Stabroek News Sunday

Youth on the Rise, Cancer Foundation hosting blood drive

- By Joanna Dhanraj

Non-profit organizati­on Youth on the Rise Guyana (YORG) and the Guyana Cancer Foundation will be hosting a blood drive this Saturday, February 27th , at Vreed-en-Hoop Junction.

The hosting of the campaign comes amidst a continuing call by the national blood bank, the National Blood Transfusio­n Service, for persons to donate blood as it is in need of the fluid.

Blood drives have been hosted annually by the YORG since it was founded in 2018. The group last hosted one in February of last year and a year later it is calling on volunteers to take this opportunit­y of be someone’s lifeline.

Sasha Rawof, Director of YORG, explained that donating a pint of blood can save up to three lives. She noted that the officials from the blood bank will see to it that volunteers are healthy before any taking of blood is done. She said that persons wishing to be a part of this exercise must first have their blood count checked and blood group verified, all of which will be done at the site. Persons with

a low blood count will not be allowed to go through with the process.

When asked what will be done to detect HIV or any other diseases, Rawof expounded that this is done after the blood is donated and before it is given to a patient in need.

At last year’s blood drive, thirtysix pints of blood were donated.

Rawof noted that while there was a large turnout, a number of persons were found to have low blood counts.

Owing to COVID-19, YORG’s plans for last year after the blood drive were cancelled. While the transmissi­on of the virus still prevails, persons are more informed about the needed precaution­s for staying safe and as a result YORG plans on going ahead full throttle this year with all that it wishes to do. Currently, it has planned feeding projects to help the homeless as well as children at the orphanages for next month while a book drive and a clothing drive are both to scheduled to follow in April.

The blood drive will be conducted at the Summertime Travel Agency, situated in the Lucky Dollar Building at Vreed-en-Hoop from 10am to 4pm. Persons are reminded to wear their face masks.

For more informatio­n, Rawof can be contacted at the organizati­on’s Facebook page or at 611-6494 or 660-3608.

Andrew Campbell has been intriguing many with his dark, velvety bars of chocolate produced under the business name Araunama and he is working around the clock to have a formal launch by mid-March.

Araunama is the Lokono/Awarak word for Essequibo. The business was named after Guyana’s largest county, where most of the cocoa beans are produced for the making of the chocolate. It is also the Campbell’s home county; he was born in Moruca.

No stranger to entreprene­urship, Campbell had started a venture called Ebesowana Natural Food some years ago, through which he sold dried fruits and powdered spices. Campbell was in Trinidad in 2017, working on the restoratio­n of the Red House, Trinidad’s parliament. He had several Guyanese friends who knew persons in the chocolate-making business, and they introduced him to members of the Alliance of Rural Communitie­s of Trinidad and Tobago including one of the founders, Gillian Goddard, who shared some of the chocolate products made there.

In 2018 he went back to Trinidad and at that point had

discussion­s about the possibilit­y of starting a chocolate business in Guyana. In 2019, while attending the New Fire Music Festival where he did a presentati­on of the way of life of Indigenous people, he met with Goddard who took him on a tour of some of the community-based chocolate factories. He was taken through the entire process: drying of the beans, fermenting, conching, and making chocolate liqueur.

Intrigued, he held further discussion­s and learned that the group could provide funding for a similar start-up in Guyana. The group, he noted, has helped to start up other businesses in a few other countries, but his was the first in Guyana.

With that assistance, some of the profits from Ebesowana Natural Food and a GoFundMe, Campbell was able to come up with the needed finance to start Araunama. Activist Sherlina Nageer also played a key role in raising funds to buy the necessary equipment, he said.

By July 2019, Campbell had made his first batch of chocolate. “The first batch was actually very good. I made it at 70% cocoa dark chocolate. It was really good, everybody liked it,” he enthused. “Then I did a 50% cocoa which was to be used for drinking.”

He used up a lot of this chocolate and shared some with a friend from Switzerlan­d who was in Guyana at the time. His friend, he said, lived near to a chocolate factory in Switzerlan­d. Campbell shared that while it was not his best, she told him she liked it even more than what was available where she lived.

“I encountere­d the first problem when I bought the Demerara Gold sugar. Apparently that wasn’t refined enough,” he related. Campbell learned that to get the best quality sugar, he needed to get it directly from GuySuCo. He said he learned that Demerara Gold sugar is imported and repackaged here.

Araunama chocolate is artisanal or made by hand. He said that unlike Nestle which has just been named in a child slavery class action lawsuit, his business is supplied with beans from farmers in the working class. “I do not support slave labour,” stated Campbell.

Guyana, according to Campbell, produces the three main varieties of cocoa: Forastero, Criollo and Trinitario, said to be the best in the world. He sources his cocoa beans from the Blue Flames Women’s Group in Hosororo, North West District, Pomeroon and other places in Guyana.

Owing to the pandemic, Campbell said, he was on the verge of selling his chocolate-making equipment as the hinterland areas were locked down and he could not source the cocoa beans he needed. However, he has since been able to cover his expenses. In addition to making life more sustainabl­e, Campbell has begun planting his own kitchen garden which he started last May. He has not had to buy vegetables.

The entreprene­ur is currently supplying farmers with cocoa plants and said that once these plants start to bear, he will be purchasing the cocoa beans from them. This is a long-term initiative as cocoa plants take eight years to produce. However, since a plant keeps producing for 65 to 90 years, both he and the farmers can benefit in the long run. Campbell said two grown cocoa plants can take care of a third of a small family’s utility bills for a year.

Campbell’s chocolates are currently being made to order and he uses simple packaging – parchment paper. He has a food handler’s certificat­e but needs to be certified by the Food and Drug Department before his chocolate bars can make it to the shelves of local supermarke­ts and shops. At present he is working towards making this a reality.

Campbell said that for the most part he is still experiment­ing and his mainly couverture chocolate can be sampled at the cost of $600 per 31 gramme bar. He is hoping to have an 85 gramme bar available soon.

At present, Campbell has available 85% dark chocolate, 65% dark chocolate, 70% dark chocolate with turmeric, 70% dark chocolate with turmeric and ginger, and 70% dark chocolate.

For more informatio­n Campbell can be contacted at Araunama Chocolate Company of Guyana on Facebook or by telephone number 665-8306.

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 ??  ?? Sasha Rawof
Sasha Rawof
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 ??  ?? Drying of the cocoa beans
Drying of the cocoa beans
 ??  ?? Andrew Campbell
Andrew Campbell
 ??  ?? Thirty-six hours after continuous­ly conching
Thirty-six hours after continuous­ly conching

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