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Our Impact

OVERALL TOTALS:

13,967 kits

13,674 International, 1,476 Local

33 Countries, 21 Charity Partners, 41 Local Sites
 

2025 (So Far..)

1,183 kits

953 International Kits, 6 countries,

230 Local Kits

2024

5,141 kits

4,328 International kits, 15 countries,  11 charities,  7 individuals, 

813 Local Kits

 

2023

3,923 kits 

3,490 International, 20 countries, 15 charities, 5 individuals, 

433 Local kits

2022

3,720 kits

 3,720 International Kits , 17 countries, 11 charities, 1 individual

WHAT PEOPLE SAY

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Vickie Stone, AILC 

"I have the honor to distribute the kits and literally watch lives transformed! And all because they have something they can call THEIR 0WN! Truly the kits are powerful in these young women’s lives. So thank you so much for all your labors of love and belief that your efforts are impacting the lives of thousands, and making daily living filled with more confidence and purpose!!!"

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Grace Kuto, Harambee Centre

"You will be so happy to know that your (2023) kits were well received in Kenya and Uganda by middle school and high school age girls. Since Harambee Centre is very inspired by the notion of encouraging use of these products, especially in rural areas in East Africa, your supply of these pads helped to spark conversations towards a comprehensive national study on this issue that we will help fund at a North Coast Medical Training College in Kenya. One of our own medical students, Lindah is co-authoring this study."

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Maureen Halvorson, Kenya Keys

"Your beautiful kits were delivered to hundreds of girls in Kenya last week. They were THRILLED to receive them & so grateful for how they will keep them in school. Thank you for all of your work to make it happen!"

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2025 Freedom Kits of Yakima Distribution List  (SO FAR...)

1183 kits total

953 International kits, 6 countries, 230 Local Kits

January:

70 kits to Mercy Rains charity – Lori Sybouts – Uganda school girls

50 kits to Sylvia’s friend for Ethiopia school girls

27 kits to MeiLynn for Taiwan remote village

20 local kits to Greater King County YWCA

40 local to Mira Vista Middle School, Sunnyside

50 local to Los Angeles Fire Victims through Jennifer Ko

20 local to Ellensburg Apoyo (Alonza)

February:

65 kits with Muriel to Thailand school girls

March:

41 kits to Ethiopia – Muriel’s husband – girls in nursing school

400 kits to Kenya Keys – school girls

200 kits to Asylum Seekers on the Southern Border – Susan Harriss UMC Pacific Conference

100 kits to Africa is Life Changing for school girls in Ghana

50 local kits to Central Washington University food locker

15 local kits to Ellensburg High School (will share with middle school)

