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ENCOUNTER EARTH BLOG

UN Millenium Development Goals Review in Sept 2010

[Canmore AB 06-23-10] In September of 2000, the United Nations addressed the issue of global poverty by adopting the Millennium Declaration. The declaration pledged the members to accomplish measurable goals to eradicate global poverty by the year 2015. The Millennium Development Goals focus on eight areas of concern, including poverty and hunger, universal education, maternal health, and HIV/AIDS prevention, among others.

Mill Goals

With the deadline now only five years away, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has called upon world leaders to attend a summit this September to assess and accelerate the progress towards reaching these goals. From un.org: “Coming amid mixed progress and new crises that threaten the global effort to halve extreme poverty, [Mr. Ban says,] ‘The summit will be a crucially important opportunity to redouble our efforts to meet the goals,’ […] by the 2015 deadline.”

With such mixed progress, how will the goals be met? Microfinance can contribute to many of these goals, making it an important tool in reaching these targets in the developing world. Although not specifically stated in the Millennium Development Goals, microfinance has proven to be a strong mechanism for achieving its mission. Addressing nearly every target, microfinance breaks through the many elements of poverty inherent in the eight goals.

“Microfinance is much more than simply an income generation tool,” says Mark Malloch Brown, administrator of the UN Development Programme (UNDP). “By directly empowering poor people, particularly women, it has become one of the key driving mechanisms towards meeting the Millennium Development Goals, specifically the overreaching target of halving extreme poverty and hunger by 2015.”

Kids for Sale Pt 2

[Canmore, AB 12-09-09] This is the second video installment of the documentary hosted by Stacey Dooley a young woman from North London. She has become an advocate for children who are exploited in the textile industry.

The video below is the second of six parts and we find Stacey in the midst of investigating small factories that illegally employ young Indian boys working in Nepal. This part is very moving as Stacey participates rescues a young boy who is regularly beaten by adult staff.


Kids For Sale Pt 1

[Canmore, AB 12-03-09] It was about a 18 months ago I posted some incredible videos from youtube that were originally from a BBC documentary titled “Blood, Sweat and T-Shirts. The BS&T series is incredible as 6 young adults from the UK who love to purchase lots of clothing go to India to work in the fashion clothing manufacturing industry beginning in the cotton fields west of Delhi and then all the way to the factories in the slums of Mumbai. These young adults are completely laid bare as they witness and participate in the clothing industry Soon after I posted the youtube videos they were removed because copyright restrictions. Was I ever disappointed.

Today I decided to search online regarding the series and came across a new documentary that has spun off of Blood, Sweat, & Tshirts. Stacey Dooley, one of the people who participated in the initial BS&T series was so moved by her involvement that she has become a social justice advocate for children. She hosts a documentary series titled Kids For Sale.

Kids for Sale is currently posted on youtube and I am going to try again to post these videos over the next week or two. Hopefully the vids will not be removed as the last series was. I am posting part 1 of 6 parts to this initial show in this blog entry. If you have 10 minutes please click on play below and become aware of the huge needs out there…


Empowered Women: India

[Canmore, AB 12-01-09] My life partner, Corey, and I watched “Silk Ceiling” Pt. 1 on BBC News Channel regarding the inability for most women in S. Asia to break through the barrier imposed by culture to gain gender equality. This documentary is hosted by Ritu Bhardawaj who herself grew up in a rural village but has become a well-known journalist on News X in India. There is one story in particular regarding African Indians who live in Jambur, Gujurat, India. This one woman nicknamed “Forest Diamond” started a cooperative and basically a trust bank for women all on her own… incredible. Corey and I were very moved and so sense that this is what the journey ahead is… empowerment and sustainability.

jambur

Below is an excerpt from the documentary website:
Back in India, Ritu visits the area in Gujarat where the Siddi tribe are descendants of migrant workers who came hundreds of years ago from Africa. She goes to meet the woman they like to call Hirbai Ben Lobi – the Diamond of the Forest. The Forest Diamond tells Ritu about the old days – when the Siddi lived in the forest – and women were harassed and exploited.

"When the girls of our village went to the forest to collect firewood... the forester used to harass them a lot... It is from this incident that I realized that we should not go into forest to collect wood anymore! Instead we needed to save our money up! But at that time the bank would not open accounts for us since some of us could not read or write. They asked us ‘who will fill your deposit slips?’ I was outraged and I told them that tomorrow my colleagues will fill the slip."

The Forest Diamond and her friends formed a co-operative. Their savings fund businesses - their own businesses. Now - unusual in South Asia - 900 village women hold assets in their own names. Money from the co-op even helps the village school. If more women went to school - and got paid jobs - it’s been estimated the Asia-Pacific region could be ninety billion US dollars a year better off.

