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Spirituality and FT Blog

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Starting in September 2009, check for weekly updates from Lead Blogger Jackie DeCarlo, FT author and nonprofit manager. Some say the Fair Trade movement was started by a Mennonite woman in the 1940s. This blog will consider how faith-based and spiritual motivations are shaping today’s effort to help believers shop their values.

Jackie’s professional background is in education and not-for-profit management, and she has promoted economic and social justice within communities around the United States, in Africa, Latin America, and Europe. Jackie encountered Fair Trade while traveling in Mexico in 1999 and soon thereafter became a volunteer with the Mut Vitz Coffee Cooperative in Chiapas. She became the director of the newly independent Fair Trade Resource Network in 2001. Jackie is currently a Senior Program Advisor to Catholic Relief Services’ Economic Justice program. Jackie’s ongoing commitment to Fair Trade and responsible consumption is nurtured through her place of worship, the Friends (Quaker) Meeting of Washington, D.C. In addition to her studies at Agnes Scott College in Atlanta, Georgia, Jackie earned her Master of Science in Administration from University College at the University of Maryland. Fair Trade: A Beginner’s Guide, Jackie’s first book, was released on May 12, 2007, World Fair Trade Day and is now in its second printing. Her blog at http://jacqdecarlo.com shares continuing reflections on reasonable, responsible consumption.

Why a Nice Jewish Girl Writes Holiday Carols

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by Adrienne Fitch-Frankel, Global Exchanges Fair Trade Campaign Director

This week, as Rosh Hashanah approaches, I am honored that Adrienne Fitch-Frankel, a self-described “nice Jewish girl,” is sharing the faith-based reasons behind her Fair Trade work.  I got to know and respect Adrienne a bit as she created the Fair Trade Holiday project for Global Exchange.  Shes one of Fair Trade’s most energetic and creative activists so it is no surprise she ends this reflection (the first of two installments) with several inclusive action steps. ~ Jackie

The week this blog entry is being posted, Jewish people celebrate our holiest week of the year:  the high holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.  Therefore, the question of how my faith background intersects with my role as Global Exchanges Fair Trade Campaign Director is especially present with me.  For me, there is both a personal side to this question “How do our faith traditions move us personally?” and a pragmatic, campaign side to this question” How can our personal understanding of faith communities inform and improve our campaigns to promote Fair Trade?”

For me, on the most personal level, there is one single experience that fascinates me the most about the intersection of spirituality and social justice advocacy.  Have you ever had an “ah-hah” moment about the roots of your passion for social justice advocacy when you participate in a religious custom or service?  For me, as a secular Jew who participates in faith rituals mostly on religious holidays, the “ah-hah” moments happen every year when I attend services for the High Holidays, retell the Hanukkah story, or participate in the Passover Seder.

Of all the pieces I have written for Global Exchanges Fair Trade Campaign, one of my favorites is our Passover Seder insert, which is written in the lyrical language of the Passover Haggadah and draws a parallel between the Biblical story of slavery in Egypt and the slavery faced by the children who are forced to grow our cocoa.  At Passover, we remember the time that the Jewish people suffered as slaves in Egypt and escaped.  Global Exchanges Fair Trade campaign not only promotes Fair Trade cocoa, but also seeks to end child slavery in the cocoa fields, which is prohibited by the Fair Trade standards.  An estimated 12,000 children are slaves in the cocoa fields of West Africa.

Thinking about this piece, and reflecting on faith and Fair Trade advocacy, I have been struck by the themes of personal responsibility for social justice advocacy that seem to emerge from our faith traditions.  Parts of the Haggadah are written in the first person, as we say “when I was a slave in Egypt”, not “when they were slaves in Egypt.”  The Passover Seder serves as a mandate to all generations to put ourselves firmly in the shoes of another, imagine what it would be like, and work to end the injustice around us today.

