Posts Tagged ‘artisans’

One Earth Day: Two Pledges

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

On the occasion of Earth Day, we encourage you to deepen your commitment to the Fair Trade principle of environmental stewardship.  Consider taking the St. Francis Pledge to care for creation.  Today is also a great time to Fair Trade Your Home in advance of World Fair Trade Day, May 8.

The theme of WFTD  is Fair Trade My Home linking our lives to the livelihoods of our brothers and sisters around the world.  Producers need to provide for their households.   Consumers like you have the opportunity to bring Fair Trade food, decorations, jewelry and more into your own home in acts of solidarity shopping.     To Fair Trade Your Home is easy and fun. Our friends at the Fair Trade Resource Network have put together a tool kit of resources and come up with several contests to inspire you.

We here at CRS Fair Trade have a contest of our own: every person who takes the Fair Trade My Home pledge–meaning promises to use one product from a CRS Fair Trade partner in the year 2010–will be entered into a raffle to win Haitian artwork from our Work of Human Hands catalog.

Here’s how to participate:

1) Fill out the pledge form attached and return it to fairtrade “at” crs.org before May 10.  Don’t forget to buy a product for your home from our crafts, coffee, and chocolate partners.   WFTD Pledge Card 2010

2) Plan a Work of Human Hands sale, a Raise Money Right chocolate fundraiser, a Fair Trade coffee tasting or other fun event using CRS Fair Trade partner products.   Encourage attendees to take the Fair Trade My Home pledge and return this downloadable WFTD pledge tally sheet to fairtrade “at” crs.org by May 10.

This day and every day Fair Trade gives us a chance to embrace the principles of Catholic social teaching such as care of god’s creation and working for the common good.  Join us in putting principles into practice.

New Products From Effort and Hope

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Last November I was able to visit 2 artisan groups in Madagascar and work with a team to assess the impact of a Fair Trade Fund grant they received and their overall progress working with CRS Madagascar and our Work of Human Hands partner, SERRV.  We came a way with a better understanding of the challenges these groups were facing and a new-found appreciation of the hard work they had before them.

My trip to Madagascar doesn’t feel like it was that long ago, but at the time the Effort and Hope cooperative in Antsirabe, Madagascar were completing an order of pocket bags for SERRV. I’m excited to announce those very bags are now available to order on the SERRV website. As a small, beginner cooperative of artisans, Effort and Hope lives up to their name. Their workspace is within the confines of a safety net center for children, Association Zazakely, that CRS Madagascar has supported in the past. Staying near their children who attend school and receive meals at the center, the artisans learn new skills and earn additional income through their partnership with SERRV. With the Zaza Pocket bag and the Pocketful of Peace bag, the artisans are applying their exceptional embroidery skills to create a cheerful pocket bag. The denim bags are cut from actual jeans, making each bag unique.

Because this group is still trying to find their stride and work up to larger orders, these pocket bags are only available online and not in the catalog. However, you can tell from the photos that they have a lot of skill and creativity. CRS Madagascar is working closely with the group on building their capacity and we hope you’ll be seeing more from them soon. In the meantime, please check out these new products from Effort and Hope!

Photo courtesy of Eileen Davenport

Second Week of Lent and Economic Justice in Bolivia

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

During the Lenten season, Operation Rice Bowl gives us many different opportunities to Pray, Fast, Learn and Give.  This week the program is reflecting on Catholic Relief Services’ work in the South American country of Bolivia.

Recently the Fair Trade team received a progress report from our CRS Bolivia colleagues working on the ASOVITA project, an effort to help small-scale farmers  establish sustainable and fair businesses.  The Fair Trade Fund is supporting an emphasis on fair or “solidarity” trading principles such as sharing “market intelligence”  and building the capacity to create alliances among small business and government.  In Bolivia, 40 percent of the population works in agriculture. We encourage you to place 40 cents a day in your Rice Bowl in solidarity with the Bolivians who earn their living from the land, and in turn, seek to steward it.

