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Ten Signs of Peace on Earth: The Children’s Culture Connection

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cultural-connection.gifThe good news that is the common thread running through children in war-torn Iraq or poverty-laden India, is that they all still have hope. And Dina Fesler, the founder of Children’s Culture Connection has discovered that when we give American children a taste of the world’s cultures, it helps them connect with kids who have very little, and empowers them by showing that they, in fact, can make a difference in the lives of others.

When news of economic recessions and crazed holiday shoppers makes you wonder if the notion of ‘peace on earth’ is really more than a greeting card cliche, take a minute to read the top ten accomplishments of the Children’s Culture Connection in 2008. Kids helping kids moves us down the path toward universal peace.

Ten Signs of Peace on Earth, written by the Children’s Culture Connection founder:

  1. A CCC presentation to a church youth group in Minnesota on Haitian culture inspired the kids to organize a book collection drive for the children of Haiti. By October, CCC helped them ship a container with over 3,000 books to Haitian students who currently must share one book among 10 children.
  2. When 10-year old Abby learned about Guatemalan culture at CCC’s first-ever Children’s Culture Carnival, she—with CCC’s support and encouragement—wove 100 friendship bracelets and sold them to her classmates. Not only did Abby donate her proceeds to CCC’s Guatemalan charity, Life of Hope, to pay for scholarships for three kids in the La Limonada slum for one year, but she and her classmates have started a CCC pen pal and art exchange with the Guatemalan children to teach one another about their lives.angel_of_lights.jpg
  3. Through the sales of our own handmade greeting cards, the CCC team raised enough money to build a house for an impoverished family in Vietnam through the CCC’s Vietnamese charity, Children of Vietnam. Their tin-roofed plastic bag-sided house was torn down to make way for a solid cement structure in which the family’s children can safely live.
  4. War Kids Relief, CCC’s in-house Iraq program, has recruited 100 kids in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Minnesota to participate in a three-month peace-building cultural exchange with kids in Baghdad, Kirkuk, and Suleimanya. This first of its kind pilot program will expand in 2009 to help over 4,500 children in both countries work together to build a foundation for a sustainable peace.
  5. 16-year old Sara organized a bracelet-making party with her classmates to make friendship bracelets for kids in CCC’s Peruvian charity, Angels of the Amazon. Their goal was to let the Peruvian children know that American kids are interested in their lives and want to be friends with them. They also had a good opportunity to practice their Spanish while writing messages of friendship on a tag on each bracelet that CCC sent down to the Peru charity to distribute.
  6. A 5th grade Minnesota class is beginning a peace-building cultural exchange with a group of impoverished Roma children who suffer from ethnic discrimination served through CCC’s Bulgarian charity, Orphan Sponsorship Intl. After learning how these Roma children have suffered from generations of ethnic discrimination throughout Europe, the American students will reach out to them in friendship through letters, artwork, and video lessons teaching one another about their respective cultures.
  7. The CCC team collected more than $1,200 worth of gently used Christmas ornaments to donate to Maria’s Children, CCC’s Russian charity, for the December opening of that group’s new thrift shop. Money generated through the resale of these items will be used for food programs serving the Russian orphans.
  8. In Washington, D.C., kids at an inner-city youth center are participating in a cultural exchange with AIDS orphans in CCC’s Kenyan charity, Nyumbani Children’s Home. This four-month exchange includes making scrapbooks for one another and will culminate with the D.C. kids organizing a fundraiser to support the educational needs of their new Kenyan friends.
  9. CCC board members took 26 teenage girls from ASHA, CCC’s Indian charity, on a five-day adventure outside the Pune slums they live in to inspire them to stay in or return to school by showing them the possibilities of their lives. Since that week, an education fund has been set up to provide financial assistance for the many girls who now have returned to school and break the cycle of poverty they live in.
  10. CCC launched its first yearlong school-to-school pen pal/cultural exchange project connecting students from an all-Caucasian school in rural Minnesota with an inner-city, highly diverse St. Paul public school class that includes African American, Hispanic American, and Native American students, as well as new immigrant students from Cambodia, Liberia, Burma, Somalia, Mexico, Ethiopia, and Laos. Each child has been matched with a pen pal from the other school, and teachers on both sides report being surprised at how quickly both classes have come to love and respect one another. Their yearlong exchange will culminate in a joint field trip to the Minnesota History Museum.

Children’s Culture Connection is a nonprofit organization that helps children (and adults!) discover the richness of the world’s many cultures with the goal of making  connections with, and raising money for, at-risk children throughout the world. 

(Thanks to Kelli Bickman for submitting the story! … Her mom works with the group.)

