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A Story from the Countryside of Vietnam – The Hieu Liem Community

My full is name Nguyen Dinh Hieu, I come from Vietnam. I was born in the northern part of Vietnam then my family moved to Ho Chi Minh City when I was 3 years old in 1986. Although at that time we faced lots of difficulties we overcame every obstacle. My parents sacrificed their life, my siblings dropped out of school early to find a job so that we have money for my studying. I have a story about Community Tourism – Homestay at my village for share with people – Hieu Liem Village, situated in the valley of greens.

I graduated from Ho Chi Minh City University of Social Sciences & Humanities majoring in political science but I have interest as well as many opportunities in tourism which gave me chances to travel and broaden my knowledge a lot. Many young people choose to stay in big and modern cities such as Ho Chi Minh city and Ha Noi after finishing their studies with the hope that they can have a good job and better life than those in their hometowns which are poor lands. I was quite confused and worried after graduating and thought a lot about my future and my responsibility. I was brought up with the education that being a man in the family, besides earning for living, I should have great sense of responsibility in taking care of my parents and worshiping our ancestors just like many other men in oriental traditions. If I stay in the city and find a job, I cannot fulfil my responsibility of being a son in the family, but if I come back to my hometown, it would be hard to find a good job let alone follow my dreams. Finally I decided to come back home with strong determination as I know that the first step is always the hardest. I applied for a job as a tour guide in Dong Nai Culture and Nature Reserve so that I have money to live while chasing my dream of working in tourism field.

I know that ‘giving them fish is not as good as giving them a fishing rod’…

When I was a student, I enthusiastically joined volunteer programs in my university’s student union with the aim to help the poor and community. Even during the time I worked in the city, I together with my friends went from places to places to raise funds then bought rice, food and other useful things for the poverty-stricken and fragile people to cover their everyday needs. They are extremely grateful to us and appreciated us for what we did for them but it could not last for a long time, they used everything in a short period of time. After that they did not know what to do but wait for another help which can get them out of starving and poverty. I know that ‘giving them fish is not as good as giving them a fishing rod‘, therefore I think I should help them with something more sustainable and long lasting such as offering them a suitable work that they can do to earn for a living so that they do not have to depend on others.

The poor and people who have their lives depending much on nature are the ones that cause lots of damage to nature and ecological environment. They destroy the forest, cut down trees to have land for farming. The last Rhinoceros sondaicus in Vietnam is now extinct, the number of Asian elephants is decreasing dramatically because of being killed and poisoned by people, gayals, primates, deer, and countless other kinds of animal are on the verge of extinction. The flora is also under threat of being destroyed.

I designed programs that help tourists experience the life and culture of native people through living and working with them.

From what I have seen, I thought day by day and talked to myself that I had to do something to improve the situation and help the community as well. I talked to my boss about my idea but I just received a cursory agreement without any support, there are even some people who did not want me to develop my plan and prevented me. As a result I decided to do it myself. After a long time carrying out surveys and considering I made up my mind to establish a Club about Homestay Tourism. This club is considered as the first club on sustainable tourism which is environmentally friendly and responsible with nature in Dong Nai province, Vietnam. The success of the club and project will not only promote the local economics, help local residents to have higher and stable income but also help to avoid deforestation, poaching of wildlife, illegal logging, rapid exhaustion of Dong Nai river’s aquatic creatures, and countless negative effects on the environment.

I designed programs that help tourists experience the life and culture of native people through living and working with them. Besides our club have many meaningful activities such as cycling for the environment, campaign about reducing the number of plastic bags, planting trees. Especially we have programs about biking, trekking, discovering the rainforest, adventure including sport games, learning living skills. It is the simplicity, hospitality and the friendliness between local people and tourists that will bring them together as a family. Tourists will get unforgettable memories and precious relaxing moments of their busy life while natives can have some small amount of money covering for their everyday needs without doing any harm to the environment and animals.

In order to have the project as today I went through countless obstacles 5 years ago. Because it is too new to the local government, local presidents and even my family, no one supported me. They said that I was crazy, risky, ambiguous, that this project was almost unfeasible in such a poor land. I spent a great deal of time talking and sharing with everyone. Time flew, they gradually understood me and what I am doing since there were some tourists came and stay with my family. This proved that my story was listened to attentively, and it spread to Wild Asia which gives me a chance to tell my story to all friends around the world. I was extremely happy and had considerable encouragement more than ever thanks to this program.

There are times when I wanted to give up because I was also exhausted. I did loads of work alone. In the morning I worked at Dong Nai Culture and Nature Reserve, went into the forest and guided tourists when they wanted to camp overnight. In the evening I went home, stayed up late to design programs, find partners and sponsors, send emails to tourism companies. I was stressed for a very long time. Luckily I have my family by my side whenever I need them, especially my mother and my sister. They are very good cooks with traditional Vietnamese cuisines. Tourists or partners who come to visit our places are all impressed by their dishes and felt extremely relaxing living in the tranquil and peaceful countryside. I believe that in the future if my project develops, we can motivate local economics through selling fresh, nutritious food and specialties produced by native farmers.