This week we also celebrate that Fair Trade colleague Antonia Rodriguez Medrano was recently appointed by  President Evo Morales as the new Minister of Productive Development and Plural Economy in Bolivia.   Antonia, whom I had the pleasure of meeting at a World Fair Trade Organization conference, is the founder of ASARBOLSEM, a grassroots organization that connects groups of handcraft producers and provides marketing services for them on Fair Trade terms.    Under Antonia’s leadership, ASARBOLSEM was named one of the United Nation Development Program’s model social enterprises in Latin America.

Nurturing the leadership of women and social enterprise for all is one of the ways Fair Trade promotes economic justice in Bolivia and worldwide!

Check your mailboxes! The New Work of Human Hands Catalog is Out!

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Whether you like it or not, it’s time to put away the Spring/Summer Work of Human Hands catalog and pull out the Fall/Winter one.  But it’s not just cold, wet weather we have to look forward to this fall – we have Work of Human Hands Sales!  For those who traditionally hold Work of Human Hands consignment sales before Christmas, the arrival of the new Fall/Winter Work of Human Hands catalog means planning and preparation can begin for the most popular time of year for Sales!

Work of Human Hands Sales not only give you an excuse to get out of the house and send some time in a warm, festive atmosphere with beautiful handcrafts and delicious gourmet foods surrounding you. It gives you and your community a shopping alternative that reflects the values of our faith and an opportunity to put your dollars toward helping those  in need.  Through Work of Human Hands Sales you can transform your parish hall into a market where faith and justice meet!

If you haven’t received your Work of Human Hands catalog in the mail, or are a first-time sale organizer ready to get started, you can order your free catalog and a consignment sale information packet from our order page. The consignment planner in the information packet offers a step-by-step guide to make holding a sale easy.

SERRV , our partner on Work of Human Hands, has some special offers for sale hosts this year. Don’t miss out!

  • Fair Trade Gift Set
    Orders of at least $750, received at least 4 weeks before your first sale date will receive a free gift set of fair trade foods as our thanks to you. This will ship with your order, and you can share it with your committee, use it in a raffle, or whatever works for you!
  • Fall 2010 Artisan Tour
    Sell more than $1000 worth of handcrafts and your group is eligible to be chosen for an artisan visit. You must also return no more than 25% of your order, and pay for your items within 10 days of your sale to qualify. We will contact you next spring if your order met these conditions, to request your proposal for hosting an artisan. The organization selected for the 2010 artisan visit will be contacted in late spring/early summer.
  • 25 for 25
    If you order at least $750, pay on time and return less than 25% of your total order, we will send you a $25 gift certificate in May 2010 to use towards a future order.

If you have any questions or need additional information, please call our Customer Service team at 1.800.685.7572.

And remember, with each purchase made through Work of Human Hands, SERRV donates a portion of the sale to the CRS Fair Trade Fund. So whether you host a sale in your parish, or shop at home, your purchase gives in 3 ways – a beautiful gift for you, a fair trade for the artisan, and a donation to CRS to help us continue to build the Fair Trade marketplace.

Midwest Fair Traders: Turn out to meet artisans from Peru

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

A big question for any social movement is “Does it actually make an impact?”  Next month, consumers in Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin will have a chance to hear directly from Peruvian artisans about the difference Fair Trade has made in their lives.  Thanks in part to the CRS Fair Trade Fund, our allies at Partners for Just Trade and Green America are celebrating World Fair Trade Day with artisans Evangelina Pizarro and Ayde Riveros.  The women are spending several weeks visiting communities in the Midwest.  If you are in that region, check out the tour schedule to learn more!

Catholic Relief Services in the Holy Land

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Members of the CRS Fair Trade network have long been supporters of artisans and farmers in the Holy Land. Right before the Christmas holiday, the Fair Trade Fund—made possible by the contributions of our crafts, coffee, and chocolate partners as well as individuals—awarded more than $18,000 to the Holy Land Handicraft Cooperative Society in Beit Sahour for market development efforts.

