Posts Tagged ‘crs’

Celebrating Christmas and Supporting Sudan

Friday, December 5th, 2008

During our very own Work of Human Hands holiday sale at CRS in Baltimore this week, I was one of the baristas selling Fair Trade coffee lattes and promoting handcrafts from places like Bolivia, Nicaragua and Ghana.  But Katy and I also had a lot of fun giving away items.  We raffled off a SERRV gift basket, and equipment from our friends at Fair Trade Sports.  A couple VIP folks (meaning those colleagues whose cubicles were closest to the noise of the sale!) got free  ”Stop the Violence” T-shirts supporting CRS’s work in Sudan.  The t-shirts were made in sweatshop free conditions by the women of Nueva Vida  in Nicaragua.

The shirts are also special because they remind me of my friend and CRS colleague Neal Deles, who took a position in Darfur recently.  I’m so proud of Neal for pursuing his desire to serve directly the people of Sudan, even though it means lots of sacrifices.  He is doing great out there, though, and I thought you might enjoy reading about Neal’s experiences in Sudan and his hope for the future.

If Neal’s work inspires you to do something more this holiday season, it is not too late to host a Work of Human Hands consignment sale.  Call 800-685-7572 to talk to a customer service rep and be sure to order some products from Africa in honor of all the CRS staff and partners working there!

Students Say: You are what you eat…and drink, and wear!

Friday, November 21st, 2008

When Lois Harr, CRS Fair Trade Ambassador from the Bronx, invited me to join her and Manhattan College student Sarah Cicuto in St. Louis at a conference with the theme, “Global Learning and Social Responsibility through a LaSallian Education,” I was all about the global social responsibility piece, but I had to do a little homework to learn who the “LaSallians” are. I quickly figured out these are the educators—both religious and lay–associated with the Brothers of the Christian Schools, an order founded by the “universal patron of educators,” French priest John Baptiste de La Salle. The warm welcome and the outstanding range of speakers I am experiencing here at their Huether Conference is educating me quickly on the power and reach of the LaSallian tradition. At our workshop, Lois and I discussed the faith-based roots of Fair Trade and how Fair Trade is a tool of economic justice. But Sarah was the star of the show, explaining how Manhattan College’s Just Peace group helps students live their values through eating chocolate and drinking coffee!

Sarah took the gathered group through the brief but impressive history of Just Peace on campus. In her role as Campus Minister, Lois had taken a group of student volunteers on a service trip to Ecuador where they were introduced to the need for Fair Trade. Soon after, some of the students decided to attend a United Students for Fair Trade (USFT) convergence in Boston in 2006 to learn how other students were bringing Fair Trade to campus. After seeking out examples from surrounding schools in their region, the students decided to take on a campus campaign. But first they organized themselves as an official student government organization, not only to spread news of their mission but also to get some of the budget allocated to student groups on campus. Pretty savvy kids.

Just Peace student Erin solicits Fair Trade support

Just Peace student Erin solicits Fair Trade support


The group started its campaign by encouraging students to fill out the comment cards in the dining halls asking for Fair Trade coffee, and then they set up a meeting with the Operations Manager for Sodexho to “demand” Fair Trade coffee. What they didn’t realize is that the manager, Dennis McCoskey, was quite willing to make the switch if the students wanted it. Sarah and her fellow group members were surprised that Sodexho was so willing to respond. Sarah says, “I learned that to make change sometimes you just have to ask the right people the right questions.”

She also learned that it is important to thank the decision makers and keep the lines of communication open. Just Peace and Sodexho now meet regularly to strategize over next product offerings, such as Fair Trade bananas or Fair Trade chocolate, and to make sure that the requests of students remain at the forefront of the food service providers’ concerns. Recently the Fair Trade Certified label wasn’t appearing on coffee carafes, so Just Peace had to hold Dennis and his staff to account.

But the relationship is not adversarial and another feature of Just Peace’s work is that they build celebration into their efforts. By working together to plan events, the group keeps up interest in Fair Trade and finds ways to educate a new generations of students. During Fair Trade month, thanks to support of the CRS Fair Trade Fund, they hosted coffee farmer Rigoberto Contreras Diaz from the MICHIZA cooperative in Mexico for campus visits, helping students put a face behind the Fair Trade coffee in their re-useable mugs. Other techniques they use include offering lots of Fair Trade chocolate samples, and hosting crafts sales to expose students to the range of products that make up the Fair Trade marketplace.

Looking forward, Sarah is relieved that two first-year students are ready to take up the leadership of Just Peace, after receiving CRS Fair Trade Fund scholarships to attend the 2008 USFT convergence in Seattle. The main lesson she wants to pass on to them, and that she shared with the LaSallian group, is that, “one step at a time takes time.” Although the group has accomplished a lot in its short history, it is able to do so because it took care to build mutually beneficial relationships, identify allies, and consistently share information. (hmm, sounds a lot like the Fair Trade principles!) A next step for the group will be to host a spring symposium for regional colleges in the Northeast on how Fair Trade relates to sustainability initiatives on campus.

