Streetwise in Ghana

Donn Young Photography, www.donnyoung.com

After graduating from UNC, Callie Brauel could have gone to Italy on a full MBA scholarship, but she opted instead to focus on a promising yet still fledgling nonprofit she started after spending a semester in Ghana.

The nonprofit works with teen mothers from the Ghanaian capital of Accra, providing them with a home and a basic education, as well as entrepreneurial skills and social services. Its formation and current success stem from Brauel’s initial reaction to the plight of street children when she first went to Ghana in 2008.

 “You’d just be walking down the street, and little 6-year-olds would be selling stuff,” she said, “and you were wondering, ‘Why aren’t these kids in school?'”

Brauel and co-founder Rebecca Brandt decided to call the nonprofit A Ban Against Neglect, a play on the west African Adinkra symbol aban, which means fence and is meant to convey a sense of safety and security for the girls who, as Brauel notes, have “faced things we couldn’t even imagine.”

Brauel is one of many who have graduated from UNC and applied their know-how to helping others around the globe. Appearing in the May/June issue of the Carolina Alumni Review, here are some of their stories: Change Agents. Members of the General Alumni Association can find a digital version of the magazine here: Alumni Review

water.org

Bangalore, India. Photos by waterdotorg.

Gary White first noticed the world’s desperate need for potable water nearly 30 years ago on a trip to Guatemala. It was the early 1980s, and vast shanty towns in the nation’s capital had become refuges for those displaced by decades of civil strife.

At the time, White was an undergraduate student at the University of Missouri-Rolla. Later, after working for Catholic Relief Services in Latin America and the Caribbean and embarking on a master’s degree at UNC, he formed a global nonprofit to help impoverished communities gain access to potable water and sanitation. Initially dubbed WaterPartners, it later morphed into water.org, which White now runs in partnership with actor Matt Damon.

“It is fundmanetally unjust that the world should be the way it is with respect to water and sanitation,” White says. “It doesn’t make sense that so many of us should have so much while others can’t even take a drink of water.”

White is one of the many who have graduated from UNC and applied their know-how to helping others around the globe. Appearing in the May/June issue of the Carolina Alumni Review, here are some of their stories: Change Agents. Members of the General Alumni Association can find a digital version of the magazine here: Alumni Review

Change Agents

Jesse Pipes is one of 10 former UNC students who drove around the southern part of Africa during the summer of 2001 living out of a van and sleeping in tents. He and his college friends had developed an educational program to help young school children grapple with HIV/AIDS, and after their initial low-budget tour took them to schools in South Africa, Botswana, Zambia and Malawi, they created World Camp, a fast-growing educational program based in Malawi. Pipes, who works from an office in Asheville, NC, is one of only four full-time employees of World Camp, but he and a much larger group of part-timers, board members and volunteeers have managed to reach thousands of school children, helping them deal with a disease that has taken more of a toll on southern Africa than any other part of the world. Pipes and his World Camp colleageus are among the many who have graduated from UNC and applied their know-how to helping others around the globe. Appearing in the May/June issue of the Carolina Alumni Review, here are some of their stories: Change Agents  Members of the General Alumni Association can find a digital version of the magazine here: Alumni Review