Angel of Lights – photo by John Stone, eyeclectic.net

 

19 Awarded Carnegie Medals for Bravery

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carnegie.jpgA Wisconsin man who lunged in front of a train to save a 3-year-old from certain death and a New York man who twice entered a burning building to rescue two little girls were among 19 people awarded Carnegie medals Monday for their courage.

The medal is awarded throughout the United States and Canada to those who risk their lives to an extraordinary degree while saving or attempting to save the lives of others. Three of the awardees lost their lives in the performance of their rescue acts.

The heroes announced today bring to 92 the number of awards made in 2008 and to 9,243 the total number of awards since the Pittsburgh-based Fund’s inception in 1904. Commission President Mark Laskow stated that each of the awardees or their next of kin will also receive a financial grant. Throughout the 104 years since the Fund was established by industrialist-philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, $31.1 million has been given in one-time grants, scholarship aid, death benefits, and continuing assistance.

Read about more medal winners at MSNBC.com 

 

Wish Comes True for Boy With Cancer to Meet President Bush

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boy-w-cancer.jpgA 12 year-old boy with brain cancer was granted his wish by the Make-a Wish foundation — to meet with President Bush. He has some advice for parents of kids with cancer, too: “It’s going to be alright.”

Couple Brings Christmas Cheer to Needy

A non-profit organization, run entirely by a couple from inside their home, bring Christmas to families every year who might not experience the holiday  — helping people like Iris Holloway who has not only lost her job, but recently was diagnosed with bone cancer. (See video and photos with the story on Oklahoma’s News9)

Central African Republic Dialogue Opens Window for Peace

A dialogue in Central African Republic that brought together the government and leaders of multiple bush rebellions has opened a window for peace in one of Africa’s most tangled—and forgotten—conflicts.

In what analysts hail as a potential peace-building success story for the international community, President Francois Bozize agreed with the rebel and opposition leaders to form a consensus government that would rule until scheduled Presidential elections in 2010. (Reuters News Reports)

IKEA Donates Plush Toy Proceeds to Kids’ Education in Poor Countries

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ikea-toy.jpgThanks to IKEA and its customers, scores of projects aimed at improving the education of school children around the world will benefit from a holiday donation of €5 million, almost $7 million, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) announced last week.

As part of its fourth annual “€1 is a fortune” campaign, IKEA will donates €1 to UNICEF and Save the Children for every stuffed animal it sells. So far, the Swedish retail giant has sold some 4.1 million soft toys.

McCartney Meets His Fans for Christmas (Video)

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paul-mccartney-signing.jpgSir Paul McCartney met with fans and signed copies of his new album Electric Arguments in a London record store, giving many people a Christmas present they will treasure forever.

Colorado Schools to Eliminate Sale of Sodas, Offer Healthy Choices

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soda-machine.jpgIn order to improve student’s health, the Colorado Board of Education says schools under its jurisdiction will no longer be allowed to sell sodas (soft drinks), including diet sodas, or other sugary drinks in vending machines and cafeterias. (RockyMountainNews.com)

Adrian Grenier Braves The Snow To Help Fight Hunger

Despite the blustery December weather that hit earlier today in New York City, Hollywood star Adrian Grenier nonetheless was busy lending a hand for charity. The 32-year old actor rode shotgun in City Harvest’s new hybrid truck and helped pick up unused food from local bakeries and restaurants in NYC. (Ecorazzi has the story)

Preventable Blindness Dramatically Reduced Worldwide

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ghana-eye-surgery.jpgThanks to the World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Trachoma Initiative, the number of people suffering with preventable blindness in the last ten years has been reduced from 63 million to 41 million, according to a 2008 announcement.

The International Trachoma Initiative (ITI) was founded in 1998 in response to the World Health Organization’s call to eliminate preventable blindness — trachoma — by the year 2020.  ITI’s founding partners, Pfizer Inc and the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, saw the need for an international charity dedicated solely to the elimination of blinding trachoma.

In 2008, the number of Pfizer-donated antibiotic treatments surpassed 100 million, and the number of people who have received blindness-preventing eyelid surgeries exceeded 410,000.

