Fair’s Fair Challenge

30 04 2009

We want to know who’s interested in taking part in the Fair’s Fair challenge. You can:

1. “Calling Fifty Frenzy” – call up 2-3 supermarkets 50 times! (if we get a group together it won’t be hard). Tell them you want more ethical products on the shelves.

“You’ve been checked out” – go check out 5 supermarkets and tally up what Fair Trade products they stock. Make it a fun day with friends (plus you can probably fit some shopping in that day too!!)

2. Meet with our local MP/Council - Daniel has more details and info if you’d like to do that

Meet with our principal – Voice your opinion: Make this school Fair Trade (probably happen after the staff afternoon tea break)

3. Help out with our Staff Fair Trade Coffee Break (Monday 11th 3:30 – 5:30) – still to be approved, will keep you up to date.

This challenge gives us an opportunity to get a GOLD MEDAL!! (how exciting) if we can do something from all 3 groups… so who’s up for it!

It’ll be fun if you can get a group together and for the afternoon, or over the next 2 weeks tackle what challenge you choose to do

Anyway, email us back with what you want to do, and we can get some groups together :) gwsc@vgroups.vgen.org

Danielle & Dan





Don’t Trade Lives – Student Forum

3 04 2009

In the Third World, slavery still exists, and it is one of the main humanitarian challenges in Australia’s region of the globe. Trafficking in human beings – especially children – for both labour and sex markets is the third most profitable industry in the world, after weapons and drugs.

World Vision is currently involving young people in the “Don’t Trade Lives” campaign, which seeks to raise awareness as to how First World retail choices can make a difference to Third World child labour trafficking.

Tim Costello speaking at our DTL Student Forum

Tim Costello

GWSC students, leaders with the Vision Generation movement, arranged for Tim Costello, Chris Varney, and Charlotte Baines to present their knowledge and personal insights into the global crisis of human trafficking to a group of around one hundred students, representatives of nine secondary schools.

Chris Varney, former Vision Generation National Co-Director and recently appointed Australian Youth Representative to the United Nations, gave moving personal stories of children he himself has met overseas, children living in slavery brought on by the effects of poverty. He emphasised that the rescue of these children from their circumstances was possible, but that it was a gradual process, with a focus on changing the culture that enables children to be traded into slavery, as well as the often unwitting support of the slave economy by consumers in nations such as Australia.

The campaign is not about boycotting, or about naming and shaming, Mr Varney pointed out, but about seeking to bring about long term change. As part of that long term change, students at the forum were encouraged to base their purchasing decisions on the answer they get when they ask retailers: Does this product come from child labour?

Charlotte Baines, from Monash Council, proudly stated that Monash is one of only three municipalities in Australia to have embraced the Fair Trade movement. Fair Trade seeks to ensure that Third World workers are granted humane working conditions, appropriate pay, and – of course – freedom from child slavery.

Not only are products such as coffee and tea used by the Council Fair Trade, but also the Council is setting up a Monash Fair Trade Steering Committee, to begin a dialogue on how the Council can better meet the needs of residents in supporting a fairer world for all. Ms Baines made the point that councils are traditionally about the three Rs: Roads, Rubbish, and Rates. With the adoption of Fair Trade certification, Monash Council is aiming to introduce a fourth R: Relationships. Ms Baines said that a major Relationships initiative for the council is to respond to resident concerns about Third World poverty.

She encouraged students to become involved in the Steering Committee, to ensure that they have a voice in community decisions on this matter.

Tim Costello, Chief Executive of World Vision Australia, informed the audience of students that “the blow against poverty begins with guys and girls like you.” He related the story of British politician William Wilberforce, who, in the Eighteenth Century, began a movement against slavery by raising awareness that the sugar everyone had in their tea came from slave labour. Having sugar in one’s tea, Wilberforce proclaimed, was having blood on your teeth.

In today’s world, Mr Costello revealed, chocolate is still largely the result of child slave labour, with children being trafficked to the major cocoa producing nations of Ivory Coast and Ghana, to work in the cocoa plantations there. He suggested that, with Easter coming up, students in Australia should be more aware of where their chocolate is coming from, and to support Fair Trade sourced chocolate, rather than chocolate sourced from child labour.

Mr Costello went on to say that each generation has to ask itself two questions: What’s acceptable in my world? What do I do about those things which are not acceptable?

Furthermore, the question each individual in that generation has to ask him- or herself, Mr Costello said, was: Do I matter?

