The Young Leader

  • GLA Program Blogs
  • Gamechangers
  • Newsletters
  • About The Young Leader

January 25, 2016 by The Young Leader

A Costa Rican Adventure

xyz1

Day 1

With everyone arriving at different times, today was very chaotic. After the majority of students arrived, which was not until the afternoon, we were off on a city tour of San Jose. David, our local tour guide, showed us all the major historic landmarks of the country’s capital. We went to the first national bank and the first supermarket where we all (except Lilly) bought rubber boots. It was then back to the hotel for dinner, which was rice with grilled chicken and salad. After a very long day, we were all happy to go back to our rooms and get ready for Day 2 of our Costa Rican adventure!

Day 2

After our last “American” breakfast for a while, of pancakes from Denny’s, we were all packed up and got on to the bus ready to head to the “Home Base” or place we will be staying for the next 21 days! On the way, we stopped at a coffee farm, which is in fact the 5th best coffee in the world! We had a tour of the machinery and taste tested coffee beans. We are all now experts in all things coffee! It was then off to home base which we all found breathtakingly beautiful. We met the staff there: Leo (owner), Memo (chef) & Ale, we can’t forget about Brutus and Cala, the two dogs! We learned who our cabin room mates were and had time to settle in before we played games before lunch. After lunch, we underwent an orientation which gave a little insight on what this program had in store for us. Then it was dinner! Surprisingly it wasn’t rice & beans! After dinner we were assigned our mentor groups (Kaylyn or Manuel). We did a short group activity, which was the spider’s web game. Where we would cross our arms and hold two other peoples hands, then we had to try and unravel ourselves without letting go of their hands. It was quite a challenge but we ended up in two separate circles, which isn’t the aim of the game but we all had fun doing it anyway. We finished Day 2 on a great note especially excited for the next day because it would be our first day in the communities!

Day 3

We had a lovely wake up call by Meghan, our director, who was playing music on the loudest volume her speakers would let her! We were down for breakfast for 7 and off in the bus at 7:30 to head to San Bernardo, the first community we would be working in. Upon arrival we were welcomed with a performance by the local primary school kids of a few traditional Costa Rican dances. Soon it was our turn to try. The lucky few, who the kids picked out, got to try on the traditional dress and learn a few moves! We then met Arturo, who is with Green Communities, the group we are working with in the communities. We were separated into two groups: Group 1 was making organic fertilizer with Arturo while Group 2 went with Eduardo, the owner of a coffee farm in the town.

On Eduardo’s farm the group helped dig trenches to prevent soil erosion when it rains. As it is the rainy season, it is very common at this time of year, as we found out. We felt very honored to be the group to help the first farm use organic fertilizer for their crops in San Bernardo. Before we knew it, it was lunchtime! Some of the local women of the town had prepared for us rice & beans with fish and vegetables, the first of many delicious meals they would prepare for us.

After lunch, we had our first Spanish class. To start with the teachers gave us a small exam which included an oral interview and a written test, to see how advanced our skills were. We were placed in one of two groups. Spanish class was soon over and we were off back to home base. We got an hour of free time before dinner and Kaylyn’s mentor group had wifi. After dinner, we had mentor groups then had a group activity, which was a personality test sort of thing, seeing what kind of leaders we are. That ended Day 3!

xyz3

Day 4

We had our first “leaders of the day” today, Amy and Hailey. As normal we headed to the service site after breakfast but we got to stop on the way to take a few pictures of the amazing views. We split again into our two groups but switched activities from the day before. Javier and Nacho, two local boys that were working with us, cut us all sugarcane to try. After lunch, we played a bit of soccer with the children that just got out of school for the day. Luckily for us, one of the young girls spoke pretty good English so she helped translate for us! Appropriately it was then time for our Spanish classes that were being held in Santa Maria, the closest town to our home base. During Spanish class, as an activity, we were sent off in pairs to find three different places in the town designated to us and to find out certain information about these places to go and report back to the class at the end of the activity. We all bought milkshakes from the coffee shop in town, which is also the place we toured on day 2. We then headed back to home base where Manuel’s mentor group had wifi for an hour. Dinner was amazing as usual! David from Green Communities did a group activity with us afterwards about the effects of outsiders coming into communities and attempting to change it to fit their personal needs not the rest of the community. After the group activity, we had mentor groups and discussed what we would need for our first excursion, which was white water rafting!

