I'm a liberal pagan living in West, Texas. Yes. That West, Texas.

Friday, March 13, 2009

THE SIMPLE TOOK THAT SAVES WOMEN'S LIVES

This article is by Dr. Ranit Mishori..I found it in the Sunday Parade Magazine..I am finding lots of good stuff in there lately.
I'm just going to copy certain parts of this article so hope Dr. Ranit doesn't get pissed..
A cardboard box is saving the lives of thousands of people in Africa. It's called a solar cooker, and it is pure ingenuity. Take two pieces of cardboard, add some tinfoil and sunlight-and anything can be cooked. You can even get water to boil.
With the help of thousands of Americans, solar cookers have found their way to camps in chad that house refugees who fled the genocide in Darfur, Sudan. More than 250,000 live in these camps, each sheltering about 20,000 people.

the cookers have made a huge difference-and not just because they are a way to heat food. Without them, refugee women must go outside the camp to gather firewood. but to leave camp is to gamble with death. Women and children-especially girls-are "particularly vulnerable to attack and rape when they are out getting wood," says Rachel Andres, director of the Solar Cooker Project at Jewish World Watch. The equation is simple, she says. A solar cooker keeps you in camp, and that helps keep you alive.


The numbers back this up. A recent survey at one refugee camp showed that journeys to collect firewood outside the camps dropped by 86% after the solar cookers were made available.
Women are taught not only how to use the cookers but also to make them. Suddenly, they have "a new skill and an opportunity to generate income for their families," explains Andres. For Eklass, a Sudanese refugee at the Iridimi camp, the income earned from assembling the cookers, "allows me to buy bread, milk, and clothes for my family," she says. "Without this job, my children wouldn't have what they need."
The cookers need to be placed in a sunny spot outdoors, in an area protected from the wind. The plentiful sunlight is converted into heat energy, which is then used for cooking. (cookers do not work at night or on cloudy days.) Food prepared with a solar cooker takes longer to cook compared with an oven or fire, but it also requires less hands-on-time.
Having solar cookers gives the women more time to do other things-look after their children, visit friends, tend to household chores, and especially take care of themselves. Some women say they are able to use the time saved to learn new things, such as reading, knitting, and basket-making.
The project has health benefits too. The cookers allow women to boil water-which kills water-borne disease-causing microbes. They also replace the wood and kerosene stoves that produce unhealthy smoke and use scare and expensive fuels. Solar cooking is cleaner, safer, and almost always ready to go.
Each cooker cost about $15. Jewish World Watch has donated more than 40,000 solar cookers to the Iridimi, Touloum, and Oure Cassoni refugee camps in Chad. the health and environmental benefits also have made the cookers attractive alternatives in other distressed areas in the world. In addition to Darfur, humanitarian projects have introduced solar cookers to Mali, Kenya, and Tanzania in Africa, and to India, Vietnam, and Nepal in Asia. To date, more than $1.6 million has been raised for the purchase of solar cookers by some 300 organizations, churches, and synagogues across the United States.
To Participate in the distribution of solar cookers to refugees of Darfur and others, visit solarcookerproject.org.
I think this is a terrific idea..but also think they could be used here in the states, in impoverished parts of our country.

17 comments:

Sling said...

This is brilliant!
It shows how much positive impact a simple approach to alternative energy can have..I like everything about it!

billy pilgrim said...

excellent idea. it seems ludicrous that an excellent idea like this isn't getting any government support. shit, the united nations blows 1.6 million on bullshit every day.

i'm so impressed, i won't make any childish about the jewish world watch.

Pom said...

It's really wonderful! If only the mindset of the patriarchy could be changed so the idea of entitlement and brutality would cease then their fears would come mostly to an end - as women anyway.

LostInColor said...

That is awesome. Thanks for sharing!

yellowdoggranny said...

i'm cute but dumber than a brick...that's supposed to be simple tool....judas priest..

Anne Johnson said...

By all the Gods and Goddesses! No one in Arizona would ever need a stove! What a brilliant idea!

I volunteer to write a solar oven cookbook... it's just a matter of re-wording all the slow cooker recipes.

Nan said...

I saw that article. Such a great idea, and so simple.

Jan said...

I'm dumber than you...I kept looking for a took.

Yes, what everyone said above. We forget how other women in the world have to live.

joy said...

What a great idea...but sad at the same time.

Heidi said...

What a great article! And yes, I agree with you that solar cookers should be/could be used in impoverished parts of our country, too!

yellowdoggranny said...

I'm thinking I could make one and use it for a bbq pit..? or a smoker...hmmm...

Nit Wit said...

Now they are cooking with gas...Wait that isn't right.
The first wife always said I was a simple tool. You can tell by my comments.

Lakota said...

They need to have them on the street corners of every city street for all the homeless that will be gathering there as the economy sinks lower and lower and more people lose their jobs... :(

rainywalker said...

This is very simple solar cooker to build and we did it when I was a scoutmaster with the Boy Scouts. If built correstly and pointed directly at the sun it can reach upwards of 2000 degrees. Very good idea where there is lots of sun and little fuel.

texlahoma said...

That's very cool! I want one. The government should be handing them out to the homeless here in the U.S.

Mouthy Girl said...

Very impressive.

I have several refugees from the Sudan at my school. I shudder to think what they experienced before leaving those refugee camps.

Cie Cheesemeister said...

I'm so dyslexic. I initially read this as "solar cookies."