Hieu Liem Community Tourism is considered as the first club on tourism connected with responsibility of the environment protection. We have local people and friends who are very nurturing and they are now open to the idea of doing something beneficial for the community. Besides providing tourists with traditional homestay program and environmental friendly activities, we sincerely want to involve tourists from everywhere in our country together with foreign friends from all over the world in our environment and animal protection campaign.

The negative impacts on the forests have caused the rapid exhaustion of the earth’s natural resources bringing about problems about pollution, forest fires, extinction of animals, climate change, global warming. These consequences directly affect the place where people are living and themselves also, all nation and all over the world, change our green earth into a dangerous place. All those things urged us to do something to improve the environment and get local people into our activities. Hieu Liem Community Tourism was established with the aim of giving tourists interesting first hand experiences by living with local residents near Dong Nai river.

Finally, I hope that my story impacts the thoughts of people so that everyone will have better habits of living responsibly with the environment. I am not a talented scientist who can invent something great enough to change the world but with my experience and enthusiasm of youth I chose sustainable community economics development with environment protection. I have great desire to have a chance to share my story in ITB Asia this year. I believe that there will be more and more friends, tourism partners, activists for the environment, sponsors and tourists all over the world listen to my story. To conclude I just want to say that please give me an opportunity in order that I could have more inspiration, motivation, encouragement to continue to write the next parts for my story.

For more info, visit www.hieuliemtravel.com

24.10.12

Jetwing Sri Lanka

Top 3 Winner of the 2012 ‘Inspiring Stories from Destinations’ Competition
The slides below was presented by Mr. Ishanth Gunawardene at the Responsible Tourism Forum at ITB Asia 2012.

 

24.10.12

Central Kalimantan Responsible Orangutan River Cruise

Kalimantan Tour Destinations aims to bring Responsible Tourism to Central Kalimantan as a way of conserving the environment and supplementing income for the local people. As a part of our Responsible Tourism Policy, for 5 years we have been working together with the locals to map the tourism potential of the villages along our cruise route. We also work with them to develop their own small tourist businesses, for example as guides, traditional music and dancing performance groups, canoe hires, fishing trips, collecting traditional medicines in the jungle, and making handicrafts.

Through our work we are campaigning to raise the awareness of local people and our guests on different environmental issues. We also collaborate with local NGO’s conservation programs, such as one operated by the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation (BOSF). Besides raising awareness, to show our support of the work done by BOSF to protect orangutans, the native Indonesian flag ship species, under threat due to shrinking habitat, we adopted an infant orangutan that we helped to rescue from the river bank in March 2011. This infant from the distance looked like a proboscis monkey that our guests had been hoping to see during the trip. When we were closer, we found that it was a weak, hungry and frightened female infant orangutan who had been separated from its mother for days. Rescuing the baby orangutan was not the work of us alone. Understanding and supporting BOSF regulations to not approach or touch orangutans, we reported the infant orangutan to BOS technicians. They have been working over 10 years in the area rescuing and rehabilitating orangutans.

We have a policy to go local. We buy all our food ingredients at traditional markets  for the food served on board. We also commit to employ local people, to train and prepare them for the different working fields. For example our cook Redi, who is from a village called Tangkiling, helped his father on a motorised canoe as driver and engine man before working with us. He joined us firstly as a cook assistant for our former cook, who had been a gardener, and gradually learnt how to prepare the special food designed for our cruises. He has been working with us for 3 years now and his food has been praised by our guests as a gourmet experience in Indonesia.

We believe in starting small and growing, and putting words into real action. As a part of our community development work to raise awareness on health and environmental understanding in the villages, together with the villagers we have a social project to improve waste management in Katimpun. This village stretches 1km along the banks of the Rungan River, and is one of the villages where we stop for our guests to meet the villagers.

The villagers play a very crucial role in this project by learning how to treat and recycle garbage.

In our program, the villagers are encouraged to understand why it is important to manage waste and not to pollute the river. This project will involve collaboration with the local government in the village, village elders, the project volunteers and guests who forwarded feedback, ideas and funds. The village leader and elders help to organize meetings and training schedules with the people. Meetings are held to socialize why such an effort is important. The villagers play a very crucial role in this project by learning how to treat and recycle garbage. KTD helps at the outset by buying appropriate garbage bins to bring a positive supporting impact.
Another project initiated by KTD related to health improvement and sustainable environment, is to build a toilet and mandi (bathing Indonesian style) for the longhouse in a village in the north Rungan River region. Traditionally people who live on the banks of the river have always used the river as toilet and mandi. The human waste goes straight to the river, causing pollution. As many local people still use the river to bathe, brush their teeth, wash dishes and for swimming, the possibility to be affected by the polluted water is high.

Nowadays longhouses are still considered as the centre of village activities related to village meetings, cultural rituals, etc. Longhouses are the places where people in the village gather. This place provides a good opportunity for us to socialize the plan to set up an example of healthier lifestyle. Many people do not understand why good sanitation is so important. There are some public toilets in the villages but nobody uses them very much. One reason why they are not very popular is that the locals were often not being involved in planning or building the toilets. They are built by outsiders who have their own ideas about what the people would want to do and assume they understand why it is important to use these. As a result most of the toilets are build in the places where access to it is not efficient for villagers and it is much more convinient to go to the floating toilets behind their houses.

