Current & Past Volunteer Stories

Want to know what it might be like to volunteer abroad? 

Omprakash volunteers have been posting stories, photos and even videos from their time abroad since 2007. We now have an extensive collection of personal stories from volunteers who've worked with our partners abroad. You can browse through the most recent stories below or use the category selection tool to narrow your search. Alternatively click on the Stories tab for each organization we work with to see specific accounts from a particular organization. Be careful - you might lose a couple hours of your day in here! Happy reading. 

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Langauge of Love

July 02, 2012 | 1 comment

Asociacion CREAR, Costa Rica
Debra Fox

Being a teacher , I was extremely excited to get involved with CREAR because I knew that their programs were right up my alley.  I remember being excited and nervous going to my first program that I was supposed to lead...in Spanish! I was new to Samara, new to CREAR and most importantly, new to Spanish. It didn't take me long to realize that kids are kids, no matter what language they speak.I was working with the little guys (grades 1-3) along with another volunteer.  We had a great time coming up with ideas for programs that we thought the kids would enjoy.  I would practice how to say things like, "first we are going to cut" in Spanish on my way to program.  In the end, it didn't matter....

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La Lloma

July 01, 2012

Casa Verde, Nicaragua
Sara Bernard

It’s been a packed week of introductions that feels (of course!) like so much longer than a week – introductions to Limon’s elementary school and preschool, to the local community, to Nicaraguan history, to the organic compost and garden at Rancho Santana (a local foreign-owned resort which is, I understand, also starting its own recycling program that I hope will eventually grow into something that the entire community of Limon can use!), to gorgeous beaches, stunning forests, broiling sunshine, slashing rain thundering on corrugated tin roofs, the roaring croak of howler monkeys and, once the rain stops, the elated squawks of insufferable roosters. (I’ve learned that I will definitely be awake each day at 5am listening to their orchestra. I know the tune playing at my host family’s house pretty...

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First Day in Nicaragua

July 01, 2012

Casa Verde, Nicaragua
Sara Bernard

I’m not sure I’ve ever been so warmly and gently welcomed to a foreign country as I was to Nicaragua. Amie was at the airport with David, a sweet-tempered driver for a company called Nica Roads who was devastated that, halfway into our drive, he unavoidably slammed into a dog with a sickening thud and sent the poor thing flying (but it feels frustrating to call it a “poor thing” when it ran out so deliberately across the road in front of the car at such a speed… it was impossible to swerve). We drove to pick up two others in Granada, a colonial town with moldering old cathedrals and brightly painted hacienda-style homes surrounding lush courtyards along cobblestone streets. We had lunch at a spot where I learned that...

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Progress Report #1

July 01, 2012

Honduras Child Alliance, Honduras
Katherine Olden

In just a few days, PASA workshops (the Spanish acronym for Promoting Improved and Sustained Learning) have gone from being a potential to being an exciting eventuality. Despite some trouble getting to El Porvenir (missing flights) and a day of school closures lost to a teacher work stoppage (in remembrance of the coup three years ago), I managed to turn only three full working days into successful first steps in setting up this pilot project.It wasn’t easy, and I could not have done it without the wise advice and help of several people from Honduras Children. In all, I was able to: meet with and gain the support of the district’s superintendent and several important community leaders, arrange for the use of the municipal...

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In Sickness and In Health

June 30, 2012

Ghana ACT, Ghana
Molly Ortiz

Bout a week since our last post--time for another update! Annelise and I are still having a blast, experiencing new things everyday, and treasuring every moment here in Ho, but I have to say there were a couple of days this last week that we both wished we could've pushed the fast forward button. But let's start with the good stuff! Last Saturday we went on a daytrip to a stunning town, high in the mountains, called Aburi. We traveled with the other volunteers, as well as our Ghanaian friend, Linda, who cooks for our house everyday, and another volunteer from the US, Mike, who works right across the street at an orphanage. Funny sidenote, Mike is a VMI alumni. Small world! Anyway, we all left bright and early as...

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Chau Pibes!

June 30, 2012

Voluntario Global, Argentina
Taryn Cutrona

 My 4 weeks working at Los Pibes, the community center in La Boca, have flown by. It just seems like yesterday that I was walking into the community center and getting a personal tour of the different parts of the building and getting introduced to the wonderful people that work there. I have enjoyed developing relationships with the kids, and even have drawings and little gifts they have given me. Although I wished I had more than just 4 weeks to volunteer and become even closer with the kids, I have loved every day I have spent with them. I have put together a short video about the community center. You can watch it below!Enjoy!

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Banku, Fufu, and FanIce... Oh My!!!

June 30, 2012

Ghana ACT, Ghana
Annelise Madison

 Wow! We've had another eventful week here in Ho--so eventful that the U.S. Embassy in Accra has issued a traveler's advisory for our area. There has been some Muslim riots in a neighboring village, and a few lives have been tragically taken. Fortunately, the violence has been isolated and we have not been affected by it. There has been some violence in Ho, though. Just down the street at the market, a police officer shot a man who attempted to rob a shop. The other shoppers turned against the officer because they thought he had shot the man for no reason. Due to this incident, the police have had a heavier presence here lately. The police depo is across the street from our house, so we feel pretty safe.We have...

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A Week in the African Bush

June 30, 2012

Ghana ACT, Ghana
Annelise Madison

 It is hard to believe another week has gone by already... especially since this week marks the halfway point of our volunteer experience. It is the end of session one of two sessions of the Ghana ACT summer program, and while Molly and I are staying for both sessions, many of our fellow volunteers are not. While it is sad that some of our friends are leaving, it is fun to meet the new volunteers that continue to arrive. This past week we went to Mole National Park, which is located in the northern part of Ghana. We volunteer in the southern part of Ghana, so we trekked across the nation, which is quite an adventure.Instead of taking tro-tros, we took the Metro buses, which are part of a government...

Elephants at Mole
Baboons at Mole
Elephant Crosses the Stream
Treehouse
Warthogs Sleeping at Mole
Safari

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In Sickness and In Health

June 30, 2012

Ghana ACT, Ghana
Annelise Madison

 Bout a week since our last post--time for another update! Annelise and I are still having a blast, experiencing new things everyday, and treasuring every moment here in Ho, but I have to say there were a couple of days this last week that we both wished we could've pushed the fast forward button. But let's start with the good stuff! Last Saturday we went on a daytrip to a stunning town, high in the mountains, called Aburi. We traveled with the other volunteers, as well as our Ghanaian friend, Linda, who cooks for our house everyday, and another volunteer from the US, Mike, who works right across the street at an orphanage. Funny sidenote, Mike is a VMI alumni. Small world! Anyway, we all left bright and early as...

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June 29, 2012

Omprakash, United States
Godfrey Ogoma

This is is the story of the humming bird, which has inspired me. We may all think what we are doing is a drop in the ocean,not knowing that we are all change agents.As omprakash volunteers,we should not give up in our missions......I first heard this inspirational story in May 2006 when Noble Peace Laureate Wangari Maathai addressed7,000 international educators who had gathered in Montreal for NAFSA’s 58th annual conference. Here isthe story she shared with us in Montreal..........................One day a terrible fire broke out in a forest - a huge woodlands was suddenly engulfed by a ragingwild fire. Frightened, all the animals fled their homes and ran out of the forest. As they came to theedge of a stream they stopped to watch the fire and they were feeling...

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with organizations and volunteers throughout our network.

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