Download the Kiva toolbar! - (what's this?)

May 23, 2012, 04:02:53 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register (it's quick and free!) for full access to all community features and functions, including instant messaging and message viewing preferences.

Login with username, password and session length

Cool Forum Options
: Not available. Login or register :)
: Popular Topics on Kiva Friends

Kivapedia
: View recent changes on Kivapedia
: Online shopping that helps support Kiva
: List of Kiva microfinance institutions
: List of Kiva group lenders
: Kiva Timeline : More...


.
Welcome to Kiva Friends, an active community for Kiva users, staff and supporters. Don't know what Kiva is? Read this!
   
   Home   Search Calendar Help Tags Login Register  

Pages: [1] 2  All   Go Down
  Bookmark This  |  E-Mail This  |  Print It  
Author Topic: LEARNING, LEARNING, LEARNING -- Thanks to Kiva and KivaFriends  (Read 3419 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest were last seen viewing this topic.
Jill
Guest
« on: January 29, 2008, 10:25:27 AM »

        I’d say that probably every single day I learn something new, thanks to Kiva-- and thanks to the Forum, here.  No question but that I could learn a tremendous amount more if I exerted even a tiny bit more effort.  Either way, I feel terrifically grateful for whatever I learn, there and here.  One of the best parts about it is that in this context, that “learning stuff” is really fun, it takes on so much more significance because it’s connected with people we’ve learned we care about, and it’s incredibly easy.

    A couple of examples – out of many that I could be offering, merely from today’s selection of loans. 

What are Votive Objects and What Significance Do They Have In Vietnam?


          I had this question when I came upon the following Loan Request:
http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=34101

Nguyen Thi Thoa – Makes Votive Objects – Viet Nam

      Now, the picture of the pretty young Vietnamese girl and the purple horse-like figures first caught my attention.  Then, when I read that she wanted to make votive objects, which “not that many people would want to do” and that, “….At first, she confronted lots of pressure from many people, even when she decided to join the Fund….,” my curiosity was aroused. 

      I knew the word, “votive” from having seen and bought those little votive candles, but that was the extent of it.  So, I went to Google and typed in the words, “votive objects” +Vietnam   and came upon a website telling about the manufacturing and meaning of votive objects in a different part of Vietnam, but the information from which I feel confident probably generalizes to the work of our Entrepreneur, Nguyen Thi Thoa.

Votive Objects
http://english.vietnamnet.vn/lifestyle/2008/01/766493/

".... In the past, villagers were mostly painters but they have now shifted to making paper religious offerings. Each family produces a different kind, for example, clothes, footwear, motorbikes, horses, cars, etc.,” said Ha Thi Cheng, a villager. Cheng’s family specializes in producing colored papers that other families use in producing the final product.

Dong Ho people make paper votive objects all year long, but are busier before the homeless souls day or the 15th day of lunar July and the 23rd day of lunar December, the day the Kitchen God returns to Heaven. On these days, families are flooded with colored papers, bamboo and glue and everyone is busy producing.

Thao - Ket family is one of the biggest producers in Dong Ho. Some order their paper votive objects at prices nearing tens of millions of VND.

Thao said that around ten years ago, the local authorities banned local residents from making paper votive objects, saying they only served superstition but it is now a job that gives a respectable lifestyle to these villagers..."


     I don't know about you, but that was fun stuff for me to learn about.
My second example from today will follow in another post, maybe later....

Logged
Jill
Guest
« Reply To This #1 on: January 29, 2008, 10:50:50 AM »

     I guess "maybe, later" is now.  That way, if I get this posted, I'll be able to go on to non-Kiva-related things, I hope, that I need to get done.
By the way, Hi, OrionTitans, one of our School Lenders turned KivaFriends, I see you, and it makes me happy.

Springs.  Where Do They Come From and Can You Really Make a Living Selling Just Springs?

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=33498


Miguel Nuñez – Manufacturing Springs – Paraguay

Miguel Nuñez produces and sells springs; he has had this business for more than 20 years. Miguel lives in the city of Limpio (which means clean in Spanish), located 30 minutes away from Asuncion, where he has his shop and factory.

In the mornings, Miguel works at a retirement home, repairing chairs and beds amongst others. He then works at his workshop, where he makes and sells the springs. He buys wires in different sizes and widths then gives them the required form with a special machine in order to produce the springs.

Most of his clients are cars or motorcycle repair shops. This year, his goal is to become the sole provider of the biggest motorcycle’s factory in Paraguay.....
[/i]

      Springs are fun.  They remind me of slinkies.  Now, everytime I see one, maybe I'll think of my guy, Miguel!  (smile).
« Last Edit: January 29, 2008, 11:02:01 AM by Jill » Logged
Antonia
Kiva Supporter
*****
Gender: Female
Posts: 120



View Profile
« Reply To This #2 on: January 29, 2008, 02:26:03 PM »


Thank you Jill, that was interesting Thumbs Up Antonia
Logged
Jill
Guest
« Reply To This #3 on: April 21, 2008, 10:21:53 AM »

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=43901

Toyin Ojobaro – Manufacturing – Nigeria

Sometimes, when I’ve exhausted most of my other rationalizations for making loans on a given day, sometimes I’ll make a loan just out of gratitude for the bit of learning I was able to garner from a particular loan presentation.  This morning, I came across this one, where Toyin and her elder sister (I have an “elder sister,” too, by all of 18 months), anyway, they, together, engage in the production of nylon.

