The mission of the FBB Inc-Intll
Humanitarian Beauty Project is to bring the core issues of a woman's self-image
to light and empower her to build a healthy sense of self-worth, recognizing
that she is in control of her own destiny. <br>
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We will continue to accomplish these initiatives by providing ongoing
educational outreach programs for women and girls in "at risk" communities where
there is significant need for leadership, but little opportunity to learn. We
encourage women from all over the world to explore entrepreneurship and build
their self-image.
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Our core purpose is to maintain and preserve each person’s natural God given
beauty through our brand product lines which include products for prevention of
hair loss and damage; maintenance products for ethnic skin and hair care; and
cosmetics for women of color.
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“If a person feels beautiful they are inspired to do anything, they have no
limits. The boost in self esteem leads to greater confidence in oneself and
abilities.” Efforts over the last several decades to improve women's lives have
produced new concepts and methods. With this knowledge we at FBB Incorporated
will grow to become a bridge in providing beauty products, opportunity for
entrepreneurship and beauty education to women.
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We will energetically expand our focus in international countries where they
have difficulty importing ethnic beauty products. In order to enhance the self
esteem of women we will encourage them to consider a focus on creating an
enterprise for their families in the beauty industry. Health and beauty products
are provisions that are always going to be a necessity in our communities.
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Some examples of other organizations that we admire for this type of positive
influence are:
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The Heifer Project in Little Rock, Arkansas, uses this same system.
Internationally, they provide livestock- such as goats, and cows to the women in
disadvantaged families, not just for nourishment but to create a source of
income for their community. -Beatrice's Goat Fed A Dream <br>
June 12, 2005
The Perfect Gift
A goat helped Beatrice Biira, 19, go to school and win a scholarship to a
college in America. (Photo: CBS)When Beatrice comes home to Kisinga, she is
immediately engulfed as if she were some long-lost African princess. (Photo:
CBS)
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(CBS) When we stop and think about the forces that have helped shape our lives,
many of us can recall a loving parent or a caring teacher, or someone else who
encouraged and inspired us and made us what we are today.
But how many of us can look back and say, "I owe it all to a goat"?
A young African woman by the name of Beatrice Biira can. If it weren’t for her
goat, Beatrice wouldn’t have gone to school, wouldn’t have been lifted out of
poverty, and wouldn’t have won a scholarship to a college in America.
There are lots of terrible stories coming out of Africa these days, stories
about war and tyranny and starvation. This is not one of them. Correspondent Bob
Simon reports.
On a sweltering June afternoon in Uganda, Beatrice, a 19-year-old African woman,
comes home to the village of her birth and is immediately engulfed as if she
were some long-lost African princess. She's been away for more than a year.
Beatrice’s village, which is called Kisinga, sits nestled in a valley in the
western part of Uganda. When most people hear of Uganda, they immediately think
of Idi Amin, the strongman who brutalized the country for nearly a decade.
Amin’s long gone, but Uganda, like most of Africa, is still plagued with
problems. There are too many people, too few jobs, and not enough food.
Beatrice remembers being hungry as a child. "There wasn't much food in our
fields. And if it was there, it was almost the same meal every other day. Like
you eat cassava or sweet potatoes in the afternoon and in the evening. And, I
must say that we were hungry," she says.
And yet, despite going hungry and not having much hope for the future, she later
found herself on the campus of an exclusive American prep school. Last year, she
was a student at Northfield Mt. Hermon, in northern Massachusetts.
How did she get there? How did she manage to pull off such an improbable
journey? 60 Minutes traveled a long way to find out.
The equator runs right across the country road that leads to Beatrice's home.
You can stand in both hemispheres. Beatrice's life has become something like
that in the last few years. She's had one foot in the African bush, and the
other in New England -- all because of a goat.
"It is through selling the goat's milk that I was able to [go to school]," says
Beatrice, who owes her good fortune to a goat and a charity in Little Rock,
Ark., called Heifer International.
Heifer International is known for its work distributing livestock to poor
families all over the world.
In 1991, Heifer introduced 12 goats to 12 families in Kisinga. Beatrice’s family
was lucky enough to be among them Beatrice's Goat Fed A Dream
(Page 2 of 2)
June 12, 2005
(CBS) Along with the goats, Heifer sent a cameraman to Kisinga to shoot film of
young Beatrice’s life. At 9, she was performing adult chores, and yearning
desperately to attend school. But her family, one of the poorest in Kisinga,
just couldn't afford it.
It seemed as though Beatrice would always be on the outside looking in. But she
says she kept bugging her parents: "I was very impassioned. Want to go to
school. I really wanted to go to school."
Enter her goat. The Heifer goats are bred to produce prodigious amounts of milk.
After struggling for years just to feed her kids, Beatrice’s mother was able to
sell enough goats’ milk to finally send Beatrice, then 10, to the local school.
From there, she won a scholarship to a high school in Kampala, Uganda’s capital.
Then, she went on to prep school in New England, where it turns out, her biggest
adjustment was winter.
"[It was] ridiculously cold. It was really cold. Like negative 30 degrees,"
recalls Beatrice. "And 20 inches of snow. That has never occurred to me in my
life."
But seasons change, and for the first time in her life, Beatrice learned how to
play tennis. She might never make it to Wimbledon, but she’s pretty smart and
won an award for general excellence. Not bad for a kid who grew up with her
parents and seven brothers and sisters in a tin-roofed shack in Africa, with an
outhouse nearby.