KTD approach is to involve the locals, not only to improve their understanding but also to encourage sense of belonging. We believe this kind of facility will only be sustainable if the locals think that it belongs to them and they will take care of it. As a sample in the longhouse, the toilet can be adapted to other houses. Our cruises and tours are designed for guests to communicate directly with the local villagers. We provide English speaking guides who will be the “bridge” between our guests and the locals to communicate and this hopefully will promote cross cultural understanding.

KTD believes that as our business grows, our contribution to the villages we visit and to the local environment where we operate, should also increase. To conserve the unique environment here and improve services and opportunities for local villagers is part of our commitment as a responsible business to work to improve our performance and the experience of our guests.

24.10.12

Vietnam Bike Tours

Vietnam Bike Tours is the product of a man’s vision to showcase his country – Vietnam – to the world, not through words or pictures, but through offering authentic experiences to eco-friendly travellers who want to see and understand the country, to support and give back to the local communities they visit. His vision is to offer them a chance to become immersed in the country from the saddle of a bicycle, the ultimate carbon-neutral way to get up close to a culture, by pedalling back roads and trails less-travelled in Vietnam and Indochina’s lush countryside and leaving nothing behind but fond memories and but tyre tracks in the dirt.

From a small office in the downtown area of Ho Chi Minh City, an intrepid young Vietnamese Ngo Trong Huy, together with his wife Kim Anh, has managed to make this vision a reality by launching the local tour operator Vietnam Bike Tours (VNBT) in 2010. Through VNBT, Huy showcases the serene beauty of the Vietnamese countryside to health- and eco-conscious tourists looking for a more sustainable way of immersing themselves in the country, from the cool northern mountains along the Chinese border to the balmy southern coast and everywhere in between. VNBT offer an array of personal services to their cycling guests, from designing tailor-made itineraries and organising visas, to local community homestays and orphanage visits.

The local tour operator now employs full-time local Vietnamese staffs, as well as bicycle guides in Vietnam and other operation offices of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and hosts around a thousand clients a year. VNBT’s guides are specially selected for their knowledge of the local history, culture and weather patterns, their English communication skills and enthusiasm for sustainable and responsible tourism. The guides are all experienced bike men and adventure aficionados, who are also trained in first-aid and bicycle mechanics. This has empowered them with the confidence and skills to give them a competitive advantage in the freelance tour guide industry. Take a glimpse at any of the numerous testimonials online and it is palpably apparent what a positive impact they leave on their customers in terms of being flexible and sensitive to the clients’ needs and level of cycling experience, and providing invaluable local insight into the complex Vietnamese culture and the diverse local fauna and flora.

A number of VNBT’s guides are also wildlife enthusiasts and their knowledge of the local animals and plants are astounding. In a country where wildlife conservation has never been number one on the agenda and wild animals are sadly more often found on the dinner plate than in their natural surroundings, these guides break the mould. For instance, a forest trail ride through Cuc Phuong National Park – Vietnam’s oldest and largest reserve – is narrated by our passionate and knowledgeable guide and includes a stop at the Endangered Primate Rescue Centre where visitors can learn about the admirable work being accomplished with the rescued langurs, macaques, lorises and gibbons. Then they jump back in the saddle for a canopied, tree-lined pedal through the forest, while your guide answers any questions about the wildlife that guests may have.

The Cham are an ethnic minority in Vietnam – remnants of the ancient Champa people – who still uphold their long-standing traditions…

As a local family-owned company, VNBT is also dedicated to supporting the smaller communities of the poorer countryside areas. In a country where around 15% of the population live below the poverty line (concentrated in rural areas), these journeys provide precious support to the rural regions. Cycling trips often include stop-offs at local schools and charities, providing much needed materials, food, resources and financial assistance to those less-privileged. An example of this is a typical cycling trip in the Mekong Delta, which stops off at a local Cham village near Chau Doc. The Cham are an ethnic minority in Vietnam – remnants of the ancient Champa people – who still uphold their long-standing traditions such as weaving and singing, and also their unique brand of Islam and VNBT guests can visit one of the local mosques and get a chance to teach some of the Cham children. Visits such as these also allow unique access to local ethnic cultures which most tourists would not have the opportunity to experience and, if they choose to do so, ensure that their donations reach their intended destinations, which is difficult to ensure when donating from abroad or through intermediaries.

On cycling trips, VNBT also make use of local products and services as much as possible. These include frequenting locally-owned and managed restaurants, hotels and other businesses, and using local transportation services such as boats and ferries. All fruit and water brought on tour is local and the reusing and recycling of water bottles are encouraged. Biking itineraries also sometimes include market visits so tourists can experience the truly exotic sights, sounds and smells of a Vietnamese market. For example, before an afternoon of cycling in the Mekong Delta, jump in a local rowboat for a morning visit to the teeming floating markets of Cai Rang in the rural provincial capital of Can Tho, where tourists can purchase local tropical fruit and souvenirs and also get a glimpse what life along the meandering Mekong is like for these villagers.

