20. january 2009:
Small tile franchise will
sponsor the entire Peace School in Congo
Even the editor of the local newspaper praises the initiative of both
staff and owners of a tile franchise that has agreed to sponsor the
building of the new Peace School in Congo.

The charitable spirit of the business “Modena Tiles” in southern Norway
even caught the attention of the largest newspaper in southern Norway,
“Fedrelandsvennen”. The staff decided to donate all proceeds from the
sale of fireworks for New Years Eve that was meant to finance a staff
trip abroad. The staff instead decided to give the money to the new
peace school that the Dina Foundation is building in eastern Congo.
It was Rune Edvardsen, the founder of the foundation, that was able to
meet with and get permission from general Laurent Nkunda, who rules this
area, to build a peace school for both Hutu and Tutsi children. Much of
the war in eastern Congo is a continuation of the strife between the
Hutus and Tutsis that led to the genocide in Rwanda in 1990. At the
school, the children will learn respect and tolerance for each other
with positive interaction, sowing the seeds for future peace in the
region.
When the owners of “Modena Tiles” heard what their employees were doing,
they decided to add whatever is needed to complete the entire project,
up to 1 million kroner, or approximately 150,000 dollars.
The editor of the newspaper writes:
“The staff at Modena makes a new way by action. They are an example to
uphold and model. During the financial crises we are experiencing, it is
easy to look inward and think mostly about our own needs. Then it is
remarkable that there are people who not only recognize that there are
people who suffer much worse than we do, but who are also willing to do
something about it. It helps us put our own problems in perspective.”
With the promise of the funding at hand, Rune Edvardsen traveled to
Congo in January of 2009 to make further preparations for the building
of the school.
22. desember 2008:
Company donates all
profit from firework sale
All proceeds from the sale of firework for New Years Eve celebrations
will go directly to the new Peace School the Dina Foundation is building
in east Congo.
The Modena Fliser (Modena Tiles) branch at Lumber in Kristiansand in
Norway has decided to give all profit from the annual New Year’s
firework sale to the Dina Foundation. The sale of fireworks in Norway
for the festive New Years Eve celebrations is considered an easy and
profitable turnover as individuals are still allowed to light up the sky
for this one evening a year.
The profit from the sale of fireworks at Modena Fliser was to be divided
in two. Half would fund a staff trip abroad, and the other half would go
to the company.
But after the company had a visit from the Dina Foundation, the staff
decided to cancel their trip and give their share of the turnover to the
children in Congo. When the owners heard this they decided to donate
their share as well.
-These funds will go directly to the new Peace School that we are
building in eastern Congo in the area that General Laurent Nkunda
controls. Rune Edvardsen was able to cut a deal for the school when he
met Nkunda in November. This is a very promising project, and Modena
Fliser tells us that we have not heard the last of it from them yet,
says Helge Flatøy from the Dina Foundation.
22. desember 2008:
Supplier Company gives 40 000
dollars to Dina
The Norwegian on/off shore supplier Werc has more on their mind than
mere profit measured in dollars. Investing in aid turns a different kind
of profit with benefits far beyond themselves.
-This is just fantastic, says Helge Flatøy from the Dina Foundation. He
says that after two coincidental encounters with one of the owners of
the Norwegian owned company Werc (www. Werc.no), he expressed a desire
to give 40 000 dollars to the work for suffering women and children in
Congo.
-I have learned not to celebrate too early when it comes to the promise
of really large donations. There are many kind hearts out there that
would like help the Dina children, but it’s not always easy for a
company to release this kind of money, says Flatøy.
–So it felt really great when the owner I met convinced the other owner
and the staff to join in this venture.
Flatøy was also invited to give a presentation of the work to the staff.
This way they can all share the joy of knowing where part of their
profit is heading.
-Everybody in the office heard about the Dina work, and it was clear
that they were all really touched, he says.
Positive for companies
Kjell Rune Nakkestad runs a coaching company for other companies in
Kristiansand in Norway. When he helps companies define their own values,
he often advices them to get involved in projects outside their own
company.
-Most people like to do well towards others. Even if most companies
acknowledge that their greatest resource is people, in reality this is
often forgotten. By getting involved in an aid project outside the
company they are strengthening and reinforcing their own values,
explains Nakkestad.
This can turn into a positive circle for a company. When the staff know
that their work has a deeper meaning it can lead to greater motivation,
and in turn, greater profit.
The Dina Foundation’s work in Congo is continually expanding as the
needs are so great.
Right now 90 young girls from Kahele in Congo are waiting for room at
the Dina senter in Goma. All the girls are victims of rape and many have
lost their families. They are all between the ages of 6-7 and 17.
21. november 2008:
Rune Edvardsen met
General Laurent Nkunda in Congo
Rune Edvardsen met with rebel General Laurent Nkunda in Congo last
week. Nkunda agreed that Edvardsen could start a school for both Hutu
and Tutsi children in the rebel area.

