2. Profile – Norihiro Takeda
Nick name: Nori
Birth: 15/4/1989
(26yrs)
Nationality: Japan
Likes:
Ukulele
Basketball
Travel
Blog
3. What JICA want me to do
Community development as a member of W-SAT (Water
and Sanitation Action Team)
Advice to improve the skill of the
community organization which
maintain the water supply
systems.
Carry out sanitary enlightenment
activities with the member of the
health center and the residents.
Share information and improve
the relationship between the
county and the sector office.
Support repairing hand pumps in
the other community with the
other volunteers.
4. What I want to do
Community development as a resident of this sector
be a coordinator,
facilitator, communicator.
Improves the lives of
villagers according to
JICA’s mission.
Help you to achieve your
goals (imihigo).
Share hopes and dreams
with children.
5. What I can do
For community development...
Find problems
Think solutions
Coordinate people
Solve problems with villagers
Teach English and Japanese
Teach skills of IT(PC, SNS)
Teach how to play the ukulele
Work as manpower
6. What I will learn
Kinyarwanda(must!!)
How to maintain water
supply systems
How to fix wells
Structure, customs and
culture of this sector
and country
7. What you want me to do
Please write
anything you want
here!!
8. What I want you to do
Share information
problems of this
community
people, groups
your plans and goals
Give advice to my action
Plan and act together
Teach Kinyarwanda
9. What I did
Sales in one of the biggest confectionary companies in
Japan.
communication
negotiation
find problems
think solution
suggestion & planning
presentation
management
Social business
10. About JICA
Japan International Cooperation Agency
JICA’s mission
to serve as a bridge between the people in
Japan and developing countries.
to advance international cooperation through
the sharing of knowledge and experience.
to work to build a more peaceful and
prosperous world.
11. About JOCV
Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers
Now: more than 2,000 JOCV are working in 71
countries (46 in Rwanda).
Cumulative total: more than 40,000 JOCV were sent
in 88 developing countries.
Jobs: agriculture, forestry and fisheries, fabrication,
repair operations, civil engineering, sanitation,
education and culture, sports, planning and
administration etc.
“together with the local community”