I’ll ask Sarah to do a posting herself from that event!

Three Coffee Countries in Eight Days: CRS Hits the Trail

Friday, June 27th, 2008

The summer season means travel time for many people, and Fair Traders are no different. Our own Simone Blanchard, Program Officer and Fair Trade Enthusiast in the CRS Atlanta office, is joining our friends from Cooperative Coffees to visit Central America. Simone and her traveling buddies aren’t taking a summer vacation though. They are headed to El Salvador to meet directly with farmers and visit a collectively managed, organic coffee farm. Then they trek to Honduras for a regional organic coffee conference with small scale producers.

Simone has done a lot of Fair Trade education visiting parishes and schools throughout the Southeastern part of the United States. Now she’ll get to meet personally with small-scale coffee farmers hearing their struggles and successes directly. Because she’s traveling with a group, including our partners at Cafe Campesino, Simone will also have the chance to exchange experiences and insights about coffee farming. Finally the itinerary includes a bit of time in Guatemala, reconnecting with our CRS colleague and coffee mentor, Michael Sheridan, and learning about CRS’s continuing efforts to promote coffee production and market access. Here are some of the APECAFORM farmers Michael has worked with in Guatemala.
CRS supported farmers in Guatemala

Depending on how the internet connections are, we hope Simone will be able to log on and let us know how the trip is going. Once she is back home, we’ll definitely have her share an overview of her time and any photos she might have. Speaking of photos, the only down side to this trip is that Simone is leaving her cute daughter Sophia behind. Simone and hubby Brett are committed to “Raising Babies Right” and recently entered Sophia in a photo contest for World Fair Trade Day. Check out the honorable mention shot, which features the Fair-Trader-in-training, as well as a recycled denim book bag handcrafted by CRS beneficiaries in Madagascar.

And check back on this posting to see if Simone has been able to comment from Central America!

Traveling for Fair Trade and Faith

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Katy and I are putting the final touches on the next edition of our Fair Trader, an electronic newsletter that we hope you subscribe to. Just as we try to post to our blog twice a week, the two of us work to write a newsletter every two months (do you see a pattern here?). This edition of the Fair Trader will feature tales from our travels this spring. We’ll also be sharing results of World Fair Trade Day activities. Did you hear that more than 12,000 North Americans participated in a Fair Trade beverage break on May 10? Check out the video and look for the Fair Trader in your in-box on Friday!

Of course, we aren’t the only ones on the road for justice. We’ve recently heard stories from members of the Newman Club at Florida Atlantic University who traveled all the way to New York City to participate in Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to the United States. Peter Fernandez spoke of his trip as “…the experience of a lifetime. I truly felt like a disciple of Christ on a pilgrimage to join the great celebration of unity which was the Holy Mass at Yankee Stadium.”
Students from Florida Atlantic University attend Papal Mass
Because this photo shows that Peter and fellow traveler Andrea Panayiotou were fueled in their travels by Divine Fair Trade chocolate, we thought we’d share some of their experience as told by Andrea:

“The opportunity to make this adventure was a rare gift and one that I’ll treasure forever….My first time in New York City was an invigorated and holy time. Our group visited Town Square, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and Ground Zero. We attended a fair, picnicked in the park, dined at a small Indian restaurant, sang on street corners, rode the subways, walked and trekked through the night and through the day. We witnessed powerful prayers as well as protests. We met people from every walk of life – on subways, on the streets, serving in the Papal Mass, playing music in the city – we encountered splendor, joy, faith, worry, bitterness, destitution. Our volunteer service with the Midnight Run [for the homeless] was perhaps the most powerful point of our trip. We drew strength from the people we met, as they found strength in us. I know with joy and commitment that ministry to people in need, in every walk of life, is our Christian mission. Worldwide, as with Catholic Relief Services, and here at home in our country, our neighborhoods… our families….

Every spot we tread and person we met has become unforgettable to me. I learned how to truly meet Christ in each person and in every corner of creation. The possibilities for my future have expanded, and my understanding of American society – its structure, intricacy, and struggles – has deepened. Pope Benedict XVI’s homily has become a song and a constant encouragement to me to live the apostolic life as a young person….As my gaze quietly looked over a wide, blessed field – where the miracle of our salvation was shared by millions of people – I saw the contrast of the green, the gold, the glory, the peace, with the sparkle of billboards, the drab grayness of flat rooftops, and the hectic rumble of the rushing subway. I learned an immense peace which has remained with me: the peace of knowing that Christ is the Savior of all, and that His love is infinitely merciful and present in every corner of the earth… in the longings of every heart….From this trip I’ve found the joy of being part of a universal human family.”