Fanapi Foundation

Empowering the outer islanders from Micronesia at home and abroad

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Fanapi Center at Bayview Building

December 24, 2012 By Fanapi Center

Linda Mori Hartmann, a member of the Board of Directors, has donated part of the waterfront Bayview building for use as the site of the Fanapi Center. The new location includes several large rooms for offices, conference room, clinic, a large balcony overlooking the Chuuk lagoon, docking place on the water for outrigger canoe demonstrations, and an outdoor place for an uut.

“I am delighted to offer this space to Fanapi Center to help in my dream to keep our traditional culture alive,” said Mrs. Hartmann. She continued to share her dream that her family complex is, “to have a Life Museum here where we can demonstrate our traditional cultures and customs.”

In a recent tour of the great location, Mrs. Hartmann confided in Vid Raatior, founder of the Fanapi Foundation, “I’ve been more confident and relaxing my poor head, knowing that if I drop dead tomorrow, you’ll make it come true and will continue (her legacy).”

Linda need not worry as the space will make it possible for the outer islanders to perpetuate the last remaining traditional cultures of Chuuk.

Filed Under: News & Events, Partnerships

Fanapi Foundation sponsored by US public charity

December 24, 2012 By Fanapi Center

The Chuuk-based Fanapi Center now has a US-based fundraising entity known as the Fanapi Foundation. Founded by Vid Raatior and a team of volunteer Advisory Board, the Fanapi Foundation’s mission is “to raise funds and provide technical assistance to support the Fanapi Center’s mission to promote self-reliance among the underserved outer islanders living in the remote Northwest region of Chuuk State, Federated States of Micronesia.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Fundraising, News & Events

Leaders unite over educational reform

July 9, 2012 By Fanapi Center

On July 2-7, 2012, leaders from throughout the Northwest regions of Pattiw, Namonweito, and Pafeng converged at Weipat High School on Onoun island to participate in the first Northwest Educators Summit. Their goal: to explore ways to improve the quality of education for students of their region through the Chuuk State Educational Reform Plan. Instead the leaders took the plan further by adopting to take the decentralization goal a step further in building their own reform plan through the creation of a non-governmental organization to be called Fanapi Center. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Leadership, News & Events

Local Faith, Sustainable Church

July 6, 2012 By Fanapi Center

Over 100 years ago, the Catholic faith was brought to the outer islands (fanapi). Today it has undergone a maturation process. It was brought to these islands by Spanish and German missionaries and expanded by American Jesuits after WWII. While the faith community continues to grow, the needs are also great. Yet the resources have shrunk to practically zero.  When the Christian faith came to these islands, it also brought with it a dependency on foreign supplies to build more “permanent” church buildings. Those needs were met by benefactors from around the world. The American Jesuit priests who served these islands, for example, such as Fr. Angus Morrison, SJ and Fr. Kevin Fahey, SJ, were supported by the global Jesuit Order and their friends around the world.

When the Jesuits passed the leadership of the Church to the local Diocesan priests such as Fr. Florentinus Akkin, they took with them the global support system. The local leadership was left to fend for themselves locally. When the church buildings that the Jesuits built needed new roofs, the Diocesan priest had to depend on local collections. For the Jesuits, the renovation of a church can be accomplished in one single request to the expansive list of rich benefactors. The Diocesan priests like Fr. Akkin, on the other hand, have to rely on their parishoners. Their food, fuel costs, and personal needs come from local revenue.

Inside the newly built St. Cecilia Church on Unanu.

In the Namonweito islands where my high school and college classmate Fr. Akkin serves, this is especially challenging. Out there there are no jobs except for the few teachers. The average Sunday collections is about $1.25 total. Yes, that’s one dollar and twenty five cents. One single corrugated roof on the church costs $27.95 in Chuuk. And the gasoline to transport the single roof to the outer islands is about $6.00 a gallon.

The globally-based Catholic faith has truly become locally owned in the outer islands of Micronesia. On the outer island of Unanu, the St. Cecilia Church have decided to reclaim their local tradition by constructing their local church from local materials. Like their ancestors, the people of Unanu have valued their age old cultures and customs. They have realized that their locally produced materials are far more superior than foreign imported building materials. For one, their local huts are built from local materials and cost nothing to use or replace. A local hut built from local fibers, coconut palms, tree trunks cost nothing, abundant, and sustainable.

But the support for their parish priest Fr. Floren is still a challenge. The people still have no jobs yet the parish priest still has to serve the other islands traveling by motorboat. He still has to travel over hundreds of open ocean to the main center for meetings, trainings, and to secure other services. He still has to travel to other outer islands for sacramental needs.

Fr. Floren Akkin holding the pwo made by St. Cecilia Church parishoners for their church fundraising to support the needs of the church.

How to Help

Deposit: Please deposit funds into Fr. Akkin’s bank account to help him meet the needs of the people in the outer islands. Any amount will help.

Bank Information

Name: Florentinus M. Akkin
Address: Onoun Island
Bank: Bank of Guam, Chuuk Branch #04
Account: 0204-299879

Pwo: St. Cecilia Church on Unanu invites people from the outer islands (fanapi) who are interested in winning the pwo to deposit their bid (minimum: $50) in the above bank account. The pwo will be sent to the highest bidder / donation. You can deposit your bid in the above bank account. The bidding process will stop July 30, 2012 while donations are still welcomed. The pwo winner will be announced here.

For more questions, please contact Fr. Floren Akkin (floakkin@gmail.com).

 

Filed Under: Community Development, News & Events

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Dear Friends: On behalf of Fanapi Foundation's all-volunteer Advisory Board , our partners and sponsors, I want to welcome you to our website.   Thank you for your interest in knowing more about our mission and programs. The Fanapi Foundation was founded in 2013 to provide technical assistance to the people from the geographically remote … continue

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