Supporting the local community is also evidenced by visits to cottage-industries, ranging from traditional food crafts such as tofu-making in Vinh Long, to the pottery artisans of Bat Trang and the traditional folk wood cut painting masters of Dong Ho. All of these visits allow travellers to glimpse age-old techniques in action and make small but significant contributions towards ensuring these traditional skills and products are conserved and continue to thrive in a developing country where the lure of mass-production and mechanisation is all too appealing.

VNBT also urges their customers to use homestay or locally-owned accommodation wherever possible. On a cycle through the misty Hoang Lien mountains of northern Vietnam, which are dotted with various ethnic hill tribe villages, tourists can get the opportunity to stay overnight in one of the traditional hill tribe stilt-house accommodations in Tam Duong village. This is but one of many examples of similar options available which provide significant financial support for the local region, and of course, give VNBT guests invaluable insights into their customs and everyday way of life.  Where possible, VNBT also choose the most environmentally-friendly accommodation, such as the Topas Ecolodge in Sapa, who are committed to working with minority communities, sustainable environmental development and living, as well as combating waste and pollution in the area.

As bicycle tour operators, VNBT understand the importance of leaving as small a footprint as possible wherever you visit, and strictly follow the mantra of ‘leave nothing but positive memories and tracks in the dirt’.  The operator strives to maintaining and preserving local ecosystems and leaving them the way we found them. We take all our waste with us in the support vehicle and pick up what we find along the way. As a registered member of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, VNBT have pledged their responsibility to ensuring the sustainability of the local environment and communities in any ways possible. Bicycles are of course also carbon-free and any trip using pedal power offsets the use of an alternative petrol-guzzling and CO²-producing vehicle. VNBT also choose suppliers that match their environmental values and their bike suppliers, Trek, also believe in the power of human-powered transportation in the fight against climate change, urban congestion and rising global obesity levels.

From the initial contact when the guide picks up the guests at the airport, through the cycling experience and to the often sad-to-say-goodbye drop-off for the flight back home, VNBT try to ensure guests experience Vietnam in a unique way. VNBT have established itself as a sustainable and responsible leader in the local tour operating industry and Huy’s vision of showcasing Vietnam’s hidden charms and rich culture is truly underway.

24.10.12

Chi Phat Community Based Tourism: From Poaching to Changing Lives

Top 3 Winner of the 2012 ‘Inspiring Stories from Destinations’ Competition

“I stopped illegal activities when they arrived” says Prom Heoung in perfect English. His dark eyes lit up slowly and his prominent cheekbones reveal a bright smile. Proud of his English and of what he could do for his community, like over 150 other villagers, Hoeung has traded poaching and slash and burn for tourism since the Community Based Eco-Tourism (CBET) project was launched here five years ago.

In the heart of Cambodian’s Southern Cardamom Mountains, small wooden houses sprinkle the banks of Piphot River, where coconut trees bend over the clear water. Welcome to Chi Phat, at the edge of a dirt road eroded by the heavy rains. All around, the emerald forest melts into the sky.  Hoeung lives in this picture postcard scenery with 550 other families. A quiet and peaceful place today, Chi Phat used to be a busy area for wildlife traffickers and loggers. Heoung was one of them after the late 1970s left the village with nothing but a two decade long civil war heritage; no education, poverty and only the will to survive.  He was illegally setting more forest land on fire for slash and burn farming every year and hunting in the forest to feed his family.

Situated in Southwest Cambodia, the Cardamom Mountain Range is the second largest continuous forest in South East Asia and one of the last seven remaining elephant corridors and large predator in the region.  Covering just six percent of Cambodia, the Cardamoms’ continuous forest cover of nearly five million acres includes a vast rainforest ecosystem with 16 different vegetation types and home to 16 globally endangered species.  Economic development in the area stalled for decades due to conflict, abuse of resources and communities by business and political interests, and the area’s economic isolation. The region is also vulnerable to climate change and shifting rain cycles.

Hoeung remembers the late 1980s when big logging concessions were exploited, with Chi Phat as a target. Cambodians came from all over the country to cut the rosewood and hunt wildlife from the surrounding rainforest. These illegal activities were much more profitable than any other farming activity: one cubic meter of rosewood would bring around 5000 US dollars to a home. Tiger skin, elephant tusks, bear paws, pangolins and other expensive wildlife trophies could also easily be traded.  At its peak, a thousand of families were living in Chi Phat, supplying to the needs of a rich elite living in Phnom Penh or even China.

But for the past decade, people have been forbidden by law to pursue these activities.  Knowing he could face serious time in jail if caught, Hoeung had to find other activities for him and his family to survive. US-based NGO Wildlife Alliance has been working with the Royal Government of Cambodia (RGC) since 2000 to assist in strengthening protected areas, promote good governance in forest conservation, help manage state forests, counter wildlife and timber trafficking, and develop sustainable alternative livelihoods. Wildlife Alliance set up a law enforcement program to protect the area with patrols by military police and Forestry Administration officers. In partnership with the Cambodian Forestry Administration, Wildlife Alliance established a care program at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Center for rescued wildlife and a rehabilitation center in Koh Kong to release wildlife into this protected natural area.  Wildlife Alliance employed local villagers to replant the forest with native trees at its nursery in Chi Phat. Actively engaging local communities to not only be involved but to take ownership of protecting their natural heritage is a fundamental component to the long-term conservation of the Cardamom Mountains.

