Life changing stories
RSSRead about our volunteers' experiences of living and working in a developing country.
These are real stories from real people creating real impact. Find out firsthand what it's like to work at the grassroots of change.
Lemonaid
Two enterprising youngsters in Calgary raise money for CUSO-VSO's work on HIV and AIDS in Africa.
Simon Brown, monitoring and evaluation adviser, Nepal
The ability to evaluate the impact of any development project is crucial to its success. Simon Brown, a CUSO-VSO volunteer in Nepal, explains why.
Volunteers help Nigeria adapt to climate change
Volunteers work on an innovative project in Nigeria that confronts the realities of climate change at the grassroots of West Africa.
Volunteering experiences in Nigeria
Volunteer in Nigeria and you’ll find a country that defies expectations. Whether it’s trying local dishes like bush meat or overcoming their long-held fears, volunteers are learning to appreciate their new and exciting lives in Africa’s most populous nation.
Hugo Pellerin, organisational development advisor, Cameroon
CUSO-VSO connects experienced public servants and government advisors with opportunities to share their skills and knowledge abroad. Hugo Pellerin’s story takes us from Gatineau, Quebec, to the far north of Cameroon.
Tanzanian youth speak boldly about HIV and AIDS
With over one million people in Tanzania living with HIV and AIDS, raising awareness among young Tanzanians is a high priority for VSO. We’re working with local partners like Femina HIP to help young people create a healthy future.
Elizabeth Chen, alternative conflict resolution support, Jamaica
A CUSO-VSO volunteer worked with Jamaica’s Dispute Resolution Foundation to help foster peace and reduce violence in the Caribbean nation.
Ashleigh Mitchell - Information and communication technologies trainer, Solomon Islands
Canadian volunteer Ashleigh Mitchell used information technology to help women in the Solomon Islands find their voice – and make sure they're heard.
'Model Forests' help sustainability take root
Creating livelihoods while promoting sustainable resource use is an increasingly important component of VSO's work. CUSO-VSO volunteers serving in Latin America are taking a walk in woods that are models of community stewardship and sustainability.
Northern Ghana's Madam Betty
Betty Ayagiba offers hope in Ghana through the Widows and Orphans Movement (WOM). WOM works to curb violence against women, and provides training and income-generation support to widows and orphans.
Martijn Whien, organisational development adviser, Namibia
Martijn Whien ‘took the leap’ as he calls it. He’s been working as an organisational development advisor in Rundu, Namibia since January 2010. He works for Youth 2 Youth (Y2Y), a small non-governmental organisation (NGO) fighting HIV and AIDS.
Big Society: Sandra Scantlebury in Ghana
Volunteer Sandra Scantlebury is working to get more girls into schools in the Upper West region of Ghana. Here she tells us why involving communities in education is such a crucial part of her work.
Reinvigorated: Ros Bellamy in Cameroon
Ros Bellamy took a break from her job in an adult learning service in Wales and accepted a short-term placement working for a council in the North West Province of Cameroon. Here she tells all – from what made her volunteer to why the experience has given her a real boost of energy!
Rising to the challenge: Martin Fawdry in Nigeria
After eight years in banking Martin Fawdry was craving a new kind of challenge. So he took a career break to volunteer abroad in rural Northern Nigeria. Here he explains how volunteering has helped him progress, both personally and professionally.
Jelda Veninga, HR development adviser, Namibia
VSO has developed a long-term strategic partnership with the Randstad Group to help it meet its corporate social responsibilities. Randstad offers its employees the opportunity to share their skills and help make a difference. Randstad volunteer Jelda Veninga worked as an HR adviser with the Ministry of Education in Runda, Namibia. Here she describes the rewards and challenges of her work.
Abass Koroma, beekeeper, Sierra Leone
Twenty three year old Abass Koroma was just eight years old when the civil war in Sierra Leone began in 1992. During the next ten years he missed out on going to school and spent months living in the bush trying to avoid recruitment as a child soldier. But five years after the war ended, and with support from VSO partner CCYA, he is part of a flourishing village enterprise and is putting the finishing touches to a house he has built for himself.
VSO contributes to dairy processing development in Tajikistan
In Tajikistan many workers move to Russia in search of work and better opportunities. In the northern town of Khojand, VSO is piloting a programme of partnering with private businesses to provide opportunities for the local community. One such partnership includes Mr Mirzosulton and his dairy farm, Correct.
New Horizons: Ellen Crabtree in South Africa
Ellen Crabtree has swapped her life as a highflying finance executive to help vulnerable people in downtown Johannesburg at risk from HIV and AIDS. Here she tells us about a project that helps sex workers find alternative sources of income - and explains how volunteering has changed her own life, as well as the lives of those she is working with.
Small bits of help, help
Boka Nyachieo, VSO Jitolee media and communications officer, describes how a VSO volunteer has gone above and beyond the call of duty.
Caroline Pitcairn, continuing professional development facilitator, Malawi
Primary teacher Caroline received support from her school when she decided to volunteer abroad with VSO in northern Malawi. Here she describes her voluntary work the warmth and generosity of her colleagues and neighbours and her sometimes very muddy commute to work...
