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GOOD PEOPLE GOOD WORKS
Dr. Anteneh Roba and the International Fund for Africa: Caring for Ethiopia - P1/2 (In Amharic)
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Today’s
Good People, Good Works
will be presented
in Amharic and English,
with subtitles
in Amharic, Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
HOST (IN AMHARIC):
Enlightened viewers,
welcome to
another edition of
Good People, Good Works
on Supreme Master
Television.
Our program today is
the first in a two-part series
that features the noble
Dr. Anteneh Roba,
physician, humanitarian
and co-founder
of the International Fund
for Africa (IFA),
a US-based
non-profit organization
dedicated to bettering
the lives of those in need
in Africa,
regardless of species.
Dr. Roba (m):
The mission
of International Fund
for Africa is
as best as we can
to prevent, alleviate
and abolish all suffering
of both humans
and non-humans.
We started the organization
towards the end of 2006.
The reason IFA equally
promotes the interests of
both humans and animals
stems from the founders’
deep, abiding belief
in the interconnectedness
of life.
The group operates
on the principle of
“ahimsa” or nonviolence
and respect for all beings.
The IFA has many
projects encouraging
constructive relations
among humans and
between humans and our
animal co-inhabitants.
Dr. Roba (m):
The main areas we work
in are human health,
animal welfare/rights
and promoting veganism
in Africa.
HOST:
Dr. Roba is
firmly committed to
spreading the good news
regarding
the health benefits
of the plant-based diet
and its relation
to kindness to animals.
Dr. Roba (m):
In 1999 my cousin, who
is now the vice president
of the International Fund
for Africa, asked me
to keep her dog for her,
because she had gotten
this little dog
and was keeping him
in her apartment and
the apartment building
would not let her keep him.
And she said,
“Can you keep him
until I move to
another apartment
so that I can keep him
with me?”
And I said, “Sure.”
Dr. Roba (m):
I started falling in love
with him.
And I learned something
about animals
that I never knew before:
that they’re
wonderful beings,
they are sentient beings
and they give so much love.
And so he started me
on the road towards
reconsidering my lifestyle,
and especially
my being a meat eater.
And so I slowly
started changing my diet.
Dr. Roba (m):
I stopped eating meat,
eventually eggs, dairy
products, and finally fish.
And about eight years ago
I became vegan.
HOST:
Dr. Roba, who was born
in Addis Ababa,
the capital of Ethiopia,
travelled widely
with his parents in Africa,
Europe and the US
as a boy, since his father
was a career diplomat.
He finished high school
in his hometown,
did undergraduate work
in North Carolina, USA,
and then went on
to study medicine.
He is currently
an emergency-room
physician in Houston,
Texas, USA.
During a visit to Ethiopia
in 2003, Dr. Roba saw
that the health needs
of the disadvantaged
were not being met,
particularly in the area
of hospital services
for newly born babies.
Dr. Roba (m):
So far in the human arena
we’ve worked
very diligently to bring
equipment to hospitals
in the capital city
of Ethiopia.
Most hospitals
in Ethiopia do not have
neonatal units;
“neonate” meaning
the first 30 days of life,
the babies when
they’re born if they’re sick,
they’re supposed
to go to a unit or a ward
or facility where
they can be taken care of.
Until four years ago
there was only one
in the capital city
that was basically functioning.
Dr. Roba (m):
We hooked up
with a very good doctor
in Ethiopia
who is a neonatologist.
She specializes
in taking care of babies
in the first 30-days of life
and we supported her.
She had started
a small unit in
one of the hospitals and
we started supporting her,
bringing in equipment
so that babies do not die
of you know simple things
like hypothermia,
loss of temperature,
and malnutrition
and things like that.
The first one we started
was in a hospital
called Yekatit 12, which
is in the capital city
of Addis Ababa.
HOST:
IFA has helped
to upgrade Yekatit 12
in numerous ways
such as providing
vital equipment
for neonatal care
like incubators,
phototherapy devices,
glucometers, and beds.
For the neonatal staff
at the hospital,
which consists of
12 nurses and one doctor,
the Fund has gifted
pediatric stethoscopes,
scrubs, jackets,
protective eyewear,
shoes, watches, and caps.
Dr. Roba (m):
The facility had
only one room, two beds
and after three years
working with the hospital
and this doctor,
we transformed that place
from a one room,
two bed facility,
to a seven room,
30 bed facility and
we even opened the first
intensive neonatal unit
in that hospital.
In fact,
right now because of
all the progress that
we saw in starting this,
the hospital itself
was motivated
and the government,
the Ministry of Health
is also helping
to build one whole floor
dedicated to
the neonatal unit,
and we have promised
to help them provide
equipment for which
we’re trying to get funds.
Dr. Roba (m):
Now we’ve also
got involved with
another hospital,
called the Gandhi
Memorial Hospital
after the great
Mahatma Gandhi.