In 2007, in collaboration with the community of Chi Phat, Wildlife Alliance launched a Community-Based Ecotourism Project.  The aim of the CBET Project is to provide a better and more sustainable means of income for local communities.  It gives villagers the opportunity to increase their livelihoods by protecting the forest rather than destroying it.  The hunters can now earn more money from trekking with visitors from all around the world, showing the very wildlife they were hunting now roaming freely in lush jungle.

When the CBET project started in 2007, Hoeung decided to join and became a guide to lead adventurous tourists into the jungle; Hoeung knows every footprint, tree, sound that the rainforest can offer, the quickest ways to go jump from the five waterfalls around Chi Phat, as well as the best wildlife viewing areas. For two years, he studied English and saw the beauty of the jungle that he previously only considered as a mean of survival. The CBET gave a new life to the surroundings; trees are being replanted and an Angkorian archeological site has been uncovered revealing a six hundred year history in this remote part of the largest continuous forest in Cambodia.

The CBET project was set on a participatory basis.  This methodology ensures the inclusion of stakeholders in project development. And it is the inclusion of stakeholders that is key to the successful outcomes of this project; decisions made about the project by community members are much more likely to be adhered to by community members, paving the way to long term success. A Management Committee, comprised of elected members of the community centralizes all the tourism activities in the village and in the forest.  Everyone can join and earn from tourism.  Families are now joining the project by setting up guesthouses and homestays to accommodate tourists. Poachers became guides or forest cooks amazing tourists in the forest, boat drivers leading them to rare bird species as the sun rises and fishing for lobster with them at night and motor drivers bringing them back to the rest of their journey. Villagers are able to keep accounting records, answer emails, book activities and coordinate all the tours.  The CBET Project follows a fair benefit sharing system.  All activities are set on a rotating basis so that every member enjoys the same chance of benefiting from tourism. With technical and financial support of Wildlife Alliance, Chi Phat now has 13 guesthouses, 10 homestays and 160 kilometers of trails for trekking and mountain biking.  Chi Phat has a range of 20 Mountain bikes and 8 kayaks, a fleet at motorboats and row boats and a wide variety of pristine outdoor activities.

“I want to preserve [the forest] for the next generation.”

In 2009, Heoung became the chief of the project and is now in charge of giving a direction to it and ensure that the community and the local authorities can work together to promote the place and also preserve it. He can count on ten villagers patrolling in the forest to look for snares and traps and ensure the forest can be fully enjoyed by the tourists coming to visit the surroundings.  “I want to preserve for the next generation” tells Heoung to journalists writing about Chi Phat. After 5 years, Chi Phat has become the most successful CBET Project in Cambodia and one of the most successful in Southeast Asia.  It has over 150 members from the community and brings indirect income to another 30 families.  To date Chi Phat has welcomed over 5,400 domestic and international visitors generating over US$205,000 income into the community.

The natural wonders of the Cardamoms, and the protection and development efforts of Wildlife Alliance and the community of Chi Phat, makes Koh Kong province Cambodia’s second destination—the place that no international tourist will want to miss after seeing the temples of Angkor.

Recognized by the Lonely Planet travel guide as one of the top ten ecotourism destinations in the world, your visit will directly help Chi Phat commune to save this pristine jungle!

View the slides presented at ITB Asia’s Responsible Tourism Forum 2012.

24.10.12

Green Riders by Heritage Tours India

Top 3 Winner of the 2012 ‘Inspiring Stories from Destinations’ Competition

Barefoot is a team of volunteers from a different field of life who spare their free time to work in the field of Empowerment, Education, Energy and Environment. We use Tourism as a tool to empower the local community by training, motivation and technical support.

Green Rider is an  unique effort by the Barefoot team that have transformed the lives of 75 rickshaw pullers who were under tremendous poverty due to lack of work as the motor auto rickshaws took their position on the growing tourism scenario at Puri- a holy pilgrimage centre in east India. We decided to revive this non polluting mode of transport in Puri as a ‘Propoor Tourism Initiative’ that not only benefits the environment but also provides a form of livelihood for poor locals.

The challenge was to unite these rickshaw pullers under one banner, to create a motivation and self respect among themselves for their work and to fight against the alcoholism. Continuous training for one year on various subjects like knowledge about the history and mythology of the destination, body language, health related tips including family planning and HIV awareness, traffic and safety rules, and yoga practice helped them gained a new dignity and self-respect. We named them as “Green Riders” and got them special uniforms, an identity card, green-coloured rickshaws and tour brochures. This made them stand out and economically, they grew as tourists preferred the Green Riders because of their honesty and innovative rickshaw tours in the holy city.

The project started on 27 September, 2009. We started with 40 Green Riders on World Tourism Day in 2009 and now we have 75 Green Riders on the streets of Puri. We financed 24 new rickshaws with a soft loan by the State Bank of India and donations from Tourists. We developed a community fund from their own contributions with matching grants from our volunteers to look after the emergency needs of member of in the Barefoot team.

Their earnings from less than one dollar a day have gone up to three dollars a day because of their approach and honesty.

