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Sonrisa receives DLA cheque

DLA cheque
Representatives of Sonrisa were very pleased to received a cheque for £6,700 from Discovering Latin America (DLA) at the organisation’s Annual General Meeting.

The substantial donation was the result of a highly successful fundraising event - The Rhythms of Latin America Festival - held by DLA at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London.

Supporters of Sonrisa (Hazel, Maya and Laura) receive a symbolic cheque from Mariangela of DLA.

DLA chose to donate the profits of the festival to Sonrisa so the money collected could go directly towards helping children at the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) in Quito.

A member of DLA had seen first hand the valuable work carried out at the centre, and was determined to offer aid to the charity.

The donation made by DLA will go largely towards the paying the salaries of the local teachers and support staff who work at CENIT.

Money will also go towards buying new resources for street outreach work and covering the costs of a nutrionist, so that the meals in the school canteen are as healthy as possible.

Sonrisa would like to take this opportunity to extend its heartfelt thanks to DLA for its most generous donation.

Cheque is handed across

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CENIT to give better service to volunteers

Every year the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) in Quito receives dozens of overseas volunteers who come to help the centre carry out its valuable programmes for working children.

Between 40 and 50 volunteers work at the centre at any one time, supporting CENIT’s 35 permanent Ecuadorian staff. Without the continuous flow of new volunteers, the centre would struggle to keep all of its programmes operating, particularly the Street Outreach scheme.

volunteers

CENIT recognises the value of its overseas volunteers and with this in mind has introduced a new application process for individuals wishing to volunteer at CENIT. Future volunteers will now be required to fill out an application form well in advance of their arrival in Quito, to ensure they are matched to a suitable programme at CENIT.

“Each day we working not just for our children and families in need, but also to give the best experience possible to our volunteers,” explains volunteer co-ordinator Betty España.

CENIT relies heavily on the work of overseas volunteers.

“We really want our volunteers to to feel comfortable, useful and pleased with the work they’re carrying out,” adds Betty. “We want them to feel they sure that they are offering a good service to the children and their families – that way the volunteers will have a good experience at CENIT.”

“We’re now working with an application form that CENIT volunteers must fill out and send back at least a month before they come,” says Betty. “It’s ideal if they can send it back even earlier as this will give the future volunteer a greater range of options for working.”

Once the volunteer co-ordinators have received the form, they will go through it with the aim of finding a compatibility between the skills the volunteer has and the needs of the different programmes at CENIT. If accepted, the volunteer will be sent a timetable and information about the type of work he or she can expect to be doing.

Betty stresses that although she will endeavour to place volunteers in the programmes that will most interest them, she has also to consider the needs of the centre. “We hope our volunteers will be flexible and willing to adapt to the needs of the work,” she says.

CENIT’s volunteer co-ordinators believe that this revised volunteer admissions process will be beneficial both the volunteers and to the children and families CENIT helps.

“The aim is that we never have volunteers who feel useless or who don’t have the skills to carry out the work effectively,” says Betty. “By bringing together a pool of volunteers who are more qualified and better prepared, we can make sure each of our volunteers leaves having had a highly positive experience.”

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Fun and games at CENIT’s summer camps

School may have been out in July and August, but at the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) in Quito, Ecuador, there was a hive of activity.

Every year the centre organises popular summer camps for children of the local Camal market, providing educational and recreational activities for children who can only dream of going on a summer holiday.

(more…)

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News from CENIT’s vocational workshops

One of the aims of the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) is to help working girls and their families break the cycle of poverty by equipping them with a means to financial independence.

“The centre places a special emphasis on helping girls and their mothers to acquire a valuable skill as a distressingly large proportion of the adult women in the girls’ families are subject to abuse and degradation because they have no money or means of their own to escape such a life,” explains CENIT’s director Hermana Jacqueline.

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Street outreach at Cisnes market

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Students strip for CENIT

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Students’ nude calendar makes national news

Oxford students who stripped off to raise money for their summer volunteering project at the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) in Ecuador have received a mention in The Times newspaper.

The enterprising students produced a nude calendar, featuring them posing in various locations in their day-to-day life at St Peter’s college.

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Reaching out to Quito and beyond

The Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) provides opportunities and hope for hundreds of Quito’s working children every year.

Sadly, however, there are many more children in and around Quito who are forced to work long hours and in dangerous conditions to supplement their minimal income.

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A new president, a more stable future?

presidential debateEcuadorians will soon be headed to the urns to vote in their new president – the eighth in ten years.

Elections in October will see one of nine current candidates take office in the new government.

The country has a rocky political past and present, and its people are famed for bringing down presidents by taking to the streets en masse.

(more…)

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CENIT clinic celebrates five years

Alison with a patientIn the same year that the Centre for the Working Girl (CENIT) celebrates its 15th anniversary, the centre’s medical clinic has reached the important milestone of half a decade of operation.

During the past five years the clinic has welcomed a grand total of 5,379 patients through its doors - a mixture of individuals attending CENIT programmes, their families and people from the local area who are in real need of medical attention.

(more…)

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Sonrisa is UK registered charity no. 1102369