Day 5

Today we had a very early start, 5:30, to be down for breakfast at 6 am and to leave by 6:30 . We traveled to the Guayabo National Monument then to our hotel for rafting. Sam and Emina were team leaders today. At the monument we toured where a native tribe used to be located. After our tour it was time for lunch! The plan after lunch was to go to a park nearby but that was aborted when we got a flat tire. So instead we all played Heads Up in a town center with local students and families finding us all very entertaining! We all decided to get ice cream before we headed to the hotel, with our plans to go to the park gone. During our ride to the hotel we all enjoyed a jam session on the bus to Mr. Worldwide (Pitbull). Once we arrived at the hotel and got our room assignments we had 2 hours of free time. A few of us decided to go see a waterfall nearby with Carlos. We underestimated the time and the intensity of the walk down especially with the muddy conditions, so showering before we went was not the best idea! We ate dinner in the restaurant in the hotel then had our group activity. Our group activity was with us all sitting in a circle facing outside the circle with our eyes closed. Three students at a time would be chosen without the rest of the group knowing to tap the shoulders of people that related to the question she was asking. That concluded Day 5!

Day 6

We all awoke to the lovely sound of the pouring rain, which was the exact opposite weather we had hoped for that day since we were going white water rafting! After a short lie in until 7:30 and breakfast we were all ready for the buses to come and collect us, even if it was still raining. After discovering that the river we had planned to raft on had flooded due to the rain, our leaders of the day, Dennis and Olivia, had to make the decision of where to relocate our rafting adventure to. They decided on going to a different starting point on the same river that was not as dangerous to the new conditions. After a little longer bus ride than expected, a short stop in a local shop and a 20 minute hike downhill we reached our starting point! We split into our rafting groups and were off down the river. A few rapids later we stopped at a waterfall. Our tour guides showed us how to climb up, stand under the waterfall and then we got to slide back down to the bottom. We saw many different types of wildlife, such as frogs, birds and spiders while on our trip. We ate lunch two rapids before the end. It was all spread out on the bottom of a flipped over raft. We had burritos, pineapple and watermelon. After finishing the last few rapids we had the chance to jump in the river and float down stream. It was then time to head back to the hotel to change buses (the Mario Kart we had named it) and drive back to Cedrela. After a few bathroom stops and the odd snack break we arrived back in time for dinner and a short mentor groups. It was a very late end for us today so we all were very happy to go back to our cabins and get some well-deserved rest!

xyz2

Day 8

We all awoke to Connor and Lilly’s wake up call, which we all thought we were having another earthquake due to Connor’s loud banging on our cabin doors! It was laundry day today so we all had to figure out how to fit all our lovely dirty clothes into one bag per cabin to give to Leo to get washed. Today for a change we worked on Nacho and Javier’s family coffee farm, digging trenches and square holes for the runoff water. While walking back Carlos pulled up in his pickup truck and we all hopped in for the short ride down to the community center instead of walking 20 minutes downhill back. After lunch we went back to home base for Spanish class. Today’s class today was all about traditional Latin American styles of dance so we spent the time learning different moves to the salsa and merengue. For the last hour we had a zumba class from a lady from Santa Maria. It was great fun but very tiring! We then got an hour of free time before dinner and mentor groups. We got our laundry back, which was not expected until tomorrow so that was a great surprise and great end to the day!

