Surf Aid wins the Rugby World Cup of humanitarian aid organisations
We may have lost the yachting and rugby but our proud Kiwi heritage of helping others less fortunate continues, with New
Zealand humanitarian organisation SurfAid International winning the 2007 Humanitarian Award at the World Association of
Non-Governmental Organizations (WANGO) awards ceremony held overnight in Toronto.
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This WANGO award means SurfAid has been recognized as one of the best non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in the
world, a fantastic honour and a testament to their ground-breaking and effective approach to providing aid.
“This is like a world title but better because it’s your peers who have chosen you” SurfAid Founder and CEO Dr Dave
Jenkins said, “They know better than anyone else how tough it is, how dangerous it is, and how much determination you
need to start and grow an effective non-profit without being a billionaire or having any significant backers”
Dr Jenkins added, “We were started by New Zealanders – we did not win the Rugby World Cup, but we just won the world
title for 2007 humanitarian excellence. That’s awesome. I think our success once again describes the uniqueness of New
Zealanders. We are always thinking we can find solutions and we tackle the most difficult challenges without being
overly concerned with the risks or obstacles. Once again we have fought above our weight and won. I hope Kiwis are very
proud of who we are and what can achieve as a small group of determined people who feel the need to celebrate the good
fortune we had of being born in NZ by giving back to those less fortunate. The New Zealand Government aid agency, NZAID,
has been one of our biggest donors and we extend a great thanks to them. The award is recognition of everyone who has
backed our results.”
In taking the decision to present SurfAid International with its 2007 Humanitarian Award, the WANGO Awards Committee
were impressed with the compassion of SurfAid and their remarkable and successful effort to address the dire health
situation of the Mentawai people, with their high childhood mortality, the ravages of malaria, poor education, and
poverty.
Mr Taj Hamad, Secretary General of WANGO said, “We are delighted to recognize such efforts and bring greater worldwide
awareness of the extraordinary accomplishments of SurfAid International. SurfAid’s unique cutting edge solutions to
alleviate the human suffering in the Mentawai Islands, and now Nias Island, promoting community-based solutions and
tapping into the inherent values in the surfing community—individualism, courage, dynamism, and adaptability—is an
example of humanitarian service that deserves widespread recognition.”
The prestigious WANGO awards recognize non-governmental organizations from throughout the world that demonstrate
exceptional effort, service, innovation, and excellence. Among past recipients of WANGO awards are Rotary International,
Ashoka, Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress, Inuit Circumpolar Conference, Free the Children, Bahrain Women’s
Society, Bharatiya Jain Sanghatana, Buccoo Reef Trust, Altai Foundation, and Roots of Peace.
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WANGO is the world’s largest international association for non-governmental organizations both large and small,
assisting NGOs to better connect, partner, and multiply their contributions to solve humanity’s basic problems.
SurfAid International was started by Wellingtonian, Dr Dave Jenkins, in 2000. The mission of SurfAid International, a
non-profit humanitarian aid organization, is to improve the health of people living in isolated communities.
SurfAid works so well because it provides the fundamental building blocks of health through direct community empowerment
and engagement, creating long lasting behaviour changes. They are also very effective because the connection between
public donation and the provision of actual on-the-ground frontline aid is more direct than other aid organizations.
And, as WANGO say, their work is epitomized by the values of the surfing community - individualism, courage, dynamism,
and adaptability. This makes SurfAid a powerful force for helping stricken communities
Dr Jenkins said, “We are a team coming from varied backgrounds but who share the same vision and have all sacrificed
something to be here. We did not change our lives, leave families, and the comforts of home for anything but the best
outcomes for the people we have chosen to help. We have all surrendered to this commitment and we are not letting go of
our single-minded vision. Striving for cost effective impact in remote island settings is an extreme challenge and
requires SurfAid to test, refine and retest cutting edge solutions. This has and will continue to build a strong and
resilient organizational culture.”
The fund-raising work of SurfAid is also supported by funding from NZ Aid, which enables SurfAid to leverage their
fund-raising and reach even more isolated communities. NZ Aid Director Global Group Don Clarke said, “We are extremely
pleased at this recognition of Surf Aid International, one of our many NGO partners. Central to our mission is
eradicating poverty, and one of the ways in which NZ Aid is able to make a significant difference is to engage with New
Zealand's NGO community and provide funding to support their programmes on the ground overseas. Surf Aid is an excellent
example of a successful partnership that is making a real difference.”