Before they were not having any respect for themselves nor does the society respect them. Now they get a good respect from the society as they are also involved in community service like cleaning the beach or bus station or free ride for elderly people on festive days. Their earnings from less than one dollar a day have gone up to three dollars a day because of their approach and honesty. This project is financed by the contribution from the volunteers of Barefoot and various stakeholders especially Heritage Tours India whose director, Yugabrata Kar is the founder of the Barefoot team. This project has really created an example of community benefit for this section of service providers in the tourism industry.

We also motivate them to clean these age-old sites such as old tanks, bus stands at pilgrimage sites and the beach as a part of their social responsibility. They feel very involved to render their services to preserve the cultural destinations as it brings more respect for them in the community.

We have designed various tour packages using these traditional rickshaws to the small lanes, old temples and other less known but interesting destination in this pilgrim’s town with fixed prices which brings a decent earning for the Green Rider. Before they were not able to communicate with tourists about the different tours which can be done by rickshaw only. This brand of Green Rider with uniform, rickshaw with flowers, typical green colour rickshaw with nice painting draws the attention of tourists. Before they spent most of their earnings on cheap alcohol, after this training and motivation for one year, most of them have stopped their alcohol habits and due to this designed tours their income as gone up. Also 24 of them have gained financial freedom from their boss who rent them the rickshaw and take more than half of their earnings as rent. We have managed to finance from the bank and donations from our known tourists by providing 24 new Rickshaw and making them the owner. They are now paying back to the bank regularly and it has improved their economic condition. We are going to add another 15 rickshaws this month.

We celebrate World Tourism Day in a big way where we invite the stakeholders, media and important politicians from the locality. On this day we highlight our Green Riders team and their work as they participate in the event with their family and share their experience. Also we organize rickshaw relays on the streets of the city to create awareness about the Green Riders and also the importance of tourism among the grass root people. Nevertheless, Green Rider always gets good media attention. The Barefoot team was awarded best community based project for the promotion of pro-poor tourism by Department of Tourism in the Government of Orissa this year. It encourages other rickshaw pullers in the city to join this movement to provide better and honest service to the pilgrims and tourists.

Being inspired by the success story of Green Riders, now we are working with 240 Nolias (traditional fishermen) who earn their livelihood as lifeguard on the sea for safe bathing of the pilgrims and tourists as more than 90 people have lost their life during sea bath at Puri beach. We are providing them training on behavior, life-saving skills and trying to improve their visibility on the beach by bright tent and uniforms. This project will be called ‘Sea Rider’ and they will not only prevent tourists from drowning but can also improve the livelihood of traditional fishermen. We have launched project Sea Rider on World Tourism Day 2012 with a model beach that is safe, clean and community friendly.

The most important aspect of our project is to improve the inner value of these uneducated service providers who come in direct contact with easy money from Tourists. We have motivated the team of Green Rider to live a life with dignity, honesty, respecting work, self and tourists. We teach them leadership by making community team to clean up the locality where they live. To protest when there is an unwanted situation .To stand by each other’s good and bad days, by contributing physical presence and financial help from their community fund made from their own contribution on each weekly meeting.

They motivate and identify other poor rickshaw pullers who like to join this Green Rider team for a better and meaning full life. They are the true leaders in their community and we are proud of them. They also motivate their children to go to school and inspire their wives to form self-help groups that are supported by our volunteers. This story of Green Rider is now recommended in the Lonely Planet guide book in the page about Puri.

24.10.12

Reality Gives by Reality Tours

Reality Tours & Travel (RTT) is dedicated to raising social awareness about the strengths and challenges of the Dharavi Community and to raise funds for our social impact programs implemented in the the slum, Reality Tours and Travels started operating tours in February 2006. RTT’s famous Dharavi tour highlights the strength of the industry found in the slum and the vibrancy of the community. However it also discusses the daily realities of slum living such as pollution, poor working conditions, water and sanitation problems, and the lack of quality education.

In addition to the Dharavi slum tour, RTT also offers unique experiential tours such as Bicycle, Market, Night and Public Transport Tours in Mumbai and also a village tour. Eighty percent of the profits or approximately 30% of the revenues from the tours go to support the operations of Reality Gives, RTT’s sister NGO. Tours in Dharavi are happening every day in the morning and afternoon and the prices range from Rs500 onwards. The ethical tour company was founded by UK national Chris Way and Krishna from Mangalore who came to Mumbai 18 years ago working as a waiter for Rs275 a week.

Reality Gives

Reality Gives‘ mission is to create change and improve the quality of life in Dharavi’s vibrant community by supporting and connecting social entrepreneurship projects and mobilizing resources. The NGO runs English language Support Programs in vernacular schools with the aim to strengthen their curricula by creating a truly bilingual educational experience in a supportive environment. It has a community center where we run a Youth Empowerment Program for teenagers and young adults who have been unable to complete their formal education. The goal is for them to gain confidence, learn valuable skills such as facility with computer use and speaking English that will help them explore various career opportunities that might not have been previously open to them.

In addition, Reality Gives runs youth programs in art, sports, music, and computers so that young children can explore their world and gain confidence in expressing themselves. These programs were set up in partnership with other NGOs like Bombay Underground, YUWA, Under the Mango Tree and RUR.

