Blog Contributor:

Tomas Moreno

Tomas Moreno is a rising senior at Wofford College where he is studying Sociology and Government with an emphasis on African and African-American Studies. He has worked heavily with ONE’s ONE Campus Challenge program both as a Campus Leader and as a Campus Outreach Ambassador for North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and The District of Columbia. His efforts with the ONE campus challenge came to a head with Wofford being named the Number 1 ONE Campus in its second year as a program and being one of the top student activists picked to go to Kenya last summer. Tomas is currently the US Field Intern here at ONE.

ONE Power Summit 2011: Connect. Thank. Brand. Pitch.


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Apr 13th, 2011 4:40 PM UTC
By Tomas Moreno

Nearly 150 ONE super-members are in Washington, D.C. for ONE’s 2011 Power Summit, a four-day advocacy extravaganza. Tomas Moreno, our former intern, gives advice on how to rock meetings with Congress.

ONE members on the hill

I love working on the ONE issues. Its one of the most powerful and important things I do in my life. I can table, I can speak at events, I can band candidates at events. But one thing scares me beyond all else: lobbying.

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‘Sweet Crude’


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Jun 22nd, 2010 2:02 PM UTC
By Tomas Moreno

If you’ve been reading the ONE blog recently, you will have noticed the recent comparisons between the Exxon Valdez spill and the horrors occurring in the Nigerian Delta where estimates are they have been experiencing the equivalent of this every year for the past 50 years.

But the Delta region has experienced more than just this ecological disaster and the effects it has had upon this traditional fishing community, and this is what is traced in the film ‘Sweet Crude’ which partner organization Oxfam America is screening in conjunction with the Sierra Club and the Publish What You Pay coalition.

The film is a moving story tracing the evolution of the filmmaker’s growing investment in telling the tale of how the people of this much neglected region of Nigeria are being impoverished by the very resources that allow others to live in extreme wealth. At its roots, the story is one of a people’s attempt at survival, the corruption keeping them down, the greed surrounding the oil, and the armed resistance of people who feel they have no other place to turn.

The screenings are part ongoing efforts to help citizens from resource-rich countries hold their governments accountable for the management of their natural resources.

I highly recommend seeing this film as it is a perfect example of the curse of resources. And, if you live near either Naperville, Illinois or Atlanta, Georgia then you have a chance to see the film for free!

Admission is free of charge but reservations must be made in advance. Call Rachel at 202-548-6593 or email Rachel.ackoff@sierraclub.org.

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Event details for Naperville:
WHEN: Sunday, June 27th at 7:00pm

WHERE: The DuPage UU Church is located at 4 South 535 Old Naperville Road in Naperville, Illinois.

For Atlanta:
WHEN: Monday, June 28th at 7:30pm

WHERE: Plaza Theatre 1049 Ponce De Leon Avenue Atlanta, GA.

Hope Beyond AIDS and a 2-Hour Journey for Water


Jul 30th, 2009 3:54 PM UTC
By Tomas Moreno

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Our ONE Campus Challenge students are on the ground in Kenya. Tomas Moreno reports back:

Sorry for not blogging for a day, our time in Kenya has been very hectic. But amongst all of this chaos of going from site to site there has been a lot of hope expressed by the stories of the people we have been able to talk to.

More than this, they have shared their innovative ways of approaching the problems they face (such as the astonishing MPESA program). But that is not what we looked at the past two days. We researched the local health of the Kisumu area, which boasts the country’s highest rates of HIV/AIDS with a whopping 14%, and how they work to stem this and a myriad of other issues. What I focused on was the economic issues facing those with infectious diseases in and around Kisumu.

The most inspiring story was at Kagua CBO (Community Based Organization). Here, people that have HIV/AIDS live together in a community, supporting each other as well as finding hope and strength in the fact that they aren’t alone. But, the most inspiring part of this was when we were able to go visit some of the families in their homes. Here, we met Phieria Opende Agola.

Phieria is 65 (at least, she could not remember her exact birth date), and lives with her grandson and granddaughter who both have HIV/AIDS. She takes care of them because her son and daughter-in-law died from HIV/AIDS almost 10 years ago. Since then, she has devoted her life to her grandchildren and soon moved next to her other son and daughter-in-law (who was 21 with four children; she had her first child at the age of 11). They care for seven children between the two of them, but mostly take care of them separately.

This means that she must make the two-hour journey to Lake Victoria to get water for her family. She usually takes a 21-L jug that none of us could carry for more than a few seconds standing still, much less walking up and down hills.

Maureen, the other daughter-in-law, had a dream of opening up a business so she could work her way out of poverty but would need 3000 KSH (just over US$39). And she cannot save the money because currently they live off of a paltry 500 KSH (US$6.) a month. Put in context, four of us spent 680 KSH that morning for seconds of our breakfast…

The thought of living off of that for a month, while caring for two children, is crippling even at my age. To think of doing that at 65 is unimaginable. But Phieria did say that she found hope in Kagua and her grandchildren both had big dreams of being an attorney and a teacher. And I find so much hope in their hope; the fact that they, despite massive economic barriers, even compared to people in similar situations have these dreams and plans is truly inspiring.

-Tomas Moreno

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