Palestinian artisan photo by Debbie Hill for CRS

Palestinian artisan photo by Debbie Hill for CRS

However, at this time, parts of the Holy Land are dealing with tremendous violence. I wanted to share this press release to let you know about the Catholic Relief Services response on the ground:

CRISIS IN GAZA: CATHOLIC RELIEF SERVICES RESPONDS
$350,000 to Provide Food, Blankets
and More to Vulnerable Families

Baltimore, MD., January 12, 2009–As the conflict in Gaza and Southern Israel continues, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) will provide 500 war-affected families in Gaza with desperately needed food and other humanitarian relief supplies. With a $250,000 grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development and $100,000 from its American donors, CRS will distribute food, hygiene items, blankets, candles, and other essentials.

Since the fighting began on December 27, approximately 900 Gazans have been killed and thousands more wounded; 14 Israelis have also been killed. Many Gazan families are without electricity, water or food; some are living in shelters or with host families.

“We will work closely with our partners in Gaza to deliver these supplies when conditions permit the safe movement of staff,” says Matt Davis, country representative for CRS’ Jerusalem, West Bank and Gaza program. “Aid distribution will be difficult and dangerous as a result of the closure of border crossings between Israel and Gaza, bottlenecks at open crossings and ongoing military strikes from the ground, air and sea within Gaza.”

Since cooking fuel is not available, CRS will provide ready-to-eat items like tuna, canned meat, cheese, dates, and high-protein crackers.

On January 7, Israel announced it would halt military strikes for a three-hour period each afternoon to allow much-needed humanitarian assistance to be distributed. CRS is working closely with the United Nations, other international organizations and local partners to ensure a fast and efficient response to the most vulnerable families during these windows of time.

CRS’ office in Cairo is also monitoring the situation and is ready to respond. “We are on standby to provide relief if there are Palestinian refugees from Gaza who are allowed to come to Egypt,” says Luc Picard, country representative for CRS Egypt.

CRS’ regular programs in Gaza are temporarily on hold because its staff and partners have largely been confined to their homes as a result of the fighting. Once security allows, CRS will resume programs that give impoverished women jobs, train youth in nonviolence and conflict resolution, distribute food, and provide psychosocial counseling for traumatized women and children.

In addition to its humanitarian response, CRS and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) are calling for strong U.S. diplomatic leadership, together with international partners, to achieve an immediate, comprehensive cease-fire that ends the escalating violence between Israel and Hamas, addresses the humanitarian situation, and leads to concrete steps toward a two-state peace agreement—the best hope for long-term stability and security for both Israelis and Palestinians.

How to Help:
Donate via phone: 1-877-HELP-CRS
Donate online: www.crs.org
Write a check: Catholic Relief Services
P.O. Box 17090
Baltimore, Maryland 21203-7090

Supporting the Holy Land in Holy Times

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

We thank the Catholic News Service for their coverage of CRS’s work in the Holy Land and our efforts to promote the work of artisans during the Advent Season.

For olive woodcarvers, economic crisis means slump in Christmas sales
By Judith Sudilovsky

BEIT SAHOUR, West Bank (CNS) — Fadi Bannoura sits at his desk in front of rows of shelves filled with images of Jesus and the Holy Family carved out of olive wood.

His father worked in the woodcarving business for 40 years; Bannoura, 31, began learning the craft some 10 years ago.

Now he is the sole member of his family left to run the workshop. Eight years ago, at the outbreak of the intifada, or Palestinian uprising, his parents and two brothers left for the United States. But Bannoura, who is Greek Orthodox, was not given a visa, so he stayed behind.

With the tourist industry not yet fully recovered from the slump caused by the intifada, Bannoura — like the other hundreds of olive woodshop owners in the Bethlehem area — relies primarily on international sales to make his living.

Outside his workshop, cut olive branches that have been soaked in water pile up, left to dry before they can be carved. The whole process from preparing the wood, usually taken from pruned trees, to the final carved product normally takes about six months, said Bannoura.

“Olive wood is expensive; life is expensive,” said Bannoura. Even in 2008, a year when the tourism level was relatively high, he has barely managed to break even and pay his eight employees, he said.

“There is a lot of competition and it is hard to sell our carvings. Usually the Christmas markets in the U.S. are good for us, but this year the world economy has had a bad effect on the sales,” he said. “This year I have not sold anything in the USA.”