Dr Jenkins added, “Over 11 million children under the age of 5 die in the world every year. Further, for every single
death thousands of children and their communities are crippled by suffering. And yet, the vast majority of these deaths
and suffering are preventable with achievable behaviour change from the parents. Immediate post delivery and exclusive
breast feeding, mosquito nets, improved nutrition, clean water, washing hands and recognizing the signs of serious
illness are scientifically proven behaviours that save lives. SurfAid International is committed to designing and
refining a proven model that permanently shifts community norms towards these key health behaviours.
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“In the long term we would like to take our success to scale in many more communities across Indonesia and beyond. I’d
like to sit in my rocking chair one day (if those damn mossies don’t get me first) and know I’ve been part of something
that has saved at least a million children’s lives and prevented tens of millions of days of extreme childhood
suffering.
“We ask people to get passionately involved, give time and money, organize a fundraiser, recruit other members, and get
your school involved in our schools program,“ Dr Jenkins said. “Stay with us, be part of our growing success, and help
save lives.”
About SurfAid
The mission of SurfAid International, a non-profit humanitarian aid organization, is to improve the health of people
living in isolated regions connected to us through surfing.
Six years ago, physician and surfer Dr. Dave Jenkins went on a surf charter to the Mentawai Islands with one goal in
mind: to find perfect waves.
The surf proved to be everything he had hoped for. What he also found, though, were the Mentawai people---mostly women
and children-–-suffering and dying from the ravages of malaria and other preventable diseases. Troubled by the inequity
of lifestyles and moved by compassion, Dr. Jenkins went on to establish SurfAid International, a non-profit organization
dedicated to the alleviation of human suffering through community-based health programs.
Soon after, Dave was contacted by investment banker, Andrew Griffiths, a fellow Kiwi in London preparing for a surf
holiday in the Mentawai Islands. Andrew had heard about Dave’s Mentawai initiative through a friend and set up a
meeting, where the two immediately clicked. A plan was quickly hatched a to raise a couple of thousand dollars through
friends and contacts - enough to buy mosquito nets and permethrin (the insecticide for treating the nets) - and pilot a
small malaria net distribution program to the villages adjacent to the breaks Andrew would visit.
Andrew's first SurfAid mission was a success. Hooked, Andrew swapped his life in London for a tiny project in a small
Mentawai village. Working as volunteers out of Padang, West Sumatra, Dave and Andrew began laying the building blocks of
the SurfAid International Mentawai Health Program.
In the years that have elapsed since the founding of SurfAid, others have joined in the effort, including individuals,
international corporations, government agencies, and global health organizations. Coupled with the support of
volunteers, the international surfing community, and most importantly the Mentawai people themselves, SurfAid has come
to exemplify the healing power of cross-cultural partnerships.
SurfAid has expanded to include 53 villages and over 37,000 beneficiaries in our programme, which is a community
development health initiative focusing on malaria control and childhood health. SurfAid is also laying the foundations
for the communities to run their own health programs and build on the prevention of other diseases.
About Dave Jenkins
Dr. Dave Jenkins is the inspiration behind SurfAid International, as well as its CEO and Medical Director. Dave started
surfing in chilly Dunedin while studying medicine in New Zealand. Later, during his time in rural general practice he
became interested in indigenous, traditional medicine and the challenge of merging the best of ancient wisdoms and
modern medical practice.
He left clinical medicine to follow his interest in teaching and training and was appointed as a senior lecturer of
postgraduate medicine at Auckland University, New Zealand. That was followed by a job as educational director of a
multinational health organization in Singapore. It was during this time that he journeyed to the Mentawais. Following an
impromptu clinic at Katiet village where many villagers were dying, he realized that he could not leave and forget what
he had seen. Dave has dedicated the last seven years to building SurfAid and working with the Mentawai people. He is a
passionate advocate of the "hand up, not a handout" philosophy and wishes to see the Mentawai people empowered, so they
may benefit from and build on the health gains from the SurfAid projects, independently.
In August 2005, Dave was named a fellow with the prestigious humanitarian organization, the Rainer Fellowship (http://www.rainerfellows.org/) .
Dave has two daughters, Melissa and Jasmine.
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