; a puzzle. Charity. Mother Teresa; charity facts from different countries; charity word puzzle; something about the Mother Teresa Society; exercise asking kids how they would set charity priorities. Science Fiction. Jules Verne; list of Verne’s future inventions; word puzzle; invitation to kids to write a story. Invention. Thomas Edison; list of his actual inventions; how light bulb works; comparison of a regular light bulb and an energy saving bulb. Scouting. Baden Powell; scout facts; secret code puzzle; information on scouting in Kosovo; Scouting as world peace and youth promotion movement; do it yourself projects. Consequences. Mary Shelley; how different people see consequences; possible consequences of behavior for kids to think about; a genie “be careful what you wish for” joke; physiology of fear. Perspective. Michelangelo; art facts; color wheel experiment; perspective game; people seeing from different angles. Relativity. Albert Einstein; Einstein quotes; Einstein as peace activist; Theory of Relativity; gravity experiment; Mobius strip exercise. Wildlife. Jane Goodall; Roots and Shoots program; a story from Jane Goodall’s childhood; making an animal art project; Lessons for Hope. World of Wonders educational comics received a grant from the Council of Europe for the first six months. The budget for the comics was € 5,550. This included: Art and design € 4,100 Concept, research and writing € 1,300 Overhead € 150 The World of Wonders is supported through May 2005. Continuation funding is being sought. World of Wonders = Bota e Mrekullive The “Science Fiction” theme page featured Jules Verne. “WHEN I GET A LITTLE MONEY, I BUY BOOKS; AND IF ANY IS LEFT, I BUY FOOD AND CLOTHES.” ERASMUS BSF’s Scout project contributed to this page to coincide with BadenPowell’s birthday. Page 11 Annual Report 2004 Responding to an Emergency BSF with the Mother Teresa Society ran a clothing drive. When violence shattered Kosovo in March 2004, leaving more than 4,000 people displaced from their homes, BSF joined in the emergency response. Along with our work at the Novo Selo camp (separate article) we: took a refugee family to stay with relatives in northern Kosovo; made many hospital trips; drove more than 40 people from Gjilan to health services in a neighboring village; visited isolated families in Lipljan; donated 50+ mattresses and as many blankets to IDPs; donated a television set to a Gracanica IDP center; collected among ourselves for a large box of toys, games, and art supplies to Vushtrri refugees living in isolation on a military base; conducted, with the Mother Teresa Society, a Prishtina clothing drive collecting a truckload of clothes; made 50-kilometer trips twice daily for a month helping save a job, and included some 100 people on those trips, getting services in other towns; assessed medical needs and got donated prescription drugs; purchased medicines for people without access to pharmacies; visited IDP centers in Mitrovica, Gracanica, Vushtrri; helped arrange emergency access to social service payments; developed and implemented security plan for a family’s abandoned house. other projects. After the March violence, BSF provided Sami and Faton transport to continue with Open Eyes, a multiethnic youth video project of another NGO. Welcome to Plemetina and Four Years Later, films produced in two projects led by volunteer Kieran D’Arcy, were shown at One World, the Prishtina Human Rights film festival, in December. Kieran returned to Kosovo for several months in 2004. He produced a refugee story, one young man’s experience after the March 2004 violence left him homeless. WHEN VIOLENCE SHATTERED KOSOVO IN MARCH 2004, LEAVING MORE THAN 4,000 PEOPLE DISPLACED FROM THEIR HOMES, BSF JOINED IN THE EMERGENCY RESPONSE. Youth Video Balkan Sunflowers’ contribution to youth video continued to be realized in 2004: Sami, Avdyl and Faton Mustafa received funding from the Swiss Development and Cooperation Office to create SAF Productions, a video company. They are filming life at an IDP camp, making video letters for neighbors, and working on Good Will brings Good Fortune Delivering the tractor. In February 2004, BSF met two unusual friends—of different ethnicities but friends nevertheless. Learning that the Serb farmer’s tractor had been stolen two years before, BSF approached Mercy Corps for assistance. Mercy Corps developed a plan which gave the farmer a Page 12 tractor, his neighbor a trailer, and depended on a group of their neighbors receiving some support from the tractor in the coming growing seasons. More than 20 neighbors signed an agreement supporting the friends, and agreeing to participate in the project. Though Kosovo’s March violence made it seem as if no such project was possible, in fact the tractor was delivered on 3 June, when many neighbors gathered