Sunday, July 24, 2011

67 Ways To Change Our World

67 Ways To Change Our World

On Monday 18th July Tata Madiba will celebrate his 93rd birthday.  In November 2009 The United Nations officially declared the 18th of July Mandela Day.  It is more than a celebration of Madiba's life and legacy; it is a global movement to take his life’s work into a new century and change our world for the better. Mandela Day asks us all to embrace Madiba’s values and honour his legacy through an act of kindness. Below, you will find 67 ways to help you get started and perhaps live everyday as Mandela Day.
A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination.
1. Make a new friend. Get to know someone from a different cultural background. Only through mutual understanding can we rid our communities of intolerance and xenophobia.
2. Read to someone who can’t. Visit a local home for the blind and open up a new world for someone else.
3. Fix the potholes in your street or neighbourhood.
4. Help out at the local animal shelter. Dogs without homes still need a walk and a bit of love.
5. Find out from your local library if it has a story hour and offer to read during it.
6. Offer to take an elderly neighbour who can’t drive to do their shopping/chores.
7. Organise a litter cleanup day in your area.
8. Get a group of people to each knit a square and make a blanket for someone in need.
9. Volunteer at your police station or local faith-based organisation.
10. Donate your skills!
11. If you’re a builder, help build or improve someone’s home.
12. Help someone to get his/her business off the ground.
13. Build a website for someone who needs one, or for a cause you think needs the support.
14. Help someone get a job. Put together and print a CV for them, or help them with their interview skills.
15. If you’re a lawyer, do some pro bono work for a worthwhile cause or person.
16. Write to your area councillor about a problem in the area that requires attention, which you, in your personal capacity, are unable to attend to.
17. Sponsor a group of learners to go to the theatre/zoo.

Help out for good health

You will achieve more in this world through acts of mercy than you will through acts of retribution.
18. Get in touch with your local HIV organisations and find out how you can help.
19. Help out at your local hospice, as staff members often need as much support as the patients.
20. Many terminally ill people have no one to speak to. Take a little time to have a chat and bring some sunshine into their lives.
21. Talk to your friends and family about HIV.
22. Get tested for HIV and encourage your partner to do so too.
23. Take a bag full of toys to a local hospital that has a children’s ward.
24. Take younger members of your family for a walk in the park.
25. Donate some medical supplies to a local community clinic.
26. Take someone you know, who can’t afford it, to get their eyes tested or their teeth checked.
27. Bake something for a support group of your choice.
28. Start a community garden to encourage healthy eating in your community.
29. Donate a wheelchair or guide dog, to someone in need.
30. Create a food parcel and give it to someone in need.

Become an educator

Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.
31. Offer to help out at your local school.
32. Mentor a school leaver or student in your field of expertise.
33. Coach one of the extramural activities the school offers. You can also volunteer to coach an extramural activity the school doesn’t offer.
34. Offer to provide tutoring in a school subject you are good at.
35. Donate your old computer.
36. Help maintain the sports fields.
37. Fix up a classroom by replacing broken windows, doors and light bulbs.
38. Donate a bag of art supplies.
39. Teach an adult literacy class.
40. Paint classrooms and school buildings.
41. Donate your old textbooks, or any other good books, to a school library.

Help those living in poverty

Let there be work, bread, water and salt for all.
42. Buy a few blankets, or grab the ones you no longer need from home and give them to someone in need.
43. Clean out your cupboard and donate the clothes you no longer wear to someone who needs them.
44. Put together food parcels for a needy family.
45. Organise a bake sale, car wash or garage sale for charity and donate the proceeds.
46. To the poorest of the poor, shoes can be a luxury. Don’t hoard them if you don’t wear them. Pass them on!
47. Volunteer at your local soup kitchen.

Care for the youth

There can be no keener revelation of a society's soul than the way in which it treats its children.
48. Help at a local children’s home or orphanage.
49. Help the kids with their studies.
50. Organise a friendly game of soccer, or sponsor the kids to watch a game at the local stadium.
51. Coach a sports team and make new friends.
52. Donate sporting equipment to a children’s shelter.
53. Donate educational toys and books to a children’s home.
54. Paint, or repair, infrastructure at an orphanage or youth centre.
55. Mentor someone. Make time to listen to what the kids have to say and give them good advice.

Treasure the elderly

If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his language, that goes to his heart.
56. If you play an instrument, visit your local old-age home and spend an hour playing for the residents and staff.
57. Learn the story of someone older than you. Too often people forget that the elderly have a wealth of experience and wisdom and, more often than not, an interesting story to tell.
58. Take an elderly person grocery shopping; they will appreciate your company and assistance.
59. Take someone’s dog for a walk if they are too frail to do so themselves.
60. Mow someone’s lawn and help them to fix things around their house.

Look after your environment

I dream of the realization of the unity of Africa, whereby its leaders combine in their efforts to solve the problems of this continent. I dream of our vast deserts, of our forests, of all our great wildernesses.
61. If there are no recycling centres in your area, petition your area councillor to provide one.
62. Donate indigenous trees to beautify neighbourhoods in poorer areas.
63. Collect old newspapers from a school/community centre/hospital and take them to a recycling centre.
64. Identify open manhole covers or drains in your area and report them to the local authorities.
65. Organise the company/school/organisation that you work with to switch off all unnecessary lights and power supplies at night and on weekends.
66. Engage with people who litter and see if you can convince them of the value of clean surroundings.
67. Organise to clean up your local park, river, beach, street, town square or sports grounds with a few friends. Our children deserve to grow up in a clean and healthy environment.
This list was compiled by The Nelson Mandela Children's Foundation

Friday, July 8, 2011

From Soup Kitchens to Dining Room Tables


“Today it is very fashionable to talk about the poor. Unfortunately, it is not fashionable to talk with them.” Mother Theresa

In 2006-2007, I lived in Camden, NJ. I was there with the volunteer organization Mission Year. Most of my mornings were spent at Frank's, a homeless day shelter, while my afternoons were spent working with Urban Promise, an after school program. However, the nights are what provided a real sense of community and hospitality.

Many evenings were spent at the Walter Rand Transportation Center hanging out with homeless folks and eating donuts while listening to football games on the radio. On various other nights, our home hosted at lot of dinner parties. The guest list included church clergy, neighbors, co-workers, and people we met at Frank's.

Now 4 years removed from Camden and back in school working on a PhD, I am constantly experimenting with new ways of communicating hospitality to those around me. For a year and a half I worked at the homeless shelter in town, Good Samaritans - I only left because I am now going to school full-time. While working there, I made a lot of good friends and still keep in touch fairly regularly - although not as regularly as perhaps I should. Occasionally, I will find myself driving through downtown and meeting up with folks for a meal or lengthy conversation.

More recently, I've been inviting more people over for dinner. Sometimes it's planned; other times it's rather spontaneous. But either way, it's community - it's family. Let me be clear - I love what food banks and shelters can do for people and the people who work there day in and day out are fantastic, self-sacrificing people doing their absolute best to serve an ever-growing population of hungry individuals.

Yet, sometimes it's nice to have a little intimacy around a dining room table and a home-cooked meal. It doesn't always have to be about the logistics of getting food into a person's stomach. Sometimes it can be about slowing down, enjoying the conversation, and sharing life together.

Much Love.

Joshua Daniel Phillips
PhD Student, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Author, 1,800 Miles: Striving to End Sexual Violence, One Step at a Time