Day 9

Our team leaders for today were Abby and Lauren who all gave us a lovely wake up of running into our cabins full of energy! We all were very excited for today’s breakfast, which were pancakes! Today’s service work was helping make cement to build a sidewalk coming from the primary school to the community center. In Spanish class we went to the kitchen in the school and learned how to make a beef soup which tasted amazing! Arturo was leaving us to go help another group in a different community so we had to say goodbye to him to what we thought was the last time we would see him but we were happily mistaken!

Day 10

After our wake up call by our leaders of the day Jen and Destiny and breakfast we were off to our last day of service in San Bernardo. We split into 3 groups and every hour we moved to a different activity. They were: painting tires, making cement to finish the pavement from yesterday or digging holes for posts to place behind the tire fence. We got to write our names in the cement before it dried so we will always be remembered but personally I think we would be a hard group of people to forget! While cleaning the shovels we all got a little sidetracked with a water fight us GLAers against Javier and Nacho, I think we won!

After saying all our goodbyes in San Bernardo we hopped on the bus and headed into Santa Maria for some coffee and some time to go around by ourselves, with a buddy of course. We had dinner during mentor groups to save some time for our group activity. Tonight’s was a TED video on first impressions and we had a discussion on it afterwards. We finished up the night with watching a few of Javier and Nacho’s Taekwondo videos.

Day 11

After Jamie and Sarah woke us all up and we had eaten breakfast we were off to a new community, Zapotal. We were welcomed with a dance from the children from the local school. Today we got to make eco- bricks for the first time. Eco-bricks are made out of recycled plastic bottles filled with plastic bags, wraps etc. We plan to make enough to build a bench! After lunch w headed back to home base where Carlos and David came to talk to us about consumer products and the linear cycle it goes through. We learned how to lessen the impact it had and became more aware on its effect on our earth. We had a joined mentor groups where we played a few trust exercise games. After dinner we decorated the dinning room with balloons, birthday hats and banners since it is Dennis’s birthday tomorrow!

Day 13

Our leaders of the day Sam and Lilly had decided on a very relaxed day today, which we all needed. We spent the morning at the beach by our hotel where we got to buy souvenirs such as shirts and jewelry. The waves at this beach were much larger than the ones yesterday so we enjoyed watching the surfers and jumping the waves. After lunch at the hotel we were on the bus back to home base. Memo had made us burgers for dinner, which were amazing! We tried ours with strawberries, apparently that’s very popular there, but they tasted pretty good. We had short mentor groups tonight since we were all tired from our day at the beach!

Day 14

We were up at our usual time, 6:30 by our leaders Emina and Connor and off to service at 7:30. We split into 3 groups, 2 mixed cement while the last group finished stuffing the bottles with plastic for the bench. We ended service an hour before lunch so we could play our community soccer game. We had Spanish class in San Marcos, which we got to walk around to visit the bakery. We had mentor groups before dinner, which we all loved since it was pasta! For our group activity we played multiple games such as Queen B and flipping a tablecloth with us all standing on it. We all enjoyed tonight’s group activity a lot!

Day 15

Everyone was woken up to the music of Jen and Olivia. On the way to service we had a pump up session to get us all ready for service today! David and Jonathon gave a little in sight on the history of Zapotal, which was very interesting. We split into our 3 groups again 2 worked in the soccer field to dig trenches to stop it from flooding the other one was making eco-bricks. After lunch we had a small dance party with the members from the community. We made a congo line and had a dance battle! We had Spanish class back at home base where we practiced our acts for the final presentation. We had mentor groups and group activity before dinner. Our group activity was completing an obstacle in groups of 5 while our feet are constantly touching, it was harder than we all thought! After dinner we split into our talent show groups to practice before we were in our cabins for lights out.

Day 16

Lauren and Jamie had us in the bus 6 minutes earlier than usual, probably due to the guacamole we had for breakfast! We worked on the sidewalk and trying to finish the eco bricks. The women of the town performed for us today some dances that we got to join in with. Back at home base we had our last Spanish class where we performed Vivir mi Vida and danced to Carnival. We got to practice our talent show acts after dinner.