It’s a maternity hospital
that never had
a neonatology unit.
Imagine a baby
is born to a mother
and if the baby is sick
they have to literally
pick up the baby
and take the baby
by foot or by taxi
to the only other hospital
that has a neonatology unit
and a lot of the babies
would die on their way.
In October of 2009
I went there and they had
opened two rooms with
basically a couple of beds
and nothing else.
And they asked,
“Dr. Roba, please can you
and your organization
help us because
a lot of organizations
have come to Ethiopia
and told us they’re going
to help us but
nobody has showed up.”
And I said, “We’ll
do the best we can,
You know, funding is an issue.”
But I said, “We’ll try.”
Dr. Roba (m):
So I came back
to the United States and
we scrounged around
to get funding
and eventually,
some of the doctors that
I work with in the hospital
helped me out and I put
some money of my own
and we bought
the equipment and
sent it back to Ethiopia.
And the facility now
has a full-blown unit
and all the babies
that are born
do not have to go to
another facility anymore.
Dr. Roba (m):
Mortality has gone down
from 30% to less than 5%,
just from this action.
The other hospital,
when we first started,
mortality was 17.5%
or 17.8% down to 4%
in three years
after we got involved.
So the…you know, the results
have been phenomenal.
HOST:
In a short time,
Dr. Roba and the IFA
have managed to bring
about fantastic changes
in neonatal care
in Ethiopia’s capital, but
their compassionate deeds
don’t stop there.
Their love extends to all
of God’s great creations
as they also work
to bring comfort to
the country’s vulnerable
animal co-inhabitants.
Dr. Roba (m):
We’ve been going to
Ethiopia for many years
and every time we see
a lot of homeless dogs who
are suffering, miserable,
they get hit by cars, they
are dragging their feet.
You see them dying,
some of them have babies
that are drowning
when the weather is bad
and there’s rain.
They can’t even
pick their heads up and
they drown on on the streets.
So we approached
the government and said,
you know, “We can help you.
Can we work together?”
And they said,
“We would love
to get some help.”
So we came back
to the United States,
and we hooked up
with the Best Friends
Animal Society in Utah,
and the Humane Society
International,
which is part of HSUS
(Humane Society
of the United States),
and we told them,
“Look, we need help,
can you work with us?
We don’t have money,
but we are working
with the government,
and they are willing
to work with us.
Can we do something?”
And they said,
“Yes, we can help you.”
So we set up
a one-year project, clears throat
a pilot project
to take a certain part
of the city and…
do vaccination,
and spay and neuter.
We plan to do
about 1,200 dogs
to show the government
how it works.
And we brought in vets
and dogcatchers
from India to train
the Ethiopian vets.
We trained them
for about a month.
After that the project was
continued for about a year,
and we were able to
show the government
that this could happen.
We just went back
a couple of weeks ago,
actually Gregory Castle
from Best Friends
Animal Society,
who is the CEO
and I went to Ethiopia.
We sat down
with the city officials,
and even went up to the
president of the country
to see how we can actually
expand this program.
And the government
was very receptive, and
Best Friends and HSUS
is also going to help us
to cover the whole city
of Addis Ababa.
There are
four veterinary facilities.
We are working on
a proposal to provide
not only equipment,
but technical support
and training
to cover the whole city,
which will be starting
sometime in the future.
HOST:
The International Fund
for Africa
is also looking out
for the welfare
of donkeys and horses
in Ethiopia as many lead
tremendously harsh lives,
with constant heavy,
laborious work
being the norm for them.
A common practice is
to abandon the animals
when they become old
and not able to work at
the same level as before.
Dr. Roba (m):
We’re also
working on opening
a donkey-and-horse
sanctuary
in Southern Ethiopia.
Ethiopia, by the way, has
the second largest number
of donkeys in the world,
after China.
China is number one
at a 11 million and
Ethiopia has five million.
And imagine
the difference between
China and Ethiopia,
as far as numbers.
But the donkeys in Ethiopia
are suffering a lot,
and the horses are also.
We’re working with
a veterinary school
of medicine
in Southern Ethiopia
to start a very small
horse-and-donkey
sanctuary,
so that we can take
the horses and donkeys
that are left to die and
give them some support
until the end of their life.
HOST:
Please join us again
next Sunday on
Good People, Good Works,
when we will
continue our interview with
Dr. Anteneh Roba
and learn more about
the International Fund
for Africa’s
praiseworthy programs.
For more details on
the International Fund
For Africa,
please visit
www.IFundAfrica.org
or connect with the IFA on
www.Facebook.com
OUTRO (IN AMHARIC):
Amiable viewers,
we appreciated
your company
on this week’s edition of
Good People, Good Works.
Coming up next is
The World Around Us
after Noteworthy News.
May we endeavor
to always clean
and beautify our planet.
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