Oleh Yayasan Kawan Baik Indonesia

& Fair Future Foundation

Rumah Kambera

“Rumah Kambera”; “Rumah” berarti tempat tinggal dan Kambera adalah nama kecamatan. Kami memilih kata “rumah” dengan sengaja, karena selain menjadi kantor masa depan kami di Sumba, ini juga akan menjadi tempat pertemuan, kegiatan berbagi, belajar mengajar, rumah singgah untuk relawan, tempat bertukar pikiran, ruang bermain, menemukan ide-ide inovatif, semua dengan visi bersama, yakni untuk meningkatkan kualitas hidup masyarakat yang tinggal di daerah Sumba Timur.

Berita Terkini

SUMBA PHOTO STORIES

Sebuah proyek pendampingan fotografi untuk menjadi media berekspresi dan bercerita melalui foto. Dimulai sejak Januari 2020, pelatihan telah dilaksanakan di dua sekolah, di dua desa, di bagian timur Sumba.

BANGUN MBINUDITA

sejak Agustus 2020 kami membangun kembali sekolah yang roboh terkoyak angin pada akhir tahun 2019. Dengan pembangunan ini, setiap tahunnya 65 hingga 100 anak dapat bersekolah dengan aman dan nyaman.

FIRST AID KIT

Sebuah proyek yang bertujuan memberikan pertolongan pertama melalui kotak P3K yang akan dibagikan ke setiap sekolah dan tenaga medis tradisional yang di dampingi tenaga Faskes di Sumba Timur.

SEKOLAH KAMPUNG

Sebuah proyek bersama Sekolah Charis Sumba. Dalam empat tahun terakhir, di bidang pendidikan, Sekolah Charis Sumba telah mendampingi 37 guru di 18 sekolah kampung terpencil, terutama sekolah PAUD dan kelas darurat di area Sumba timur.

AKSES AIR BERSIH

Salah satu masalah utama di Sumba Timur adalah terbatasnya akses untuk memperoleh air bersih. Umumnya masyarakat masih mengandalkan mata air, sumur, dan tampungan air hujan namun masih belum mencukupi kebutuhan pokok air.

KEBUN

Salah satu aset terbesar pada rumah ini, adalah lahan dimana rumah ini berdiri; areanya cukup luas dan cocok untuk bercocok tanam, kami akan membuat taman dan kebun.

Instagram #RumahKambera

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Video #RumahKambera

The Sumba Sepsis Study 2026 begins long before the first household interview.

Over two intensive days of training, nurses, healthcare workers, Kawan Sehat health agents, and enumerators learn how to conduct interviews, collect reliable data, and communicate respectfully with families living in some of the most remote villages of East Sumba.

Through realistic role-playing exercises, participants prepare for interviews that may last up to two hours per household. They learn how to explain complex medical concepts, how to ask sensitive questions, and how to ensure that every answer accurately reflects the realities experienced by the families they meet.

Over the coming months, these teams will visit nearly 600 households across East Sumba. Their mission is to help us understand why sepsis remains such a major cause of suffering and death, why many patients arrive late for treatment, what barriers prevent access to healthcare, and what factors contribute to severe infections and preventable mortality.

This study represents an investment of more than half a billion Indonesian rupiah and brings together healthcare professionals, researchers, community leaders, and international partners.

Because understanding sepsis is the first step toward preventing it.

Sumba Sepsis Study 2026
Understand. Prevent. Save Lives.

#SepsisStudy2026 #SepsisAwareness #GlobalHealth #PublicHealth #RuralHealth #Indonesia #EastSumba #PrimaryMedicalCare #FairFutureFoundation #KawanSehat
Training the Teams Behind the Sumba Sepsis Study 2026 | Understanding Sepsis in Rural Indonesia

Mei 31, 2026 11:29 am

The Sumba Sepsis Study 2026 begins long before the first household interview.

Over two intensive days of training, nurses, healthcare workers, Kawan Sehat health agents, and enumerators learn how to conduct interviews, collect reliable data, and communicate respectfully with families living in some of the most remote villages of East Sumba.

Through realistic role-playing exercises, participants prepare for interviews that may last up to two hours per household. They learn how to explain complex medical concepts, how to ask sensitive questions, and how to ensure that every answer accurately reflects the realities experienced by the families they meet.

Over the coming months, these teams will visit nearly 600 households across East Sumba. Their mission is to help us understand why sepsis remains such a major cause of suffering and death, why many patients arrive late for treatment, what barriers prevent access to healthcare, and what factors contribute to severe infections and preventable mortality.

This study represents an investment of more than half a billion Indonesian rupiah and brings together healthcare professionals, researchers, community leaders, and international partners.

Because understanding sepsis is the first step toward preventing it.

Sumba Sepsis Study 2026
Understand. Prevent. Save Lives.

#SepsisStudy2026 #SepsisAwareness #GlobalHealth #PublicHealth #RuralHealth #Indonesia #EastSumba #PrimaryMedicalCare #FairFutureFoundation #KawanSehat

YouTube Video VVVyeEFCTmJaaWluWGdSQzVYNUI4SnlBLmxoTTRXZTB4UnBR

Training the Teams Behind the Sumba Sepsis Study 2026 | Understanding Sepsis in Rural Indonesia

Laindatang is a village we know well. Over the past three years, we have built twelve water reservoirs of 5000 litres or more, including a 115,000-litre tank, installed sanitary facilities, and regularly train teachers and families. Two Kawan Sehat health agents also work here. However, none of this can operate without access, and the road to the school has become nearly impassable.

Yesterday, I cycled the eight kilometres up to the hilltop school. This track, already the steepest in the area, is one we concreted ourselves so trucks could deliver materials for the reservoirs. Today, it is broken again—slippery, cracked, covered in mud, and treacherous at every turn. I had to stop dozens of times just to stay upright. Filming while moving was impossible; the risk of falling was too high.

Children walk this road every morning, often barefoot, arriving at school soaked and covered in mud. Some teachers cannot reach the classrooms at all. Yesterday, only three teachers got there for six classes; the others were trapped below because the road is no longer maintained. The authorities remain absent, too preoccupied elsewhere, leaving the community on its own.

Two teachers live beside the school in a fragile shelter without electricity or running water, aside from what we have provided. At night, they rely on a single SolarBuddy lamp to see. This film shows what access means in East Sumba. Without a safe road, education, health, and even daily life are pushed further out of reach.

@KawanBaikIndonesia @UNICEF @rotary @malariapartnersinternation8808 @KementerianKesehatanRI @KementerianSosialRI @upt-kphsumbatimur9690
The Impossible Road to Laindatang School and the Children Who Walk It Every Morning

Desember 11, 2025 6:24 pm

Laindatang is a village we know well. Over the past three years, we have built twelve water reservoirs of 5000 litres or more, including a 115,000-litre tank, installed sanitary facilities, and regularly train teachers and families. Two Kawan Sehat health agents also work here. However, none of this can operate without access, and the road to the school has become nearly impassable.

Yesterday, I cycled the eight kilometres up to the hilltop school. This track, already the steepest in the area, is one we concreted ourselves so trucks could deliver materials for the reservoirs. Today, it is broken again—slippery, cracked, covered in mud, and treacherous at every turn. I had to stop dozens of times just to stay upright. Filming while moving was impossible; the risk of falling was too high.

Children walk this road every morning, often barefoot, arriving at school soaked and covered in mud. Some teachers cannot reach the classrooms at all. Yesterday, only three teachers got there for six classes; the others were trapped below because the road is no longer maintained. The authorities remain absent, too preoccupied elsewhere, leaving the community on its own.

Two teachers live beside the school in a fragile shelter without electricity or running water, aside from what we have provided. At night, they rely on a single SolarBuddy lamp to see. This film shows what access means in East Sumba. Without a safe road, education, health, and even daily life are pushed further out of reach.

@KawanBaikIndonesia @UNICEF @rotary @malariapartnersinternation8808 @KementerianKesehatanRI @KementerianSosialRI @upt-kphsumbatimur9690

YouTube Video VVVyeEFCTmJaaWluWGdSQzVYNUI4SnlBLm5pUTJINzJ5VGNv

The Impossible Road to Laindatang School and the Children Who Walk It Every Morning

The journey of SDN Mbajik in Haray, East Sumba, is a testament to how access to electricity can transform an educational ecosystem and uplift an entire community. Initially, students and teachers were bound by daylight. As dusk approached, the atmosphere shifted to a sense of urgency to complete tasks before darkness fell. This lack of power limited educational opportunities and quality of life, proving that electricity is more than just a convenience; it is a necessity for progress.

The turning point came through a community-driven effort involving Fair Future, Smart Energy Tech, Kawan Baik Indonesia, and the residents of Haray. In a remarkable display of determination, they manually transported almost a ton of material over rough terrain, embodying the spirit of community empowerment. The installation of solar panels marked not just the culmination of their hard work but the beginning of a new way of life.

With electricity, the school grounds came alive at night, enabling evening classes and interactions that were once impossible. The community gathered for an unforgettable cinematic experience, highlighting how such projects can bridge educational gaps and broaden cultural horizons.

This initiative is merely a small step in a larger mission. Over 100 schools and villages in East Sumba still await similar transformations. The success at SDN Mbajik sparks hope and motivation to replicate the project throughout the region, ensuring that no child’s education is curtailed by the setting sun.

For further support and information, Fair Future invites you to join their journey. Such grassroots initiatives are fundamental to promoting sustainable development and global community resilience.

To support or learn more, visit our website: https://fairfuturefoundation.org

#FairFuture #EastSumba #SolarEnergy #EducationForAll #CommunityEmpowerment
The Day Night Changed – Solar Power for a Remote Sumba School

Desember 2, 2025 4:36 pm

The journey of SDN Mbajik in Haray, East Sumba, is a testament to how access to electricity can transform an educational ecosystem and uplift an entire community. Initially, students and teachers were bound by daylight. As dusk approached, the atmosphere shifted to a sense of urgency to complete tasks before darkness fell. This lack of power limited educational opportunities and quality of life, proving that electricity is more than just a convenience; it is a necessity for progress.

The turning point came through a community-driven effort involving Fair Future, Smart Energy Tech, Kawan Baik Indonesia, and the residents of Haray. In a remarkable display of determination, they manually transported almost a ton of material over rough terrain, embodying the spirit of community empowerment. The installation of solar panels marked not just the culmination of their hard work but the beginning of a new way of life.

With electricity, the school grounds came alive at night, enabling evening classes and interactions that were once impossible. The community gathered for an unforgettable cinematic experience, highlighting how such projects can bridge educational gaps and broaden cultural horizons.

This initiative is merely a small step in a larger mission. Over 100 schools and villages in East Sumba still await similar transformations. The success at SDN Mbajik sparks hope and motivation to replicate the project throughout the region, ensuring that no child’s education is curtailed by the setting sun.

For further support and information, Fair Future invites you to join their journey. Such grassroots initiatives are fundamental to promoting sustainable development and global community resilience.

To support or learn more, visit our website: https://fairfuturefoundation.org

#FairFuture #EastSumba #SolarEnergy #EducationForAll #CommunityEmpowerment

YouTube Video VVVyeEFCTmJaaWluWGdSQzVYNUI4SnlBLnU4d0Q4OElwaFUw

The Day Night Changed – Solar Power for a Remote Sumba School

In this film, we spend a day with Sarlota and her husband Yosef in the village of Lahiru, in the Mahu district. They are both Kawan Sehat health workers with the Primary Medical Care program. Yosef smiles, saying he's the only man among all these women. They laugh about it, but they take their work very seriously.

Sarlota is also a teacher for the Charis Foundation, which builds small learning centres in areas where there are no schools or where the schools are too far away. Yosef is a farmer. He grows rice, corn, and a few watermelons to feed his family, and when he can, he sells his produce.

From dawn, the day is busy. Sarlota cooks and does laundry. Yosef cleans and repairs the house. Together, they walk down a steep and challenging path to the river to fetch water for cooking, drinking, and washing. The round trip is over a kilometre. They often slip on the path, and the jerrycans and wet clothes are heavy, but this is their daily life.

Back home, Sarlota bathes her baby in warm water, which has been boiled and infused with local herbs to protect its health. Yosef goes to the garden to tend the crops. Then, they prepare their home for the next stage of their lives.

Every day, dozens of people come to their homes for treatment. Thanks to the support of the Fair Future Foundation and Kawan Baik Indonesia, Sarlota and Yosef examine people with fevers, clean wounds, dispense medicine, and explain how to prevent illness.

For them, caring for their neighbours is like caring for their own family. This film gives them a voice. It shows what primary healthcare is really like in a remote village.

#KawanSehat #PrimaryMedicalCare #UltraRuralHealth #CommunityHealth #WomenInHealth #RuralLifeIndonesia #CleanWaterJourney #GrassrootsMedicine #FamilyAndVillage #FairFutureFoundation
One Day in My Life in Lahiru as a Kawan Sehat Health Agent

November 18, 2025 4:35 pm

In this film, we spend a day with Sarlota and her husband Yosef in the village of Lahiru, in the Mahu district. They are both Kawan Sehat health workers with the Primary Medical Care program. Yosef smiles, saying he's the only man among all these women. They laugh about it, but they take their work very seriously.

Sarlota is also a teacher for the Charis Foundation, which builds small learning centres in areas where there are no schools or where the schools are too far away. Yosef is a farmer. He grows rice, corn, and a few watermelons to feed his family, and when he can, he sells his produce.

From dawn, the day is busy. Sarlota cooks and does laundry. Yosef cleans and repairs the house. Together, they walk down a steep and challenging path to the river to fetch water for cooking, drinking, and washing. The round trip is over a kilometre. They often slip on the path, and the jerrycans and wet clothes are heavy, but this is their daily life.

Back home, Sarlota bathes her baby in warm water, which has been boiled and infused with local herbs to protect its health. Yosef goes to the garden to tend the crops. Then, they prepare their home for the next stage of their lives.

Every day, dozens of people come to their homes for treatment. Thanks to the support of the Fair Future Foundation and Kawan Baik Indonesia, Sarlota and Yosef examine people with fevers, clean wounds, dispense medicine, and explain how to prevent illness.

For them, caring for their neighbours is like caring for their own family. This film gives them a voice. It shows what primary healthcare is really like in a remote village.

#KawanSehat #PrimaryMedicalCare #UltraRuralHealth #CommunityHealth #WomenInHealth #RuralLifeIndonesia #CleanWaterJourney #GrassrootsMedicine #FamilyAndVillage #FairFutureFoundation

YouTube Video VVVyeEFCTmJaaWluWGdSQzVYNUI4SnlBLjdLQ3ByV1JZYnB3

One Day in My Life in Lahiru as a Kawan Sehat Health Agent