Day 17

Sam and Sandra woke us up to our last day of service. We all made eco- bricks till snack time today which finally allowed us to make enough for our bench! After snack we all went down to the soccer field and started mixing cement for the bench. Jonathon helped us lay out the cement and place the eco-bricks on top of the cement layers. We painted the bottles to add a little color to the plain plastic and inscribed our names into the wet cement. We had to say our final goodbyes to the community of Zapotal which was very emotional. We stopped at San Marcos on the way back to home base to get any supplies we may need for our talent show acts later that day. We also stopped in Santa Maria at the coffee shop to get one last coffee. It was then back up to home base for an early dinner before the show. The talent show went great! Nacho & Javier came from San Bernardo, Carlos, Arturo & David came from Green Communities and Jonathon’s whole family came from Zapotal.

Highlights included Meghan and Kaylyn feeding Cala and the neighbor’s dog like they were humans, Nacho & Javier’s staged Taekwondo fight and Connor’s lip syncing to Party in the USA mad the night. As a group, we all performed the Semilla song. It was a great night!


Contributed by Olivia Larder

GLA Alumnus

Costa Rica: Spanish Service Adventure

Filed Under: #myGLA, Official Student Bloggers

January 25, 2016 by The Young Leader

Two Days

Day 2

IMG_4856

“Ask her why she… why she just dropped out of school after 4th grade,” Hungbo, one of my fellow GLA students, says to Mama Simba.

Mama Simba, acting as our translator, quickly relays the question in Swahili to Mama Neema, me and Hungbo’s host mother who speaks no English. Mama Neema looks down and to the side for a moment. She says one word quietly, her mouth hidden behind her worn, wrinkled hand. Mama Simba looks back at us.

No uniform,” she says. “She stopped going at grade 4 because she could not afford a uniform.”

When we leave the compound with her, we pass by a little boy, a member of one of the other host families. He’s wearing dirty pink converse, studded with fake crystals on the toe, laced up to his ankle. He doesn’t seem to have a care in the world that they’re girl shoes- after all, he’s still dressed “smartly”, as the Tanzanians say, in a stained white tuxedo t-shirt.

Mama Neema places her hand gently on my back anytime we get too close to the hectic road; Tanzanians seem to have no need for traffic laws. Mama Neema says something to Revelation, a “local expert” our age that’s fluent in Swahili and English. Revelation explains that Mama Neema has decided to walk behind us in order to prevent strangers from following us.

When we arrive to Mama Neema’s house (an overstatement, as I’ll explain later), we inquire after her 10 year daughter that Mama Neema told us about. Mama Neema calls her daughter’s name loudly, and the girl busts out of a tangle of lush green trees, her friend in close pursuit. She barely slows her run as she hurdles into me, enveloping me in a quick hug. Shyly, she immediately steps back, and only offers Hungbo a small wave. “They are apart of our family now,” Mama Neema explains to her.

Mama Neema shows us inside her home: “Karibu,” she says, the Swahili word for welcome. It is nothing but a small, wooden hut, 4 sides containing an area the size of my parent’s closet; I don’t compare it to that to sound snobby or wealthy, but to explain just how small this woman’s everything is compared to a small part of my life. A suitcase, presumably filled with all of her belongings, sits at the foot of her bed. She ushers us to sit down on the couch,- “Karibu”- the only other piece of furniture in the room. She then sits on the bed, smoothing the quilt as she does so. She is not ashamed. These 4 wood walls, dirt floor, and two pieces of furniture are not just her house- they are her home.

Mama Neema retrieves four eggs from the chicken coop lean-to next to the house, and her daughter fetches a bag and four avocados. She insists on carrying our gift for the rest of the day, which consisted of about an hour of walking, where she showed us the beautiful local lake.