Thinking of this characteristic of the Haggadah, one hears echoes of other wisdom that comes from our faith communities, like the rule of treating our neighbor as we would wish to be treated ourselves.  Or the famous poem of theologian and Lutheran pastor, Martin Niemaller, in which the voice in the poem laments that each time the Nazis came for another group, he or she did not speak up, and “Then they came for me, and by that time no one was left to speak up.”  Or the expression “there but for the grace of God go I.”

Fair Trade is about walking in another persons shoes.  We are all the farmer in Ethopia, the enslaved child in the cocoa fields of Ivory Coast, or that childs parents, sick with worry, the youth in a coffee-farming community hungering to go to school.

For all that we stand in the shoes of neighbors, we also stand in our own shoes.  And we are blessed with resources and a sense of fairness and a moral compass that our faith traditions give us.  The resources to change things are in our hands.  If only each one of us recommits ourselves to using them.

When we choose the coffee or cocoa or crafts we will buy, we must treat our neighbors as we would wish to be treated ourselves.  Not only that, but we must take action to transform the economy so that every one of our real neighbors in our community is also buying Fair Trade.  We are the ones with the resources and the ability to speak out.  We are all Moses.

I feel very blessed to bring a background of having been raised in a faith tradition to my work in Fair Trade, and not only because it is one of the original catalysts that inspired me to do this work.  I believe that having a deep appreciation for the importance and potential of the contributions of faith communities in achieving social justice enables me to better serve in my role of supporting coffee- and cocoa-growing communities lift themselves out of poverty.  For those of us who were raised and/or participate in a faith tradition, I think our background provides us a key component of both the “why?” and “how?” of compelling, effective, and dynamic social justice advocacy.  To me, even though I work at a secular institution, this means that faith-based initiatives are absolutely a priority in Fair Trade advocacy.

During this special week and beyond, I would like to invite you to help spread Fair Trade faith-based programs (available at www.globalexchange.org/cocoa) all over the US, by participating, organizing your congregations, and telling friends nationwide:

Finally, I would like to invite you to join me in the cocoa fields, so that together we can learn about the lives of producers and even ask them their opinions on the role of faith in Fair Trade.  I will be leading a delegation to Conacado in the Dominican Republic in May 26-June 6, 2010.  Visit www.globalexchange.org/tours for more information.

A Fair Trade Anniversary!

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by Jackie DeCarlo

As I write anniversary celebrations for SERRV have begun.  Started by Church of the Brethren relief workers, this Fair Trade pioneer has been working to eradicate poverty for 60 years!  While now an independent organization, SERRV is a fine example of how faith-based values shaped the Fair Trade movement a generation ago, creating a legacy for both secular and religious participants.    I encourage you to visit the SERRV website to take a look at the timeline of its accomplishments, which were often fueled by volunteers. http://www.serrv.org/AboutUs/60thAnniversary.aspx

Also please consider sharing on this blog your own faith community’s commitment to Fair Trade.  Last week we learned of a congregational church utilizing Fair Trade coffee to support for U.S. troops in harm’s way.  Let us know how or why your faith-community  participates in the Fair Trade movement.

Holy Joe’s Cafe Ministry

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holy-joes-blog

Photo Courtesy of Holy Joe’s Ministry

by Jacqueline DeCarlo

Last week, Cheryl-a leader at SERRV (http://serrv.org) which began as a faith-based organization-mused in a blog comment about how “action which grows from spiritual understanding” is part of the Fair Trade movement today.  One effort that comes to mind is the “Holy Joe’s Café” ministry (http://holyjoescafe.blogspot.com/).

Thomas Jastermsky, of the First Congregational Church in Connecticut where the project started, reached out to me at Catholic Relief Services (http://crsfairtrade.org) knowing that CRS’s partner Equal Exchange (http://www.equalexchange.coop/interfaith-program) was involved in Holy Joe’s.

