11.24.2008

I need Africa more than Africa needs me

I realized after I posted this that I needed to be a little clearer in my description :)

I was asked by an organization called Mocha Club to write about the statement "I need Africa more than Africa needs me." They are a community-based website where visitors can give $7 a month (the cost of 2 mochas) to support a project in Africa. Journalism students at CBU are using this opportunity to spread the word about their organization: 

At this very moment, the Africa I experienced over a year and a half ago still exists. While I sit in class, Eveline and Sofia do as well. In the middle of Mathare surrounded by the world of shanties and AIDS, their smiles are etched in my mind forever, as I stress in my cottage over unwritten papers.

I become numb to a greater reality, that life in Africa awakened me to.

Is there something in the air, or in the soil that changes my perception? Or is it simply the reality of life around me. The suffering of life, and joy of spirit, that makes me aware of life beyond the task list of the day.

It is the hard things of life that awaken me to that reality. Death, sickness, hurt and struggles. These things touch emotions that otherwise go unturned. But there are opposites of these as well that serve the same effect. Life, health, joy and peace. In Kenya I saw glimpses of these as well, which brought a brighter sense of reality. A sense of purpose and belonging.

There are so many situations going on in Africa at this moment.

President Carter recently commented on the intense state of Zimbabwe. The Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo is multiplying, and the crisis in Darfur continues. Change is needed. The nations are crying out for hope and for true change. The answer to the call lies in Jesus Christ alone.

So do I need Africa more than Africa needs me?

I think the answer is that we both need Christ.

Neither of us will answer the problems of the other.

While I may not be the cure to poverty, the kingdom of God is the cure for desperation of Africa, and my own desperation to truly live.

So now i pose the question to you: Africa is more than faces of pity and hopelessness,

11.19.2008

The conspiracy

Okay.
So I may not necessarily like the title, because the word has been used continuously in an attempt o be "different."
Linguistics aside, this is onto something.
We watched this video last week in chapel. Along with several others,
as we were invited by Brian Zuniga to be a part of:

This is more than just the "reason for the season."
It's a crazy thought.
To really value giving more than receiving - so much so that we may never see the results or appreciation of the gift we have given.
We wonder and talk - How can we be a part of the "Christmas Spirit" while not participating in the consumerism that it entails?
As you figure out what that looks like for you during this season, there are some options that the website offers that are interesting.
If you really enjoy gift giving, make sure that your gifts are fair trade!

Some options are:
Trade as One (on online store)
Give a goat through (or many other survival necessities) through World Vision.
Buy freedom and support lawyers through International Justice Mission.
Donate and help build a well through blood:water mission.

Also, let your favorite brand names know that you don't support products that are slave-made.

I feel like this conversation is just beginning...

11.15.2008

SoCal Fires

Just walked outside with Merrick... we can see flames off in the distance of the chino fire.
Stay updated at these sites:
Map of Wildfires
Keep in prayer...

11.12.2008

Venting: Online Airline Services.

Comment for today:
Virgin airlines are wonderful and the website is amazingly easy to navigate.
Lufthansa on the other hand...
Well here's my story.
I have been trying to redeem miles from flying to New Delhi this past summer.
So I created a "miles and more" membership when I got back.
The website gave me a temporary membership number, and said I would receive my PIN number in the mail after the first "mile" was earned. 
Unfortunately, this was after my miles were taken...
All to say it has left me in a fix.
Yes, this was back in May - over six months ago.
I lose patience with the website and tell myself I will go back and try again later, somehow thinking things will be different.
...
Well, I guess I will try again later.

11.04.2008

When you vote, remember

The world is watching.

11.03.2008

Equal Exchange

There is one thing lately that has fascinated me and drove my crazy at the same time about the human race.

Opinions.

Everybody seems to have one, some with more validity than others based on their source of information and thought process.

The world of blogging has allowed every “Joe the plumber” to have a venue to have their opinions spread out for the literal world to see.

Rather than a simple speech there is an opportunity for people to comment, for ideas to be discussed. Sure, chat rooms may do the same thing – but the networking capability of blogging has ushered its induction as a new favorite pastime of the international society.

 

In a random search for other blogs interested in social justice issues I happened across the following four blogs;

 

http://matthewryanward.blogspot.com/

http://trevinwax.com/

http://chrisblattman.blogspot.com/

http://www.refugeesinternational.org/blog/

 

They are just four ordinary people, sharing what they have found, and inviting discussion about their conclusions.

 

And now for today’s topic.

Coffee, food and clothes seem to be the three things that college students consume the most of. Typically we are unaware of where there these resources have come from. Whether slavery or abuse was involved in producing them does not often seem to cross our minds as we order our pumpkin spice latte celebrating the autumn season.

A few weekends ago, CBU went to APU for a Speech and Debate tournament. After leaving at seven in the morning on a Saturday, the on campus coffee shop was a welcome sight about halfway through the day. Although the rivalry between University sports can get intense, I was inspired by something that I saw when walking inside cornerstone café.

http://www.equalexchange.coop/

Four organizations have gotten together to define Fair trade as

 “a trading partnership, based on dialogue, transparency and respect, that seeks greater equity in international trade. It contributes to sustainable development by offering better trading conditions to, and securing the rights of, marginalized producers and workers - especially in the South. Fair Trade organisations (backed by consumers) are engaged actively in supporting producers, awareness raising, and in campaigning for changes in the rules and practice of conventional international trade.”

I have blogged about this before, but after finding how APU has made a decision to change companies to a fair trade company, I began to wonder where the coffee, tea and sugar that CBU uses finds its origin.

Equal Exchange offers everything from coffee, to chocolate bars, cocoa, teas and snacks such as almonds, cranberries and pecas. Brochures feature pictures and reflections from farmers, producers and consumers that are part of its change.

The following image puts into perspective how different their process if from the conventional coffee chain.

 

With many of the problems in the trade world today, it is easy to feel overwhelmed. When confronted with the facts that fairly traded products are more expensive, we often choose the cheaper of the options out of “necessity.”

Equal Exchange works to connect the consumer with the farmer.

Diego Perez Lopez, President of CIRSA Cooperative in Chiapas, Mexico said, “Consumers and farmers must continue to walk together. We are all working together in this cooperative effort for the good of all… we are all in the same struggle for a life of peace.”

Aside from workers being treated with fairness, they pride themselves in over 90% of their products as organic.

Dona Ana Lucia Banol, part of the cooperative in Colombia said, “Everything I grow is organic. Why? You see my hands; they’re covered in dirt But they’re no longer burnt from using chemicals. And my land? Well, it’s time to give back to the land a part of what the land has given to me.”

As college students and as followers of Jesus we need to be aware how our decisions affect others – in more drastic ways than we can imagine. With the upcoming election many of us can feel powerless, as if our voice is so small in the presidential campaign of California that it will not matter.

And we vote anyways.

By emailing our food service and other places we shop, we do have a voice in the market of the future and the market of today. So send a few emails... let me know what you find out :)