Monday, March 18, 2013

Restoring Hope Where it is Lost: Supporting HIV+ Artisans in Kenya


This week, One World Projects is honored to feature a limited supply of beautifully crafted Journals made by an amazing social enterprise, Imani Workshops, based out of Kenya, Africa. Established in 2005, Imani Workshops has sought to bring about HIV awareness and positive social change. Along with the Family Preservation Initiative, Imani workshops helps train HIV positive artisans, providing them with knowledge and skills, so that they may provide economically for themselves and their families. In a society that places unfair stigmas on carriers of HIV/AIDS, many of these artisans have struggled in the past to find employment or secure business loans. At One World Projects, we have recognized these struggles and we feel privileged to work with such a compassionate enterprise. If you would like to purchase one of these marvelous journals for only $8.00, please contact us via email: sales@oneworldprojects.com or call us at: 585.344.4490. But don’t wait too long, these journals are only available in limited quantity. Please help us support this wonderful organization–Imani Workshops.
Would you like to see more of our products? Please visit OneWorldProjects.nettoday!
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Friday, March 8, 2013

From Loving Hands….Celebrating Women from All Walks of Life


Whether it be the hand sewn blanket given to you by your grandmother or the brand new iPhone 5 resting in your pocket, most of the products we own have been touched by a woman’s hands in one way or another. Today is International Women’s Day– a day to celebrate not only these women, but women all around the world. From your grandmother to the woman in South Africa who walks multiple hours each day to supply her family with water. According to UN Women (http://www.unifem.org), some statistics show that women account for 70% of the world’s poor, yet, in many regions they provide over 90% of the food.
At One World Projects, we work with artisan groups from all around the world and provide them with a fair wage for the beautifulIMG_7925products that they produce. We recognize the gender inequalities shown in statistics and we work to combat them with empathy and action. Fair trade is not hand-outs or charity, it is honest pay for hard workers–and more often then not, some of the hardest working artisans we find are women.
Take for example, Miss Nebsa of Inspirit Arts. Her humanitarian fundraising collective produces magnificent, colorful headbands and head wraps as well as intricate jewelry and accessories. This month, One World Projects is featuring Inspirit Arts’ one-of-a-kind, handcrafted earrings for only $7.00. For more information please visit our FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/oneworldprojects and to order yours please e-mail: sales@oneworldprojects.com or call: 585.344.4490. Your fair trade purchases not only provide you with beautiful handmade artwork but also support artisan communities and their families all around the world.
2543-Jadeite-Turquoise-Circle-Necklace-Turkmens-Womens-Association-AfghanistanFurthermore, One World Projects regularly hosts products made from the women of TWARA. The Turkmen Women’s Active Rights Association (TWARA) was conceived in 2002 and registered in 2005 in Kabul. With a mission to empower women and educate them about their legal rights, TWARA started work with the backward and marginalized Turkmen tribes of northern Afghanistan. TWARA works towards providing these communities with a strong economic and social structure. The organization has helped in establishing schools and health centers in the region. The members of TWARA also provide women with information about women rights and legal awareness. To view and purchase products from TWARA, please go tooneworldprojects.com.
Join us in celebrating and supporting these wonderful, hardworking women. The steps to change are easier than you think. By purchasing fair trade, your doing just that. One World Projects just wants to make it easier for you. Happy International Women’s Day to all!

Monday, March 4, 2013

Helping Street Children Take a Step Forward


The UN estimates that 18 million children live and work in the streets of India. It is believed that more than 250,000 of them are in the nation's capital city ofDelhi. Thousands of immigrant families move to Delhi each year in search of employment and find themselves living in the streets. Their children grow up on the street having to fend for themselves, sometimes being abandoned or running away. Many of them make the platforms of the New Delhi and Old Delhi railway stations their home as it may be the place where they came into the city, or the constant comings and goings of people provide the opportunity for illegal activities. Few jobs are available to these children and many turn to a life of crime as the easiest way to sustain themselves during a time in their lives when they should be playing and going to school.

Ramesh Gupta was a runaway fending for himself in the streets of New Delhi when the law caught up to him. Luckily he was removed from police custody and admitted into the Salaam Baalak Trust where he was fed, educated, and sheltered to help prepare him for a productive adulthood. The Salaam Baalak Trust provides street children with a holistic network of services that help guide their physical, creative, cognitive and social development through schooling and various rehabilitation programs. In 2004, Ramesh partnered with a friend and started the Lakshya - Badte Kadam community initiative, or Goal - Step Forward, hoping to take what he learned and share it with his old community.

The primary goal of Lakshya is to rescue street children from the dark life of the railway stations and then to provide them with shelter, food, the opportunity of an education, and vocational training. They also administer social reform campaigns to help those children that for one reason or another continue to live in the streets. By playing games with them, teaching them to become productive members of society, and providing them with counseling services, the Lakshya community has grown to support more than 100 street children. Lakshya is creating a nurturing and safe environment for children filled with promising opportunities and a life of dignity.
Lakshya is a registered NGO, funded by the production of colorful and eco-friendly textiles. Rag-pickers are employed to collect pieces of recycled-cloth, newspapers, and chip bags from the streets while the older youth, and women in the surrounding community sew them into various apparel and fashion accessories. Our line of Lakshya products will include a courier-style shoulder bag, a gym bag, back pack, wallets, clutches, handmade paper journals, neem wood pencils, and more. We are happy to be a link in the chain of support for these children in need who find themselves struggling and alone on the streets of Delhi. 

Help support the street children of Delhi by placing an order for their products today.

Visit oneworldprojects.net to find their beautiful creations!