Archive for the ‘Giving’ category

Mission Manna Video – 880 The Revolution Interview

May 25th, 2010

Todd Kaderabek was interviewed by  hosts Lesley Groetsch and Blake Butler of 880 The Revolution, Asheville’s Progressive Talk Radio. This happened on May 21st, 2010.

Topics covered were: Mission Manna’s clinics, feeding program and goat projects; Haiti’s current needs during the earthquake crisis; and info on the benefit at Jack of the Wood, 6-10 Tuesday May 25th, 2010.

Listen to this station on 880 AM in the Asheville, NC area.
Follow 880 The Revolution on Twitter: @TheRevolution

Click here to visit our channel.

The video is a  Bourne Media Production

ABOUT US

Mission Manna provides medical care for malnourished children and continuing health care education for adults in and around the Haitian town of Montrouis. Our work focuses in three main areas:

1) Community Health Agents providing malnutrition relief, medical care and education to improve the overall health in the Montrouis area and the surrounding communities.
2) Providing leadership for medical mission teams to travel to Haiti to conduct clinics for thousands of Haitian children each year.
3) Sustainable Nutrition in the form of providing and maintaining goatherds in and around Montrouis.

Keep up with our latest updates on our NEWS Page.

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Bruisin’ Ales to Host Mission Manna Benefit

January 27th, 2010

Thursday Tasting 2/4: New Belgium Brewery to benefit Haiti/Mission Manna

From Julie Atallah:

Ryan from New Belgium Brewing Company is coming to town for a tasting on Thursday, Feb. 4 and we’re partnering together with the brewery for the cause of Asheville non-profit, Mission MANNA, as a fundraiser for Haiti. Mission Manna is a faith-based organization located in Western North Carolina that provides medical care for malnourished children and continuing healthcare education for adults in and around the Haitian town of Montrouis. The non-profit has been actively involved with Haiti for ten years. The following is from Todd J. Kaderabek, Chairperson of Mission MANNA, Inc.:

As you are aware, on January 12, Haiti was hit with a devastating earthquake and is now in need of humanitarian assistance to a degree above and beyond what we have ever known. As such, Mission Manna is continuing our efforts in three major areas: health care access, malnutrition rehabilitation, and sustainable nutrition.

Establishing a sustainable source of food and income is a key component in ultimately improving the health and quality of the lives of children and their families in Haiti. This project contemplates the use of agriculture to provide impoverished families with nutrition and income and will initially focus on the introduction of goats as to better the lives of poor families in and around the Montrouis community. We are fortunate to report that our Montrouis clinic site was largely unaffected and all of our staff, friends and immediate family survived. That said, we are feeling the impact of the earthquake in the form of food prices tripling and fuel costs as high as $40 per gallon. That said, we are adapting to current conditions and our core mission will remain unchanged.

This four-flight beer tasting will include the new Ranger IPA, Mighty Arrow Pale Ale (seasonal), 1554 Black Ale, and La Folie Flemish Sour.

$5/per person gets you into the tasting, plus a raffle ticket with a chance to win three different prizes:

New Belgium glass
Bruisin’ Ales t-shirt
6-pack of Prestige (the official beer of Haiti!)

Drawings will start at 6:40 pm, though we will welcome donations up until we conclude at 7:00 pm.

Your financial contribution

March 4th, 2009

Your financial contribution to Mission Manna will be allocated strictly to our community healthcare workers in Montrouis and Mission Manna’s efforts to provide medical care and malnutrition relief for the children of Haiti.

Community Health Agent Initiative Yields Results

July 4th, 2008
Mission Manna team member hands out Akamil to a Haitian mom

By Kate Lalor
July, 2008

For many years, Mission Manna has hoped to employ community health workers to help children between our twice-yearly visits. Prior to the departure of the April team, we decided to put a pilot program in place, hiring Eddy Prophete and Givneaud Louis to follow thirty children determined to be at risk from malnutrition.

For $1,200 a month, we are providing akamil, nutritional education and when needed, emergency medical care to 30 children. Eddy and Givneaud go to the home of each family from two to five times per month, depending on the severity of the need. They are tracking data such as body weight and arm circumference on each of the children so that we can evaluate our efforts and make adjustments to improve results.

In light of the effect of global circumstances in Haiti’s economy, the timing of our decision to “jump in” could not have been better. It is possible only because of your generosity.

If every person on our mailing list donates $40.00, it will cover the cost of the Community Health Initiative for a year. We have two supporters who send $10 per month. If you do the math, you’ll see what an impact their donations make.

(The community health program in November 2009 now costs $1200 a month, not $800, as stated above.)