The most recent project is the Girl’s Football Program in cooperation with Yuwa, an organization that implemented a successful girls empowerment program in Jharkhand, a state in North central India. 20 girls are visiting the training every day and their skills improve step by step.

Some of the major key achievements so far are:

  1. Educating 142 students using an English curriculum developed with the assistance of Malvern House in the UK.
  2. Training 17 teachers from Dharavi based on the Muktangan method and with the support of Educo. This has impacted the lives of 131 students.
  3. Supporting 2 local schools in English language support and a total of 250 students using our child-centred teaching methods.

The NGO is funded by Reality Tours and Travel and individual donations. To find out more about both, Reality Tours and Travel and Reality Gives, visit the websites www.realitytoursandtravel.com and www.realitygives.org as well as www.facebook.com/realitygives .

24.10.12

Wakatobi Dive Resort

Divers often envision having the chance to discover pristine reefs in a remote, idyllic setting. This was certainly true for Swiss-born Lorenz Mäeder, who turned a childhood love of snorkeling the Mediterranean into a career as a dive instruction and resort director. For two decades, he pursued his passion for underwater adventure, exploring the Red Sea and Indian Ocean in search of the perfect place to create a world-class diving resort. His quest eventually brought him to southeastern Sulawesi, and a small island within the Wakatobi group known to local people as Onemobaa – the place of the long, white beach.

One particular section of this beach seemed perfect, and it fronted one of the finest coral reefs Mäeder had ever seen. The waters teemed with rich and diverse populations of fish and corals. He knew he had all the ingredients needed to create a spectacular dive resort. But from the beginning, he also strived for more than just commercial success.

Mäeder expected his resort to adhere to the highest standards of ecologically conscious development and operation. In addition, he hoped to create a new type of business model that would not just limit environmental impact, but would actually provide positive change for both the local economy and ecosystem.

The resort was constructed in a style that honored local architectural traditions. A variety of sustainable products and practices were incorporated, and local materials and labor were utilized whenever possible. A majority of the resort’s workforce was recruited from nearby villages, providing significant economic advantages to the surrounding communities. But for Mäeder, this was only the beginning of a far broader plan that would not just provide employment to the region, but also launch a social transformation that would ultimately lead to a newfound conservation ethos.

At the time of Wakatobi’s founding, the region’s reef had no protection from destructive fishing practices such as reef dynamiting, fish traps and over-harvesting. Mäeder knew that governmental designations often did little to actually preserve a resource if there was no budget for enforcement, and no support from those within the region. As an alternative, he created the Collaborative Community based Reef Conservation Program, which was designed to motivate the people living within the Wakatobi region to realize that besides fishing on the reefs it is possible to generate income from tourists who are just looking at fish and corals. The program channels a portion of the resort’s income to the local community in the form of lease payments in exchange for turning designated areas of reef into no-fishing sanctuaries.

Today, 17 villages near the resort derive income from the lease program, and have become active stewards of more than 20 km of reef.

The first pilot program was launched in 1998. It took years of continuous and consistent efforts to build trust and reach a point where all members of the surrounding villages respected and honored the agreement. In time, however, the economics of dive tourism replaced environmentally destructive fishing practices, providing the local population with a sustainable source of regular lease payments, and more importantly, ownership in a more valuable resource. The community began to defend their new found local marine resource against outside intruders and poachers, as well as threats that emerged from within their own communities. Based on this initial success, the sanctuary was extended, and today, 17 villages near the resort derive income from the lease program, and have become active stewards of more than 20 km of reef.

Today, Wakatobi Dive Resort is widely regarded as one of the world’s premier dive resorts, recognized not only for delivering the highest levels of customer service in a setting of ‘barefoot elegance’, but also for their core values of proactive conservation and community stewardship. Guests naturally abide by a code of conduct that minimizes impact on the underwater environment. Resort staff conduit reef monitoring and cleaning programs, and clean at least 1 km of beach each day. To minimize anchor damage, public moorings are installed and maintained both on dive sites and within local harbors.

Operational initiatives such as intensive recycling and wastewater treatment initiatives have earned Wakatobi awards within the ecotourism community, while local initiatives have won the trust and cooperation of local people. Wakatobi has sponsored waste management programs and other public works projects for 17 villages on neighboring islands, and provides electrical service to a village of 500 in exchange for their honoring a reef sanctuary located on traditional fishing grounds. Local schools are provided with educational materials and scholarships for orphans; small-scale credit programs are made available to local businesses, and up to 50 local widows are employed to produce natural roof tiles for the resort buildings.

Behind these initiatives and others not often publicized by Wakatobi is a question Mäeder has long used to gage the success of his efforts: “Is my operation improving the natural environment? Does the local community benefit directly and indirectly?” Some 16 years after the resort’s founding, the answer to those questions is “yes.”  Mäeder’s vision has created a unique destination that not only provides a shining example of how ecotourism can be conducted in an earth-friendly manner, but has also created demonstrative improvements to the reefs and seabeds of the surrounding islands, and enhanced the lifestyles of the local human community.

