Emerge in the Field

Post From a Past-Program Particpant

SR is a past bead program participant who now assists at our workshops in Panadura. What follows is her first blog post about her experiences at the Panadura bead workshop:

I am an Emerge past bead program participant who has followed the program for the past 2 years since I left the shelter few months ago I have the privilege of teaching some of the girls who are following the bead program in the shelter in Panadura. This has been an awesome experience for me.

I would like to mention that during my work I noticed one participant VIRC who joined the program about 3 months ago. Her home town is in the north of Sri Lanka and she seemed a very innocent girl. She had a communication problem and she was ridiculed and disliked by the others. Due to this she quickly transformed in to an angry child.

Soon, she learned the art of beading and she began to change, she even started conversing in Sinhala, this was due to the Emerge beading programme and the staff who are behind it and not forgetting the compassion and love Nirukshi Miss had towards VIRC.

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Former Emerge Participant APIL Helps Emerge Launch in a New Home!


“APIL* Miss!” a student calls for attention. I look over to see APIL beam a smile while confidently explaining a jewelry pattern to one of Emerge’s new students. In July 2007 APIL started as an Emerge program participant at Ma Sevena. In 2008 she left Ma Sevena; two weeks ago she began helping us work with a new generation of Emerge girls at the National Training and Counseling Centre in Panadura.

The National Training and Counseling Centre in Panadura is Emerge Global’s newest program site. The home is run by the Sri Lankan Probation Department (the same department that handles all of the court cases for the girls at Ma Sevena). This home is the department’s model home and they have expressed interest in using their work there to identify programs that could be successfully replicated in other homes in Sri Lanka. There are approximately twenty five girls in the Panadura home at any given time. Each girl stays for six to nine months of counseling and rehabilitation before being placed in another location. The girls are all survivors of abuse.

Every week, APIL takes the bus from Matara to Panadura- five hours each way- in order to help lead the Emerge workshops. Though she initially seemed nervous, she’s come to fill her new role with confidence and poise. She’s even planning to wear a sari to the next workshop, where she will speak to the girls about her experiences living in, and leaving, a group home. We couldn’t be happier to witness this former participant taking responsibility and leading the new girls to empowering and active participation in the Emerge Bead Program.


* I have used APIL's initials to protect her confidentiality.

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How do you start something new?

In our case, we just dive right in! Last Monday we got the okay from our partners to start workshops in their home, and this Monday we left our first workshop with 25 new Emerge girls and a camera full of smiles.

The hard work put in by our entire team in the past few months made for a very successful first week at Panadura. I’ll let Rachael’s blog post speak for itself about the partnership agreements which she negotiated and I’ll just stick with the programs side of things.

*The best part of the week - seeing how excited the girls were to have created their first pieces of jewelry. I have some great pictures of them all posing with their new bracelets. (Unfortunately we can’t post those pictures due to privacy rules, but they were cute!)

*The hardest part of the week – holding the girls back! They wanted to move through the curriculum at warp speed because they were so excited. Luckily we had Nirukshi, Rachael, Prabhani, a past participant (who did a fantastic job) and myself all working together.

*What made me sad – we had the girls fill out a pre-program survey to get a feel for their self-esteem and their plans for the future. A lot of the girls have a very low opinion of themselves and their abilities. It was sad but at the same time it really inspired me to see how much we can change those attitudes this year.

*What inspired me – watching one of our past participants teach the girls jewelry techniques. She was so graceful and she has such a great success story. She left the program with a large amount of savings which she has set aside for her child’s education. She’s happy, healthy, and in a solid relationship. It’s great to have her hear to show the girls that the future can be really bright.

*What is challenging me – coming up with new topics each week! From now on we’ll need to find a new speaker for our life-skills session every week at Panadura and once a month at Ma Sevana. It’s a lot to keep up with, but I’m enjoying the new challenge and Prabhani and Nirukshi are contributing a great deal of their time to helping me out.

*What made me laugh out loud – several of our new girls remind me just a little bit of mini-gangsters. They’re tougher than me I think and it’s a good thing; several of them want to become police officers or join the military when they’re older. I hope they pursue these goals; I think the country would be in good hands. ;)

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