to celebrate the fortune of two good families. Gjilan Roma center and kindergarten—hand-over When Silvia Eckert, acting head of office for OSCE Gjilan, was acknowledged for the OSCE’s on-going support of the community and the support of the new community center, she thanked Center Manager Osman Demiri but said certainly BSF deserves thanks too. Osman replied that BSF was part of the Roma community and the community part of BSF; that we are completely together, that it was far more than thanks that we had. OSCE Democratization Officer (and former BSF volunteer) Daria Paprocka designed a program to help the center become selfreliant. After 3.5 years the BSF Gjilan Roma center was now to be a local project. BSF volunteers working on other Gjilan projects will continue to be available to the center and support it. Since 2000, BSF volunteers have led English and computer programs, sports projects, special celebrations, arts, community advocacy and access support, and civic education programs. In April 2004, the Roma kindergarten, under BSF auspices for almost 3 years, until January 2004, moved into a new house, sharing space with the Roma community’s elementary school, now under the Ministry of Education. BSF has donated its furnishings, desks, refrigerator, and supplies to the kindergarten. Opening of the Roma Community Center, with local management. Sylvia Eckert, Ghadah Alrawi and Bernard Wright. BUT IT IS SOME SATISFACTION New BSF Office—again In the May 2004 Sunflower Seeds we reported on our new office. It was torn down. So, with the building coming down around us, we were in a desperate search for new space. In October, successful, we moved into our new “HQ” in the Youth, Culture and Sports Hall, in the center of Prishtina. We look out our windows at UN and UNHCR headquarters, the national liaison offices (embassies) on “Dragodan” hill, the football coliseum, from which regularly we hear the exaltation of victory and the agony of defeat, the large open market, and the outdoor cafes. Of course, there is too much work to spend time looking out the windows, but it is some satisfaction to know that it is all there if we ever do look. Being in the Culture Center, we also hear concerts, enjoy festivals, and for six months were subjected to weekly filming of TV’s Star Bingo. Nine BSF staff work in our office; a steady stream of others come: to the RAD office, to work on scouting, for the CAN project, and for Plemetina and Gracanica programs. TO KNOW THAT IT IS ALL THERE IF WE EVER DO LOOK. Sewing and knitting For several months in 2004, Plemetina women gathered at our community center to sew and knit together, chatting and socializing. Some of the younger women and girls took part at the same time in a literacy class, as many had never attended school. They made their fine handicrafts with sewing machines do- nated in Belgium, found by BSF volunteer (2003) Ellen Baert, with materials driven in convoy to Kosovo by the UK group Hope and Aid Direct. Efforts in 2004 to find markets for their handicrafts were not successful. BSF will continue in 2005 to explore ways to support this as small income work, exploring both Fair Trade options and marketing through the BSF website. Page 13 BSF helped register and equip the Plemetina girls volleyball teams. Annual Report 2004 Gracanica Education Center The center is a fundamental contribution to young lives. These children face such significant obstacles going to school (teaching in a different language, discrimination, health, poverty, low parental opinion of education) that supplementary education is vital if most of them are to have a chance of a better life. learn the language better. They are learning songs, basic mathematical elements like numbers and shapes, and recognizing the difference between big and small. We have many creative games, drawing, painting, crafts, etc. The situation for these children before the center opened was very poor; most of their time was spent in the street. Since the center opened the situation in the community is different because the parents know the time when they send their children to the center and they make sure that their children are at home after the center. The center has become a positive habit in the children’s lives; parents are afraid that if the center stops working the children will loose their motivation. We expect and we will work to ensure that the older children attend the primary school next year. Startup Art complements learning language and math. THE SITUATION FOR THESE CHILDREN BEFORE THE CENTER OPENED WAS VERY POOR; MOST OF THEIR TIME WAS SPENT IN THE STREET. From the first month, April 2004, the program coordinators were finding the center space, interviewing prospective teachers, and identifying the people who would provide the staff training. We were also painting