Heifer Village: A socially conscious stop for trip to Little Rock

A tour guide at Heifer Village tells about a man and child about an interactive board game at "Change for Change," which illustrates how small loans can lift communities out of poverty.
A tour guide at Heifer Village tells about a man and child about an interactive board game at "Change for Change," which illustrates how small loans can lift communities out of poverty.

One of Little Rock’s newest tourist attractions is also a place to educate yourself and your family about the world around us.
Heifer International, a non-profit, humanitarian organization to help people around the world out of poverty, opened Heifer Village near the Arkansas River in June to tell its story through 80 displays and hands-on exhibits. About 20,000 people so far have visited Heifer Village and made an optional tour of Heifer International’s world headquarters, known as the “green building.”
The typical visitors are families, including many from out of state.
“Often we will see grandparents bringing grandchildren, moms bringing their kids,” said Jim Rollings, Heifer Village senior director. “The one thing that is common with all of our visitors is we see a high-level concern and sophistication about topics of social responsibility. They generally don’t come in naïve to the subject … They are sharing with their children. They are extending the moral and ethical behavior to their children by showing them the effects around the world that their behavior can have.”

Heifer Village
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Heifer International has Christian roots. Dan West, a Church of the Brethren relief worker and Midwest farmer, was handing out rations of milk during the Spanish Civil War in 1944. He saw that if the people he was serving had cows, not just cups of milk, they would benefit greatly. Heifers, young cows that have never given birth, were bred and shipped overseas to provide livestock to the poor in developing countries. Heifers for Relief founders felt it was better to give families livestock, such as cows, goats, chickens and sheep, and allow them to use the milk, meat or eggs to feed themselves and bring in financial support. Those receiving an animal must agree to “pass on the gift” of an offspring to another family. They also must share the training they receive.
In 65 years Heifer has served 10.5 million people in 125 countries, including the United States.
Heifer is not, however, associated with one faith or denomination. Eleven “covenant agencies,” including the National Catholic Rural Life Conference, are committed to the mission of caring for neighbors and the earth.
“From the beginning, this vision has encompassed all spiritual paths and all people who understood that to serve God we serve our brothers and sisters. Today, Heifer is comprised of people of many faiths working together around the world to realize its vision,” according to the organization.
Visitors to Heifer Village are immediately introduced to the history and mission of the organization. Then they can read, watch videos and see tangible examples of what Heifer believes are the ways to end poverty in the world.
The five solutions are:
Infrastructure, such as roads and utilities
Health care, including nutrition
Education, which is often out of reach for girls and those who can’t afford it
Fair markets, in order to increase the income of those who are making the goods or raising the crops
Sustainable agriculture, which can increase production and income
At the center of the building is a tree, representing the center of a village.
Kelli Westbrook, a volunteer tour guide and member of the Cathedral of St. Andrew in Little Rock, said the facility is self-guided with written descriptions and videos throughout the building. It is geared for students as young as third grade.
“It is very text heavy,” she said.
Parents with younger children can, of course, read about and explain the items, Westbrook said.
A few exhibits are specifically created for children and are interactive, such as a touch-screen story called “Journeys to School” and a board game called “Change for Change.”
In the fair market area, Westbrook points out how consumers in the United States should become more familiar with the companies they buy from. Heifer suggests searching company Web sites for their code of conduct, which will explain their commitments to fair markets or treatment of employees.
Westbrook said education is one of the most important areas for families getting out of poverty. She said families overseas often need money to buy books and uniforms to send their children to school.
“The first thing they want to do in these developing countries is send their kids to school,” Westbrook said.
She said she also likes the facts about poverty printed around the facility.
“Poverty is not caused by laziness or ignorance,” Westbrook said.
Heifer believes poverty is caused by a lack of opportunity and access to basic resources, such as education, health care, clean drinking water and food.
A large model of a sustainable farm in Vietnam illustrates all the different ways farmers are able to support themselves and teach others how to become self-sufficient.
“The farmers take care of the farm and the farm takes care of the farmers,” Westbrook said.
Rollings said anyone’s tour should end at the Make a Difference Lab, where he or she can learn about ways to protect the environment, volunteer, recycle or support local farmers.
At the conclusion of their visit to the lab, visitors can type in their commitment to changing the world. Their first name, city and commitment are then projected on a large screen overhead.
“A little bit done by each of us can do a lot,” Rollings said.

Heifer Village
Location: 1 World Avenue, Little Rock (across from the Clinton Presidential Center)
Web site: www.heifer.org/heifervillage
Hours: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon-5 p.m. Sunday.
Admission: Free
To make a group reservation or for more information: (877) 870-COWS
What to do and see: Three to five times a day a volunteer guide will lead a tour of Heifer’s world headquarters, which was built with recycled materials and maintained in an environmentally friendly manner. It is surrounded by restored wetlands with native plants and trees.
Heifer Village also serves lunch at Café@Heifer from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Shop@Heifer sells fair market and hand-made items.
Other learning opportunities: Heifer Ranch is a learning center, working ranch and retreat center in Perryville (Perry County).
Future plans: As the economy improves, Heifer Village hopes to build four different outdoor displays to show what life is like in other countries.

Click here to return to the Catholic Travel 2009 index.

Malea Hargett

Malea Hargett has guided the diocesan newspaper as editor since 1994. She finds strength in her faith through attending Walking with Purpose Bible studies at Christ the King Church in Little Rock.

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