People often think of Africa in terms of stereotypes. That it’s one big country, that there are adorable, but starving, black babies everywhere, that it’s dry and cracked and red and barren. But there are also the positive generalizations to consider, and though they are much observed and over-used cliches, they are still true. These people with so little are so rich in other ways- in generosity, in love, in happiness. Their friendliness is abounding, and opens to us strangers is refreshing. In comparison, America seems tacky, insensitive, cold, selfish, spoiled…the list goes on.

These short flashes of the Tanzanian culture I just provided do it no justice. I cannot possibly capture and convey the hearts of these people. They inspire me to change my ways, and to carry a piece of their culture within me always, even upon my return home.

Day 11

IMG_5548

Yesterday, Sarah, one of my student’s who has chosen me as her favorite, took me to her house. Since the beginning of the week, Sarah had latched onto me- constantly holding my hand, calling me over to look at her paper, finding me as soon as recess began. I have to admit, I was nervous when she pointed to her home and dragged me over. She had given me a sponsorship letter asking me to bring her colors and coloring books earlier in the week, and I thought that her parents might pressure me similarly or put me in an uncomfortable situation; I didn’t want to make promises I couldn’t keep.

But when she gleefully dragged me by the hand to her small house, right next to the school’s campus, shouting, “Mother! Mother!!”, and I was greeted warmly with a “Karibu!”, my anxiety dissipated. Her mother invited me in, and I sat on the worn couch in the crowded living room. A few posters of Jesus hung on the wall, and odd, out of place decorations were smattered around. A fridge stood in the corner, and Sarah’s mother directed her towards it in Swahili. Sarah ran over to the fridge and grabbed out an orange popsicle (liquid since it wasn’t frozen), presenting it to me with a large smile that matched her mother’s. Her mother didn’t speak much English, but she communicated to me with nods and smiles as I tried to convey what a pleasure Sarah was to have in class. Since there wasn’t much to talk about, due to the communication barrier, I prompted Sarah to come play football with me.

As we skipped towards the field, I attempted to tear open the popsicle, and Sarah quickly took it from me to rip it open with her teeth, giving it right back with another one of her charming smiles.
Today, I met her father- they look exactly the same. He teaches English at the school, which probably explains why Sarah is so obedient and listen well. Later in the day, she found me and pressed a Worther’s candy into my palm before grasping my other hand and walking all the way back to home base with me.

As I sucked on the caramel hard candy, and the sugar melted deliciously in my mouth, I realized just how sweet this experience has been- cliche, I know. But the people I’ve met, culture I’ve been immersed in, and experiences I’ve had will forever hold a special, sweet place in my heart- a bit cheesy, but the best way to sum up how positively I feel about my time here in Tanzania.


Contributed by Bailey McNeill,

GLA Alumnus

Tanzania: Heart and Soul of Africa

Filed Under: #myGLA, Official Student Bloggers

January 5, 2016 by Brett Scuiletti

Teen Organizes G.I.R.L. Drive to Aid Women and Girls in Ghana

“The girls in the village don’t normally continue education past age 12 because of this problem.”

–Kelsey Glancy

kelsey-1

Name: Kelsey Glancy
Hometown: West Chester, PA
Education: Villanova University
Passions and Interests: Country music, animal rights and surfing
Transformational Experience: Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™
Making an Impact: Started G.I.R.L. drive to provide pads and underwear to girls and women in rural Ghana

One of the truths few people like to admit when traveling to the developing world is that basics we consider ordinary and essential are far from that in places where even running water is rare. While participating on the Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™ program with Global Leadership Adventures, Kelsey Glancy got a firsthand look at the effects of not having access to the sanitary items people back home are used to having within arm’s reach.

After volunteering on a two-week project building a compost toilet from start to finish that would benefit local families in Dzita, Ghana, Kelsey saw how access to a private place to use the bathroom can be so profoundly life-changing for a person. These toilets reduce the risk of illness and diarrhea, and provide privacy for women and girls that is sorely lacking. It’s this last element that really resonated with her.