15 local kits to Ellensburg WIC

20 local kits to Ellensburg Apoyo food bank

2024 Freedom Kits of Yakima Distribution List
5,141 kits total
4,328 International kits, 15 countries, 813 Local Kits

January:
100 kits to Ghana – “Empower Playgrounds” – Ben Markham, UT
February:
30 kits to Marshall Islands – Stephanie
50 kits to Costa Rica – orphanage – Dion’s daughter, UT
25 kits to Haiti – Judy – orphanage
97 local kits to Yakima area high school and middle schools
March:
75 kits to Uganda – schoolgirls – Mercy Rains – Lori Sybouts
​60 kits to Ethiopia school girls – Muriel
April:
275 to Chewle, Kenya – Harambe Centre – schoolgirls – OR
140 Kits to The Vineyard Food Bank, Yakima, Janene Westbay
10 kits to East Africa – Muriel
40 kits to After-Care rescue charity in Uganda "My Sisters' House"– Rochelle Sellers, AZ
May:
700 kits to Kenya –  “Africa is Life Changing” school girls– Vickie “Shosho” – UT
100 kits to Ghana – Empower Playgrounds schools – made by Utah satellite
500 kits to Kenya – Kenya Keys school girls – Maureen Halvorsen – OR
40 kits to St Anthony's H.S. in Uganda, through Portland H.S. service mission
June:
77 more local kits for The Vineyard Food Bank, Yakima
33 local kits to Union Gospel Mission, Yakima
50 kits to Tanzania (Kiersten Monich’s friend)
July:  
100 kits to Hong Kong – Marilyn Reid – Shoreline UMC
30 local kits to attendees of Mission University
45 kits to Kenya rescue charity for trafficked girls – Pastor Judy
August:
50 kits to West Valley HS Ram’s Landing, Yakima
3 mini kits to Ram’s Landing, West Valley HS
September:
15 Kits to Selah High School
20 Kits to Tacoma School District traveling nurse 
20 Kits to White Swan fire victims
4  Kits Davis High School, Yakima
30 Kits Yakima School District Foodbank “Health & Wellness Center”
10 Kits East Valley High School
30 Kits Camp Hope homeless shelter, Yakima
30 Kits Yakima Rotary Food Bank (Center Street)
30 Kits YWCA Yakima
30 Kits Selah Naches Food Bank (behind Tractor Supply)
10 Kits to Love Inc, Yakima
25 Kits to WIC Office, Nob Hill, Yakima
30 Kits to Farm Workers Clinic, Nob Hill, Yakima
250 kits for Cambodia – Lori Carlson – LA
October:
400 kits for Uganda – Bend, OR–OCTOBER– Kelly Zamora
100 kits for Philippines – Marilyn Reid UMC– Shoreline, WA
November:
90 kits for Taiwan – MeiLynn – Yakima
150 kits for Kenya – Louise UMC, Hermiston OR – Girls’ Empowerment programs, Kenya
100 kits to Uganda for recovery charity working with trafficked girls–AZ
20 local kits to Ram’s Landing, West Valley – Jill Hendricks
10 local kits to Catholic Charities
3 mini kits to Ram’s Landing
6 mini kits to Summitview Elementary – Jenn
December:
500 Kits to Ghana, Empower Playgrounds charity
398 Kits to UMC Pacific Asylum Seekers program, San Diego, Susan Harriss
20 local kits to Greater King County YWCA
10 local kits to The Lighthouse Advocacy, Prevention and Education Center, Sunnyside (for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault)
10 local kits to Yakima Community Health, Sunnyside
10 local kits to WIC office, Sunnyside
10 local kits to Nuestra Casa Sunnyside (works with immigrant families)
10 local kits to Sunnyside High School
10 local kits to Noah’s Ark Homeless Shelter, Wapato
12 local outreach kits
 

