http://www.one.org html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> Act as if what you do makes a difference. It does.

If A is success in life, then A equals x plus y plus z. Work is x; y is play; and z is keeping your mouth shut. - ALBERT EINSTEN

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Ecological Debt Day

By Annie Leonard

Taken from: http://www.storyofstuff.com/blog/?p=


This past September, news of the economic crisis dominated the headlines. At the exact same time another debt crisis was intensifying, yet was barely noticed.

Earth Overshoot Day, also known as Ecological Debt Day, was September 23.This is the day in 2008 by which humanity had used all the resources that the planet will generate this year. As viewers of The Story of Stuff already know, we currently consume 1.4 planets’ worth of global resources each year. From September 23rd on, we’re eating into the natural capital, undermining its ability to produce for the future. We’re consuming on credit and accumulating ecological debt that we have no way to repay.

Ecology and economics share a common root: the Greek word oikos, meaning “home.” Economics and ecology both are about managing our home. In our current situation, we have messed up both.  Continue reading here.

We’re obsessive over economic indicators. We track indicators hourly, panic at the slightest decline, invest billions when it is shaky. Yet, we have a  huge collective blind spot to the other ecological management, even though it’s a bigger problem, both in terms of survival and even in terms of finances. There is a growing call coming from all over the world, to integrate our understanding of the economic and ecological crises and to ensure that a solution to one is a solution to both.

Crisis and opportunity are often referred to as two sides of the same coin. That is definitely true here. The current economic crisis provides us a much needed opportunity to re-evaluate the priorities of our economy, to develop new metrics for measuring real progress, for reducing superfluous consumption while increasing economic equity and ensuring the integrity of the ecological systems on which life depends.

My friend Rita always says “If you keep doing what you’re doing, you’ll keep getting what you’re getting.” Clearly, what we’re doing isn’t working. As David Korten, author of The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth, suggests, it’s time to try something new.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

For all you fishetarians and sushi lovers - be aware of this new study

From the NY Times

January 24, 2008, 2:40 pm

National Study Finds High Levels of Mercury in Tuna
By
Marian Burros

The international conservation group Oceana has issued a report that found levels of mercury in fresh tuna in stores and restaurants across the United States that were as high as those reported yesterday in a New York Times article on tuna sushi sold in Manhattan.

Like those samples tested by The Times, many of the Oceana samples had levels of mercury exceeding those that would allow the Food and Drug Administration to take legal action to remove it from the market.
Mercury is believed to affect neurological development of fetuses and young children. Some studies have suggested it may cause health problems in adults, too. Since 2004, the Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency have recommended that women of child-bearing age and young children eat no more than 12 ounces of fish a week, including no more than 6 ounces of canned albacore tuna, and avoid swordfish, tilefish, king mackerel and shark because they are high in mercury.

Oceana tested samples of fresh tuna, swordfish and tilapia, as well as tuna and mackerel sushi bought in 26 cities and found that the average mercury concentration of tuna steaks in 23 grocery stores was 0.68 parts per million, even higher than the 0.57 parts per million that was the average for tuna sushi that The Times bought in stores. Swordfish levels were even higher; tilapia and mackerel were very low.

The mercury content of tuna sushi from the 24 restaurants in the Oceana study was 0.86 parts per million, quite similar to the average of 0.88 parts per million that The Times found in tuna sushi in restaurants. One third of the tuna sushi in the Oceana study had more than one part per million of mercury, the level that would allow F.D.A. to remove the fish from the market, something it rarely does.
In 2005 Oceana launched a campaign to make major grocery chains post at their fish counters government warnings about tuna. Since then several chains, including Whole Foods, Vons, Dominick's, Safeway and Trader Joe's, have agreed to post some information.

But Oceana said that when seafood counter attendants were asked what the FDA advice is for those women and children, they found that 87 percent either gave an incorrect answer or incomplete information or simply said they did not know.

Oceana is asking the FDA to require warnings at seafood counters, to add fresh tuna to its "do not eat" list and to increase the frequency of its testing of fish.

