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Youth Action International is a non-governmental organization that uses grassroots techniques to develop and implement programs that help alleviate the suffering of children affected by war or living in difficult circumstances, empower them to reach their full potential, and break cycles of violence and poverty.

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Empowering Africa


Read the YAI 2010-2012 Annual Report: Empowering Africa (pdf)

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Uganda: Agricultural initiative a success

Youth Action International has successfully implemented the Family Empowerment Initiative to support children made vulnerable by AIDS, poverty and conflict in Rakai District. In the first phase of this program, YAI provided 150 families with seeds and tools for subsistence farming. We trained farmers on various topics including post-harvest handling, good environmental practices, and seeds preservation. This has helped with food security for the families and enables them to provide basic necessities for the children.

See photos of the project

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June 1, 2009

YAI ON CW NETWORK! Host A Viewing party.

A new reality series featuring Kimmie Weeks is set to debut in the United States after airing globally in 133 countries and 35 languages around the world. Help raise awareness and support our work by hosting a viewing party. In 4REAL Liberia, host Sol Guy takes international music sensation M.I.A. to post-war Liberia to meet child rights activist Kimmie Weeks. Weeks is the founder of Youth Action International, an organization that is helping to alleviate the suffering of children affected by war and empowering them to reach their full potential. Among their many projects they are providing educational opportunities, employment and building some of the first playgrounds in post-war Liberia. The adventure goes from a visit with Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, to the front lines of Youth Action International’s projects, to a dance party in a Monrovian neighborhood.

Showtime on the CW Network:

4REAL Liberia November 9 2008 Sunday 5:30 PM
4REAL Liberia November 16, 2008 Sunday 5:00 PM
4REAL Liberia December 14, 2008 Sunday 5:00 PM  

Get details for hosting a Viewing Party!

October 4, 2008

YAI holds workshop for Liberian photographers

Cody HallMonrovia, Liberia-9-15-08:   Youth Action International in collaboration with the Photographers Union of Liberia has held a one day training workshop for Liberian photographers and photo journalists.  The one day workshop was held at YAI’s offices on Benson street on September 12th and brought together 20 Liberian photographers.

Speaking at the start of the start of workshop, the Executive Director of (YAI), Mr.Kimmie Weeks said that his organization had taken the initiative to carry out the workshop as the first in a series of steps aimed at strengthening business fields young people usually engage in. “We want to see more young people developing the skills to compete anywhere.  We want Liberia to one day boost of having the best young photographers.” 

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September 23, 2008

Donation thank you

Thank you for your donation to Youth Action International.   We are delighted that you have joined our efforts to support the needs of people living in post war countries.

You will soon receive a formal thank you letter from us.

December 18, 2007

New website coming soon!

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August 16, 2007

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YAI BLOGS more news

Posted by Kimmie, 2/1/12

Youth Action International High School Youth Leader of the Year 2011

Congratulations to Amanda Hurlbut, a 12th grade student, who since 2009, has led Kids with Sole, in coordination with YAI to send 3000 pairs of sneakers to children in Liberia.

Posted by Kimmie, 11/6/11

My Liberian internship

It is a year since I began my internship at Youth Action International and what I thought would be an easy task is very difficult. I do not know where to start in talking about my experiences over the last one year. To save myself from overworking my young brain trying to think about my experiences, I will use this medium to extend my gratitude to Kimmie and the Youth Action International family for affording me the opportunity to grow and develop in a more responsible leader.

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Posted by Kimmie, 10/6/09

Surrounded by Angels

estherI’ve been thinking about what to write since I came back from Liberia.  I am from Spain and English is my fourth language – I also speak Spanish, Italian, and Catalan.  So as you can imagine, it took me forever to put all my thoughts in order in English.

My name is Esther Rodriguez-Brown. My husband, Michael, and I are the founders of The Embracing Project, a non profit organization we created to educate inner city youth about the similarities between genocide and gang activity.  One purpose of this journey is to expose inner city youth to the experiences of children soldiers in different parts of the world and then to create a pen-pal relationship between both groups.

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Posted by Lauren, 10/6/08

Invite Kimmie Weeks to speak.

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Every year, Kimmie Weeks embarks on a nationwide speaking tour to motivate young people to become pioneers of change. To date, thousands of students have heard his message and many of them have gone on to start their own humanitarian organizations or have joined other change-making programs.