2023 Freedom Kits of Yakima Distribution List
3,923 Total Kits plus 360 pads         

Total of 433 LOCAL kits distributed, 3,490 International
January: (170 kits)
10 Freedom Kits each to East Valley HS, Davis HS, Eisenhower HS, West Valley HS, White Swan HS, Toppenish HS, Wapato HS, Zillah HS, the Yakama Nation Veterans Affairs office, the YWCA, Triumph Treatment Center, YVCC Food Locker, Rod's House and the Watsonville, CA Farm Workers' Clinic.  AND another 30 kits for the Farm Workers' Clinic in Toppenish!  
February: (300 kits)
180 to Cambodia – Pete Olds, Yakima – Helen Camarce in country – school girls
60 to Mumbai, India – Shawn, Yakima – International Medical Relief in country – single moms
60 to Mexico – Rachel McCracken, Selah – It Takes a Village Library – school girls
March: (250 kits)
70 to Kosoro, Uganda –  Laurie Peterson, Yakima – Mercy Rains – school girls
180 to Chewle, Kenya – Grace Kuto, Portland – Harambee Centre – school girls
April: (60 kits)
60 to Kewilili, Kenya – Jean Bons, Pasco – Overflowing Joy – school girls
May: (510 kits)
200 kits to Malawi, Kenya and Uganda – Rachel McCracken, Selah – It Takes a Village Library – school girls
180 to Tanzania – Steve Whitehouse, UT – AfriCompassion – school girls
60 to Malawi – Judy Panagokos, Yakima – Anu Anandaraja, Women Together Global – school girls
60 kits for Guatemala – Muriel, Yakima
10 to Union High School, Union, Washington
June: (195 kits)
150 kits to Zimbabwe – Eyes4Zimbabwe – school girls
10 kits to a refugee camp in Correze, France for refugees from Africa – Muriel
30 kits to Malawi – Anu Anandaraja, Women Together Global – women
5 kits to Life Choices – Sylvia, Yakima – women
July: (380 kits, 360 pads)
300 kits to Philippines – Marilyn Reed, Shoreline – 200 school girls, 100 women
360 pads to Nepal – Katherine Parker – school girls
50 kits to Kenya – Mission University attendee – school girls
30 sample kits to Mission University attendees
August: (140 kits)
30 kits to Yakama Nation – Veterans Affairs Office, Tribal School, etc
60 kits to Ghana with Gloria Sana Terry, Founder, Africa is Life Changing, Inc, Homeless girls attending Sewing Institute to learn trade
50 kits to Rwanda with Reid Carlsen, UT, school girls
September: (505 kits)
400 kits to Kenya Keys, Maureen Halvorsen, Portland, school girls, southeast Kenya
85 local kits to Selah High School, Naches High School, Highland High School,  Pahto Public Passage (Yakama Nation Shuttle Bus), Heritage University, and Regional WIC office
20 kits to Nepal – Janene Westbay – school girls
October: (363 kits)
350 kits to Eyes for Zimbabwe charity (total was 500 for 2023!!!)  – school girls
13 kits to West Valley High School RAM Landing (food pantry)
November: (725 kits)
500 kits to Cambodia – Eagle Scout Period Poverty Project – Jennifer Ko – school girls
10 kits to Yakima Salvation Army Family Services
60 kits to Mexico/Belize – Abundant Life Foundation – Mayan women 
100 kits to Ghana/New Zealand – new mothers
35 kits to Camp Hope
10 kits to Prosser High School
10 kits to Grandview High School
December: (325 kits)
10 kits going to Love Inc, Yakima
15 kits to West Valley High School RAM Landing
300 Kits to Kenya with Kenya Keys – school girls

2022 Freedom Kits of Yakima Distribution List 
3,660 total kits, 11,400 pads, 690 guards, 250 bags to 17 countries plus the U.S.

​Pokot, Kenya:  These 290 kits are helping to keep the 8th grade girls in school.  Traditionally the girls leave school after 8th grade, receive FGM (female genital mutilation), and are given in marriage as the 4th or 5th wife to a man in his 40’s or 50’s.  The charity taking the kits over is working with village elders to end this practice.  These kits help them to keep the girls safely in the boarding school.  Traditionally girls and women in this area dig a hole in the ground and sit over it while on their period.  The volunteer sent us videos of the girls receiving their kits and captioned, “these are the girls you saved from FGM today.”  

Eyes4Zimbabwe sent several large trucks to Guatemala, El Salvador, the Amazon, Mexico and Peru, loaded with medical supplies, school supplies, and humanitarian aid supplies.  An important addition is our Freedom Kits, of which they took 1000 in 2022.  Anywhere you have poverty, be assured that girls and women are missing school and work and life because they have no access to feminine hygiene products.

Bangou, Cameroon:  Our 200 kits went to help girls stay in school where cultural norms and taboos force girls to remain home when on their period.  The charity generally does medical mission work and supports a school.  Upon learning about our kits they realized that the girls ARE missing too much school because they have no way to manage their period.

Farmworkers Clinic, Toppenish and Granger:  our 50 kits were given for free to low-income women who struggle to afford both menstrual supplies and incontinence supplies. In the U.S., it costs between $20 and $30 a month for menstrual supplies, and up to $100 a month for incontinence pads.  Our kits are making a real difference for the women who receive them.