the center and organizing the classrooms. Once the center space was ready, teacher training began. The training focused both on child-friendly practice and developing objectives and activities. Training was led by Milena Maksimovic, a child psychologist and Angelina Skarep, an educator. The staff together planned the objectives and activities for the first three months. The activities for these three months were very productive as the children got used to coming to the center; it became their habit. The parents, too, are very cooperative with the center Grants from the Laura Jane Musser Fund (Minneapolis, manager and the center. We have MN, USA) and the Organization for Security and Coopsucceeded in building good relations eration in Europe (OSCE) made possible the Gracanica within the community, both with the Education Center’s first year. The 2004-2005 funding children and their parents which you was stretched to thirteen months: € 22,400 ($ 28,000). will see later in this report. This included: The activities in the center are: 1. 2. 3. 4. Kindergarten Starting School Club Homework Help After School Club Kindergarten Kindergarten. Teachers and manager € 9,425 Rent, utilities, building preparation, etc € 6,165 Education materials and equipment € 1,480 Children’s midday snacks € 1,950 Training € 1,000 € 2,000 The age group of kindergarten is 3 BSF volunteer support to 6 years old. The number of the children attending kindergarten The Gracanica Education Center has supported through daily is 40 to 45. Some 30 of the September 2005. New funding is needed to continue its children are very regular in their program from 1 October 2005. daily attendance. The activities with this group Starting School Club are fun, but all the activities are carried out in the Serbian language, the language of the The Starting School Club is the school’s main school they will attend, so the children can target group. This program is geared to the Page 14 . Results • • • • • • • Children have improved learning habits. Children’s attendance at primary school is improved. Children are behaving and interacting better. Children have very improved capacity in the Serbian language. Roma and Serbian children are getting along better. Parents are more supportive of their children’s school participation. The center is supporting the stability of the Roma community. children 7-10 years old, in the first three years of their primary school. We are providing basic Serbian language instruction so that they have a better chance of keeping up in class, and maintaining self-esteem in what can be a difficult situation. As the school is not in the children’s mother tongue, many can easily fall behind their peers, and be victims of ridicule or other humiliations. The activities over the last few months are: fun grammar, songs, games, writing and story telling. All the activities are strongly connected to the development of Serbian language skills. The number of children for this activity is normally 35 to 45. We receive many compliments from the school director Mr. Gligorije Stojanovic. He said that we are doing a good job and he can see a positive effect on the children who are attending the school. Center staff meetings with the parents have improved the parents’ opinion about education. Now the parents are visiting their children more often in the school; this is also giving a different picture to the primary school teachers. Homework Help Ten to 15 children come every day to the center for homework help. It provides an opportunity for them to study and ask the teachers for help with their work. This class is bringing a lot of positive results for the center and for the children. The Roma children that are in the primary school have a lot of difficulties in understanding their homework, so they come to the center and do their homework with the assistance of the teachers. The results of this are that the Roma children that are in the school are doing The Center is an important part of their lives. their homework correctly. We provide a positive environment where the children have time, space, quiet, and assistance to do their homework. Some of the children won’t find this at home. The teachers at the school asked the Roma children why they are doing their homework so often. The children explained that an education center opened up in the Roma community. We have full support from the teachers in the school. ONE OF THE GOALS IN GRACANICA IS TO RAISE AWARENESS After School Club OF VOLUNTEERISM. The After School Club activities are being managed by On the Good Way. The activities are Street Law, Scouts, Roma history, art and dance, movie nights THE TRAINING HELPED RECRUIT 7 MORE VOLUNTEERS. The Teachers & Volunteers: The center staff includes a manager, Sebastian Serifovic, two full-time teachers: Mirjana Manitasevic and Ivana Markovic; two part-time teachers: Aziza Butic and Bajram Serifovic; a cleaner, Kemajl Tahiri; and a BSF volunteer, Maria Vergara. One of the goals in Gracanica is to raise awareness of volunteerism. The center organized a meeting with young people and explained volunteerism and the benefits of volunteerism. This training helped recruit 7 more volunteers that are coming in different times to keep the center clean, help the teachers organize activities, help the homework class, prepare extra activities, and participate in weekly meetings. - Sebastian Serifovic Page 15 Gracanica staff on a cold winter day. Annual Report 2004 How We Measure Success—Novo Selo In the aftermath of the violence of March 2004, thousands of people were displaced from their homes and communities within Kosovo. Many of the families affected and displaced by the violence were friends of Balkan Sunflowers. Some BSF volunteers and staff were caught up in the violence, surrounded by the riots and destruction. But, ironically, out of that trauma and violence, out of the anger and misunderstanding, came new friendships, lives torn down and rebuilt, and the renewed notion that compassion and cooperation can revitalize communities during their moments of greatest need. Three charmers. Of course, compassion and cooperation didn’t come easily and not without hard work. After the violence, BSF was asked to develop programs of psychosocial support for several displaced communities throughout Kosovo. When those proposals were not funded, our at the end of our first day, “Our children haven’t smiled so much in five years.”). We were a team of five working in the IDP camp. It wasn’t the sprawling, diseaseinfested camp that people are used to seeing on television. With a population of around promises to those communities remained. BSF volunteers chose to work with a displaced Ashkalia community living on a French KFOR base just south of their hometown of Vushtrri. Initially hesitant with our presence (one concerned father told us at the start of our first day, “We know how to play with our kids.”), the community ultimately welcomed us and our work with open arms (the same father told us 250, this was a small community; a boutique camp. Each family lived in one of twenty tents. Do the math and imagine sharing a space the size of a small sitting room with that many people. We spent a lot of time with families in these tents drinking coffee and hanging out with babies. It doesn’t take long for claustrophobia to set in. There were a couple of large, often muddy, fields where WE SPENT A LOT OF TIME WITH FAMILIES IN THESE TENTS DRINKING COFFEE AND HANGING OUT WITH BABIES; IT DOESN’T TAKE LONG FOR CLAUSTROPHOBIA TO SET IN. Films were always popular. Page 16 we played sports and games with kids. Other than the living tents, there were two others. One was the “feeding tent,” where neutral tasting army food was delivered by soldiers and served up by residents. The small art projects hanging on the walls were the only clues that this was a kindergarten after lunch. We converted the other tent into a theater, where people watched movies projected onto a large screen for the first time in their lives. In addition to the football games and film screenings, the children of the camp participated in kindergarten, English lessons, math and reading lessons, art activities, a girls discussion group, and occasional karate lessons, yoga, and water balloon fights. Parties, of course, were on Fridays. As our time in the camp grew, parents and other adults became increasingly involved in our activities. A mothers and babies playgroup was formed. We brought in sewing materials for the women and chess for the men. News-papers were the most popular supplement we provided. Much of what we did was just talk to people and try to help them access resources. It seemed that we were in constant negotiation with authorities for better representation and medical care. I spent some time speaking with a young father. Along with his wife and two boys he lived in Vushtrri where they owned a small neighborhood market. They had lived in Vushtrri their entire lives and were obviously a close family. He told me about the store, its success, and his plans to pass on the store to his sons when he was older. I could just imagine him working in the store, selling bread and produce to his neighbors, his boys running in and out taking candy at will, showing his sons how to write a receipt or take inventory, thinking of them as grown, successful men with families of their own. And I could just imagine the curl of the smoke as it rose from the roof of his store and adjoining house, the way the fire started with a Molotov cocktail thrown through the store window and burned its way through the paper products, and the split-second