A sporting chance: NomFundo Ndlovu, Johannesburg
Across South Africa there are thousands of disadvantaged and vulnerable children who leave school at a young age and miss out on their right to an education. Others become vulnerable to exploitation, abuse and sex trafficking. However, VSO and local partner SCORE aim to tackle these problems through sport and are helping many at risk children on their way to a better future. One girl is NomFundo Ndlovu who has discovered her two passions in life, education and football.
Connecting people: Nick Palfreyman in Indonesia
When Nick Palfreyman found out that less than 20 per cent of deaf children in developing countries go to school, he knew he had to act. Within months he was sharing his skills and knowledge as a volunteer in Indonesia. Now back in the UK, Nick’s life has changed direction forever.
The Lady Mechanic Initiative, Nigeria
"The Lady Mechanic Initiative"? It sounds like something out of a quirky novel. But it’s not a work of fiction: it’s real and it’s changing the lives of disadvantaged women all over Nigeria. VSO volunteer Russell McKeown is drawing on 25 years’ experience in engineering and business to help The Lady Mechanic Initiative go from strength to strength.
Clare Barrell, organisational development officer, South Africa
Ahead of South Africa’s World Cup, VSO volunteer, Clare Barrell, 26, from Hertfordshire has spent the last two years working with local charity SCORE, helping vulnerable children find a better future through the power of sport. Here she gives an insight into the life of a volunteer in the run up to Africa’s first ever World Cup.
The ripple effect: Teacher development in Ghana
Jeremiah Kpetaa is a teacher at Lawra Secondary School, the same school he went to as a child. Over the past four years he has worked with VSO volunteers at the District Education Office. Here he tells us how they have helped develop his teaching and leadership skills and how he is using that learning to improve the experience of education for his students.
The time is now: Catherine Mahoney in Ethiopia
Having spent most of her career working in the Third Sector, Catherine Mahoney was always interested in volunteering abroad. But it wasn’t until she’d given up her full-time job – and become a Grandma! – that the time was right for her to volunteer.
Mary Njuguna - Programme co-ordinator, Pretoria, South Africa
South Africa is home to over a thousand informal settlements; communities with limited resources, sanitation and formalised welfare. Children often suffer within these communities and miss out on an education. VSO volunteer Mary Njuguna is working with local organisation Children on the Move to help get children back into school and enjoying life again.
Richard Feinmann, chest physician, Uganda
Chest physician Richard Feinmann is volunteering with VSO in Uganda, where life expectancy is just 51 and over a third of the population live in poverty. Here Richard describes some of the challenges facing patients and why exposure to these challenges is so crucial for UK health professionals.
Dr Ilona Hale, doctor, Nitcheu District Hospital, Malawi
Dr Hale found herself the only doctor at a hospital that served a population of over half-a-million. In addition to emergencies and the anything-but-routine life of a volunteer doctor, she was able to introduce new life-saving preventative medicine measures.
Olly Jefferis, paediatrician, Malawi
Dr Olly Jefferis volunteered in Malawi through a joint scheme between the Royal College of Paediatrics and VSO. The programme is seen as professional development for doctors becoming consultants, and provides recognition for their experience when they come back to in the UK. Here Olly talks about his experience in Malawi.
Small change, big difference: Joanna Haworth in Sierra Leone
On the face of it, you might not think helping to establish a new university course would make much of a difference. But the work of VSO nurse trainer Joanna Haworth could have a far-reaching effect on healthcare provision in Sierra Leone, where life expectancy sits at an average of just 42 years.
Supporting self-governance in rural India
Cristina Gaspar (a monitoring & evaluation and documentation adviser) gives an insight to being a VSO volunteer, the selection process, the place, the people and the work involved in developing systems for rural development programmes in Mohuda, India.
Life-saving health messages reach Cambodia's rural communities
Years of conflict have made Cambodia’s healthcare system one of the weakest in the world. That’s why VSO volunteers like Dr Suzanna van Schaick are making difficult journeys into remote communities to share knowledge and advice that will save lives.
Susan Cross, primary teacher trainer, Malawi
At 18, Susan Cross considered volunteering with VSO but didn’t have the confidence to go for it. Some 30 years on and now an experienced primary school teacher, Susan returned to VSO. Here she describes the rewards and challenges of two years spent as a volunteer in Ntchisi, Malawi.
Five minutes with...Isabel Hodger, teacher trainer, Ethiopia
Head teacher Isabel Hodger had 36 years’ experience in education and just three years until retirement when she decided to volunteer with VSO. She’s sharing her expertise in Ethiopia, where classrooms are bursting with children due to free education, but teachers are poorly trained. Here Isabel describes how her work with teacher trainers from all corners of the country will ultimately benefit millions of school children.
Five minutes with...Stella Wragg, mental health worker, Sri Lanka
VSO was thrilled when psychotherapist Stella Wragg decided to volunteer again. With the experience of her first VSO placement in Nepal, Stella is now preparing to volunteer in Sri Lanka. Her expertise will be put to excellent use improving the care available to people who are living with mental illnesses as a result of years of civil war and the 2004 Tsunami. Here she reveals her hopes and fears about her upcoming placement.
Five minutes with...Simon Marchant, education adviser, Ethiopia
In the 1960s Simon Marchant was a schoolboy in Somerset watching a film about VSO. Some forty years on he could be starring in that film: he’s now a VSO education adviser in Ethiopia, sharing skills and expertise that will transform teaching in classrooms across the country.
Five minutes with...Susan Newson, maternal child health adviser, Cambodia
Nurse Susan Newson had always wanted to volunteer, and after working as a health visitor in the UK she felt the time was right to apply to VSO. She’s putting her skills to good use in Cambodia, a country with some of the highest maternal and neonatal death rates in South East Asia. Here, halfway through her two year placement, Susan describes her work and why she thinks VSO’s approach to fighting to poverty is so powerful.
Stephanie Stoker, Youth community development facilitator, Peru
Volunteer Stephanie Stoker used creativity to help paint a brighter picture for the youth of Iquitos, Peru. The visual artist, who has extensive experience in theatre and arts education, embraced art to help young adults develop life skills and get involved in the future development of their community.
Seeing disability differently
The Creative Self Help Centre is a community organisation in Papua New Guinea supporting people with disabilities. Youth for Development volunteer Laura Carse, who is herself visually impaired, spent a year raising awareness of the centre’s crucial work and challenging attitudes towards disability.
Brendan Grehan, education development officer, Eritrea
Brendan Grehan, a teacher from Dublin, spent two years working in education development in Eritrea.
Edd Shaw, physiotherapist, Papua New Guinea
Papua New Guinea’s mountainous terrain is so impenetrable that the entire population of the entire district of Porgera – over one million people – did not make contact with the developed world until 1938. Imagine, then, the obstacles faced by disabled people who live there. VSO physiotherapist Edd Shaw talks about his role in improving their mobility, including distributing over 300 wheelchairs.
Nicola Swann, fundraiser, Uganda
Nicola Swann was a fundraiser for an autism charity in London before volunteering with VSO in Uganda. She’s sharing her skills and expertise in fundraising with the Uganda Society for Disabled Children, a charity that provides crucial support to disabled children and their families across the country. Here, Nicola describes the highs and lows of life in Uganda and dodging goats on her way to work…
VSO helps fight child sacrifice in Uganda
Child sacrifice is on the increase in Uganda. A ritualistic ceremony usually performed by witch doctors, it involves cutting off body parts to offer to spirits in return for luck and wealth. VSO is working with ANPPCAN - The African Network for Prevention and Protection against Child Abuse and Neglect - to ensure affected families receive the counseling and legal support they so urgently need. Vivien’s ten-year-old son was abducted for child sacrifice but survived. Here she tells her story.
Linda Davis, head teacher, Ghana
After 14 years as a head teacher in a Shetland primary school, Linda Davis wanted to do something different. Then she saw an ad for VSO. Within months she was on her way to Ghana with her husband Peter. By building the skills and confidence of seven Ghanaian school inspectors, Linda and Peter have improved standards in 14 schools – which means over 4,000 children get access to a better education.
John Brogan, IT trainer, Eritrea
John Brogan an IT specialist from Dublin volunteered with VSO in September 2006 and worked as an IT trainer with the Ministry of Education in Eritrea.
Five minutes with...VSO Jitolee volunteer Úna Higgins
To many Maasai people, disabilities are a curse from God. VSO volunteer Úna Higgins is based in Kajiado, in rural Kenya. She’s working to change that attitude by helping more than 20 disabled Maasai boys fulfill their potential. Here she discusses the difficulties she faced and the progress she’s made.
Katrien Deschamps, GP, Malawi
In a country with just one doctor for every 62,000 people, GP Katrien Deschamps is playing a vital role in Malawi’s healthcare situation. As one of just two doctors working in a district hospital in the north of the country, she’s undertaking life-saving clinical work and at the same time passing on invaluable skills to health workers at all levels.
Cookery classes in Cambodia’s hospitals tackle malnutrition
Cambodia has some of the worse maternal and infant mortality rates in South East Asia. In rural areas many people don’t know about eating healthily, so malnutrition is rife. As part of VSO Cambodia’s maternal and child health programme, volunteer nurses are coordinating cookery demonstrations that teach mothers how to make simple, nutritious meals that will help their children to thrive.
Daphne Sharp, teacher trainer, Tanzania
Thanks to support from VSO, pre-primary education in Zanzibar is receiving a makeover. The old-fashioned “chalk and talk” approach once ruled - but walk into a classroom today and you’ll find children learning through participation and play. Working alongside local colleagues, VSO volunteer Daphne Sharp is helping to ensure that all children in Zanzibar receive a good basic education, whether that’s in a brightly decorated classroom with an animated teacher or under a tree with a wind up radio.