One way to matter, he proposed, was to stand up to injustice, such as the child slavery that the forum had been discussing. In question time, Mr Costello said that he drew his motivation to go on with often seemingly hopeless campaigns from being “chained to hope”. He said that he believed that one day, perhaps in the time of the audience’s generation, child slavery and world poverty would, indeed, become things that only existed in history.

Following the presentations and question time, students broke into groups to discuss ideas as to how they might personally address the issues that they had been hearing about.

- By Mr Schlosser





Invisible Children

2 04 2009

Tuesday March 10 – the day I’ve been anticipating for a week at least. I sat myself in the Lecture Theatre with only a minimal amount of year 12s and a whole bunch of middle school students, about to watch the wonderful reckless documentary that got the likes of Fall Out Boy, Paramore, Hayden Panettiere, Kirsten Bell and the whole world at their feet – Invisible Children: Rough Cut.

Invisible Children merchandise sold well


As I learnt from research prior to the screening, Invisible Children was created by three young filmmakers, Jason Russell, Bobby Bailey and Laren Poole, who traveled to Africa originally in search of a story. But what these Southern Californian boys didn’t expect was to discover ‘a tragedy that disgusted and inspired them, a tragedy where children are both the weapons and the victims’. This became the film that exposed the tragic realities of northern Uganda’s night commuters and Joseph Kony’s child soldiers.

While watching the film, I admit I had laughed at these filmmakers as they were funny and nerdy right at the beginning but as soon the film rolled in, it made sense as to why millions of viewers wanted to help these kids and why these three boys transformed into three young noble men who were passionate to create an inspiring documentary and movement. As a viewer, you would learn that this neglected war affecting the children of North Uganda has been running for 23 odd years; a war where children live in fear of abduction by rebel soldiers and subsequently being forced and brainwashed to fight as part of a violent army. Boys and girls as young as five have guns strapped to their chest and look too alienated to be even considered a child. Abuse such as brutal and slaughtering attacks are affected by many victims – adults, other innocent children and even their best friends. Crying is also degraded within these territorial areas as it can be measured as a sin and a sign of weakness. Children who do cry may even be killed as punishment. The film can be considered similar to ‘Blood Diamond’, but this is the harsh reality that is affecting dozens everyday.

Being a teen human rights activist, I’ve been blabbering to others a particular scene in the film that was mesmerising and literally broke my heart to even watch. One of the young boys seen in the film was Jacob, previously a child soldier. He mentions that his older brother had been killed in the ever-lasting war. It was pretty much interpreted that his older brother was his protection and guardian and Jacob further mentions that “If he was here, I would say I love you and miss you and I hope we’ll see each other in heaven one day.” As he realised what he had said, he broke down and cried. There was that immediate interpersonal connection that you received from this young boy – the burden of the war, the missing of his older brother, the everyday fear of being abducted, the loneliness of growing up without a mother or father, and the feeling of having no future, since he cannot afford to go to school. During this scene, Jacob admits that he would rather be dead than alive.

This scene has been fixed in my mind for a while now and it has come to my discovery that if these children are taught that crying is a negative reaction, then how many kids hold in their fear of simply shedding a tear? I’d imagine if we were to put all of the affected children into a room and allowed them to expose how they really feel, the way Jacob did, the crying would be as loud as a symphony orchestra – powerful and moving at the same time.

I was lucky enough to see a screening of the film and to watch the progress Invisible Children have made since the breakthrough in 2003. I will tell you that I have been “forever changed”. Thank you to the exceptional Melody, Jamie, Colin and Christina, the official Invisible Children down-under ‘roadies’ who devoted their time to show and discuss the film and even come back on Friday March 13th to sell IC sweatshop-free merchandise. Over $1000 was raised for the cause in just over half an hour! The money raised will go towards health and safety resources, the need for quality education, mentorships, the redevelopment of schools, resettlement from the camps, and financial stability in North Uganda.

Get involved! Email gwsc@vgroups.vgen.org

- Melissa Him, Year 12





Don’t Trade Lives | GWSC Student Forum

5 03 2009

Don’t Trade Lives | GWSC Student Forum


Join passionate high school students from across Monash for an inspiring and empowering student-led forum discussing how YOU can act against modern-day slavery!

It is estimated that today there are 27 million people trafficked into slave-like conditions, many of them children forced to work in exploitative labour, the sex industry and cocoa farming.

At the student forum on April 1, hear how YOU can campaign against children being bought and sold by leading Vision Generation (VGen), World Vision’s national youth movement and supporting its anti-trafficking campaign, Don’t Trade Lives.