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Monday, January 21, 2008

Join us! For a peacefuly Colombia

A million voices against FARC...
We need our voices to be heard.
Let’s not be silent anymore, let the world hear us; let every guerrilla man or woman hear us: We repel FARC - EP (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia - People's Army).
We DON’T want more armed fight.FARC have deceived the world once again by not freeing the thousands of kidnapped people they have kept captive for almost a decade now, recurring one more time to all kinds of tricks and evasive lies.Kidnapping is the worst of acts against human dignity, and FARC have kidnapped and kept captive thousands of people over the last years, while they keep growing their drug production and drug traffic business, perpetrating all kinds of crimes and terrorist attacks against people, bringing poverty and misery to our country, which has suffered this plague and humanitarian tragedy for more than forty years now.
Colombia, Colombians, friends from all over the world, let’s unite to shout loudly:
NO MORE!
NO MORE KIDNAPPING!
NO MORE LIES!
NO MORE MURDER!
NO MORE FARC!
Let’s commit ourselves to join a million voices in this group so we can make a difference, and let the entire world know that we don’t need that “People’s Army” here in Colombia; that FARC is a terrorist group, led by murderers and enemies of the Colombian and World’s People.
This is a cause beyond all political interests or colors. It’s a humanitarian cause, encouraged by a simple sense of solidarity, for the sake and welfare of our citizens. Join us; We need our voices to be heard.
A million voices against FARC.
Join us on Feb. 04 in a global march against FARC.
PLEASE VISIT www.colombiasoyyo.org AND GET DETAILS!

Meeting points in Colombia
BARRANQUILLA, AtlánticoPlaza de la Paz. Al frente de la Catedral. 12:00 del medio día Contactos: Oscar Morales Guevara nomasfarcbarranquilla@gmail.com
BOGOTA, D.C.Movilización en toda la ciudad. En donde se encuentre salga a la calle y hágase sentir. Puntos iniciales: Plaza de Bolívar y Calle 72 con 7a. Corredor vial: Av Cra 7 Contactos: Pierre Onzaga, Rosa Parra, Cristina Lucena nomasfarcbogota@gmail.com
FUSAGASUGA, CundinamarcaPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: Jenny Angelica Quicano nomasfarcfusagasuga@gmail.com
FACATATIVA, CundinamarcaPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: Catherine Miranda nomasfarcfacatativa@gmail.com
SOGAMOSO, BoyacáPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: Jorge Ferney Cubides nomasfarcsogamoso@gmail.com
MEDELLIN, AntioquiaPlaza de Banderas de la Alpujarra, al lado del Centro de Convenciones Plaza Mayor. 12:00 del medio día Contacto: Edward Naranjo nomasfarcmedellin@gmail.com
CALI, ValleParque del Perro. 12:00 del medio día Contacto: Andrew Cupp nomasfarccali@gmail.com
ARMENIA, QuindíoPlaza de Bolivar. Carrera 14 Calle 21. 12:00 del medio día Contacto: Alejandra Estrada nomasfarcarmenia@gmail.com
BUCARAMANGA, SantanderPlaza Luis Carlos Galán. 12:00 del medio día Contacto: Carlos A. Santiago nomasfarcbucaramanga@gmail.com
OCAÑA, Norte de SantanderPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: nomasfarcocana@gmail.com
SANTA MARTA, MadgalenaPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: Oscar Ortiz Celedón nomasfarcsantamarta@gmail.com
MONTERÍA, CórdobaPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: León Jaime nomasfarcmonteria@gmail.com
VILLAVICENCIO, MetaPor confirmar sitio.Contacto: María José González nomasfarcvillavicencio@gmail.com
International Meeting Points
CENTRO Y SUR AMERICA
BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINAObelisco, Avenida 9 de Julio. 3:00 p.m. (Hora local Buenos Aires) Contacto: Laura Puerta nomasfarcbuenosaires@gmail.com
CIUDAD DE GUATEMALA, GUATEMALA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Sergio Ramírez nomasfarcguatemala@gmail.com
SAO PAULO, BRASIL Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: nomasfarcsaopaulo@gmail.com
PUNTA CANA, REP. DOMINICANA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Maria Catalina Serna nomasfarcpuntacana@gmail.com
MEXICO, D.F. Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Jorge Hernández nomasfarcmexicodf@gmail.com
NORTEAMERICA
NEW YORK CITY Al frente del edificio de las Naciones Unidas. 12:00 del medio día. (hora local NY) Contacto: Jaime Caballero nomasfarcnewyork@gmail.com
MIAMI, FLORIDA Parqueadero del consulado de Colombia. 10:00 a.m. (Hora local MIA). Contacto: Adelaida Vengoechea nomasfarcmiami@gmail.com
WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Carlos Grajales nomasfarcwestpalmbeach@gmail.com
PHILADELPHIA, PA Capilla de la Catedral. 12:00 del medio día. (Hora Local Phily) Contacto: Maria Martinez
BOSTON, MA Plaza de Government Center, en frente del City Hall. 12:00 del medio día. (Hora Local Boston) Contacto: nomasfarcboston@gmail.com
CHICAGO, IL Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Paola Susan nomasfarcchicago@gmail.com
WASHINGTON, DC Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Laura Busche nomasfarcwashington@gmail.com
SAN FRANCISCO, CA Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Marcela Junguito nomasfarcsanfrancisco@gmail.com
HOUSTON, TEXAS Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Javier Saavedra nomasfarctexas@gmail.com
STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Natalia Santamaria nomasfarcstatecollege@gmail.com
IOWA Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: William A. Montoya nomasfarciowa@gmail.com