decisions this young man, who was born into poverty, had to make while saving his family from the mobs in the street and leaving his life savings behind in his house. I could just imagine trying to cradle a one year old in my arms while sprinting down the street, the race of his son’s pulse as he screamed for his mother, and the police force locked them in jail while their houses burned to the ground1. In July, the camp was closing; the community was being moved to a partially renovated building not far from the charred skeletons of their houses in Vushtrri. By this time the community was incredibly splintered. Many had chosen not to return to Vushtrri and instead had taken refuge with friends and family elsewhere in Kosovo, Serbia, and beyond. The community had shrunk from 250 people to less than half that number. There were countless instances of a green KFOR jeep entering the camp, loading a family and their belongings inside, and driving off while sobbing friends and neighbors followed closely behind and we stood on the sidelines watching. Can a story like this have a happy ending? It’s hard to say, because the ending has yet to be written. But what can be said is that through tenacity and a dedication to the value of human dignity, many people in Kosovo have found success in their struggle against hatred and violence. These successes are not always grand. They come in the form of reading classes when there is no school and in the form of knitting with your neighbors when all your blankets have been burned. A success will be declared when this community lives once more in their homes, new and shiny, and we will all be successful when those houses never again feel the heat of fire and this community never again fears for their lives. 1 The Kosovo Police Service (KPS) and other security services had examples of outstanding work during the March violence. There were also significant failures. For more information, see “Failure to Protect.” Human Rights Watch. http://hrw.org/reports/2004/kosovo0704/ Page 17 Doing lessons gave some normality to life in the camp. WHAT CAN BE SAID IS THAT THROUGH TENACITY AND A DEDICATION TO THE VALUE OF HUMAN DIGNITY, MANY PEOPLE IN KOSOVO HAVE FOUND SUCCESS IN THEIR STRUGGLE AGAINST HATRED AND VIOLENCE. Children want to learn. Annual Report 2004 Scouting for Change 1& 2 If their mothers could see them now. IT WAS ALSO AN OPPORTUNITY TO MEET NEW FRIENDS AND GET IN TOUCH WITH LEADERS FROM OTHER GROUPS WITH WHOM TO ORGANIZE COMMON ACTIVITIES IN THE FUTURE. What kind of future will they have? Scouting for Change 1 Scouting for Change 2 "Scouting for Change", a Balkan Sunflowers’ training program, began with a seminar at the Vushtrri Police School from 16th to 18th January 2004. The seminar gathered 50 Kosovar youth leaders—Albanian, Serbian, and Roma—from nine communities. Thomas Bevand led the program. Tom is a French scout with more than 15 years experience. Scouting for Change 2 continues the direction of the first phase. The project is intended to The six-month training program aimed to help leaders from the different Kosovo scout groups to improve activities, exchange experiences, gain new leadership skills, and deepen their knowledge and their practice of scouting. Through different kinds of workshops, the participants expressed their expectations of the seminar and the Scouting for Change program. They looked at the situation of scouting in Kosovo, and discovered how they could contribute to improve it. This seminar was not only a chance for the leaders to gain skills and learn about scouting, but it was also an opportunity to meet new friends and get in touch with leaders from other groups with whom to organize common activities in the future. The seminar was followed by several oneday trainings. The program concept called for a Kosovo-wide training for leaders to be followed by two further steps: regional trainings conducted by participants from the Kosovo-wide training, and then group activities that further put these trainings into practice. The whole concept was to ensure that leaders quickly learned by doing. The March 2004 events in Kosovo altered the plan. In April 2004 we held a scouts peace meeting, to plan next steps. From May, again, the schedule resumed. The basic concept of tiered training was used and appreciated. Scouting for Change 1 led to several busy summer months. Tom helped coordinate Scout et Guides de France (SGDF)-supported scout camps, as well as SGDF groups who visited and participated in activities in Gjakova, Gracanica, Obiliq, Prizren and Plemetina. Page 18 encourage and support local groups, strengthen an informal network among scout groups, and improve skills and program through training. Fourteen of Kosovo’s scout groups, representing as many of 1500 scouts, regularly participate in the