Tom is a big believer not only in God but also of supporting U.S. troops!  Since 2006 Holy’s Joe’s has helped 405 military chaplains provide a Coffee House ministry to troops in 120 locations in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait. Chaplain Peter St. Martin says “Coffee has the effect of making the chaplain’s space a nice place to hang out.  It is in these moments that God and I do our best work, I believe: in casual conversation with no specific agenda and before the burden someone is carrying has erupted into real trouble.”

Organizations such as United Church of Christ, the Presbyterian Church, and the United Methodist Church are involved. Congregations donate coffee to the ministry and in turn chaplains create a coffee house atmosphere so troops can relax, talk with a chaplain, or just get a good cup of coffee.  If your community is interested in putting its faith into action, get more information at 888-970-7994 or contact Tom via email: HolyJoesCafe “at” aol.com

If you have more examples of the old adage “faith works wonders” please comment below.

Does Fair Trade Owe Faith Communities for Past & Current Inspiration?

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man-working-stool-w-cross-crsBy Jacqueline DeCarlo

As lead blogger for the next few months, I want to offer a warm welcome to this “Spirituality and Fair Trade” blog.  Many thanks to FTRN for devoting space to the question of how faith-based and spiritual motivations are shaping today’s effort to help believers shop their values. With your participation, and a range of voices from the Fair Trade movement, I hope we’ll create a conversation about the role faith plays in this unique marketplace.

But before we explore what’s happening today, I launch this blog with a premise:  The Fair Trade movement has its roots in–and owes much of its formative inspiration to–people of faith.  One of my favorite stories is that of Edna Ruth Byler, a church volunteer in Pennsylvania, who worked with the Mennonite Central Committee (http://mcc.org). As part of their regular duties, Edna Ruth and her husband J.N. took a trip in 1946 to Puerto Rico, where Byler was introduced to impoverished seamstresses improving their skills in sewing classes. When she got home, Edna Ruth began to sell embroidery products to women in local sewing circles.  She returned profits to the Puerto Rican seamstresses to help them work their way out of poverty. Eventually Byler opened a gift shop in the basement of the home she and J.N. shared, and that led the way to the retail chain now known throughout the United States and Canada as Ten Thousand Villages.

As important as it was to help create a successful Fair Trade Organization, Edna Ruth made an even greater contribution by shaping the framework of what Fair Trade is and why.  Finding opportunities to connect disadvantaged and marginalized producers to consumers has become a central principle of Fair Trade.  Other resources on this website can introduce you to the rest of the principles.  My point is that one woman, spurred by her faith and supported by her denomination, helped start a successful movement for economic justice.  We people of faith, then, have an important legacy to uphold.  We can’t take all the credit for Fair Trade’s success, of course.  That wouldn’t be accurate nor would it be appropriate as many faith traditions caution humility!  But as the movement evolves, I think it is important to shine a light on the religious and spiritual motivations some Fair Traders draw from as they work to shape and improve the movement.

In the coming months I will invite several Fair Traders to share this space to relate how their faith shapes their work.  At this point, I’d be interested to learn of particular role models within your faith community. Feel free to comment and uplift an individual or community whose faith results in Fair Trade activism.  Or, chime in if you think my premise is bunk!  Let me know if you think that Fair Trade, being based in the marketplace, should be considered only as a secular endeavor.  Whatever your opinions, I’ll post once a week, but regularly respond to comments you offer.

Photo: A priest in Madagascar explains the features of hand-made furniture.  Photo credit: Jacqueline DeCarlo/CRS.

Forbes Magazine Publishes Feature on Ten Thousand Villages

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In the September 7, 2009, issue of Forbes Magazine, FT pioneer Ten Thousand Villages and its store in Center City Philadelphia are reported on.  The article says that “Ten Thousand Villages has mastered the art of nurturing affluent customers as well as impoverished craftsmen.”  Check out the full story at:  http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2009/0907/creative-giving-ten-thousand-villages-grows-with-fair-trade.html

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