TORONTO, CANADA DUNDAS Square. Centro de Toronto. 11:00 a.m. (Hora local Toronto). Contacto: Luis Orellano nomasfarctoronto@gmail.com
CALGARY, ALBERTA - CANADA Por confirmar sitio. Contacto: Daniel Vargas nomasfarccalgary@gmail.com
EUROPA Y ASIA
PARIS, FRANCIA Place de l'Hotel de Ville. 75004 PARIS. 1:00 p.m. (Hora local París) Metro: Hotel de Ville. Lineas de metro: 1 y 11. Contactos: David Velilla. Heider Pardo (Bordeaux). nomasfarcparis@gmail.com
MADRID, ESPAÑA Plaza Mayor en Madrid. Contacto: Camilo Garavito nomasfarcmadrid@gmail.com
TORINO, ITALIA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Jorge Tobón nomasfarctorino@gmail.com
DÜSSELDORF, ALEMANIA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Javier Amaya nomasfarcdusseldorf@gmail.com
HAMBURGO, ALEMANIA Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Camilo Palacios nomasfarchamburg@gmail.com
MUNICH, ALEMANIA Marien Platz. Contacto: Susana Vélez Haller nomasfarcmunich@googlemail.com
LONDRES, INGLATERRA Por confirmar sitio. 5:00 p.m. (hora local Londres) Contacto: Carmelita Hurtado nomasfarcengland@googlemail.com
LA HAYA, HOLANDA Plein al Frente del Parlamento. 11:30 a.m. (Hora local Holanda) Contacto: Alejo Bernal nomasfarclahaya@gmail.com
COPENHAGEN, DINAMARCA Contacto: nomasfarccopenhague@gmail.com
TEL-AVIV, ISRAEL Por confirmar Sitio. Contacto: Juan Valenzuela nomasfarctelaviv@gmail.com
DUBAI, EMIRATOS ARABES Contacto: nomasfarcdubai@gmail.com

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

“Lets Get Real With Reuben Torres"

For people living in the US, a cousing of mine lauched a radio program recently, check it out and join him if interested:

“Lets Get Real With Reuben Torres" is an open forum where topics on politics, immigration, education, and other global issues, that affect our country and the world at large, are discussed and debated at local, national, and global levels.

"Lets Get Real With Reuben Torres" airs every Tuesday evening from 9:00 pm to 10:00 pm. To listen to the program go to http://www.squarebizinc.com/radioshow.htm. All are welcome to participate by calling (646) 462-4571"

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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

For MSN lovers




i’m is a new initiative from Windows Live™ Messenger. Every time you start a conversation using i’m, Microsoft shares a portion of the program's advertising revenue with some of the world's most effective organizations dedicated to social causes. We've set no cap on the amount we'll donate to each organization. The sky's the limit. There's no charge, so join now and put our money where your mouth is.

i’m is about making a difference. Not in a huge expensive way, not in a time-consuming way. But in a simple, effective way.

You won't have to change your conversation to change the conversation. With every instant message you help address the issues you feel most passionate about, including poverty, child protection, disease, environmental degradation and animal protection. It's simple. All you have to do is join and start an instant messaging conversation. We'll handle the donation.

Once you've signed up, every ad you see in your message window contributes to the grand total we send to the causes.

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Friday, March 30, 2007

New Ashoka Fellows in Asia


Ashoka elected its first Fellows in Asia 25 years ago and has since built a robust network of innovators throughout the region. Growing populations and changing economies across the continent are introducing new problems and shifting the way we approach old ones. Ashoka remains committed to strengthening the citizen sector across Asia by supporting the most promising ideas and the entrepreneurs giving them life.