-My desire is to build a school for both Hutus and Tutsies and other
minority groups in Congo. We will start a new project where children
will come together from an early age to learn to see the world in a
different light than what they do now, says Edvardsen.
It was Thursday afternoon on November the 20th that Edvardsen had talks
with General Laurent Nkunda and his staff at Nkunda’s headquarters in
Rutsuri in east Congo.
During a meeting that lasted for two and a half hours, Edvardsen heard
Nkunda’s thoughts about the conflict and was able to start talks about
aid work in the area.

-Right now I come from a meeting with Nkunda and his chief in command.
We shared some food together with his staff of “ministers” and talked
together. It was a very unreal feeling to be there, says Edvardsen.
Edvardsen’s television producer, Geir Egeland, who filmed the meeting,
says that it was really Nkunda’s chief in command that had agreed to see,
so they were taken by surprise when Nkunda suddenly showed up.
-They were all very friendly towards us at the headquarters. I was
served food by Nkunda himself. But our driver, who is a Hutu from Goma,
did not want to get out of the car. He showed great courage by his
willingness to drive us right in to the lions den, so to speak, Egeland
explains.
Rune Edvardsen says he got the idea for this meeting a long time ago.
-I have a theory that I wish to work with all people, no matter who they
are, what they believe or what they think. I would like to do something
for the children in the area that Nkunda controls. A few months back I
therefore contacted the rebels, and after arriving in Goma a few days
ago I sent them a text message. I got contact and he said we could come
and visit.
Rune Edvardsen said that it was interesting to hear the ideology and the
thought behind their rebel movement.

-Nkunda first of all thanked us for coming to see them. He says that the
media coverage internationally does not correspond with what they stand
for. They want to unite Congo morally and believe that there must be one
power that has control over the borders so that outsiders can’t come in
and strip the country of its valuables. At the same time he said that he
supports the minorities in the country. The people who really know all
about this can judge if this is what it really is all about, but it was
very interesting, says Edvardsen.
Edvardsen makes is very clear that he does not take sides in the
conflict between General Nunda’s army of rebels and the government
forces.
-It is not possible in a conflict where there is so much wrong on both
sides. We will work towards the individual. There are many tragic human
fates on both sides of this war. We have offered to assist with
humanitarian aid and to try to make contacts with other people. To
achieve peace people must talk together.
Rune Edvardsen has traveled to Congo more than 30 times since 2001 on
behalf of the Dina Foundation.
If you would like to help the people in Congo with a donation to the
Dina Foundation, please click here.
20. november 2008:
The Dina-children are safe in
Goma
-The 70 girls and the 50 boys at the Dina-senters in Goma in Congo
are safe and still attending our school during daytime, despite the
escalating war conflict in the area, says Helge Flatøy who is
coordinator for the Dina Foundation.
Despite the ongoing conflict in the area that has killed and maimed
thousands of people while hundreds of thousands are homeless, a team of
15 Norwegian volunteers arrived in Goma on November the 9th to assist
with a much needed expansion of the Dina-senter for girls.
-We have not had any personal confrontation with the war yet, but it is
clear that people here are nervous. They get some of the same news that
we get at home. But for them this is quite normal. The only difference
really is that the western press finally started reporting what is
happening in eastern Congo, says Helge Flatøy who is now in Goma.
The goal of this trip is to help expand the Dina-senter where 70 girls
are living under very crowded conditions. With the additional rooms now
built the Dina-senter can provide shelter, medical help and schooling
for 115 girls.
One of the Norwegian volunteers, Aud Korsvik, says that the past days in
Goma have been filled with stark contrasts, causing her to cry many
times.
-During mealtime one day I got to hold the youngest girl here, who is a
3 years old toddler, on my lap. That was a very emotional experience and
I thought about what had happened to this little girl, the terrible
violence she suffered. And yet here am I, that was pretty unreal, says
Aud.
From the youngest 3 year old to the oldest 17 year old, all 70 girls
have had horrific crimes committed against them. They have been violated
and many have watched their own parents and siblings get killed.
-But I can see that the children at the Dina-senters are well provided
for. I have watched them play, they sing a lot and they really like to
dance while using the water buckets as drums, says Aud.
–In fact, that is what the children at the kindergarten I work at in
Norway also likes to do.
As an extra gift she brought 1000 dollars that was a donation to the
children from the kindergarten and school where she is employed. After
conferring with the local director of the Dina-senter, they have decided
to use the money to buy chickens and rabbits and pens and cages to keep
them in.
-This will really make a good contribution to the children’s diet, she
explains.
Some of the children are still a bit malnourished but this will improve
over time, particularly when they now will get more protein in their
diet. As chickens and rabbits reproduce so quickly, they will also be
able to sell what they don’t need at the market, which will be a
valuable contribution their daily budget, Aud explains.
The volunteers are leaving Goma on Saturday November the 22nd.
Donors give new life to Congo
children
By: Bente Rognmo Thakre
-The wedding at the orphanage last summer really gave the children a new
hope for their future. Now they all want a wedding, says the director of
the Dina and Bethsaida center in Congo, dr. Kabutu Biriage.
-Claudine, who got married last summer, is now expecting her first baby,
says dr. Kabutu Biriage. He is the local coordinator and director of the
Dina Foundation in Congo. Claudine was the first girl to get married
after the Norwegian founder, Rune Edvardsen, started the orphanages in
2002 for boys and 2003 for girls. Claudine was one of the very first to
seek refuge at the Dina center for abused girls. She was then 14 years
old and had been living on the street working among the market stalls
carrying goods for shoppers from she was 8 years old.
-The wedding really gave the children hope that they do have a future
and the possibility of having their own family one day. That they will
find somebody who will love them despite of what they have experienced,
explains dr. Kabutu.
-Now all the children want to have a wedding, he adds and laughs.

