The Fanapi Foundation is pleased to announce the full funding of the Northwest Educators Summer Training (NEST) at Xavier High School on July 29 – August 2, 2013. The funding in the amount of $42,000 was committed by the Chuuk State Department of Education with $2,500 donated by the Matson Foundation will pay for the training facilities, room & board, support staff, training supplies, transportation expenses for the participants who will be traveling to Weno on chartered ships from the outer islands. [Read more…]
Who We Are
Fanapi Foundation is a US-based entity whose mission is to raise funds and provide technical assistance to support the underserved indigenous people living in the geographically isolated outer islands (fanapi) in the Northwest region of Chuuk State, Federated States of Micronesia. Founded by Vid Raatior and an all-volunteer Advisory Board, the Fanapi Foundation is a sponsored project of the United Charitable Programs (UCP) – a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, tax ID #20-4286082, headquartered near Washington, DC., whose mission is to develop and support charitable programs with a local, national, or global focus.
The Fanapi Foundation’s mission and vision is grounded on the core belief that our role is to empower the local indigenous solutions of the Fanapi islanders with global resources. We focus our efforts in the areas identified by the local leaders as the top priorities for their people; namely, educational reform, community development, preventative healthcare, and economic empowerment.
Our Name
Fanapi, [fan-ah-pee], literally translated ”islands of the sand” is the Chuukese name for all the low-lying sandy outer islands located in the Northwest region of Chuuk State comprising of Pattiw atolls, Pafeng atolls, and Namonweito atolls. These isolated islands are arguably the most under-served region in the country of Micronesia.
Our Beginning
The inspiration for the Fanapi Foundation came from the local leaders of those fanapi islands (see photo). On July 2-7, 2012, over 60 leaders (school teachers, principals, mayors, municipal council presidents, religious leaders, traditional chiefs, political leaders, and representatives of concerned parents) from throughout the Northwest regions of Pattiw, Namonweito, and Pafeng converged at Northwest High School (formerly Weipat) on Onoun island to participate in the first Northwest Education Leadership Institute sponsored by the Chuuk State School System (CSSS). The goal of that historic gathering was to explore ways to improve the quality of education for students of the Northwest region and to build community support for the Chuuk Educational Reform Plan (CERP).
What transpired at this historic meeting was beyond the usual expectations for the outer islanders; the participants elected to support and expand on the challenge to engage in educational reform by adopting to formulate key steps in building community-based support and ownership of “our own schools” and solving “our own needs.” The delegates unanimously formulated the Northwest Resolution expressing their dissatisfaction with the State’s lack of educational improvement, the need to unify all the public schools into the Northwest Unified Schools (NUS), and the creation of a non-governmental organization called Fanapi Center to be located on the main island of Weno to support educational reform, facilitate community development, coordinate healthcare programs, and develop economic opportunities for the Northwest region.
The keynote speaker at this educational / leadership summit was Mr. Vidalino Raatior, a fellow outer islander, product of Chuuk State’s public education, international educator who currently serves as the Director of the Pacific Islander Student Center at the University of Hawaii at Hilo. In a recognition of one of their own son of the Northwest, the delegation asked him to serve as the lead consultant for the region to help implement their action plans.
Our Board
Upon returning to the University of Hawaii at Hilo where he serves as the Director of the Pacific Islander Student Center, Vid proceeded to assemble a team of experts to help him found a US-based nonprofit organization to raise funds and provide technical assistance to the local leaders and their efforts. On December 5, 2012, the Fanapi Foundation was officially chartered as a sponsored program of the United Charitable Programs (www.unitedcp.org), a registered 501(c)3, non-profit public charity organization based near Washington, DC.
Our Partners
The Fanapi Foundation continues to expand its partnership with local and global organizations, corporations, foundations, and individuals to help advance its mission. We are working closely with the various associations of Fanapi islanders to engage their members to be actively engaged in helping to address the neglected needs in education, healthcare, advocacy, and economic development back in their home islands. The largest groups of fanapi islanders now reside in Hawaii, Guam, Texas, Oregon, Missouri, and Tennessee. Please contact info@fanapi.org more information on the levels of partnerships.
Ms Caroline Voyager Schedule 2013
The FSM Department of Transportation, Communication & Infrastructure (TC&I) has released the 2013 approved schedule for the Caroline Voyager’s trips to the nation’s outer islands. According to Mr. Francis Itimai, Secretary of TC&I, the dissemination of the complete schedule will enable FSM citizens from the small remote outer islands to plan their visits home. Click here to download the PDF format of the full schedule. For more information or questions about the schedule, please contact the department directly at transad@mail.com or (691) 320-2381/2865/5829.
Fanapi Center at Bayview Building
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.