Ashoka will also expand its presence in Asia over the coming year, with plans to elect the first Fellows in the Philippines, take initial launch steps in China and Japan, and explore opportunities across Southeast Asia.

Pianporn Deetes Pianporn Deetes, Thailand
Grassroots action on mega-development projects
The daughter of an Ashoka Fellow, Pianporn learned early on the impact a social entrepreneur could have on society. Pianporn cultivates national and international action to prevent the disastrous impact of dams on the Salween River, the largest free-flowing river in Southeast Asia. She has successfully engaged local villagers in Thailand, Myanmar and China to research and develop both immediate and long-term action plans that engage local authorities, policy makers, and the media.

Mohammad Sirajuddin Mohammad Sirajuddin, Pakistan
Sustainable housing in low-income communities
Siraj is addressing Pakistan’s urban housing challenge by training local young professionals in construction and urban planning that is affordable and sustainable. Enhanced by a materials production unit and a housing credit program, this new generation of talent is ensuring that low-income housing works both for communities and the environment. Already in 28 districts, Siraj is expanding his program throughout Pakistan.


A.K.M. Maksud A.K.M. Maksud, Bangladesh
Innovative schooling for nomadic fishers
Maksud established a mobile boat school program to respond to the unique needs of the nomadic river community in Bangladesh. As a place of learning and a community forum, the schools become hubs for decision-making and human rights advocacy. The model solves the challenge of delivering education to a unique population while capitalizing on opportunities for further growth and development.


Farha CiciekFarha Ciciek, Indonesia
Equality for women through religious institutions
Within Islamic schools and communities, Ciciek shows that faith and gender equality can co-exist by drawing attention to the emphasis placed on human equality in religious texts. To prevent increasing religious conservatism from subordinating women, Ciciek uses creative strategies such as adapting popular praise songs to celebrate women’s contributions to Muslim society. She encourages religious leaders to apply these ideas to improve women’s status.



S. Sankara Raman S. Sankara Raman, India
Leading a new era for India’s disabled movement
Sankara, who lives with muscular dystrophy, is uniting the fragmented disabled community into a powerful India-wide network. His state-level federations of self-help groups equip India’s disabled—rich or poor, urban or rural—with life skills and the organizational resources to develop significant political capacity. These groups become a platform for the disabled to assert themselves, seizing their legal rights and changing society’s perception of their abilities.

Suprabha Seshan Suprabha Seshan, India
Saving the environment by restoring local ecosystems
Suprabha is filling an acute need for fresh ideas in conservation. Contrary to conventional environmental conservation in India, based on either preservation or indiscriminant replanting, Suprabha diagnosed and rebuilt an entire ecosystem of local species. She now hosts a state-supported training institute at her Gurukula Botanical Sanctuary to teach this model of ecosystem restoration to local and external educators, scientists, and policymakers.

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Friday, March 23, 2007

Introducing ATLAS CORPS



I´m glad to introduce to you to this recently created but quite amazing org called ATLAS CORPS. I got to know its founder Scott Beale (first virtually!) since India and recently here in Colombia, where he´s now based. If you feel a strong connection for what these guy´s are doing feel free to contact them or I can sure make you the link to them! If you are passionate about development issues, south - north (notice not north south!) talent exchange, international cooperation, or specially if you are acolombian NGO leader (or know some of them) just read below!

The Search For Colombian Fellows Is Underway ...


Did you know Atlas Service Corps, Inc. ("Atlas Corps") is a new international citizen sector (non profit or NGO) organization that will revolutionize international service and build a global partnership for development. Our mission is to create a global partnership for development through an innovative, sustainable and scalable Fellowship program that demonstrates that the global south should not just be a destination for support, but a partner in tackling the world's most pressing social issues. While in the U.S. Fellows will learn best practices from the United States, share unique perspectives from abroad, and then return home to create avenues of cooperation and continued learning. Atlas Corps Fellows will address a wide range of issues related to the United Nations Millennium Development Goals including hunger, poverty, education, gender equity, health, the environment, and human rights. We invite you to visit our website to learn more about the program and read about our fantastic staff and Senior Advisory Board that includes such notables as Bill Drayton, the founder of Ashoka, and Senator Harris Wofford, one of the founding leaders of the Peace Corps - http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=tyexx6bab.0.8xwi97bab.ijgtp9bab.6738&ts=S0235&p=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.atlascorps.org%2F


Atlas Corps is currently seeking outstanding rising leaders in the Colombian citizen sector to apply for a one-year fellowship in the United States. Candidates must be nominated by a citizen sector leader before their application can be submitted. Nominations can be submitted online at: http://www.atlascorps.org/nomination_es.html AtlasCorps is looking for 2 outstanding citizen sector leaders from Colombia for our inaugural 2007 Fellowship program. More details about the U.S. Host organizations and Fellow job descriptions can be found at: http://www.atlascorps.org/fellow_profile.html

Want to know more about Atlas Corps Fellowship? Additional information on the nomination and selection process in the section below...


