20 June 2006
Lima, Peru
Dear Friends,
The rush of activities here often keeps us from pausing and reflecting
on all that God is teaching us—and from celebrating all
that God is doing in and through us. Last week, as we moved our
office to the first floor of an old house in Lima’s Jesus
Maria district, our Joining Hands Against Hunger network of churches,
non-profit organizations, and grass-roots organizations took the
time to stop and review where God has brought us in this last
year.
For the last five years, our network identified three critical
areas in which poor Peruvian communities are struggling in these
globalized times: local development (enough income to put food
on the table); environmental justice (or call it “Creation
care”—enough for families to live a healthy life);
and human rights (enough to live life with dignity).
Local development
In the last three years, our 125 artisans have increased the
quality of their handicrafts and sales volume from $8,000 to $100,000.
We’ve opened up a fair trade store in a Lima hotel, where
sales are growing. A Presbyterian Women’s Birthday Offering
grant enables us to reach out to more artisans living in extreme
poverty. By the end of their 18-month training period—in
which they learn product design, quality control and microenterprise
skills—most of the artisans have increased their income
between 100 and 300 percent! We hope to train 400 artisans by
late 2008, thanks to the Presbyterian Women and our very dedicated
staff!
Though many organizations claim to work with the poorest, few
are able to help people living in extreme poverty increase their
income in a sustainable way, so we are deeply thankful that “Bridges
of Hope” project is having the impact it is. Many churches
are ordering a “Christmas Box” of quality Peruvian
handicrafts to promote mission during the Christmas season. (The
ordering deadline is August 31.) For information, contact Giddings-Lovejoy
Presbytery (Bob Thornberry directs the U.S. side of the project,
“Partners for Just Trade” from St. Louis: partnersforjusttrade
[at] yahoo.com). Bob can send a 10-minute video on “Bridges
of Hope” that will help churches understand the lives and
dreams of the artisans. You can also check out the products
and artisans on our Web page.
Environmental justice: Bringing people together
to care for God’s children
Our network supported the parents, teachers, and church and community
members of the Movement for Health in La Oroya, Peru’s most
contaminated city, in their struggle for a healthier environment.
A St. Louis University study that our network supported revealed
that 97 percent of La Oroya’s 10,000 children have lead
poisoning due primarily to the Doe Run Company’s metal smelter.
One U.S. scientist found that arsenic contamination is so bad
that the probability of contracting cancer in La Oroya is 2,000
times more likely than the U.S.’s maximum permissible standard.
Our network was able to get the word out about what was happening,
and La Oroya’s children made headlines on CBS News, the
prestigious British medical journal, The Lancet, and more than
50 newspapers around the globe, and we worked together with Oxfam
and other non-profit groups to gather more than 16,000 letters
from 52 different countries in support of our children’s
health campaign. |