Says the village headmaster: "If a poor and uneducated woman can do so much, if women are educated and they come forward, this will bring a great change in society."

A local woman tells Ritu: "Thank God I am a woman. If I were a man I would have done nothing. It is because I am a woman that I can accomplish so much. I am happy to be a woman, I don’t want to be a man…"

(Source: www.tve.org/lifelines)

POWERFUL!!

Direct Trade in 2010

[Canmore, AB 10-23-09] The past three years of development and launch of encounter earth has literally been a education. The ee team been schooled in fashion, in business, international trade, retail storefront, supply chain, fair trade, and the list goes on. There is much to learn and much more to journey to find what, we believe, is the ideal… Direct Trade.

peru

This first phase of ee operations has been to discover what is currently available in the fashion industry that is truly fair made and sustainable. There is a growing group of manufacturers/suppliers who see the need to bring change. In light of the entire industry it is still but a drop in the ocean but there are many more drops forming.

As we look ahead to 2010 the encounter earth team believes that opportunities are unfolding to see us begin to transition from fair to direct trade. The biggest difference between these terms is first, fewer people are involved in the process of bringing the products to market and second, the stories of the workers and their communities stay with the clothing/accessories and do not get lost after flowing through many companies’ hands.

Dialog has begun regarding Colombia, Peru, Dominican Republic and India. Trips are being planned to some of these locations. The journey towards ee partnering directly with people in cooperatives and small factories is coming closer to reality. We will keep you updated as the changes begin to happen.

Invisible Children

[Canmore, AB 08-22-09] Northern Uganda is a very dangerous place to live for anyone! The LRA - Lord’s Resistance Army, led by their mystic-leader Joseph Kony, have targeted parts of Uganda, Sundan and DR Congo. Since 1987 this group has terrorized the land trying to establish their own theocratic state. This is the longest running conflict in Africa… over 22 years in length. Children have been the most vulnerable through this war. The LRA goes into villages and abducts the children to make them soldiers for their cause. They recruit and exploit the weakness of young children brainwashing them into believing they must fight and kill. It is so sad and something must be done… but over 20 year?! How can we bring change on this side of the world?

Invisible Children [IC] is an NGO in Los Angeles led by some young adults who are trying to advocate for sisters and brothers in Nothern Uganda. I spent some time on their website over the past few days. The guys over at goodsociety who make the jeans we sell at encounter earth also support this organization. IC is active in creating awareness regarding the children and families who have been abducted and killed for the LRA cause. Below is a video from the IC website to help create awareness and encourage participation in making a difference.


For more information and vidoes go to invisiblechildren.com

Lifesaver - Clean Water for ALL!

[Canmore, AB 08-06-09] One of the most difficult challenges that children of the third world face is bad water. This bad water is full of viruses and diseases that often leads to diarrhea and death. According to UINCEF over 4000 children die daily from water-related diseases and over 1.8 million people (mainly children) die annually. That is difficult for many including myself to process and fathom.

I often go to TED.com to be inspired and encouraged by thinkers and innovators. Today as I watched the video below with an engineer Michael Pritchard from the UK I was stirred with hope. Please take 10 minutes to watch the video below regarding Lifesaver, an incredible water bottle or a jerry can with an water filter system, that can take the worst sewer-infested water and in seconds make it safe, sterile drink water!

It is clearly time to “think differently” and consider the possibilities of changing the world…


36 Child Soldiers Freed in Darfur

[Sudan - 07-27-09] Thirty-six child soldiers who once served with an armed rebel movement in Sudan’s Darfur region have been voluntarily demobilized and given assistance so they can return to school and their communities, the United Nations reported today.

child soldier

The joint African Union-UN peacekeeping mission (UNAMID) has provided logistical support to the Darfur Child Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) programme and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), which are spearheading the demobilization initiative.

By the end of the week another 17 child soldiers are expected to be released and demobilized and help with reintegration into their communities. As many as 2,000 children have been identified as eventually participating.

The programme is taking place in Tora, a village located about 60 kilometres from El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur state.

The first batch of 36 – who served with the Freewill faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), often to defend their villages – received backpacks containing school and educational supplies, as well as sports equipment, as part of their reintegration packages.

The Sudanese Government has also set up a three-year special education programme to help with reintegration.

Source: UN News Service

Generosity v Justice

[Canmore, AB 05-30-09] Generosity is a wonderful act. I have experienced, many times, the benefits of a generous person. There is a wonderful feeling that comes when someone gives to you without strings attached or maybe a few small ones. It is even more incredible when you are the one who is generous and the joy you can experience when you see the receiver eyes light up with surprise and thankfulness. On the other hand justice, as far as my experience is concerned, is a little more difficult to achieve or experience. Justice requires sacrifice, wisdom and a willingness to tough it out long term to make things right when there is wrong that is usually accompanied with hurt and brokenness.