Atlas Service Corps seeks to integrate a global citizen sector in order to create a global partnership for development through facilitating international fellowships for rising citizen sector leaders who contribute a year of service to the U.S. These Fellows then commit to work an additional year in the Colombian citizen sector, sharing new skills, best practices, and valuable experience. Atlas Service Corps (Atlas Corps) has engaged an innovative cooperation model which seeks to revert the traditional flow of voluntarism, training and collaboration, by mobilizing human capital from the global south to developed countries. Atlas Corps is looking to take 2 Colombian social sector leaders during its pilot year, to work at 2 social sector organizations in Washington D.C.

For this pilot program, Atlas Corps is searching for intermediate professionals with experience in the areas of marketing, health, computer science and youth leadership. The Fellows Hill travel to Washington D.C. in mid August, and will have a medical insurance and a living stipend during their stay, as well as a $2,500.00 bonus at their return. The pilot program it's being implemented in Bogota, New Delhi and Washington D.C. For additional information, please visit Atlas Corps web site:http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=ooxl76bab.0.8xwi97bab.ijgtp9bab.688&ts=S0235&p=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.atlascorps.org%2F


Basic Requirements for the Potental Partners

The basic requirement that aspiring candidates must fulfull are:

- Colombian Citizenship

- Professional

- Minimum 4 years of experience in the social sector

- English Proficiency

Host Organizations in the United States

For this pilot year, the Colombian Fellows host organizations are looking to count with the help of 2 national professionals. These host organizations are AYUDA y Mobilize.org.

AYUDA (http://www.atlascorps.org/ayuda.html) is a social sector organization seeking an individual with experience I marketing, web design and IT management skills who can be manage AYUDA's website, provide IT support to AYUDA staff and fulfill various other technological tasks.

Mobilize.org

(http://www.atlascorps.org/mobilizing_america_youth.html) is excited to welcome an Atlas Corps Fellow to serve as the Online Advocacy Director, responsible for maintaining the Youth Policy Action Center, the Mobilize.org website, and contractual obligations to clients, building on the success of the Youth Policy Action Center in 2006. The Fellow will develop a simple tutorial that takes an every day issue affecting the lives of young people, highlights what public policies are related to that issue, and assists young people in contacting their elected officials.

Nominate a Fellow!

Once you have read the requirements of both organizations as well as the Fellow profile, (http://www.atlascorps.org/fellow_profile.html), Atlas Corps is encouraging individuals to nominate potential fellows to participate in this social sector capacity building experience. http://www.atlascorps.org/nomination.htmlThe deadline to nominate a candidate is April 1, so please do so right now.


Thank you!

Please visit our site, sign up for our newsletter and contact us if you have more questions. Contact Alejandra Henao, the Colombia Country Director, at (1) 313-0043 and/or alejandra@atlascorps.org with questions.





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Friday, March 09, 2007

CHANGE.ORG

After many years in the "let´s get together to change the stuff we do not like from the world" mood and certainly enjoying it (specially thanks to AIESEC!), I could not stop finding amazing http://change.org/ - what a name to have a host, ah?

The site is simple to understand and operate.

You sign in, you can post the change you want to see in world and what´s all about and once this happens, more people that identify themselves with that change, just join you ... or join the "change" and from this moment on you start networking about the issue. You can communicate through a blog, upload fotos and videos related to the topic, protrait organizations that work already towards that. You can also sign in as an organization, if you represent one.

Below you can see tha recently popular changes posted, to have an idea ...

Recently Popular Changes



AND WELL, I also selected my topic, entrepreneurship "for a change" ... let´s see how the thread moves!


Why Entrepreneurship education ...

I was happy to see that someone else already selected entrepreneurship education as a desired change, as I am also happy to start the dicussion.