Italy’s Poor to Dine on Contraband Caviar

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caviar.jpgSome homeless people in Italy will be savoring beluga caviar this Christmas, thanks to officials who seized 88 pounds of the contraband delicacy from smugglers. Rather than destroy the delicacy, authorities decided to donate it to charities. (AP story via MSNBC)

Dog Rescued From Frozen Missouri River

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angry_sea.jpgBlack Eagle firefighters scaled a railroad trestle to rescue a dog that had fallen through the ice into the freezing Missouri River this afternoon. The male dog was able to muster up enough strength to bite down on a rope thrown. (Great Falls Tribune.com w/ photo)

Tree Farm Donates Trees to Foreclosed Reno Residents

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trees-farm.jpgThe owner of Ferguson Tree Farms says he is giving away one tree to every Reno family who can’t afford one this Christmas. He says he gave away 400 trees Wednesday alone. “The economy is just really down, so there’s so many stories from people who come in here. They’ve lost their cable or their house is foreclosed, so I just try to do what I can do and still survive and make Christmas for everyone here in Reno.” (From the Channel 4 KRNV web site – includes a video)

Cinderella’s Fairy Godmother Helps Abused Kids at Christmas

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fairy_godmother-charselle.jpgMy lawyer girlfriend asked, “Will you help with the holiday party for the abused kids?” “Sure, what do you want me to do?” I replied.

“Oh, just be some fairytale character” she said and hung up. I sat there staring at the phone. Which character?

My girlfriend was on the board of an organization, in San Francisco, that deals with child abuse and works on prevention through parental education. I grew up with loving parents and a secure home life, so I wanted to help.

I’ve been a performer all of my life and had no problem with that part of her request. I just wanted to make sure I chose the right character.

At first I started thinking of holiday characters like Frosty and Rudolph but they weren’t really ‘fairytale characters’ . Then I spent time considering fairy tales and nursery rhymes. I wasn’t the Pinocchio or Little Mermaid type, more like the grandmother, than Little Red Riding Hood.

Then the perfect idea came twinkling in, as if by magic. Of course …Cinderella had been abused…maybe the kids would relate to The Fairy Godmother.

Facebook Pastor Raises $21,000 for Needy Kids

Dozens of shrieking, smiling schoolchildren tore into Christmas gifts on Tuesday, the holiday coming nine days early thanks to hundreds of people they’d never met and Facebook, the social networking site. MSNBC has the story of the Atlanta pastor who took his crusade to the internet.

‘Operation Christmas Child’ Brings Cheer to Neediest Children Around the World

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shoe-box-gifts.jpgThe annual ‘shoebox’ campaign led by the Salvation Army – ‘Operation Christmas Child’ is the world’s largest children’s Christmas project. Since 1990 the project has sent a message of Christmas joy from the UK to more than 60 million boys and girls throughout the world.

The last month has seen the 2008 campaign in full swing with homes, schools, workplaces and community groups throughout the land ransacking their cupboards to locate any shoe boxes that haven’t made their way into the recycling bin or (like mine) been stashed away at the top of the wardrobe!

Nike Donates $100,00 to Help Rebuild Football Field and Track for New Orleans

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no-football-team.jpgNIKE will make a $100,000 contribution to George Washington Carver High School in the 9th Ward of New Orleans for installing a football field and track in the community. The donation, which supports Carver’s “Field of Dreams” initiative, forms part of Nike’s continued rebuilding effort in New Orleans, since Katrina.

“This project is going to be the first public space of its kind in New Orleans, serving as a true community space in every sense of the word,” said Field of Dreams founder Brian Bordainick, who is a Carver High School Teacher and member of Teach For America. “Nike’s commitment reinforces the fact that individuals can believe in their own power to create a lasting change in their community.”

Scientists Record Music Composed by Fish, Ants (Video)

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tropical-fish-school.jpgScientists at Georgia Tech in Atlanta are setting the movements of fish and ants to music. The results could help both animals and humans — especially the vision impaired — live richer lives.

Breakthrough Solar Dye Coating Converts Glass Windows Into Solar Power Plants

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sliver-panel.jpgMIT researchers have developed a new technique that involves coating glass with a specific mixture of transparent dyes which redirects sunlight to photovoltaic cells in the frame. The technology, outlined in the journal Science in July, could be used to convert glass buildings into vast energy plants. (BBC News reported on the discovery)

Iran’s Generosity in Hosting Afghan Refugees Praised

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iran-refugee-ceremony.jpgThe United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has lauded Iran’s long record of generosity in hosting one million displaced Afghans since 1998 calling their settlement camps maybe the best in the world.

“In my work I’m used to visiting the worst places in the world, where people are suffering and life is tough,” António Guterres said on Friday, during a visit to Torbat-e-Jam, a camp located about 80 kilometres from Iran’s border with Afghanistan, housing some 5,000 refugees.

“It warms my heart to visit what is probably the best refugee settlement in Iran, if not the world,” he stated as he surveyed the 100-hectare refugee community of solid brick houses, well-equipped schools and clinics and a mosque and community centre featuring a refugee art exhibit.