It opened my eyes to the struggles girls face due to their lack of sanitary items, and it gave me a desire to help them.”

During her time in Ghana, Kelsey made friends among the locals in the community. She wanted to give back to those who had given her a new outlook on the world – in particular, an 8 year-old girl named Abby. Kelsey says Abby was “energetic, sassy and always happy.” Despite the fact that Abby was not fluent in English, they grew close during Kelsey’s time abroad.

kelsey-3a

What she learned during that time was that girls in these communities have a tough time completing an education. By the time they reach the age of menstruation, they do not have pads, underwear or other sanitary feminine products that make staying in the classroom comfortable and safe for learning. So they miss school during their periods. And then they fall behind, month after month. And once they miss too much time at school, they fall so far behind that many of these young women simply drop out.

Often, women who drop out marry someone 2-3x their age, have children very young, and end up mired in poverty.

After learning all of these terrible facts, I realized that this would all one day happen to Abby; I knew I had to do something to prevent it, and that is what influenced me to start a Feminine Products Drive at my school and three other schools in my area. The “Ghana Improving Rights for Learning” or G.I.R.L.”

The drive was a huge success, providing 28 large boxes filled with sanitary pads and underwear to girls in in the Volta region of Ghana, where Abby lives. Kelsey partnered with Village Exchange Ghana, an NGO, to hand out the materials. Staff at the NGO will provide girls in the community with an education program on the use and importance of the pads, as well as answer feminine health questions.

kelsey-5

Kelsey found the letter she received from her partner organization in Ghana to reflect what’s at the heart of her accomplishments, and her continued drive to give back:

The most rewarding part of volunteering for me is the after-effect, or the person’s response. The NGO in Ghana (Village Exchange Ghana) that I partnered with for the G.I.R.L. drive, sent me in an email after they received the products. It read: “The girls will be very happy. I will also like you to give us a brief background about yourself and all those who supported in getting the sanitary materials to Ghana.  I will tell them this on the days we carry out the demonstration and distribution of the sanitary materials. This is just to let them know something about the one who sent the sanitary materials to them. I think this will motivate and encourage them, and will make them very happy that someone far away somewhere cares about them.” The last line is what truly made me smile – that the girls are so grateful that someone far away thought about them and wanted to help them. I find it amazing how one person can lift up another person so high, by sometimes even the smallest acts.”

kelsey-4a

You can check out more about G.I.R.L. on its Facebook page.

Kelsey is currently attending Villanova University. She’s been accepted to the College of Nursing.

Program Kelsey attended:

GLA Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™

Curious about exploring your own GLA adventure in Ghana? Check these out:

  • Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™
  • Ghana: Sports Service Adventure
  • Ghana: Children of Africa™

Filed Under: Gamechangers, Latest Posts

January 5, 2016 by Brett Scuiletti

Leaving a Big Mark in Ghana

“The people I met left a big mark on my life.”

–Julia Nijnens

Julia-1

Name: Julia Nijnens
Hometown: Little Silver, NJ
Education: Currently in High School
Passions and Interests: History, English, writing music, and track
Transformational Experience: Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™
Making an Impact: Featured in two newspapers for her volunteer contributions with GLA in Ghana

One of the realities of living in the Volta region of Ghana, like many other areas in rural Africa, is lack of access to toilets. In Dzita, Ghana, 10,000 people live and work without adequate access to sanitation, and operating toilets are few and far between. Most people are forced to use the bathroom out in the open, which is particularly problematic for women.

Fortunately, there are teens like Julia Nijnens who are not only willing to lend a hand to a community-in-need, but who are excited to bring much-needed solutions to problems that are often overlooked back home in the west. Julia joined Global Leadership Adventures for two weeks on its Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™ program, and she was excited before she even left. It wasn’t until she arrived in Ghana that she began to see that reality was a bit different than what she thought.