activities of the network. They have participated in a threeday seminar in October and a network planning meeting in October. They also contribute to a scouting newsletter which shares information on activities, and provides tips and activities. This phase of the project was organized by Elise Drouet, a BSF volunteer and French scout, and Sami Mustafa and Gezim Visoka, who staffed the project. Scouting for Change 1 was made possible by a grant from the Swiss Liaison Office, Pristina. Scouting for Change 2 was made possible by support from the Scouts et Guides de France (SGDF), Fondation Schneider, and the European Scout Region. Plemetina and Obiliq scouting programs were enabled by grants from the Norwegian KFOR brigade. Summer camping programs are projects of Scouts et Guides de France and supported by SGDF, but receive logistical support from BSF. Additional support for scouting programs was received from Caritas Italiana and Ruud van der Meer. Plemetina Background: Plemetina, a village 3 km from Obiliq town, the municipal hub and location of two old lignite-fired power plants, has some 1200 Serbian, 300 Albanian and 400 Roma inhabitants. Most Serbs and Roma lost their employment after the 1999 war. But, in Kosovo, the majority Albanians are also largely without work. Balkan Sunflowers started a community center in Plemetina in January 2002. In 2004, BSF had 6 projects in Plemetina: Community Center. Since mid-2001, at the request of OSCE mission in Kosovo, Pax Christi NL was involved in development of a community center in Plemetina. As the construction took much longer than anticipated, Pax decided to support an interim community center. In 2004 BSF merged its center with two local NGOs, Idemo Pravo and Novi Pacotek, in a new interim center. Activities included English and computer classes, kindergarten, and handicrafts. tics, and manage a 2003 Norwegian KFOR support grant. Small income projects. Four families received small income generation grants from a project BSF presented to the Swiss Development and Cooperation Office. Ekrem Kurti, a mechanic with fifteen years experience, had the trust but now also has the tools to work on local cars, motorcycles, and tractors. Mehdi Skenderi proved his reliability driving for BSF over more than a year. Now he has “Taxi Mehdi”. Semo Mustafa has played music since he was a small child. His new keyboard and speakers allow him to play for weddings and parties. Sami, Avdyl and Faton Mustafa (SAF Productions) are making films. One of their income innovations is making video letters which neighbors send to relatives abroad. Self Development Project. A working group of local people must decide on projects, using a Pax Christi grant. The second phase, from January 2004, was making The “Freedom Train” runs on these tracks, connecting Plemetina to towns north and south. BSF HAD 6 PROJECTS: THE COMMUNITY CENTER, A KINDERGARTEN, SOCIAL SUPPORT, Kindergarten. The kindergarten is developing. Every day 25-35 local chilThe Plemetina small incomes projects were supported dren are playing, singing, learnby the Swiss Development and Cooperation Office, ing their numbers and letters, Pristina. The SDC is the development agency of the improving hygiene, and develop- Swiss Foreign Ministry. The grant total for the four small ing social skills. income projects was € 9,576. THE SCOUT Post-violence support. Plemetina Pax Christi Netherlands supported the Interim Commupeople, though not direct victims nity Center and the Plemetina Self-Development proof the March 2004 violence, ject. Phase 2 of the Self-Development project was were affected. They were cut off funded by a grant of € 24,600. from their families in other towns as buses and trains stopped work. Getting progress until the March 2004 violence. A to the market or to health care was internew working group began to function in rupted. The social assistance office in Obiliq late 2004. This group includes representawas destroyed. There were many refugees tives of communities, neighborhoods, and from other towns. BSF provided transport to local institutions. After a call for proposals, help meet needs. We pressured for quick they selected three for support: continuation alternative handling of social assistance of the kindergarten, support of the village payments. We reached out to people to sanitation company, and a project for forinclude them in programs. We provided mer workers of the electrical enterprise. The blankets and mattresses, and collected working group may become a useful vilclothes for new refugees in the village. lage institution, bringing together different interests to assess needs and together seek Scouting. The group started in 2002 continsupport for new initiatives. ued. BSF volunteers advise, help with logis- DEVELOPMENT Page 19 GROUP, SMALL INCOME PROJECTS, AND THE