Posts Tagged ‘kidsco’

Hub News: “Israeli campaigner, career booster and filmaker celebrated at Ogunte awards” from socialenterpriselive.com

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Jobeda Ali of Fair Knowledge

Jobeda Ali of Fair Knowledge won the Social Business Leader 2010 award at last night’s Ogunte women’s social leadership awards, in conjunction with the RSA. Ali is pictured with speaker Dr Rachel Armstrong. Picture by Jody Kingzett

A woman who campaigns for family rights in Israel, the founder of a company which increases the career prospects of women in top organisations and a woman who helps under-represented groups get their voices heard all picked up prizes at the Women’s Social Leadership Awards 2010.

The awards, which have three prize categories, were held in London last night and organised by social leadership support organisation Ogunte, in conjunction with the RSA.

  • The Campaign for Social Change award was won by Irit Rosenblum, founder of New Family.
  • The Leader in the Workplace award was won by Samantha Collins from Aspire Companies.
  • The Social Business Leader of the Year prize was taken home by Jodeda Ali, who set up Fair Knowledge.

Servane Mouazan, director of Ogunte – which launched the awards four years ago – said she has noticed several trends with this year’s entrants.

‘They have been much more explicit about their social impacts, more forthcoming with talking about how exactly they are earning money through products and services and, in general, we received more interest from international organisations,’ she said.

Ali, who is a School for Social Entrepreneurs graduate said she was ‘very happy, but surprised to win the award’

She said: ‘I don’t feel like I really fit the definition of a social entrepreneur put across by organisations like the School for Social Entrepreneurs or Social Enterprise London and I think my social impact is really hard to measure, so I never expect to win these awards.’

She was motivated to start the organisation, which currently makes 20 per cent of its income from events and consultancy, after a stint in film making from 2004 to 2007 and 12 years in the public sector.

‘I got a lot of interest as a film maker, but when I pitched an idea relating to the World Trade Organisation and was asked to do something about forced marriage instead, because of the way I look, I was angry.

‘People are stereotyped and restricted and because of this no one gets a true view of what’s going on in the world. I want to change this, to create “fair knowledge”. So we try to open up chances for people to do what they want to do in media and other sectors.’

Rosenblum, who founded Israeli organisation New Family in 1998, campaigns on behalf of the majority of people in Israel who fall outside the government’s definition of family and thus lack many rights that traditional families get. The organisation also tries to reunite families who are on different sides of the divide in Israel.

Samantha Collins, who was unable to attend, was praised for her work with 10,000 women in UK companies to advance their career. She also works with companies to ensure they understand the benefits of respecting and promoting women. She recently set up the Aspire Foundation for business women in the UK to mentor and coach women in the developing world.

Mouazan said: ‘I hope women in the audience, and all women, will be inspired by the talent and the audacity of the winners and the speakers.’

Love is in the air…

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

I use the term love quite freely. I love cooking. I love the X Factor. I love when the weather is crisp and leaves are on the ground just waiting to be kicked. I of course love my family. In all honesty, I love lots of things. Since working for the Hub though, I have also developed a new type of Love. One I like to call ‘Project Love’.

Project Love occurs when you just LOVE someones project (who’d have guessed eh?!). Of course all Hub members and associates do amazing things but there are just some organisations out there, that us Hosts have a soft spot for. We usually keep them secret (it’s not nice to show favouritism after all!) but today, I just can’t hold my love for one particular project, in any longer. So here goes….

I LOVE KIDS COMPANY!

This is the KidsCo philosophy:

Kids Company aims to promote and support emotional well-being. Our approach is rooted in attachment theory and a belief in the importance of ’loving care’. We start by solving practical problems such as housing, health and nutrition, in the hope of restoring some consistency to young people’s lives, and so reducing their loneliness and trauma. From here, the process of emotional repair can begin.

Experience has taught us that children who suffer trauma, abuse and neglect cope with their pain by shutting down their capacity to feel. Punishing these young people only cements their emotional coldness. We facilitate the healing process through the development of sustained, caring relationships, in which both children’s practical and emotional needs are taken care of.

This week, I received a copy of the Kids Co Winter Newsletter and just felt so inspired. One of the first paragraphs in the opening letter from Chief Exec, Camila Batmanghelidjh reads:
We have had a fantastic year. Of the children funded through our Government
grant, 84% are now in education, employment or training, when they were not
before. One hundred and twenty had no birth certificates and we’ve organised
those for them; 117 gained passports; 106 gained National Insurance numbers;
seventy-three received driving licences; 99 opened bank accounts; 57 started
university. For some, we have negotiated entries into top universities without
GCSE or A level qualifications. This is in the context of 400 young people
with serious emotional and behavioural difficulties whose problems were
compounded by extreme poverty.

This is despite a reduction in other donations due to the financial crisi (eek!) and posta strikes. Kids Co have done lots of other amazing things this year but the things detailed above really stood out to me. Things like obtaining a birth certificate will have such a dramatic effect on a child’s life – to begin a journey of feeling, of identity, of history, of being loved, of being valued. To happen at such an important stage in life can help determine the sort of person that child will become.

Kids Co also provides the opportunity to volunteer in exciting ways – for example, recently they have been looking for elves and a Santa to run their Xmas Grotto! And once, they needed someone to house a dog so one of their children to go into rehab (he refused to go until the dog, his best bud, was given a home while he was gone).

It is because Kids Co places such an importance on the little things, the big things and everything in betweem that I love them. And always will. Well done Kids Co, keep up the good work. You can donate to them here.

Holly x