I had all these dreams about it, and when I got there, all my dreams were so far off. It exceed my expectations.”

Dzita was safe, the people were exceedingly kind and welcoming, and the village was on beautiful coastline with lush vegetation and unbelievably starry nights. Still, for all of the natural beauty of the area, the issue of toilet access loomed everywhere. Access to toilets helps to prevent diarrhea and other illnesses, and is an essential component to local public health.

On this program, Julia joined her follow student volunteers in constructing an eco-compost toilet, from start to finish, in just two weeks. When they arrived at the work site, there was only a foundation on the ground. By the time they left, they had provided a family and its neighbors – 43 people in total – with a compost toilet building they could use any time of the day.

FullSizeRender_2

Julia wasn’t left to her own wits to get the job done either. Building a compost toilet is hard work, but it’s rewarding work, and she has the help of GLA directors to make the two-week completion deadline.

[My directors] were both amazing leaders and they had an impact on me every single day. I was inspired by their hard work and dedication. They were well educated about everything we were doing and always knew how to help us.”

From mixing cement and pouring concrete to building the walls and the compost chamber, Julia was involved in every step of the construction project. With the guidance of her directors, the help of local carpenters, and the commitment from her fellow GLA student volunteers, they were able to change the lives of 43 people in only two weeks’ time.

Julia also learned about how projects in developing communities make the most out of volunteer efforts by making as many projects as possible serve multiple purposes. Given the decline of the local fishing game, more Ghanaians than ever before depended on farming to provide for their families. So the compost toilets provide one final gift to their families beyond sanitation alone: they provide highly potent compost that will help to improve crop yields in the community.

IMG_4911

After returning to the U.S. from Ghana, Julia started working at the nearby supermarket so she can save up for future volunteer work abroad, and she looks forward to picking up a few things for her new friends back in Ghana.

Looking back on her GLA experience and how it moved her to continue contributing to the world, Julia learned to appreciate the little things:

I got back from Ghana and had a completely different outlook on everything. I smiled when I turned on the faucet to brush my teeth and felt so lucky when I went to take a shower and the water was warm. Ever since I returned from Ghana I appreciate the little things in life rather than stressing unnecessary things. Going to Ghana has inspired me to return to the town in which we stayed and do another trip. The conditions in which I was in for two weeks have inspired me to really make a change and return.”

FullSizeRender_1

I never thought that flushing a toilet when coming home would be such a big thing.”

Julia attends high school in Little Silver, NJ. She’ll be participating in the Ghana: Sports Service Adventure program this summer.

Program Julia attended:

GLA Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™

Curious about exploring your own GLA adventure in Ghana? Check these out:

  • Ghana: Building Healthy Villages™
  • Ghana: Sports Service Adventure
  • Ghana: Children of Africa™

Filed Under: Gamechangers, Latest Posts

January 5, 2016 by Brett Scuiletti

Contest Winner & GLA Alum Inspired to Protect the Ocean

“My life makes more sense when I am helping others. By using my passion for the ocean to help others, I believe I can make a difference.”

–Noemie Roy

Noemie-1

Name: Noemie Roy
Home Country: Canada
Education: College Nouvelles Frontieres
Passions and Interests: Hiking, snowboarding, ice skating and yoga
Transformational Experience: Costa Rica: Protecting the Pacific™
Making an Impact: Winner of the 3rd annual My Ocean Guardian Journey Contest

My friend Mathilde and I won the Ocean Guardian Journey Contest 2015 with our project, Bracelets for Belugas. The public had to vote for the Best Action for Environmental Stewardship. The grand prize is a surf and yoga camp for two people at Bodhi Surf School in Bahia Ballena, Costa Rica. I think the major support from all of our entourage helped us win. Everyone has been very supportive throughout the contest.”

