About Lorna

Lorna Owens is former Midwife, Registered Nurse, Attorney and also Legal Commentator, Nancy Grace CNN HLN and Tru TV In Session, Expert Global Health,Gender Expert, International Keynote Speaker, Executive/ Life Coach and Author who travels the World teaching the Art and Science of Success to Women's Groups and Organizations. Author Every Day Grace Everyday Miracle, Daily Sustenance. CDs Decision to Change and the Undiscovered Self. She has also appeared on NBC, TBN, and TV in Jamaica, D.R. Congo, Curacao,Cayman Island and Bermuda. The Miami Herald called her a Pioneer and the Mother of Reinvention; Advance for Nurses says she wows her Audiences. Owens is very active in her Church All Souls Episcopal Church and the Miami Rotary. At any given time you can find Owens volunteering at local community events in Coconut Grove. She also finds time to host a Local TV Talk show called AND THE WOMEN GATHER on Teleamerica Channel 88. As well as a once a week Radio show on Blogtalk radio called of course AND THE WOMEN GATHER. And the Women Gather airs every Saturday 10 am Est. She is also the author of Daily Sustenance and Everyday Grace Everyday Miracle living the life you were born to live. Her third book a legal thriller THE LADY LAWYER will be our next year

TASTE OF THE ISLAND

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   It is a Taste of the Islands. Samplings of Foods from the Islands

RUM PUNCH AND GINGER BEER

Date : Friday February 22, 2013

Time : 7pm

Place :1601 SW 10 St. Miami FL. 33135

Humming Bird cake from Lee and Marie's Cakery

 

  –A Deliciously Timeless Bakery & Café –

Cost $25.00

Please click on button below to purchase tickets

 or

Make check payable to: Footprints Foundation. 4000 Ponce Deleon Blvd Ste 470 Coral Gables Florida 33133. Call 305-573-8423

RSVP  A MUST

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MUSIC BY TWILIGHT WAS VERY SUCCESSFUL. THANK YOU

 

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AFRICA:A JOURNEY OF HOPE AND PROGRESS

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My activism in Africa began with a single news report and has taken me halfway across the world.

Traditional birth attendants in the Congo. Photo by Marcia Narine

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— Lorna Owens

 

BY LORNA OWENS

It started when I watched a TV new segment, an Anderson Cooper piece examining the War on Women. It was a searing exploration of how rape is used in the Congo as a weapon of terror. The report touched me deeply, flooding me with anger and tears — and a resolve to do something.

The very night, I started my research. In the days ahead, I reached out to experts, like Dr. Julia VanRooyen, a Fellow at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, and her husband Michael, who does a great deal of work at the Panzi Hospital in the eastern Congo.

I also connected with Kaleba Kasongo, a Congolese woman who, in turn, referred me to Dr. Sylvia Gleason. Originally from Ohio, “Dr. Sylvia,” introduced me to four Congolese doctors doing humanitarian work in their own country.

I began sending money to those on the ground who are laboring in the violence-ravaged country of 71 million.. But I wanted to do more. And that’s how I found myself boarding a 23-hour flight to Africa. My traveling companion was my friend Marcia Narine. We were joined a day or so later by Kasongo, who would be our organizer and translator.

As we prepared to land at Kigali airport in the neighboring country of Rwanda, I became anxious and excited. This was a language and culture I knew nothing about.

After a quick check through customs we found Father Pascal, our host for the night. Then, a lovely supper of goat before retiring to my room and resting up for the trip into the Congo.

The border of the eastern Congo is sheer chaos. People beg for money; they offer to carry your bags for a fee. Bike taxis jostle for passengers. There are soldiers with guns everywhere. The magnitude of what I had gotten myself into was beginning to settle in.

Our driver, Virginia, whisked us away through the chaos along dusty, bumpy streets covered with lava and gray ash, remnants of the Nyiragongo volcano that devastated the area in 2002.

Finally, we arrived at Maji Matulivu, a beautiful, heavily guarded guest house.

The next day, Dr Joseph Muyuma and Dr Alfred Mwenebatenda of Project Congo Alliance took us to see a little house they had converted into a hospital. Doctors there make less than $500 per month and often go without a salary.

And we got to meet Philomene. One of the joys of visiting the Congo was actually getting to meet the people we were trying to help. Philomene is a young girl who was gang-raped when she was 15 years old. She has a little daughter as a result of the rape. This is where our dollars had been going — $28 per month for their care. As we pulled up outside of her home, the whole village seem to descend upon us. Philomene ran and hugged me.

“Mama Lorna!” she called out. We hugged and cried.

We also we met with some traditional midwives; many are both untrained and illiterate.

They are afraid they might contract AIDS so they ask if we can provide them with gloves so they do not have to do deliveries with bare hands.

One woman told her story of being raped. All I could do was listen. I just could not find the words to tell her I was sorry. We learned women are gang-raped in their homes, or when they leave to collect firewood or fetch water. They are raped in public; they are raped in front of their families. The fact that they might be pregnant doesn’t matter. Age doesn’t matter. The youngest victim was a 3-year-old toddler; the oldest was a 90-year-old grandmother.

We also visited a refugee camp and clinic in Sha Sha. The clinic barely has any medicines, and many of the victims have died. All Souls Episcopal Church, Miami Beach, provided the clinic with a generator.

