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  • 7
    Nov
    2012
    4:06pm, EST

    Handmade lingerie meant for charity burns in Texas house fire

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    By NBC News staff

    A Texas woman escaped injury Wednesday after a fire gutted her home and destroyed thousands of dollars’ worth of handmade lingerie she'd just brought back from West Africa to sell for charity.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "It's one of those moments I have to kind of put my hands up and thank God I'm still alive," Tara Smith told NBCDFW.com.

    The sound of the smoke alarm startled Smith from sleep about 2 a.m. Flames were shooting through a vent in the living room of her home in Irving, northwest of Dallas. She tried to put out the fire, but it spread quickly, she said. Smith managed to escape from the home, suffering minor burns.


    “I’m not sure where I will go from here,” Smith told NBCDFW.com. “Everything is like burned.”

    See the story on NBCDFW.com

    Fire officials have not determined the fire's cause.

    Just four hours earlier, Smith had returned home from a month-long mission trip to Africa. She returned home with thousands of dollars’ worth of lingerie handmade by villagers in West Africa. Smith planned to sell the clothing through a nonprofit and fair trade business. Money raised would have helped fund development projects and employ seamstresses in Cameroon. Smith said her goal is to help women worldwide to start businesses to sustain their families.

    "We are still in shock,” Smith’s mother, Lynette Nadeau, told NBCDFW.com.

    Smith stayed hopeful, fighting back tears as she spoke with NBCDFW.com. 

    “I'm just holding on to my faith right now,” Smith said.

    NBCDFW.com's Kendra Lyn and NBC News' Sevil Omer contributed to this report.

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    13 comments

    Why must you all be so negative? Have a little empathy! I know Tara and she was helping out seamstresses in Cameroon by making the lingerie there and having in sold here in the US. She lived in Cameroon and loves the people there and has been working extremely hard to try and help them. This projec …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: charity, commentid-charity
  • 20
    Jul
    2012
    9:54am, EDT

    Rachel's legacy: Year after girl's death, mom goes to Africa to honor her clean-water wish

    Courtesy of charity:water

    Rachel Beckwith asked friends to donate to her favorite charity rather than give her gifts for her ninth birthday.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    All Rachel Beckwith wanted for her ninth birthday was for people less fortunate than her to be able to have clean water to drink. Now, a year after Rachel’s death, her mother is traveling to Africa to see firsthand how her daughter’s wish has come true for thousands of people she never met.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Samantha Paul, of Bellevue, Wash., accompanied by her church pastor and others, is traveling to the Tigray region of Ethiopia to visit the communities that now have access to clean water because of Rachel’s wish.


    “The biggest thing I’m looking  forward to is seeing the actual wells where the people, because of Rachel, are going to be able to have clean water," Paul said in a telephone interview Thursday, "seeing other 9-year-old children and their moms knowing that they're going to have a 10th, 11th and 12th birthday and so on because of Rachel’s heart.”

    Rachel, the girl with a big smile and giving spirit, wanted to raise $300 by her ninth birthday on June 12, 2011, for charity: water, a New York-based nonprofit that works to bring clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations. She started her online campaign after hearing Scott Harrison, founder of charity:water, speak at her church, EastLake Community Church in Bothell, Wash. Instead of birthday gifts, Rachel asked that people donate to the charity.

    Rachel fell a little bit short of her goal by the time she turned nine. A few weeks later, on July 20, 2011, Rachel, her younger sister Sienna and their mother were in a car on Interstate 90 east of Seattle when a semitrailer jackknifed into a logging truck, sending logs spilling onto the highway. In the ensuing chain reaction, the semi rear-ended Paul’s car, critically injuring Rachel, who was in the backseat. She was taken off life support and died at a Seattle hospital on July 23, 2011.

    Word of Rachel’s birthday wish spread quickly after her death and her story was picked up by national news outlets including NBC News, The New York Times and CNN. Donations to charity: water in her name -- some from strangers across the world -- took off. In just a few weeks, pledges for the Rachel’s Wish campaign topped $1.2 million.

    The money is going to projects that will bring clean drinking water to 60,000 people in Ethiopia, according to charity: water.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Ethiopia, a landlocked country of nearly 85 million in the Horn of Africa, is consistently hard-hit by drought and famine. It is one of the poorest countries in the world, and it’s estimated that only a quarter of its residents have reliable access to clean drinking water.

    “Rachel’s lasting legacy will be seen in the lives and smiles of thousands of children like her that will now have access to life’s most basic need -- clean and safe drinking water,” Harrison said in a press release.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    EastLake Community Church, a longtime supporter of charity: water, has raised more than $400,000 for clean water projects. The church and its members are hosting a fundraising event called Drinks4Drinks on Aug. 3 to continue to raise awareness for the developing world’s water crisis.

    'This changed actual lives'
    Paul, her parents and Pastor Ryan Meeks were among those departing for northern Ethiopia on Thursday night for a weeklong visit to villages where drinking water wells are being built. Harrison and other charity: water officials will also be on the trip.

    "We're going to actually see the work done," Meeks told KOMO News last week. "It's one thing to have your heartstrings pulled on and give money to something, but it's another thing to actually see the work proven. This went somewhere. This changed actual lives and here they are."

    A year after Rachel's death, Paul said she's still surprised at how her daughter has touched the hearts of so many strangers.

    "A lot of kids look forward to birthdays and Christmas. She realized she didn't need anything for her birthday, she had enough. It's amazing that a 9-year-old could grasp that concept," Paul said.

    The campaign continues with her family’s Rachel's Birthday Wish for Sienna page on charity: water's website.

    Rachel isn’t the only “celebrity” who has inspired a giving campaign to bring clean water to Ethiopia. Hollywood couple Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith recently returned from a trip to Ethiopia with charity: water to see the impact of their fund-raising efforts. They visited schools and communities benefiting from new wells and spent time with villagers.

    In 2010, the Smiths opted to forgo presents for their birthdays in favor of donations to charity:water and asked their fans to do the same. The couple’s efforts reportedly raised more than $789,000 for charity: water.

    Previous stories on Rachel:

    9-year-old girl’s clean water wish takes off after her death
    Rachel’s legacy inspires other kids to give
    Video: After death, girl inspires $1 million in donations

    76 comments

    Impressive. A little girl who has accomplished more in her 9 short years than most adults could do in their lifetime!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ethiopia, charity, featured, charity-water, rachel-beckwith, samantha-paul, commentid-charity

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