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Archive for September, 2008

Something a little more personal.

September 29, 2008 salvokat Leave a comment

Hello.

I’ve noticed that I’ve blogged nothing but advertising for events and arbitrary news articles recently.
That’s ok I suppose. But I don’t know what you come here for. So maybe I’ll try something a little more personal, to work my way back into blogging about my life and experiences…

I’ve just uploaded a heap of photos to facebook. But even if you don’t have facebook you can have a look, and please do – they’re really fun! 

Sunday School Anniversary – Some Junior Soldier Enrollments, and some interesting costumes!

I’ll Fight Day – The Spirit of The Streets Choir etc.

African Praise Meeting – Lots of people, lots of praise, Commissioners Mungate & Lieut-Colonels Finger

BIG – Rockclimbing

BIG – Dress Up/Messy Games Night

Alanah’s 16th – Some great shots of crazy outfits

Cupcakes, Apples & Baby-cinos - Some simple pics from my time in Sydney in July.

 

        

Seductive Sweet

September 18, 2008 salvokat Leave a comment

Chocolate leaves a bitter taste
September 18, 2008

It is enjoyed by millions of connoisseurs around the world, but in recent years chocolate has started to leave an unpleasant aftertaste.

Canadian author Carol Off, whose book alerted readers to the ethical quagmire of chocolate consumption when it was released two years ago, is currently in Australia to talk up the topic.

Her book, Bitter Chocolate, lifted the lid on the use of child slavery in the cocoa plantations of West Africa.

The link between slavery and chocolate is as old as history, Off said.

“There has always been a case where cocoa has been produced by people who didn’t have a lot for people who do,” she said.

“The Aztecs and the Mayans produced cocoa for the King of Montezuma and in Europe they produced slaves to harvest cocoa beans for the chocolate fanatics of Europe.”

Things haven’t changed, she says.

“We have chocolate bars today that seem to be cheap and affordable even to a child … but the truth of the matter is we can only afford this chocolate because people who are picking the beans and cultivating it are children in West Africa,” she said.

“A lot of children voluntarily go (to the plantations) because there’s nothing for them in countries like Mali.

“Their crops are failing and nothing is growing in that part of the world, So a lot of the kids are sent off by their parents to get some money.

“But child traffickers see the vulnerability of these kids, there’s nobody watching over them and they round them up and take them over the border into the Ivory Coast and make money from them.”

It is difficult to help these children, Off says, because much of the Ivory Coast, which produces most of the world’s cocoa supply, is torn by civil war.

The government uses profits from the cocoa trade to fund the war, Off says.

“The complicity here is with them and the big chocolate companies.”

“There are only a handful of multinationals that control the industry and basically they are able to operate with impunity in Africa and Ivory Coast because everybody that has power over the situation is getting what they want.”

Fair trade systems were having a small impact, Off said, but would never provide a full solution.

“They pay a premium to the farmer, the chocolates are more expensive and the profits go back to the farmers.

“Where I went in those situations, the kids are going to school, there was health care, clean water and all these things were paid for by fair trade premiums – but there’s so few of them.

“It represents not even one per cent of all the cocoa being produced, so the vast majority is under this other system.”

The CEO of The Confectionery Manufacturers of Australasia (CMA), Trish Hyde, said the CMA was a part of a global initiative to eliminate child slavery and forced labour in the industry.

She said the CMA and other chocolate companies from around the world were working with the governments of the Ivory Coast and Ghana to help eliminate child slavery and forced labour.

“The important thing is from our perspective is the collaboration with government and NGOs (Non-Government Organisations) on the ground, with industry programs … that are actually making changes in the communities.”

The CMA says that in July this year it also helped implement a reporting system that would certify all labour on West African cocoa farms.
AAP

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2008/09/17/1221330918327.html

I’ll Fight Day – Social Justice Conference

September 8, 2008 salvokat Leave a comment

Greetings!

Thankyou for your keen interest in the I’ll Fight Day – Social Justice Conference on the 13th of September 2008, held at The Salvation Army, Rivervale Corps.

Please find here some resources that are available to you for the purposes of spreading the word.

Please seriously consider spending the day with us.

“The need to rediscover that God is just and sends the Spirit to do his work of justice through God’s people is urgent now. Such an undertaking requires Christianity’s best thoughts, imagination and energy to be worked out in the world.” – Ash Barker (Preface to “Following Fire – How the Spirit Leads Us To Fight Injustice” ed. Cheryl Catford)

Be Blessed! Through Grace.

——-

Dear Comrade,

RE: “I’ll Fight Day” – Social Justice Conference.

The Salvation Army in Western Australia is hosting a Social Justice Conference on the 13th September 2008.

It will be held at The Salvation Army, Rivervale Corps (cnr. Norwood and Francisco Streets, Rivervale) from 9.30am to 4.30pm (with Registration from 9am).

The conference will have two main focus areas, Poverty and Human Trafficking.

The day will consist of guest speakers (including – among others – a group from TEAR Australia), video presentations, workshops, etc. and will engage your heart and mind around what you can do to help Fight these injustices.

There will be a special guest appearance of the Spirit of the Streets Choir. The choir was initially formed in late 2006 by the BIG ISSUE newspaper sellers of Perth. It finds its newer members among other marginalised people, outside the reach of the mainstream community; the homeless, those with a mental illness, the disabled and those affected by drugs or alcohol.

There will be a crèche facility provided upon request (this must be pre-arranged – call Kathleen Pearce on 0417 972 936).

Lunch, and refreshments during the day are included in the low cost of the event.

$15 and $10 for Student/Concession.

By sharing with us your valuable reflections regarding the day, you will be given an opportunity to win a door prize! There will also be many resources available for your information and for purchase.

Please seriously consider spending the day with us.

Sincerely yours,

Jen Noonan & Robert Maley
Divisional Social Justice Representatives

Click Here to Download the Conference Advertising Pack