Menot-Ö-Fest Raises Over Four Thousand

GENESIS Executive Director Adam Swartzbaugh thanks the crowd for coming.

Robert Moreau

Research Analyst/Outreach

As Tom Waits put it, “a little rain never hurt no one.”

Despite drizzly conditions, about 400 people crowded inside and outside Menotomy Beer and Wine in Arlington, MA for the store’s second annual Menot-Ö-Fest, an annual charity event to help the GENESIS Network.

The result was the raising of about $4200 for the construction of a new schoolhouse in Hok Pha Lae, Thailand.

“It’s just so nice to see people show up and donate to something that’s going to help people out,” said Menotomy employee Lucas Schleicher.

About twenty-eight area brewers, including Sam Adams, Long Trail, Mayflower, Shipyard, 50 Back, and others had tables set for the gathering, and a door payment of $3 bought customers a glass. Raffle prizes included a Jim Koch-signed Sam Adams Utopia bottle, and Meat House Arlington served BBQ plates of steak and chicken for $8.

Fest-goers line up to try some beer.

Though some Fest-goers knew about GENESIS, others were finding out about the organization for the first time. Through the chatter and companionship over a good brew that defied the rain, it was apparent that everyone was having a good time.

“This is awesome. No one even cares that it’s raining,’ said Dave Rostosil.

“I think it’s great,” said Katie Chiasson.

The accumulated money will be a substantial help to GENESIS as it continues its project, with funds needed for supplies such as books as well as building materials. The opportunity to support a good cause while bringing brewers together is something that Menotomy owner Neil Duggan said will keep the Menot-Ö-Fest alive for years to come.

“We’re going to be doing this (as) our main beer fest forever,” he said.

Robert Moreau is Research Analyst/Outreach for the GENESIS Network. A 2008 Master’s graduate of the University of Massachusetts Lowell in Regional Economic and Social Development, Moreau has been working for GENESIS since July 2009. His work has included freelance newspaper pieces and a newsletter published for a Lowell-area social services agency in 2008.

EVENT TOMORROW: GENESIS director talks US foreign aid innovations

Robert Moreau

Research Assistant

adamswartzbaughOn January 27 at Park Plaza in Boston, GENESIS director Adam Swartzbaugh is giving a timely presentation on “how US dollars are being spent on foreign aid programs.”

The United States leads the world in giving abroad, with $122.8 billion total foreign aid donations in 2005. With the current relief efforts in Haiti, the topic of how funds are used to aid people “on the ground” is a focus of interest. Swartzbaugh’s talk will focus on how programs “are being shaped to accommodate a widening array of developmental environments” and how people can become actively involved in these efforts.

Joining Swartzbaugh is Todd McCormack, co-founder of Partners in Health. Started in 1987, PIH organizes “comprehensive and community-based” projects to combat disease and poverty in the developing world. Its work has expanded to seven countries, as well as supporting projects in Guatemala and Mexico. McCormack will be focusing on disaster relief programs providing aid in Haiti.

The presentation is sponsored by the Boston Rotary Club, and will be held at 6pm at Park Plaza in Boston.  For more information, email Adam at info@gnetwork.org , or contact the Boston Rotary club at (617) 426-7133 and info@BostonRotary.org.

We hope you can join us tomorrow for this event.

Rockport student holds benefit for children’s global network

GLOUCESTER TIMES
By Gail McCarthy
Staff Writer

A globally minded Rockport woman is hosting a musical benefit Saturday to raise money for a network working to help orphans in some of the world’s most impoverished communities. Alexandra Saville, 21, has pulled together three bands and food from local restaurants in an event for The Genesis Network at the Rockport Community House, starting at 6 p.m. The event features the music of Zach Comtois, the Jo Henly band and the BFs.

rock the nightGlobal Network founder Adam Swartzbaugh, 24, will speak briefly at the event. The network, incorporated as a nonprofit last December and which uses all donations on its porjects, already has built two schools and helped 250 children in Thailand.

The mission of The Genesis Network is to develop international human rights projects to help at-risk children and communities. Projects include building schools, economic development and orphan protection. “I decided to try my hand at event planning in order to take advantage of the support and accessibility a small town has to offer,” said Saville. “It has really been a community effort and I would love for people to come out and support a great cause. Each ticket will make a difference in the life of a child in these impoverished villages. A little bit goes a long, life-changing way for these kids.”

Saville, a 2006 graduate of Rockport High School, is majoring in international communications with a minor in print journalism at Boston University. She took a year off from college to travel, working in an orphanage in Mexico. She had plans to work in Thailand but because of a violent coup, that trip was cancelled. But when she finishes her college degree, she plans to do community service globally again, likely through The Genesis Network. She came across the organization on the Web, and began writing grant proposals for it this summer. “Being by myself around the world for a year was definitely a catalyst for my desire to help,” she said. “It made the world seem smaller to me and allowed me to better empathize, and more clearly see the connection all people share. It made me want to help.”

Swartzbaugh, who grew up in Rockport, Maine, but has lived throughout New England, knows how to make things happen. He said he struggled to find his path through his college years but in the end earned a bachelor’s degree in international relations and a graduate degree in development studies from Brown University. He was the only ROTC student at Brown, which did not have a ROTC program. He traveled to nearby Providence College to take part in the program. He just received his commission in the Army, and will go on active duty in a few months for four years. “But I’ve built the organization to a place where it can be sustained,” he said. Swartzbaugh, who worked in construction in Maine, explained that the roots for the Web-based network sprouted from when he was working in Thailand with a tsunami relief construction project.

“I had the opportunity to see the abuses against children along the Burma and Thai border, where there was trafficking, child prostitution and slave labor, and I wanted to do something about it,” he said. “I really wanted to get something started, get student support. This evolved from a single project. But I realized it was going too slow and I thought how can we do more with less — and The Genesis Network evolved from that.” The network functions as a grassroots initiative and gives people a chance to reach out to volunteer, and reports on its projects for potential philanthropists.

“We connect the dots between people who need support and people who give it,” said Swartzbaugh. “So often you give to a large organization but you don’t see where the money goes, but the network allows people to donate to a specific project as well as interact with project leaders, see project plans, budgets and photographs.” The network, still in its infancy, is focusing on a few projects at present and will expand as the network grows.

“Volunteers come to us and say how can I get involved and they find it’s easy with the network,” he said.

IF YOU GO

What: A benefit concert for The Genesis Network, which helps children, featuring three bands and food.

When: Saturday, Sept. 26, from 6 to 9:30 p.m.

Where: Rockport Community House at 58 Broadway.

Who: The event features music by Zach Comtois, Jo Henly band, and the BF, and food from Latitude 43, Alchemy, Bracketts and the Fish Shack.

How much: Tickets can be purchased online at the Rock the Night for Children’s Rights event page at Toad Hall Bookstore, at Rockport High School’s DECA store, at the available at the door. For more information, visit www.gnetwork.org