Contact Natsumi Ajiki: natsumi @ peaceforkids.org

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Posted by Cody, 10/4/08

A snap of Africa

cody-hall.jpg“What have I gotten myself into?”

This is a question that has come up many times on my journey to Africa.

I suppose to clarify, and so as not to sound like a cynic, I should explain a little bit about myself.  I’ve been a photographer for two and a half years now.  When I first picked up a camera the only thought that went through my head was “Awesome, now I have a big chunk of metal, plastic and glass that will allow me to take clearer photos and I’ll soon be rich and famous as a result of having this camera!”

This was not the case as I am neither rich, nor famous (side from my own delusions of grandeur.)   Anyways all of that is beside the point.  If someone had told me the day that I picked up that camera that it would eventually lead me to post war West Africa, I would have laughed in their faces.  Not because traveling to West Africa is a crazy idea, but simply because I did not see myself ever getting past the stage of “hobbyist” photography.

And yet, here I sit, in Sierra Leone, thousands of miles from home (6168 miles approximately) volunteering as the photographer for Youth Action International.

Now in regards to Africa, particularly Sierra Leone and Liberia, I don’t think that anything could have really prepared me for what I would experience here.   This is including Kimmie’s ‘worst case scenario’ description of Liberia.

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Posted by Lauren, 9/23/08

Notes from Africa. by Lauren Emerson

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I wish I had been more diligent about documenting my experiences and reactions in Liberia, but I seemed to always put off the act of writing.  I always told myself I was too tired or busy, but the truth is that I had a very difficult time reflecting on the barrage of experiences at the time. Throughout my time in Africa, I realized that I did not once shed a tear.  It was only once I was on the plane from Accra to New York, on my way back to my privileged and comfortable life, that I was able to absorb the memories and the pictures that I was taking with me. As I looked through the pictures I had taken on my camera, I cried for a half an hour straight. I cried thinking about the hopeful faces on the small children at Temas Orphanage that I was leaving. I cried for young people of Grand Bassa County who do not have the opportunity to go to school.  I cried because I realized that my life would be changed forever and I cried because I felt an overwhelming sense of helplessness. 

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Posted by memory, 5/9/08

Is Kony really interested in peace?

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A cross-section of observers, traditional and religious leaders, local and international media stormed Ri-Kwangba last week to witness the historical moment were Joseph Kony, the Lord Resistance Army (LRA) leader was supposed to sign the final peace agreement. The rest of the world held its breath to witness the day that northern Uganda would finally get to normalcy after 20 years of conflict between the Government of Uganda and the LRA rebels.

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Posted by memory, 4/29/08

Journey to Uganda – by Heehwa Choi

Heehwa

“Aren’t you nervous?” my dear friend carefully asked me when I told her that I’d be visiting Uganda. That’s how my parents reacted at first. I told myself it is not because Uganda is part of Africa that they are worried for my travel. Traveling to new places is always uncertain to some extent. However, I couldn’t deny that part of me was more worried than usual. What would I see? How would I feel? What should I expect? Am I mature enough? Above all, the question was ‘why would I want to go visit Africa’? I cannot tell Uganda story leaving out the influence of Kimmie and Youth Action International. I actually met Kimmie at Northfield Mount Hermon High School where Kimmie graduated from.  

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Posted by memory, 4/19/08

Peace in Uganda?

 

The Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), an Acholi-based opposition group led by Joseph Kony has been fighting first against president Museveni’s government, and currently against other Acholi peoples. The Acholi are an ethnic group who live in Northern Uganda. Though Kony, leader of the LRA reportedly believes he has been chosen by God to overthrow president Museveni and establish a government based on the Ten Commandments, and a purified Acholi race, the LRA has yet to explain its goals or put forth any sort of political agenda.
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Posted by Abigail, 9/3/07

Death in Uganda

I wasn’t promised an African sunset. When Kimmie Weeks invited me on a humanitarian mission through post-conflict countries, what came to mind were the stunning landscape pictures my friends had brought back from the ranch in Kenya. It was how I had envisioned this beautiful continent. Streaks of red and orange, firing up the night sky of deep blue and purple: a kaleidoscope of color. Instead, I found another kind of sunset. I found the African people wasting away, dying brutal, horrific deaths at the hands of war, disease, and poverty. I found the sun setting on their lives. Not fading into the night with brilliant lights, but being shredded into a nonexistence wracked with pain and suffering. Continue reading continue

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