Our next stop was a three-hour boat trip to North Kivu to meet Dr. Philemon Kakisingi and Dr. Jeff Mibi from St Vincent Hospital. The hospital is overcrowded, with multiple patients often sharing a twin bed. There are over 150 women waiting to have reconstructive vaginal surgery as a result of the horrific gang-rapes.

The trip we took to see the mines in Shabunda will live with me forever. The rebels control the mines in this area. These mines are used in the cell phones and laptops that make our lives more convenient. Many question, in light of the rebels’ hold on the area, whether we shouldn’t be obtaining those minerals from someplace else.

The trip to Shadunda was different from all our other trips. We changed drivers. We needed someone who was born in the area and familiar with the dangers. We left at about 6 a.m., to get to the mines and back before dark.

At each village, we stopped and visited with the chief. We would always leave a small monetary gift for the village. It was a humanitarian gesture but it also allowed us access and safety. I knew we could easily be killed. Rebel soldiers were everywhere. They were young and they looked angry. The soldiers are not paid.

“They kill, they rape and they take our food,” the villagers told us.

Inch by inch we made our way up the mountains and as we finally turned a corner we saw something magical, hundreds of women in beautiful African dresses. Once they saw us they started singing and chanting. Neither love or suffering have only one language, I understood it all.

Suddenly we looked up and saw several trucks with UN soldiers. The UN commander wanted to speak with us. He wanted to know who we were. Why were we there? He made it clear he did not want any trouble. “We are peaceful people,” I told him calmly. “We are only here to help the women of the Congo.”

The women waited patiently for us. Once we rejoined them we understood the significance of our visit. At this very spot in 1998, 13 people were buried alive. We cried and we hugged; I promised the women we would tell their stories. I also promised them we would provide surgery for the women who have been raped, and to set up a midwifery training program so their women would no longer die in child birth.

On the way back, we encountered another horror. Lying on the ground like road kill were five bodies — the carnage of a massacre on the village the night before.

I wondered who they were and how long they were lying there. Would they have a decent burial?

 

The author is the founder and executive director of Footprints Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to saving women’s lives “one footprint at a time.” She is a former Miami-Dade prosecutor and a former registered nurse and midwife.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/07/08/v-fullstory/2886791/africa-a-journey-of-hope-and-progress.html#storylink=cpy

MORE INFORMATION

We return to the Congo Oct. 1-12, to start our first training program for midwives. The curriculum is been developed by Dr Mary Jo O’Sullivan, Dr. Nahida Chakhtoura, and Jamile Munajj-Brown, a local midwife. Our goal is that in five years we can turn this program over to our Congolese partners.

We need help in raising the $50,000 needed to start the program. Donations can be sent to Footprints Foundation 4000 Ponce de Leon Blvd., Suite 470, Coral Gables, Fl. 33146 or online at www.footprints-foundation.org. We are also looking for doctors, nurses and psychologist to join our team

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SIP AND TWEET AT WINE ETC, COCONUT GROVE

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ENJOY WINES FROM AROUND THE WORLD THEN TWEET        YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT IT 


SPECIAL GUEST: EDDIE ROSES -SOMMELIER WINE ETC

He is amazing. Bring lots of questions.
Date: Friday, June 29 2012

Time:6p-9p

Where: Wine Etc  3197 Commodore Plaza Coconut Grove

Why :TO BENEFIT FOOTPRINTS FOUNDATION WORK TO REDUCE MATERNAL AND INFANT MORTALITY AROUND THE WORLD.

5% OF ANY WINE PURCHASED

Learn you do not have to break the bank to enjoy an amazing glass of wine

We will be serving wines from select female wine makers

RSVP A MUST

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CURRENT JOB OPENING. VOLUNTEER

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The Graphic Design Volunteer will assist the lead Graphic Designer in designing both print and digital communications.

Tasks may include but will not be limited to assisting with the design of printed and digital materials.,
Preparing files for print
Strong interest in the non-profit sector and social justice
Adobe Creative Suite (InDesign, Photoshop, and Illustrator
Microsoft Office
Excellent design skills with a strong focus on typography and layout
Excellent communication and organizational skills
Resourcefulness, ability to take initiative, and to work both independently
and as a team
Experience in writing and editing copy for marketing materials
Knowledge of basic HTML and familiarity designing for the web is a plus.

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Breaking News

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Congo-maternal-mortality-rate-poverty -Guardian

Wednesday January 9, 2013

We will be joining City Equity Theatre Birmingham Alabama February  28- March 10 2013. Get your tickets now. I look forward to meeting everyone. I will be sharing stories from our recent visit to the Eastern Congo.

 

Tuesday May 1, 2012

We have selected the three countries we will be working in next. They are Liberia and Jamaica.Fact finding has already started. Love your input.

 

Also a big welcome to our brand new chapter, Footprints Foundation Boca Raton.

Tuesday April 10 2012.

We are very excited at Footprints Foundation as we welcome Dr. Mary Jo O’Sullivan Professor Emeritus Obs& Gyn University of Miami and Dr.Nahida Chakhtoura Assistant Professor of Clinical Obs& Gyn University of Miami to our Board.

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