I truly believe that economies and societies can´t sustain a system anymore where people grow up and get education with the only expectation to join existent organizations. There are tones of wonderful organizations that nowadays are supporting entrepreneurship development at all levels (giving funds, giving non monetary strategic support, awarding and profiling) and I do not deny the impact they are having. But we (organizations, parents, governments) can´t conform ourselves just working with the few % of people that dare to be entrepreneurs and that is why I am convinced that a new a approach is needed, where entrepreneurship becomes a fundamental matter to learn and get inspired about since people are at schools! Why to spend 12 years in school just to learn maths, history, biology and other traditional subjects that are certainly needed but rarely put ourselves in the shoes of the global citizens that we are and encourage us to believe in our own capacities to create ventures (of all kinds) that can create social and financial capital to the world we live in?

I know at many universities around the world entrepreneurship education (and practice) is becoming a trend, but I also believe that has not reached its potential at all and, as I tried to say before, this "education" starts too late, you do not have to join university to start getting educated and inspired about how to become an entrepreneur. There are some societies that are not "entrepreneur-friendly" and where the perception towards entrepreneurship is rather related to be either irresponsible (from the risk taking point of view) or to be a selfish approach towards the owns believes (from the point of view of people that fight to make something happens even if it´s not proven or hard to achieve).It happens. And it´s sad to live ins ocities where such perceptions are in the air, or at least in the mins of some people. How do you foster entrepreneurship at kindergartens? at primary and secondary schools? in your own family?

There is for sure lots to reserach ...

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Tuesday, December 05, 2006

AIDS & DISABILITY

Thanks to my participation in a recent AIESEC conference in India (some stories about my experience there coming soon) I had the opportunity be be aware and experience in a more direct way two of the most worked out developmental issues of today's world: HIV/AIDS and Disability. Since being aware of issues is not only about doing it in certain dates, it's never late to hopefully through this post also bring a small bite of awareness to people.


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In terms of HIV/AIDS besides wearing the red ribbon (which let's face it is the easiest and therefore the only thing that people normally do) I had the chance to engage with externals leaders of NGOs that were giving presentations around the issue ... more than that, I had the amazing chance to have a bunch of 70 AIESEC members to discuss about that and hold each other accountable for making things happen. Some highlights about AIDS stigma in India that got stucked in my head are:

1. Places where rejection and discrimation happens the most is in health centers (clinics, hospitals) ...
2. Second place where rejection happens the most is the workplace
3. Third place is family itself. The person in an india family that rejects the most are mothers in law. Specially these ones blame wifes for the disease of their son, since wifes were not "attractive or smart" enough, and this was the cause for their son to look for other women outside the house.
4. Some women in India feel shy to admit that they know how to use a preservative and spread the word, or feel shy to talk about it with their partners (and even housband) just because he might think that this means that she "used it" already. 5. Truck drivers (also called "highway killers" in some reports and documentals) are one of the biggest. Here is a good (even if a bit old) article about that reality
These facts were results of a focus group done by this NGO focused on HIV/AIDS awareness in India, among other studies.

In terms of Disability, we had the chance again, thanks to the AIESEC conference, to visit NGOs, almost all of them working with disabled children. I was at Umang, where besides interacting for some time with the children, we had a great conversation with the founder who mad us aware about facts, hopes and fears of the disbility reality.being one of my sisters autist, this is a topic that particularly ctaches my attention, specially when we analyze the problematic of disabled children that never get access to real treatment and enjoy therefore of social inclusion, because of extreme poverty.

If you want to read more about these two issues, the following two pages are a good start. Happy reading ...

WORLD AIDS DAY - December 1st
Around forty million people are living with HIV throughout the world - and that number increases in every region every day. Ignorance and prejudice are fuelling the spread of a preventable disease. World AIDS Day, 1 December is an opportunity for people worldwide to unite in the fight against HIV and AIDS. This year, it's up to you, me and us to stop the spread of HIV and end prejudice. This starts by taking action.
You: Wear a red ribbon
Me: Talk to people
Us: Get involved in events

WORLD DISABILITY DAY - December 3rd

International Day of People with a Disability, as designated by the United Nations (UN), is a celebration of the abilities of people with a disability all over the world. In 1976, the UN General Assembly proclaimed 1981 as the International Year of Disabled Persons (IYDP). It called for a plan of action at the national, regional and international levels that emphasised equality of opportunities, rehabilitation and prevention of disabilities. Other objectives included increasing public awareness; understanding and acceptance of people with a disability; and encouraging people with a disability to form organisations through which they can express their views and promote action to improve their situation

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