SELFPROJECT. With a new watch. Annual Report 2004 Balkan Sunflowers Albania Balkan Sunflowers Albania, with the support of Caritas St. Polten (Austria), CAFOD and B.S.F.USA. has been working with school children in the Roma community in Tirana since 2001. Focusing on the small Bregu i Lanes neighborhood, a BSFA community center has money for food, and in 2003 destruction of their homes. In 2004, 31 children were enrolled. Parents’ attitudes, as well, towards their children going to school improved. BSFA tackled various problems in keeping them in offered a continuous program of children’s activities, including games, art, and school help. Summer work camps have exposed the children to foreign volunteers. They have gone together on excursions to the mountains, the seaside, and the national zoo – all of which the children had never before visited. The program has particularly aimed to enroll children in school and help them stay in school. Of the 80 children in the neighborhood of school age (6-13) when the program began, only two were enrolled in school. There were many obstacles to the kids going to school: poverty, lack of registration documents, the family need for even small children to go on the streets to bring back school, including finding food support for their families, a visiting nurse, arranging legal assistance to help families get documentation, and running a tailoring workshop for their mothers. In 2003, the families in Bregu i Lanes faced a very difficult situation which also put Holidays party, 2004. OF THE 80 CHILDREN IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF SCHOOL AGE (6-13) WHEN THE PROGRAM BEGAN, ONLY TWO WERE ENROLLED IN SCHOOL. Food distribution has been important for families. Page 20 The Balkan Sunflowers Albania Roma Center program is supported by Caritas St. Polten. Caritas St. Polten has provided long-term support. Additional support has been provided by CAFOD, the Catholic Agency for Overseas Development. The work camp has received support from VIA Netherlands. Additional support has been received from Renovabis. Beach excursion during the international work camp. IN 2004, 31 CHILDREN WERE ENROLLED. PARENTS’ ATTITUDES the BSF program in jeopardy. The municipality tore down their homes, which were illegal structures. With help from Caritas St. Polten and Renovabis (a German donor), BSFA was able to get a minivan which helped get the children to school, and keep the staff in contact with the children and their families. BSFA’s objectives for this project included that children would have increased awareness of the role of the school in their lives, that the community center would offer social services to the Roma community, that the project would increase children’s school enrollment and that the staff would help the children prepare their daily work to keep them in school, that preschool age children would get support, and that families would receive counseling on children’s health issues During 2004 the main actions were: school support, the international work camp June 20 – July 5 2004, food distribution, and the summer program. BSFA worked closely with children: helping with their homework, supporting them with school items, food, meetings with the teachers in the school. The result is the successful completion of the academic year. All of the children passed their school year and were looking forward to returning to school in the fall. This was a big success. Most had not been in school for long, or before. They had lost their homes and were still not in stable shelter. The summer holidays mean less formal activities—but nevertheless a busy schedule. The kids come to the center for all sorts of activities. From June 20-July 5, 2004 Balkan Sunflowers, in collaboration with VIA Netherlands, organized a work camp, “Working with Roma kids”, with 4 international and 4 Albanian volunteers. The kids had the opportunity to go to the beach, to the mountains, in the city park, playing and having fun. Volunteers brought new ideas and games for the activities in the center and outside it, and built very good relationships with the kids. BSFA continued to implement food distribution for the families of children who attend the school. The number of the kids who attend the school and the number of the families who are programmed to receive food is growing. Page 21 TOWARDS THEIR CHILDREN GOING TO SCHOOL IMPROVED. BSFA TACKLED VARIOUS PROBLEMS IN KEEPING THEM IN SCHOOL. An excursion out of the city takes the children into nature. Annual Report 2004 Balkan Sunflowers Kosovo 2004 Financial Information Dai and Ekrem organized a basketball tournament. Balkan Sunflowers Kosovo Balance Sheet ASSETS Total current assets Other Assets - equipment TOTAL ASSETS € 29,598.39 € 22,895.94 € 52,494.33 LIABILITIES & EQUITY LIABILITIES Grants committed