To learn more about Wakatobi Dive Resort, its initiatives and services, please visit www.wakatobi.com

24.10.12

Presentations from Responsible Tourism Clinics & Forum at ITB Asia 2012

On behalf of ITB Asia and the other co-organizers, Wild Asia would like to thank you for participating in the Responsible Tourism Clinics and Forum at ITB Asia 2012. We would also like to thank all our speakers who graciously spared their time to share their wealth of experience and knowledge with us. The outcome was overwhelming and we hope that 2013 will be bigger and better. Please contact rt@wildasia.org if you wish to be part of 2013’s Responsible Tourism events.

Below you will find the full set of presentations throughout the 3-day event. Let’s continue to “Learn, Be Inspired and Make a Difference!”

Responsible Tourism Clinics

Holistic Property Management by Andrew Johns, Sanctuary Resorts

Responsible Tourism Reporting by Raj Gyawali, Social Tours

Tourism as a Tool for Conservation by Raj Basu, HELP Tourism

Responsible Tourism Forum

Greening the Supply Chain to Increase Profit in Business by Professor Geoffrey Lipman, Greenearth Travel, ICTP

New Media as a Strategic Communication in Sustainable Tourism by Jens Thraenthart, Dragon Trail

24.10.12

The Mulberry Learning Center Story by Andaman Discoveries

In Southern Thailand, along the Andaman Coast in the province of Phang Nga, the majority of the local economy is comprised of fishing and tree farming.  Each year thousands of Burmese migrants come to the piers and fields of Kuraburi, Phang Nga, looking for work, bringing with them their families.  The children of these Burmese migrant workers are unable to access the Thai education system and their parents often have little or no education.  They do not have legal citizenship in Thailand, nor are they recognized as citizens of Burma.  Access to education is also difficult due to discrimination, the cost of enrollment and uniform fees, lack of transportation, language barriers, lower levels of education and fear of arrest and deportation.

“The children of these Burmese migrant workers are unable to access the Thai education system and their parents often have little or no education.”

Before the opening of the Burmese Learning Centre in 2005, by the Foundation for Education and Development (FED), there were no educational facilities that could be accessed by Burmese children in the Kuraburi area.  A small center was converted into a make shift school near the Kuraburi Pier, doing its best to provide education for children that normally would be denied this privilege.  Dedicated staff delivered lessons in Thai, Burmese and English and offered a wide range of subjects such as mathematics, geography, arts, music and sports. Doing their best to deliver interesting and engaging lessons in a challenging environment and with very limited resources, the staff conducted daily classes for up to one hundred students.

In 2009, Andaman Discoveries (AD), a community based tourism organization located in Kuraburi, Phang Nga became aware of the center’s need for volunteers.  Through their operations as a volunteering based tour provider, AD began to send interested travelers to volunteer at the center for weeks or months at a time.  Volunteers conduct lessons in English, helping the teachers to learn new methods of teaching a foreign language, to keep the students active and engaged.  The volunteers also introduce activities or special hobbies and interests and work with the children in a friendly and loving way.  This offers the children interaction with foreigners that they may never be able to have otherwise, and an opportunity to develop communication skills that could be beneficial in future employment.  Since the initial set up of the volunteering program, AD has sent over 35 volunteers to the school, to share with the children skills in art and crafts, music and English language.  Before the volunteer program was set up, children often sat in classes without a teacher, patiently waiting for their turn to be taught.  Unlike children in the west, the children sat quietly, in expectation, with often the older children taking lead and sharing some knowledge.  Since the collaboration there are teachers available for most months of the year, ensuring the children are learning and interacting with teachers and volunteer staff on a regular basis.  The children’s English skills are slowly improving, whereas their self-confidence and outlook on life has improved dramatically!  The volunteering program not only aims to teach children English, but also that opportunity is for everyone and the Burmese students grasp this with both hands.

In 2011 both AD and FED recognized a dire need for a new location for the learning center, as the conditions at the school by pier had degraded substantially.  During rainy season water would flood the classrooms, bringing water up to knee level of the children. Sewage and waste water running behind the school posed health hazards to the students and teachers.  These conditions made for an unsuitable learning environment and would cause cancellation of class for days at a time.

Andaman Discoveries began to use its extensive network to find sources of funding to help the learning center.  Through its working relationship with Planeterra, a non-profit subsidiary of the tour provider G-adventures, the two were able to secure funding from, Mulberry Marketing Communications, for the construction of a new school.  AD was also able to receive funding for the purchase of land from a private donor so the school could be moved from the pier to a nice field that was once a palm oil tree farm.  The new area and building would provide the perfect place for these children to receive a quality education.  In June of 2012, the construction was completed and the school was proud to be opened as the new Mulberry Learning Center.  The new building has capacity to provide education for up to two hundred students, offering classes according to the Burmese curriculum as well as lessons in Thai and English language.  A new playground offers the children a safe and healthy environment for play and exercise.  The completion of a small room for computers will be able to offer these children an opportunity to learn skills that are requirements for most employment in this technological time.  Future plans include an organic garden to provide healthy vegetables and fruits for the school.

Even with all of the accomplishments earned over the last year, the Mulberry Learning Center is still in need of additional funding to cover basic expenses like teachers’ salaries, a proper kitchen structure and lunch programs.  Andaman Discoveries continues to actively seek funding to assists this project for success in the future, so it can continue to provide a quality education and opportunity to this special community.

23.10.12

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