A lifeline to Ai-Maulin

A roadway to a remote hillside village in Timor-Leste, funded by Rotarians half a world away, has provided a lifeline for the 500 residents of Ai-Maulin.
Until recently, access to the small, remote village of Ai-Maulin, nestled on a hilly slope in the limestone high country of Timor-Leste, was only possible by foot or horseback.
Then president of the Rotary Club of Dili, Timor-Leste, Graciana Herculano Boavida, is a young lady and mother who was born and brought up in Ai-Maulin, where her family still live.
In 2016, Graciana’s father, together with his family, financed the clearing of a walking track up the mountainside to an existing rural road. However, the walking track, which was very slippery and muddy during the six-month wet season, was often made impassable by local waterways that crossed the path.
In 2017, Graciana, along with several other young adults, was selected to visit the US on a Group Study Exchange (GSE). One of the clubs they visited during the exchange was the Rotary Club of North St. Paul Maplewood Oakdale in Minnesota, where Graciana shared her story with the club.
Some weeks after Graciana’s return to Dili, she received a letter from the Minnesota club, with a proposal to assist the villagers of Ai-Maulin to build a roadway from the nearest rural road, some 4.6km away, to their village. It was a wonderfully generous offer from one club to another in a country of lesser financial ability.
Related news
Teaching children essential social and emotional skills to foster learning and encourage positive behaviour
Implementing school-based intervention programs to address issues related to PTSD and behavioural challenges in primary school children. Dr Govind Krishnamoorthy, a clinical psychologist and senior lecturer at the University of Southern Queensland was granted a Mental Health Research Grant by Australian Rotary Health in 2023. His research has focussed on further developing Trauma-Informed Behaviour Support […]
An exchange of community, culture and country
An Indigenous Group Study Exchange from South Dakota, US, to south-western NSW has highlighted the shared experiences of both country’s First Nations Peoples. A group of Native Americans from the Sioux Nation spent time travelling through south-western NSW on a Group Study Exchange from October 15 to November 2. Kibbe Brown, of the Rotary Club […]
Tackling a Rotary Camino one step at a time
Rotary International Director Elect Jennifer Scott AM outlines a new path forward for Rotary South Pacific in 2024-25. During September and October, I spent seven weeks walking the Chemin Le Puy, an 800 km Camino through France to the Spanish border. It certainly gave me time to think about the challenges we face in our […]
Join our newsletter for the latest updates
"*" indicates required fields