I’d never, in a million years, have guessed that the synthetic, nylon, could be produced in a setting and with a machine like these.  So, both for the pleasure of the easy lesson and also for the additional learning I’m almost sure to gain from it, as now, I’m at least provoked to go to Wikipedia to snag, I hope, a couple of fascinating facts about nylon that I can come back and share with you in an edit to this post, maybe sometime later today or tonight, well, to the tune of Frank Sinatra singing, “High Hopes,” "Oops, there goes a-no-ther twenty-five bucks!

Pre-Edit Note:  It looks like this particular machine has probably made a LOT of nylon, already….

An Unexpected Red-Faced Edit:  Hmmm-mm.  Looks like the joke may have been on me.  As I was closing down for the morning, I went back to the loan for one last look and then noticed, for the first time, the name of the sisters' business: Oluwatoyin Poly Bags.   Looks like instead of producing nylon, itself, that what they actually do produce are bags made out of nylon... or poly, a kind of plastic? -- not nearly so exotic as producing nylon, itself, which, it occurs to me, a day late and 25 dollars short, is exactly what all those white rolls in the foreground of the picture very obviously are.   Well, you know what the frog said....
« Last Edit: April 21, 2008, 10:35:38 AM by Jill » Logged
Bosi
Kiva Supporter
Berlin
*****
Gender: Male
Posts: 67



View Profile
WWW
« Reply To This #4 on: April 21, 2008, 10:43:37 AM »

Thanks Jill for this great addition.
There is indeed so much by Kiva also new for me to know and to learn.   Thumbs Up

Not only by the many great contributions, which to me often translation overtime captivated.

Many greetings

Manni
Logged

NevadaStars
Guest
« Reply To This #5 on: April 21, 2008, 11:07:03 AM »

Although they are only making plastic bags, I think it's remarkable that they're being manufactured in a non-factory setting.   
Reminds me of one of my favorite loans:

A woman making paper bags (a.k.a., Henry's friend)  Smiley:

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=23573
Logged
Laurelia
Kiva Supporter
Seattle, WA
*****
Posts: 122



View Profile
« Reply To This #6 on: April 21, 2008, 06:57:51 PM »


I also have a loan in Nigeria where the entrepreneur was mysteriously described as "producing nylon". I posted about this in another thread (quoted below). Maybe they're both making bags from sheets of nylon??? ---Laurie

18   Kiva.org / Kiva Listings & Loan Recipients / Re: The Work of Kiva's Entrepreneurs; How Wondrous Is the Variety  on: February 29, 2008, 11:52:14 PM
 
I had no idea you could make nylon at home!

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=36629



I did find this on the web, but I don't think that's what she's doing.

http://www.popsci.com/diy/article/2006-05/stir-some-nylon

Maybe she buys the thread and weaves it on the wooden thing that looks sort of like a loom. Or maybe she's spinning something into yarn. I'm not at all sure.

Laurie
Logged
Laurelia
Kiva Supporter
Seattle, WA
*****
Posts: 122



View Profile
« Reply To This #7 on: April 21, 2008, 07:12:11 PM »

There are also a number of loans to people in Pakistan who make paper envelopes, like this one of mine.  --Laurie

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=19161



Logged
Jill
Guest
« Reply To This #8 on: April 22, 2008, 03:59:22 PM »

       Pertaining to the loan featured in Post#36 @ http://www.kivafriends.org/index.php/topic,1959.30.html and to many palm nut/palm oil-related Kiva loans:

Palm oil
is a form of edible vegetable oil obtained from the fruit of the oil palm tree. Previously the second-most widely produced edible oil, after soybean oil, 28 million metric tons were produced worldwide in 2004. It may have now surpassed soybean oil as the most widely produced vegetable oil in the world. It is also an important component of many soaps, washing powders and personal care products, and has controversially found a new use as a feedstock for biofuel……

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_oil

Disclaimer:  Can’t tell you that these facts are accurate.  Can only paraphrase that wonderfully witty commentator on the human condition, Will Rogers:  All I know is what I read in Wikipedia.    I'd advise anyone who is interested to do research more extensive than this.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2008, 04:05:37 PM by Jill » Logged
Jill
Guest
« Reply To This #9 on: September 17, 2008, 08:28:05 AM »

A Cambodian loan was just up that caught my attention and engaged my curiosity because of this line:
She works selling banana blossoms to earn a living…


What does somebody do with banana blossoms, I wondered, and what do banana blossoms look like?  Are they pretty like apple blossoms or what?


Off I flew on my trusty Internet magic carpet on but another potentially thrilling quest. 
Turns out that:

“…. Many Asian cultures eat banana blossoms. The sliced leaves are used in salads or eaten as a vegetable. Blossoms are available fresh (preferred) or canned in Asian grocery stores….”
There’s also a recipe for banana blossoms given at this website.
http://www.gourmetsleuth.com/bananablossoms.htm

The second of the two banana blossom pics, along with other just as incredible photos of more, can be found at : http://litboy.typepad.com/my_weblog/plants/
I don’t know if these, in the second picture I'm posting, are the kind that can be eaten, but who cares?  They’re just absolutely fun and strange and lovely to look at, so, thanks, Kiva, for giving me this extra added benefit of still another learning and viewing pleasure, on this relatively early if insomniacal morning-- well, it is for me, anyway.

P.S.  Funny, Scotty, about your Internet as Mere Fad comment....


* bananablossomopen_225.jpg (8.23 KB, 225x198 - viewed 132 times.)

* 060801bananaslwv.jpg (260.23 KB, 479x640 - viewed 114 times.)
« Last Edit: September 17, 2008, 08:30:00 AM by Jill » Logged
Pages: [1] 2  All   Go Up
  Bookmark This  |  E-Mail This  |  Print It  
 
Jump to:  

 
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.11 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines LLC
Thanks to PixelSlot
Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.128 seconds with 29 queries.