Humanitarian


Free Burma!

1 iPod = 900 children fed

World Vision Mongolia sponsorshipI saw this on a web site* a while ago, and it has really made me think. I already sponsor one child, a little 7-year old girl in Mongolia. Today I was out shopping, and saw the new iPods. They’re very cool. And then I saw a World Vision** stand there in the shopping centre. I had been thinking of sponsoring another child, and so when I saw them I had to go ahead and do that! I now sponsor a 3-year old boy, also in Mongolia.

The message of the image above had been bouncing around in my head, reminding me of perspectives and balance. I probably will buy a new iPod sometime soon, but what has really thrilled me is sponsoring this additional child. Won’t you consider doing that, too? Or make a one-off donation? Every little bit helps. Here’s where you find out more:

* I didn’t make a note of where I found this graphic. If you know where it came from, please let me know and I will gladly give the correct acknowledgment here.

** Charity Navigator has given World Vision a 4-star rating after evaluating its organizational efficiency and capacity.

Bono and Oprah have gone on a shopping spree launching the (Product) Red line, a collection of products including phones, clothing, and a special-edition iPod to raise money for HIV / AIDs in Africa. There’s a MySpace site about (Product) Red, too. Buy (Red)!

Charity Navigator has in-depth analysis on over 400 US charities, and rates them. They also have articles about various aspects of charities. Well worth a review.

A coalition of aid, development and environmental non-government organisations has researched, and commissioned the CSIRO to research, the effects of climate change on development, particularly in the Asia-Pacific region. The results of the research showed that the likely effect of rising sea levels due to global warming will be to cause a mass exodus to Australia. The Australian Government is being urged to review its immigration program in light of this.

Australia has made a disproportionate contribution to global warming.

The report found, for example:

  • Millions in the Asia-Pacific region will be forced to relocate, from sea level rises up to 50cm by 2070, having an economic impact of thousands of billions. Most affected will be islands in the Pacific, India, Bangladesh, Vietnam and China.
  • The climate changes will trigger the increase of heat-related illnesses, while flooding and cyclones will also increase injuries and deaths.
  • Water resources will be challenged with both drought, and intrusion of salt-water into freshwater sources.

World Vision Australia chief executive, Tom Costello, has said that it is the poorest of the poor who will be hardest hit. Climate change “fundamentally change the way we aid the world’s poor. It will undermine the value and impact of current aid spending and will lead to far greater calls for assistance from those hurt most. The impacts of climate change will require Australia to respond far more frequently.”

The World Vision Australia Media Release reported:

Victorian and Tasmanian moderator of the Uniting Church Rev Jason Kioa, himself a Pacific Islander, said global warming was as much a moral, social, economic and theological issue as an environmental one: “We’re deeply concerned about the impact climate change will have on the lives of vulnerable people in our region.”

The report recommends that Australian aid needs help the nations most likely to be affected by climate change to prepare for those changes, and to assist in working towards more use of renewable energy and energy efficiency. And, Australia needs to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, while assisting those displaced by climate change.

For more details, see:

World Vision reports that as soon as the truce in Lebanon began, they started shipping in urgently needed basic supplies, such as water purification units, hygiene kits and food. Southern Lebanon, particularly, has been affected, with 100,000 people or more isolated by the conflict. As well as continuing those activities, World Vision will be expanding child-focused programs and protection, including psychosocial activities and Child Friendly Spaces:

As in all conflicts, children suffer the most. UNICEF estimates nearly a third of those killed and nearly half of the displaced in Lebanon were children. World Vision has opened two Child Friendly Spaces to help the displaced. At one site, a mother named Fatima watched her three children play and said with tears in her eyes, “I can barely recognize them with their new little smiling faces.” Her family had been displaced from their village for two weeks.

Already World Vision has provided aid to 30,000 people in Lebanon. Help World Vision in its work by: