Malawi Project

DEADLINE GROWING NEAR ON DAN’S CHALLENGE

On September 12 a news item on the website reflected the goals Dan Brewer, a board member for the Malawi Project, had set early in 2013. The goals were set quite high, but Dan had concluded if you don’t set high goals, you never challenge your full potential. ( https://www.malawiproject.org/dans-goals-in-focus/ ) With slightly more than two months […]

DEADLINE GROWING NEAR ON DAN’S CHALLENGE Read More »

RECOMMENDATION NEEDED – DEADLINE LOOMS

Lebanon, Indiana … Each year since 2014 the Malawi Project has received its highest recommendation from GREAT NONPROFITS, the leading platform for community-sourced stories about nonprofits. The way it works is when a designated number of positive recommendations are submitted for a particular nonprofit before October 31 each year, that nonprofit is recognized for its

RECOMMENDATION NEEDED – DEADLINE LOOMS Read More »

WATER RETENTION CONSERVATION PROGRAM

Lilongwe, Malawi … In Malawi, rains come in late October or early November and continue nearly daily until late March or early April. Sometimes the rain comes down in torrents, making travel and work nearly impossible. River’s fill, water rushes to exit the country, and its value is quickly lost to further value. Then, after

WATER RETENTION CONSERVATION PROGRAM Read More »

THE FEVER TREE

Its bark has a distinctive, greenish-yellow, smooth appearance. It produces a powdery substance that coats its bark and rubs off at the touch. Dangerous thorns grow to approximately 2 ½ to 3 inches and can easily puncture a shoe and reach the foot.This unique tree, known as xanthophloea, grows in low, marsh areas, along flood

THE FEVER TREE Read More »

He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother

“They might be brothers, or perhaps father and son, or maybe just neighbors in a nearby village. Regardless of their relationship, the view of a person carrying another reminded me of the song, “He ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother.”  “As I watched them approach the row of mobility units, I knew the struggles in his past

He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother Read More »

LIVES ARE BEING TRANSFORMED

Mchinji District, Malawi … When one loses their home, business, possessions, and livelihood to a natural catastrophe such as Cyclone Freddy, people often do not notice, or in the pain of loss overlook, what has happened to those with mobility issues. For many, this is what happened in March of this year when the longest-running

LIVES ARE BEING TRANSFORMED Read More »

FISH FARMS BEGIN IN DOWA DISTRICT

Lilongwe, Malawi … In the spring of 2022 Jan Dean, a specialist in fish farming, and Richard Stephens, of the Malawi Project (MP), traveled to the country for a fact-finding trip about fish farming possibilities. The focus was to evaluate if creating several fish farms as examples of what can be done by small-scale farmers,

FISH FARMS BEGIN IN DOWA DISTRICT Read More »

ODE TO THE ROLL

ODE TO THE ROLL Lilongwe, Malawi … In 1970 Joni Mitchell released the song, Big Yellow Taxi. In it was this refrain, “You don’t what you’ve got ‘til it’s gone.” I know she was not talking about what I recently experienced, but every time I think about my encounters in Malawi, I recall that song. My

ODE TO THE ROLL Read More »

THEY SURVIVED THE STORM, BUT NOW …

Southern Malawi … It has been six months since Cyclone Freddie washed away his entire village. Their home had been their security, and their good memories. Now it was gone, and six months later most of the aid groups who came immediately after the storm, were also gone.  John Chikwanthu, 62, and his family of

THEY SURVIVED THE STORM, BUT NOW … Read More »

PAIN OF THE PAST

Mozambique wraps around Malawi on three sides, and unlike the borders of most nations, this fact explains a nearly total encasement of the Southern portion of Malawi. Because of this fact, Mozambique has a powerful influence on the economic and political situation of its neighbor.   A major example of this took place between 1977 to

PAIN OF THE PAST Read More »

Scroll to Top