Safalta is a non-profit established to help create a movement. Our goal is to empower generation y to realize that their life is their own, and they can do anything they want with it. We will do this by example; Safalta is itself a group of young people who have come together to create positive change.
So what does Safalta actually do?
Safalta’s mission is two-fold. To empower both young people throughout the Western world, and communities in developing nations. Through our actions, both of these groups will realize that they can create the life of their dreams, with their own tools and skill sets. The message is that you do not have to go outside of yourself to sustain happiness. For the two groups we are servicing, the message is the same, but the delivery is different.
YOUTH
DEVELOPING COMMUNITIES
Communities in the developing world are currently being bombarded with disempowering messaging which states that they need to ‘modernize’ in order to be happy, and in order to be respected by the rest of the world. The ‘American Dream’ is still touted as the ultimate lifestyle in many countries, something that the western world has already discovered is an illusion. The white picket fence model isn’t working. (A crumbling economy, an overweight and increasingly poverty stricken population, are now determining features of America),
Safalta is changing the limiting belief, which is currently permeating the developing world, that the Western lifestyle is the only way to satisfaction. We’re encouraging communities to rediscover their roots, to fall in love with themselves and their culture all over again. And we’re giving them tangible, practical tools to make the transition to becoming a self-sufficient, self-loving people. This isn’t about band-aid solutions, and it’s certainly not about bringing western remedies into the equation. It’s about delivering results through tried and true methods.
Through teaching and establishing natural building, self-sustaining agricultural systems, and medicinal plants, Safalta is delivering communities the practical knowledge they need to succeed.