Beyond. Making money & changing lives!
Their nonprofit arm is called HUSK! They provide trash bins for the village and pay for trash pickup for the community.
Water filters. These filters are just $45 a piece but they are providing the community with safe drinking water. This means healthier kids that are able to attend school.
HUSK waste barrels. These barrels get the trash of the street. Cleaner streets, less rat, less disease = a more productive society.
Little by little things are changing.
This place offers tourism that benefits the community. If you’re going to take a tour, which you probably will, why not opt to use them and make a little difference while you do. Beyond employs locals & anywhere from 5% to 25% of their profits (depending on the tour) goes back into the community.
The same owner of Beyond owns a high end hotel Sojourn built in the village of Tac. He uses the location to lure customers who want to feel like they are in the “real Cambodia” but there is a catch. Almost all of the hotel activities are focused on the surrounding village. Visitors can take a village walk, teach English at a school for a few hours, help in the rice fields, or pitch in building a water filter.
Their nonprofit arm is called HUSK! They provide trash bins for the village and pay for trash pickup for the community.
Our village walk with Beyond.
This was one of the highlights of our trip. We got to see firsthand just how powerful a network of nonprofits working together can be. In Tac, a small village there were a number of things happening:
Water filters. These filters are just $45 a piece but they are providing the community with safe drinking water. This means healthier kids that are able to attend school.
Compost Toilets. Cleaner and safer for the community, ADDED bonus fertilizer to help the crops grow.
Stonger housing. Each year during the rainy season it floods and many of the houses that have been built cannot sustain the damage caused by the water. New houses are being built for the poorest families that include a tin roof, cemented wooden pillars to hold up the house on stilts, and windows for circulation.
HUSK waste barrels. These barrels get the trash of the street. Cleaner streets, less rat, less disease = a more productive society.
The entire community receives education on how to use each of these. Our guide was a local from the community and told us how impressed he has been with the change. He painted the picture of what the village used to look like and I can only imagine what is must have been like.
Little by little things are changing.
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