The Dina Foundation includes two orphanages built as two separate
compounds a few hundred meters apart. The Dina center for girls houses
the roomy chapel where all the children attend services. The Bethsaida
center where the boys live facilitates the school all the children
attend.
Most of the 32 girls presently living at the Dina center are victims of
rape and abuse by soldiers. Several had to make their livelihood as
porters among the market stalls. Others come from remote villages where
the parents have been unable to help them through their traumas after
being raped. The Bethsaida center houses about 50 homeless boys, some of
them surviving victims from the horrendous volcano eruption that struck
Goma in 2002. In the cases where it is possible, the children will be
reunited with their families to make room for new children at the
orphanages.

Dr. Kabutu and his wife Eva
visits with Snefrid in her bridal shop. Snefrid donated the gown and all
the accessories for Claudines bridal outfit.
-We really thank all the donors who support the Dina Foundation, says
dr. Kabutu.
-Girls and boys who were beggars at the market in Goma have now got a
completely new life. Some of them are even becoming young evangelists in
their own right, telling their powerful testimonies, a witness to God’s
love, he says.
United Nations and the Red Cross are uncovering chilling reports of mass
rapes as cruel war strategies to shame and destroy families. This
happens daily in Congo, and Rune Edvardsen says he has been in areas in
Congo where 9 out of 10 women and girls were raped.
-One of our problems are that young homeless children from the markets
are now knocking on our doors, hoping for a place to live, but we simply
do not have any more capacity and have to turn them away, Dr. Kabutu is
sad to admit.
He hopes to be able to expand the two orphanages that now house, feed
and school about one hundred children.
-We also need money to pay the teachers at the school 250 children from
the community attend as well, he says.

There are now 50 boys living at
the Bethsaida centre in Goma.
– All the children have regular classes from 8-12 in the morning. In the
afternoon they have their vocational training, such as sewing or
carpentry, and some bible classes as well.
Dr. Kabutu, who is a professor at the university in Goma, says they have
intensified the teaching and are able to complete the regular 6
curriculums in 3 years.
-It is really incredible to see how the children have changed in this
short time, he says.
-Now they can read, write and do their math as well as learn a trade to
provide them with an income once they leave us.
The children also have bible classes and sing in a choir where they
share their testimonies.
- I really hope we can acquire a buss for the purpose of evangelizing.
The children make a strong impression wherever they go, they are such a
powerful testimony to the gospel of love and restoration, he explains.
He adds that at their own initiative the children will fast and pray for
2 to 3 days at a time.
-Then they will pray for peace in Congo, for the leaders of their nation
and their own future and families. And perhaps a wedding, he adds with a
smile.

-Girls and boys who were beggars
at the market in Goma have now got a completely new life. Some of them
are even becoming young evangelists in their own right, telling their
powerful testimonies, a witness to God's love, says dr. Kabutu.
Practical needs:
The practical needs at the two orphanages that dr. Kabutu mentions
particularly are:
- A 300-meter long water pipe connecting the two orphanages. It is only
the boys orphanage at the Bethsaida center that has access to running
water, and the girls have to hand carry all the water they need for
cooking and washing across to the Dina center.
-Fabric for their sewing lessons. The children need fabric to practice
on, dr. Kabutu explaines.
-New parts to the sewing machines as they wear out.
-A tall wall around the Dina senter for the protection of the girls.
Dr. Kabutu emphasizes that all their practical needs are available and
can be bought at the local markets in Goma.
Click here
for more information on how you can help support the Dina Foundation
project for sexually abused girls and homeless boys.