TOTAL LIABILITIES € 25,430.15 € 25,430.15 EQUITY TOTAL LIABILITIES & EQUITY € 27,064.18 € 52,494.33 Balkan Sunflowers is a volunteer organization. Volunteers normally receive food and accommodations and may receive a small stipend. During 2004 there were 13-15 international volunteers and more than 20 local staff working at any one time. Yet the costs for the whole program were less, for example, than the costs of supporting two American policemen working for the UN in Kosovo. Volunteer Ambika Bhaskar helped on the tournament. Balkan Sunflowers Profit and Loss 2004 INCOME Grants in Kosovo Grants ex-Kosovo* Contributions ex-Kosovo* Other Income Kosovo TOTAL INCOME € 18,966.00 € 77,665.38 € 14,700.00 € 2,041.08 € 113,372.46 EXPENSES Administration International volunteer support Local staff Communications Office rent etc Transport Direct Project Expenses TOTAL EXPENSES € 2,727.17 € 25,402.07 € 20,256.65 € 6,734.54 € 8,400.14 € 17,450.14 € 40,205.15 € 121,175.86 OVERALL TOTAL * Includes funds received from Balkan Sunflowers USA Page 22 -€ 7,803.40 Balkan Sunflowers USA 2004 Financial Information Balkan Sunflowers USA Balance Sheet as of 31 December 2004 ASSETS Current Assets Checking/Savings Assets Bank of America Raymond James Total Assets Total Checking/Savings Total Current Assets TOTAL ASSETS $838.36 $186.98 $1,025.34 $1,025.34 $1,025.34 $1,025.34 LIABILITIES & EQUITY Equity Retained Earnings Net Income Total Equity TOTAL LIABILITIES & EQUITY $1,637.94 -$612.60 $1,025.34 $1,025.34 Balkan Sunflowers USA Profit and Loss 2004 INCOME Income Total Contributions Total Grants TOTAL INCOME $16,240.00 $24,000.00 $40,240.00 EXPENSES Expenses Total Balkan Projects Profesional fees - consulting Utilities - telephone Printing and Postage Administration Bank Wire Transfer Charges Internet costs Travel - Fundraising Uncategorized TOTAL EXPENSES $38,700.00 $800.00 $390.73 $82.40 $250.00 $200.00 $-45.00 $464.52 $9.95 $40,852.60 Karmit, Sebastian, and Rand watched some of the games. BSF organized tournament. Page 23 Volunteers for Social Reconstruction BALKAN SUNFLOWERS Balkan Sunflowers Youth, Culture and Sports Hall 114 Luan Haradinaj Street Prishtina, Kosovo [email protected] +381-38-24-6299 Balkan Sunflowers USA PO Box 861086 St. Augustine, FL 32086 [email protected] +1-904-806-1400 Balkan Sunflowers Euskadi Rioja 4,5 dcha. 48015 Bilbao, Bizkaia Spain [email protected] +34-943-20-6907 Balkan Sunflowers Albania Rr Hoxha Tasim Pall 263/1 Tirana, Albania [email protected] +355-4-360-676 +355-4-266-821 fax Soncogledi (BSF Macedonia) 1000 Skopje, Macedonia [email protected] +389-2-277-3270 Contributors to the preparation of the Annual Report include: Ambika Bhaskar Elise Drouet Rand Engel Nenad Gjorgievski Nathan Hutto Claudiu Marariu Sali and Jo McIntire Enkeleid Pina Marijana Podhraski Thank you to our 2004 supporters… American Refugee Committee (ARC) Jacalyn Bennett Bilbao Bizkaia Kutxa David Blair and Linda Marsella The Bogart family Catholic Agency for Overseas Development Caritas Italiana Caritas St. Polten Nancy Cooperstein Charney Council of Europe (COE) European Scout Office European Voluntary Service (EVS) Judy Haney Barry and Connie Hershey Hope and Aid Direct Kerkinactie Kind Zighn Trust Gary and Randi Levitz Samuel Lupton Laura Jane Musser Fund Maria Markowitz Norwegian KFOR Omaha Community Foundation Open Society Institute (OSI) Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe Palo Alto Friends Meeting Pax Christi Netherlands Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) Renovabis Patricia and Dan Ryan Jeanny Ryffel Nina Santner Scouts et Guides de France (SGDF) The Smith Family Stichting Limburgsch Protestantsch Kinderhuis Swiss Development and Cooperation Office Swiss Liaison Office United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Ruud van der Meer Van Itallie Foundation Ian and Amy Wallis World Aid Mission The Wyeth Family Steven and Mary Yarmosky Thanks are due to numerous others who have contributed in many ways. Thank you! Balkan Sunflowers brings volunteers from around the world to work as neighbors and friends in social reconstruction and renewal. By organizing social and cultural activities, we promote understanding, further non-violent conflict transformation, and celebrate the diversity of the lives and cultures of the Balkan region. Volunteers bring skills, experience and enthusiasm to societies that have been depleted by conflict, and the volunteers are themselves enriched by their involvement in community building. Balkan Sunflowers activities are intended both to achieve concrete results and to enliven and empower the participants and their communities. Through play, art, sport, work and celebration, and in compassionate response to traumatic experiences, we serve the communities with whom we live. www.balkansunflowers.org