Laura Roderick fundraising for Portugal - '20 Rivinus Team

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Laura Roderick

Fundraising for:
Portugal - '20 Rivinus Team

From Laura Roderick

I am again journeying to a place where a family needs help making a house, a home. This Time, a small town in Portugal, where existing homes are in great need to rehabilitatio

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About Me

The Portugal mission will be my second Habitat volunteer build, my third such venture. I have been looking for a ‘horizon event” to mark a big year in life for me, the year I move away from the Farm I have called home for nearly a dozen years. In celebration, I have planned this adventure to mark the end of a different kind of journey, a period of much growth and personal achievement. My children have grown and become successful and independent. My life has been immeasurably prosperous, and I feel this is my way of putting gratitude in motion. Not everyone has the capacity to take the time and make this kind of trip at my age. I am blessed for this, too. Not doing active volunteer gigs when I am so healthy and strong would be a misallocation of a gift. I may not always be so fortunate, as we all know. For now, I’m gonna do good stuff and hope you come along vicariously. (Unless, perhaps, you’d care to join me?). Thanks for your support, now and always. I am bless for having such a great sphere of loving family and friends, and I really do love doing these trips to have the stories to share with you. Thank you.

More Info

Housing is a major concern of poor Portuguese families, who often live in dilapidated homes in rural areas or shacks in the big cities. Successive governments have liberalized key areas of the economy over the past 20 years after decades of military dictatorship, but economic growth has been slowing since 2001. The recent financial crisis left many people without jobs or savings to improve housing conditions.

At the same time, the need for housing is growing, especially in urban areas. The state cannot support the development of new social housing units. And Portugal has been a destination for emigrants since the late 1970s, when people from former African colonies and Brazil began arriving. More recently, in the 1990s, emigrants from the Soviet Union found refuge there.

Habitat for Humanity helps low-income families in Portugal by building new homes on family-owned land and by renovating houses in the towns of Braga and Amarante. Homes are made of traditional local materials: bricks, red roof tiles, shutters on the windows, and ceramic tiles inside. Recently, the Habitat Portugal has been looking for local opportunities to raise funds to build more simple and decent homes.

Global Village is Habitat for Humanity’s international volunteer program. Teams travel to over 40 countries to work alongside communities, build housing solutions, and experience local culture. Our goal is to change the lives of the people we serve, as well as the lives of the volunteers.

To join a team or learn more, visit www.habitat.org/gv.

About Habitat for Humanity International 

Driven by the vision that everyone needs a decent place to live, Habitat for Humanity began in 1976 as a grassroots effort on a community farm in southern Georgia. The housing organization has since grown to become a leading global nonprofit working in more than 1,300 communities throughout the U.S. and in more than 70 countries. Families and individuals in need of a hand up partner with Habitat for Humanity to build or improve a place they can call home. Habitat homeowners help build their own homes alongside volunteers and pay an affordable mortgage. Through financial support, volunteering or adding a voice to support affordable housing, everyone can help families achieve the strength, stability and self-reliance they need to build better lives for themselves. Through shelter, we empower. To learn more, visit habitat.org.

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