Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2008

An insider's report on the China quake

People have asked Lisa and me if we were traveling near the China earthquake epicenter last month or if either of the girls have a connection to that area. The answer to both questions is "almost" -- Sophie is from Hubei provience and BiBi from Chongqing, each of which border the Sichuan province where most of the destruction took place. If we'd been in Chongqing, we probably would have felt the quake but not been affected by it.

Every day we read emails and online posts from other people in the adoption world who were affected, and I'd like to share one of those emails. It includes links to a charity we recommend that usually assists with adoptions but has lately been throw into disaster relief. Jenny Bowen, the executive director of Half the Sky Foundation, writes:

Dear Friends,

It's Monday afternoon here in China. As I write this, the entire country just held 3 minutes of silence to commence a 3-day period of national mourning. It began at 2:28 p.m., marking the very moment the massive quake struck in Wenchuan County, Sichuan. Flags flew at half-staff, the people wore white flowers and, heads bowed, held hands. Across the country, horns
and sirens wailed in grief.

There are 32,477 people confirmed dead, more than 35,000 still missing. ...

Ziyang Social Welfare Institution (SWI) – Building sustained severe damage. They care for 48 children, 20 of them under four years-old. They request 50 cribs and cots, bandages, 10 milk pots, children's clothes, 100 sets of bedding, bowls, spoons, chopsticks, toys and stationary supplies.

Deyang and Nanchong SWIs both have received notification that they should prepare immediately to receive newly orphaned children. All the children are living in tents. HTS will provide additional tents, beds and other requested items.

Guangyuan SWI – The children remain in tents. They were notified that they will be receiving several newly orphaned children (perhaps 50-60) very soon.



Shifang saw many of its schools destroyed, hundreds of children and their teachers buried. They sent us this heartbreaking story during the rescue efforts at Hongbai Primary School."

Here Jenny re-tells a story that will always be with me.

"'We found him!' Teacher Zhang Huibing's body was finally discovered, frozen in a posture of pushing against the door frame. According to the students saved by him, when the earthquake happened, Teacher Zhang was on the platform of the classroom on the second floor, which was very near the door. He yelled to the students, 'Run outside! Hurry!' And he somehow held the door frame up with both arms as the children ran out, one by one. Just as all the students were safely evacuated, the building collapsed on him. Teacher Zhang, who was only 30 years-old, had a 4-year-old child of his own."

About 30 children, from Yingxiu and Dujiangyang, were taken a Chengdu city park, the Qingyang Sports Center, which has been converted to a refugee camp. ... Most of the children in this camp who survived were in their teens. They told us that many younger children in their town did not survive because those in the primary schools and kindergartens were napping when the quake hit and could not run. ... The youngest camp resident was 16 days old.

Perhaps today's most heartbreaking story was about some of the 70 injured children who'd been carried down from the affected areas to Huaxi Hospital. ... A few children remained alone and unclaimed. They were required to sign their own consent forms so that the doctors could amputate their limbs to save their lives.

There are two ways to donate to Half the Sky. The first is their Children's Earthquake Fund via Global Giving. GG takes 10%, but it allows HTS staff to focus on relief efforts rather than processing funds. That URL is www.globalgiving.com/pr/2100/proj2086a.html.

The other way is directly to Half the Sky at give.halfthesky.org/prostores/servlet/Categories?category=Children's+Earthquake+Fund.

Friday, February 01, 2008

Love Without Boundaries Ain't Nothing to F With

Almost two months ago, Lisa got involved with an online fundraising challenge that ended today. And no matter what happens in the Super Bowl on Sunday, it won't be as remotely exciting as this contest.

The rules of the 50-day-long challenge were this: Whatever nonprofit has the most unique donors (not the most in donations) at the end of each day wins $1,000. And at the end of the 50 days, the one with the most total donors wins $50,000. Plus, the groups all keep their donations.

Oh, and all the donations have to come via Facebook.

Lisa and I supported Love Without Boundaries, a nonprofit that provides surgeries for Chinese orphans. And after giving our two donations, we didn't do much for a while. Then the final week rolled around and LWB was trading first place with a Free Tibet group, and we suddenly found ourselves rounding up every Facebook user we knew to give. And then we went to those we didn't know. Then we started harassing people we know to join Facebook and give.

In the end, we probably pestered 35 people to give, some of them in the closing minutes. And even though the West-Coast-based Tibet group started the final day 170 donors in the lead, LWB won by 42.

Not that Tibetan Freedom Movement was hurting. They ended the challenge with $130,000 between donations, daily prizes and their $25,000 second-place prize. LWB finished up an amazing $155,000.



If only all charity work were this much fun.

Friday, June 22, 2007

A big fat crazy wedding present

If you've been reading here lately, you know that our friends Eric and Genevieve just got married, and it was an epic wedding at that. But unlike most couples who spend their time and money to throw a big shindig, E&G aren't getting anything back, because their registry consisted solely of a Heifer.org donation page.

I can't applaud this enough -- Heifer is one of those truly perfect nonprofits that we give to whenever we can. It's one of those things that I love to see people do, even if Lisa and I weren't selfless enough to do it ourselves.

We made our donation this week (and got it matched by corporate America), but I'm hoping to surprise the couple with a little something extra. If anyone out there has thought even once about donating to Heifer lately, I hope you'll click on this link and do so:

http://www.heifer.org/c.edJRKQNiFiG/b.488975/site/apps/ka/ec/store.asp?StoreId=5006

It would be amazing if just a few people did this and generated a few extra bucks. But I also harbor a small dream that we can get this picked up by some of the community-driven sites like Digg or Reddit and make this thing explode. I'm imagining the couple coming back from their honeymoon to find out that thousands of people have donated and made this one wedding registry just explode.

So who's with me? Can we get the online community to jump in a do big community service while at the same time giving a deserving couple a big crazy surprise?

Monday, December 25, 2006

In the spirit of the holidays

Before Christmas ends, I'd like to get out one recommendation (and supporting link) for Kiva.org. They're like the Ebay of micro-loans. If you have $75 to loan, they'll match you up with a sheepherder somewhere who needs that amount. You get your money back without interest, and no one has yet defaulted on of these loans.

Anyway, seems like the kind of charity that we should all be doing this time of year.