As a father I find that I gravitate toward being generous or a better word could be lenient and that is not necessarily a good thing. When my children get out of hand into a rapidly degenerative discussion that results in fisticuffs and potentially blood I can take the shortcut of shouting it down, asking them to forgive each other and then let them get back to Wii or the trampoline whilst I get back to my facebook fix or pint on the patio… or I could actually engage in a conversation that will take time, wisdom and interaction, bringing solutions rather than avoiding the root issues.

moyo

Dambisa Moyo, Zambian economist speaks out against aid as the solution.

So when I came across the article Why Aid to Africa Must Stop in the National Post today, thanks to Mark Petersen’s blog, the thoughts I had recently about generosity and justice were confirmed. We cannot haphazardly throw money at the global poverty problems hoping that they will disappear. Generous aid is not a solution, it is at best a short-term fix that can only complement a more comprehensive strategy. Justice takes a horribly wrong situation and makes it right. Solutions such as helping those in poverty find a way to climb out through sustainable financial success is a much better path towards making things right. I have friends who are involved in NGOs and businesses that are helping our poor sisters and brothers become successful entrepreneurs and employees breaking the cycle of misery and poverty. That is justice! …and it really makes sense.

The following is from the National Post interview with Dambisa Moyo:


Why aid to Africa must stop

Adrian Humphreys, National Post Published: Saturday, May 30, 2009

Born and raised in Zambia but educated at Oxford and Harvard, Dambisa Moyo was an uncommon face as a black woman in the world of high finance. Now with the publication of her book Dead Aid, she has become an uncommon voice, a strong and eloquent advocate of stopping financial aid to Africa as the best way to help the troubled continent. It is an idea contradicting rock star campaigners, Western politicians and grassroots wisdom all at once. As she makes her way to Canada for a highly anticipated debate on Monday with Stephen Lewis and others at the Munk Debate on Foreign Aid, she spoke with the National Post about her ideas and the hazards of opposing the aid orthodoxy.

Q What’s so bad about rich nations sharing their wealth with poor nations to help them cope with their struggles?

A No country on Earth has ever achieved long-term growth and reduced poverty in a meaningful way by relying on aid. It’s just never happened. So we’re pushing a strategy that has no evidence of working anywhere on Earth. And we have years of evidence that the aid strategy doesn’t work.

It boils down to incentive. We have to ask ourselves: Are African governments incentivized to do what governments all around the world are expected to do, that is, deliver public goods: education, health care, infrastructure and security? Unfortunately an aid system has allowed African governments to abdicate their responsibilities…. So until African governments live or die based on job creation and providing goods to Africans and not rely just on getting aid money, we will continue to see a situation where the private sector has not developed and Africans do not have job opportunities. The billion dollars that go from government to government … can make African governments lazy with respect to doing what they are supposed to be doing. It also fuels corruption, can fuel civil wars, inflation, the debt burden, and so on.

Q What do you see as the better way?

A It is a mixture of trade, foreign direct investment, capital markets, the bond market, remittance and microfinance. It is basically fostering a private sector investment into these economies so you actually get job creation. The fundamental problem with the aid model is there are no jobs being created for Africans. It is a band-aid solution. Over 60% of Africa’s population is under the age of 24. These people need jobs or we’ll have a continent of pirates or young people with no opportunities. It is critically important that people understand that Africans want what Westerners want.

Q In order to raise aid money, foundations and aid agencies often turn to television commercials panning across impoverished people amid a damaged wasteland. That hardly inspires confidence that any private funding would be worthwhile as a financial investment.

A I completely agree and that is one of the fundamental problems with the celebrity culture. The focus is so negative. In the book I call it the four horsemen of African apocalypse. They want to focus on war, disease, poverty and corruption. I met with an African woman in Kenya who said to me it is hard enough to raise a teenager anywhere in the world, but try to raise a teenager to be an engineer or a doctor or to really contribute to the global society when you are constantly being told you are poor, you’re inefficient, you need a handout. This is not a formula for success. It is a great disappointment that, by and large, celebrities use their platforms to basically push a negative story. That is not going to encourage anyone to Africa to invest.

Q So you advocate turning off the taps. How soon, how suddenly and how completely should they be turned off ?

A I appreciate you asking that question because I have been completely misrepresented and, I have to say, I think quite deliberately misrepresented, particularly by the NGO community.

I give a five-year example in my book. Very foolishly, the NGOs have jumped on that and [suggest I] said aid should be stopped immediately or, in the worst case, within five years. I’m not saying that at all. What I am saying is we need to have an exit strategy. Aid can, perhaps, only work when we know the tap will be turned off at some point. We need a phase-out plan to make sure that African governments can wean themselves off of aid. I have also said that countries have very different levels of economic development. My own home country, Zambia, is at a very different level than say, Ghana, or Kenya, or Somalia for that matter. You cannot have one blanket exit strategy for all of these countries.


geldof bono

Bono and Geldof at a DATA press conference in Berlin.

Q Much has been made in the media of pitting your ideas against major celebrities, musicians Bob Geldof and Bono of U2. Not that long ago we saw Bono sitting with our prime minister, eliciting a promise to increase Canada’s spending on Africa. What is your take on the rock star advocacy?

A They have become the de facto faces of Africa. The fact that they globally are viewed as the people defining the policy agenda, attending the G8 and the G20, is completely absurd. It is particularly ridiculous because I believe that the aid system has made many African governments so lazy they have created a vacuum where anyone–in this case celebrities –feel it is OK to jump in and start propounding policy on Africa.

We, as Africans and as a global society, should want to hear from the African governments — what their plan is, what their strategy is. I don’t want to hear from the celebrity about what they think Africans should be doing any more than a Canadian would want to hear from Michael Jackson about the credit crisis.

Q Not all National Post readers are policy-makers, so on a personal level, if someone in Canada is moved by the situation in Africa and would like to help, what would you recommend they do?

A We should be questioning our policy-makers about what they are doing….After a trillion dollars in aid over 60 years and the situation is getting worse, it beggars belief. Those are very poor returns and we would ask those questions about anything else, about any policy for business in the Western world…. I very much hope that if there is one thing that the book does, it is give people permission to ask the hard questions. Someone said to me last week that one of the problems for someone born in Western society is if they even begin to question the aid model they are labelled racist or categorized as insensitive or heartless and I think that is unfair. Also there is a Web site, kiva.org,where you can lend as little as $25 to support entrepreneurs in developing countries.

Q Your book has become a New York Times bestseller, you were named by TIME magazine as one of the 100 most influential people in the world and yet many object to your ideas. Who is not liking what you say?

A The pushback tends to come from a minority group in the Western countries. By that I mean the NGOs. Some NGOs, rather than have a debate about it, they prefer to label me a genocidal maniac or try to take pot shots or make personal attacks…. I understand they are very interested in keeping the status quo because that is where their jobs are.

Q Speaking of people who might not agree with you, on Monday you will be in Toronto debating your ideas with, among others, Stephen Lewis, a very well-known and passionate Canadian advocate for African aid. Do you see Mr. Lewis’s advocacy any different than Bob Geldof’s or Bono’s?

A By and large it is the same thing, raising money for Africa using what I call a negative platform. All I am saying is their interventions are not meeting the fundamental problems in Africa.

Q Mr. Lewis can draw a tear from almost any eye when he speaks about the problems in Africa. Are you nervous about facing him in public debate?

A No, because I am speaking from the heart. I’m speaking from growing up African. It breaks my heart that people continue to push a model of economic development that does not work and they know it does not work. So I believe it would be a much better use of Mr. Lewis’s time to actually agitate for the things that can meaningfully put a dent in poverty across the African continent instead of pushing a strategy that means that, in another 50 years … your children and your children’s children will basically be paying for my children and my children’s children to go to school and get health care. That is completely ridiculous and not a long-term solution.

stephen lewis

Canadian Stephen Lewis speaking out for aid in Africa

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World Fair Trade Day 2009

[Canmore, AB 05-08-09] There are times that I measure how to share with people what we do in our shop. There are those who are taken aback by the changes from conventional traded clothing to fair + sustainable clothing. I try to stay on the positive when describing that the cooperatives/companies that we buy our products from have treated the workers well and paid them fairly. It’s like either that is an assumed premise or they don’t really give a damn about who or what happened in the origins of what they wear. I understand the journey towards creating awareness and educating people is long and arduous but there are times I want to take a short cut and let out the frustration regarding the injustices and failure to really care.

I so appreciate those who have gone before us at ee like Yvon Chouinard who founded Patagonia and the Patagonia leadership team. They have journeyed faithfully to uphold people and the environment for over three decades. Through this long season of time they understand and accept their role in bringing incremental change in textile manufacturing and the marketplace. There is lots to learn and do for sure.

wftd

  • World Fair Trade Day is one of the opportunities to create awareness and educate people about the need to make choices towards making the world a better place. Encounter Earth is hosting a WFTD 2009 event. We will have live music and fair coffee/teas between 2-4 PM at the shop. So if you are nearby stop on in and if not, take some time to educate yourself… become aware and do not choose ignorance as an excuse to support exploitation of millions of the working poor in the world.


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