Guatemala Village Health:  two chapters of this charity took a total of 240 of our kits with them as they traveled to various remote mountain villages running medical clinics and helping in schools.  Our kits help the girls to manage their period with dignity and remain in school.

Papua New Guinea:  girls and women traditionally must sit in a “menstruation hut” while on their period.  Our 70 kits went to help both women and girls retain freedom of movement for school, work, life.

Dominican Republic:  our 70 kits went with a charity that helps women in prison who are transitioning back to society.  The cost of disposable feminine hygiene is out of reach for these vulnerable women.  

Manilla, Philippines:  our 200 kits went with a charity that is helping homeless women and girls who are living in a cemetery in North Manilla.  The charity is helping the women get job training, and striving to keep the girls in school.  With no access to disposable feminine hygiene, these kits will make all the difference for these girls and women.

Guyana:  a gynecologist from the Farmworkers Clinic went to Guyana to the edge of the Amazon for a medical mission.  She was thrilled to be able to take 70 of our kits.  She said the girls there tend to take used plastic grocery bags, fill them with rags, used paper, leaves etc and tie them around their bodies, just so they can go to school.  The girls end up with open sores, rashes, and infections from this unclean system.  

Malawi, Dzhaleka Refugee Camp:  Our 70 kits went to help the most vulnerable of women in this camp…. The young single mothers, who must work to support their families, but who have no way to manage their period.  A quote from the volunteer distributing our kits:  “Today was overwhelming–a little traumatizing and a lot life-changing.  These amazing ladies helped me distribute a handful of [washable] feminine sanitary kits.  I was only able to bring 70 with me… I wish I could have brought 100 times that.  Even 6000 kits would only put a dent in the situation here…I am grateful for the donated efforts from small groups like Freedom Kits Yakima who believe in freedom of movement for women….As word spread, we were mobbed.  I could feel the desperation rolling off my new friends.  They need these kits….”

Coban, Guatemala:  Our 70 kits went with a charity that runs a school at the edge of the largest garbage dump in Central America there in Coban.  The charity struggles to keep the girls in school because they have no money and no access to feminine hygiene products.  Our kits are washable, reusable, and last up to 5 years, and will allow these girls to stay in school, graduate, and have a chance to escape homelessness and poverty.

Zimbabwe:  The 200 kits sent with Eyes4Zimbabwe were distributed to several schools where girls are vulnerable and tend to drop out within a year or two of starting their period.  They have to miss school 5 days a month, so they fall behind, then they get discouraged, then they drop out, at which point they are usually forced into early marriage, some as young as 12 years old.  At this point they are stuck in poverty.  Our kits give them the freedom to stay in school, graduate, and have choices for their life.

Kenya:  a charity out of Los Angeles supports 3 schools in remote Kenya.  They have taken our 300 kits, plus enough supplies to make an additional 270 kits, which will provide a kit for EVERY GIRL in these three schools.  They know that access to feminine hygiene is essential for keeping girls in school.

Rod’s House:  we have donated 10 “mini-kits” to Rod’s House to for a test to see if the kits are helpful to the homeless youth and young adult population that they serve.  The director is very enthusiastic and will be educating the girls and women, and promoting proper use of the kits.

Mali:  we sent 10800 flannel pads which will supplement the kits that have been distributed there in past years.  Flannel is not available for purchase in Africa, so these pads are highly needed.

Ukraine and Romania:  a total of 872 of our kits went with relief organizations to help women and girls fleeing within Ukraine, and into Romania.  With supply chains disrupted and entire homes destroyed, our kits help women and girls in this desperate time.

Zambia:  we donated 300 pads and 150 guards to a group in Spokane that assembles and distributes washable feminine hygiene kits for school girls in Zambia.

Nigeria:  we donated 250 drawstring bags and 300 pads to a group in Sammamish that assembles and distributes washable feminine hygiene kits for five schools in Nigeria.

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