The area has few other employment opportunities, he added.

Fellow artisan Osama Abu Saadeh, 32, runs his family workshop in Beit Sahour with his father and younger brother, while his mother in the United States sells their handiwork. Even if they do not sell anything, every month he must pay his seven employees, said Abu Saadeh, a Catholic.

“This is not just work; it is an art, and this is the Holy Land,” said Abu Saadeh, considered one of the top olive wood artisans in the area.

His favorite carvings are of the Holy Family’s flight to Egypt because of the detailed work they require, he said, adding that it takes about 12 days to complete the carving for such a statue. A bust of Jesus takes him about a week to complete.

“The stores in Jerusalem used to take all of my work,” he said. He gestured to shelves filled with wooden statues yet to be sold and shrugged his shoulders.

Olive carving always has been one of the traditional crafts practiced in the Bethlehem area, said George Ghattas, vice president and country representative of the Holy Land Christian Ecumenical Foundation. He said that in the last 10 years it has become one of the key industries in the area because of Bethlehem’s isolation from the West Bank and other employment opportunities.

Nearly 300 registered olive woodcarving workshops, most of which belong to one of four cooperatives, are in the area, Ghattas said. There are dozens more uncounted basement workshops that churn out carved items, he said. The competition is stiff and sales opportunities are low even in relatively good tourism years like the past two years, said Ghattas.

“Tourists spend very little time in Bethlehem, and usually when they have a chance to go shopping they go to large souvenir shops whose main interest is making a profit. They aren’t interested in maintaining the tradition of woodcarving. Many products they sell are not even from local handicrafts, and they may be imported from China because they are cheaper,” he said.

Several years ago the Holy Land Christian Ecumenical Foundation, supported by the U.S. Agency for International Development, established the Turath Center to showcase Palestinian handicrafts through the local cooperatives and to work on issues such as quality control and competition. A network of volunteers in the United States continues to organize sales in churches and malls not only as a way to generate revenue, but also as a form of advocacy to share the artisans’ story, he said.

Bannoura and Abu Saadeh are two of 36 olive artisans who belong to the Holy Land Handicraft Cooperative, created in 1981. The cooperative is a member of the International Fair Trade Organization. The U.S. bishops’ Catholic Relief Services also assists the cooperative through its fair-trade program.

“Fair-trade products from the Holy Land help us remember the origins of our faith and to put our faith into action today,” said Katy Cantrell, CRS fair-trade program adviser in Baltimore.

But with the burgeoning world economic crisis, sales forecasts for the program are not as good as they were in 2007, said Cantrell.

“We want to be sensitive to difficulties many families in the U.S. are experiencing right now, but at the same time we recognize that this is a critical time for artisans overseas who are also affected by the economic climate and (live) in much more fragile situations than most Americans,” she said.

Fair Trade Pioneer Renews Work to Eradicate Poverty

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

For 13 years, Catholic Relief Services and SERRV have worked together through a shared commitment to serve the poor overseas. We offer Catholics a way to live their faith by supporting economic justice through the decisions they make as consumers, and SERRV helps artisans gain access to the U.S. market. SERRV is evolving in some new ways that you will see in the Work of Human Hands catalogs.

Marsha Hoover, Chair of SERRV’s Board of Directors, provides background:

SERRV is known the world over for leadership in advancing the principles of Fair Trade to eradicate poverty and create opportunity for people to feed and educate themselves and their children, create sustainable communities, and quite simply, to survive. …Over the past year, the Board and staff of SERRV stepped back to examine, with the help of some highly talented experts, what the organization stands for and how to better explain this. We learned that the core values which have guided the mission for six decades are as powerful, and the SERRV formula for addressing poverty as potent, as ever. … This fall, we have initiated our efforts to change how we explain ourselves, our artisan partners, our mission, and our impact on the world in a redesigned catalog layout and in the phase-out of the A Greater Gift identity. We are infusing SERRV with new meaning as we eradicate poverty in all its forms.

CRS Fair Trade congratulates SERRV on this new approach and is excited to continue working toward our shared goal of economic justice.