Also, last September, my friend Mathilde and I started a project named Bracelets for Belugas. The Saint-Lawrence Beluga is an endangered species particularly important to people from Quebec, Canada because of the proximity with the Saint-Lawrence river. Wanting to protect them, we decided to raise funds for the GREMM (Group for Research and Education on Marine Mammals), a group working to protect this animal. To do so, we sold Pura Vida bracelets. We wanted to spread awareness through our project. So, each bracelet came with an information card explaining the situation of the Saint-Lawrence Beluga, proposing easy actions to prevent the Saint-Lawrence pollution, and encouraging to spread awareness about this issue.

Noemie and her project partner, Mathilde, started a project they named Bracelets for Belugas. An endangered species important to people from the Quebec region of Canada, the river-dwelling Saint-Lawrence Beluga faces environmental and habitat threats on multiple fronts. Bracelets for Belugas was designed by Noemie and Mathilde to raise funds that would benefit preservation efforts for the animal.

The two decided to raise their funds for GREMM – the Group for Research and Education on Marine Mammals – an organization working to protect the Belugas. With the inspiration of the Costa Rican motto Pura Vida, or Pure Life, these women sold Pura Vida bracelets. Each bracelet they sold came with an information card explaining the situation of the Saint-Lawrence Beluga, and proposals for easy actions people could take to prevent pollution in the Saint-Lawrence River.

According to Noemie:

We sold all of our 100 bracelets, raising $410 and making a lot of people aware of this issue. Also, bracelet buyers are now wearing them as a sign of support for the Beluga’s situation. So, the movement is spreading.”

Noemie-2

Noemie already had a passion for the environment prior to attending Global Leadership Adventures’ Costa Rica: Protecting the Pacific™ program. She chose the program because of her interest in studying marine biology and pursuing environmental conservation, and the opportunity to link the two.

On how her GLA program influenced her future direction, Noemie is modest:

I already liked helping others. [After my GLA program,] I now know I will be doing service and volunteering my entire life. Also, it made me thinking about linking environment and social good. For example, I would like to help coastal communities that are challenged by environmental issues. In this way, I would use my passion for the marine environment to help humans in need.”

Upon returning from Costa Rica inspired to make change in the world, Noemie knew she wanted to make the “oceans healthier and help people in need.” Her parents also noticed an immediate difference.

Her parents reflected on the changes they saw:

Before she went, we thought GLA was a safe program for students who wanted to do service in a country in need. This program has made her grow. It brought her greater awareness to oceanic and environmental issues. Now she has a greater impact on the people around her by constantly making them aware about the actions they can take and should take to protect the ocean. We were impressed by the depth of the program and the knowledge she gained. That, and the chance to meet colleagues from numerous countries will make her a better citizen of the world.”

Noemie-3

Noemie has a promising future ahead. She’s currently a semi-finalist for the Loran Award, a scholarship awarded to Canadians who “demonstrate character, service and leadership.”

Since her trip, she also makes concerted efforts to reduce her use of plastics and encourage others to do the same. This includes a particular focus on picking up trash in order to prevent it from falling in waterways.

Looking back on her GLA experience and how it inspired her, Noemie sees in herself the passion and dedication brought by the two directors on her program:

They are both very inspiring persons. They devote their every day in making a difference in the world, and seem so happy doing it. They make it look possible, to make a real difference. It makes me want to do the same.”

Noemie-4

Noemie attended College Nouvelles Frontieres in Gatineau, Canada.

Program Noemie attended:

GLA Costa Rica: Protecting the Pacific™

Curious about exploring your own GLA adventure through environmental conservation service? Check these out:

  • Costa Rica: Protecting the Pacific™
  • Costa Rica: Empowering Rainforest Communities™
  • Dominican Republic: Building a Sustainable World™

Filed Under: Gamechangers, Latest Posts

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • …
  • 71
  • Next Page »

Brought to you by

Copyright © 2026 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in