Did the American kids have any idea where she was from? Or what kind of life she
lived before going to school?
"No, they didn't know. Most of them actually look at me and maybe thought I was
African-American. So, I started to tell them my story. I didn't tell all of it,
but I told them I grew up in a very, very poor village. And, I'm trying to
transition from that kind of life to this one," says Beatrice.
"They were very good. But most of them were amazed, really amazed at my story."
Beatrice took 60 Minutes to her old school, the one she couldn’t afford to
attend until that goat came into her life. She says the school hasn’t changed
much since she went there.
In fact, it looks as though it hasn’t changed in a century. There are hardly any
books or pencils. And they still teach kids how to weave straw mats. It’s a
skill that Beatrice is still pretty good at. But then again, she was a natural
at everything in school.
She says it didn't take long for her to catch up with other kids her age. "I was
very eager to go to school," recalls Beatrice. "Even when I got there, I made
sure that I did extra work, extra homework, extra help, how to read, how to
write. And I made it pretty quick."
Beatrice made it all the way to Connecticut College on a scholarship.
Having tasted the good life at prep school in America, Beatrice remains
grateful, but not seduced. Despite her success in this country, she says she’ll
never abandon Africa.
"There's so much poverty here. There's AIDS. There are so many wars. And you're
in a position to escape it. Do you want to escape it," asks Simon. "To escape
all the hardship of Africa?"
"I'm not trying to run away from all of these hardships," says Beatrice. "What
I'm talking about is having the necessary things that you would need to live
comfortably and survive. That's what matters to me."
In Beatrice’s world, goats are for sharing. You get a goat, and you share your
goat’s offspring with one of your neighbors. It’s done in a ritual called
“Passing on the Gift.”
60 Minutes witnessed that ritual in Kisinga. The descendants of Heifer’s
original 12 goats were being passed from families lucky enough to have had them
to other families in desperate need.
Once, Beatrice was on the receiving end of this charity, and she’s not about to
forget it. What is her dream 10 years from now?
"I would love to see myself forming maybe a school for children who are
disadvantaged," says Beatrice.
"Or maybe an orphanage, and maybe a farm with cows or goats, and giving those
children milk. And I'd love to see them get healthier, all by my work."
With all the money donated to help fight famine around the world, with all the
grandiose plans conceived to conquer poverty, sometimes all it takes to save a
child is a goat. If you don’t believe that, come to Kisinga. Beatrice appeared
on Oprah Winfrey's show in the fall of 2002.
© Heifer International -End.
Oprah Winfrey has also created the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls in
South Africa. The school will teach girls to be the best human beings they can
be, training them to become decision makers and leaders. It is now
well-documented that more enlightened gender policies and investments in women's
education, beauty and health lead to higher human development and economic
growth world wide.
Mary Kay Ash developed the Mary Kay Company over 35 years ago so women could be
successful in a male-dominated corporate society. She wanted women to achieve
their personal and business goals. Mary Kay built the company on commitment to
helping women.
Mary Kay Cosmetics believes commitment in everything they do. It especially
shows in the products. The consultants take time to understand you as a person
so they can develop products that truly meet YOUR needs and deliver the benefits
you want. All Mary Kay products are TRY BEFORE YOU BUY.
This means, you try all the products before you purchase them. The products are
all backed by a 100 percent satisfaction guarantee. So, if you buy a product and
decide later it was not meant for you, you return the product to your beauty
consultant for your money back.Mary Kay is a wonderful business opportunity.
Today, the company has more than 500,000 Independent Beauty Consultants in 29
markets worldwide.Mary Kay Ash feels the company should run on 3 rules:
Put God first,
family second and career third
Praise people to success
Work by the Golden Rule, treating others as you would like to be treated
Many challenges remain in addressing women's roles across the world. The UN
Beijing conference has identified a substantial agenda of actions needed to
enable women to enjoy full human rights, to have access to critical resources
like land and water, and to realize their potential contribution to national
development. Several international communities of research, programming and
activism have formed to carry these issues forward.
Among these issue communities are networks concerned with women and economic
development, human rights, conflict and international relations, health/beauty,
reproductive health, women's studies, women in welfare states, organizational
change and political participation. Some of these are more concerned with women
in developing countries; others deal with issues in industrialized countries,
and some but not many span issues in rich and poor countries.
Although the situation has improved over the last decade, says Black Beauty &
Hair editor Irene Shelley, the UK industry is still playing catch-up with the US
market. "A lot of products originate from the US. There are so many ranges out
there, which we don't even see, with smart packaging and great advertising," she
says. And although the market is considerably larger and more lucrative in the
US, it is still in its growing phase. As Shelley says: "The manufacturers would
be stupid to ignore it." But Lubna Khalid, founder of Real Cosmetics in the US,
says: "Women of colour have been tremendously neglected by the hair and beauty
industry. Until now, they have had to settle for products with inferior quality
and packaging."
Despite issues of neglect by the hair and beauty industry towards women of
color, FBB Inc now has a more sophisticated understanding of how organizations
and markets work. This knowledge will enable us to overcome the challenges of
critiques of nationalism and other ideologies that negatively affect women, new
ways of hearing women's voices in literature and the arts, activist movements
within countries and across the globe, and a substantial recognition by
mainstream institutions of women's critical roles in national development.
**For more information and partnership development for women please contact:
Mrs. Joseph. Phone: 206-350-7971 * Fax: 206-600-3036**
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