The Forum will be hosted by the Vision Generation Group at Glen Waverley Secondary College.

Read more about the DTL Campaign Header

At the Forum YOU will:

  • HEAR from inspiring speakers Tim Costello, World Vision CEO, Chris Varney, Vision Generation National Co-Director and Charlotte Baines, Deputy Mayor City of Monash
  • LEARN about the causes of human trafficking and slavery, and solutions like ethical consumerism
  • DEVELOP your school’s plan of action against slavery and for Fairtrade Fortnight (2nd-16th May)
  • ACT by joining the local Vision Generation Schools Network and support local consumer campaigns to make Monash a Fairtrade City!

Students will have the opportunity to take up leadership of Don’t Trade Lives by starting a VGen Group or resourcing an existing Social Justice Group.

Forum Event Details

Date: Wednesday 1st April Time: 12.30pm (registration) until 3.10pm
Venue: Glen Waverley Secondary College, 21 O’Sullivan Road, Glen Waverley
(right next to Glen Waverley Train Station)
Registration Details: Up to 5 students from each school can attend.
Please send a list of student names and contact details to gwsc@vgroups.vgen.org by Monday 23rd March (schools must organise their own student permission forms and transport)

Contact: For queries, contact Forum Organiser
Daniel Christiansz at gwsc@vgroups.vgen.org or on 0434 858 892
Note: Students will need to bring their own paper, pens and snacks for afternoon tea (light refreshments will also be served) All Forum details can be found athttp://www.vgen.org/vicevents

Read more about Vision Generation and what we do! Header





Cadbury adopts Fairtrade source

4 03 2009

Tuesday, 3 March 2009

By Daniel Howden, Africa Correspondent

Farmers in Ghana will enjoy a guaranteed income and more profit

The Fairtrade movement hailed a major breakthrough yesterday with the announcement that Britain’s biggest-selling chocolate brand was switching to the ethical standard. Cadbury’s Dairy Milk, which sells 300 million bars a year in the UK and Ireland, will source its cocoa from Fairtrade farmers in Ghana, the biggest brand of its kind to make the move.

“This is groundbreaking news for thousands of small farmers in Ghana, enabling all those who buy it to make a real difference,” said Cadbury’s chief executive, Todd Stitzer. The Fairtrade mark was set up as a way of guaranteeing developing world farmers a bigger share of the money generated from products using their raw materials. Some 7.5 million people, including farmers, workers and their families, benefit from products displaying the Fairtrade symbol.

“Farmers are saying that it’s impossible to make ends meet,” said Fairtrade’s head, Harriet Lamb. “People don’t see cocoa as a future. They don’t get enough cash from cocoa so there’s not enough investment.” The new project is designed to create a “virtuous circle” by putting a floor on the price and offering a premium for higher quality beans. “With more income, farmers invest to improve quality and productivity,” she added. “Then they start to spread the benefits and you see banks popping up in villages and thriving markets appearing.”

Forty thousand of Ghana’s 700,000 cocoa farmers will benefit from the first phase of the Cadbury venture, tripling the country’s Fairtrade cocoa production. “Young people are giving up and moving to the cities where there are often no jobs,” Ms Lamb said. “We hope this can be a turning point for the industry.”

Benjamin Atiemo from the cocoa-growing village of Adjeikrom expects to benefit. He said he was concerned about the future of cocoa unless farmers could increase their yields and incomes. Ms Lamb said seven out of 10 people in the UK had heard of Fairtrade products and would buy them if their favourite brands offered the choice.

Cocoa is Ghana’s biggest cash crop and second-largest export earner. The industry has encountered increasing difficulties. Deforestation has reduced the necessary rainforest cover for cocoa cultivation and fragmentation of cocoa farms into hundreds of thousands of smallholdings has inhibited investment.





A Fair Deal With Fair Trade

24 02 2009

Hooray! Monash City Council has gone Fairtrade!

Monash City Council has chosen to support a fair deal for disadvantaged producers in developing countries and is calling for nominations for those who wish to be part of Monash’s ‘Fair Trade Steering Group’.

Following a proposal by Deputy Mayor, Charlotte Baines on 28 October last year, Council agreed to switch to products that do not promote poor conditions in developing countries, but instead use Fair Trade products, specifically tea, coffee and chocolate.

“The Fair Trade movement is changing the lives of millions of farmers, workers and their families. I am very proud that the City of Monash has agreed to be part of this very worthy international movement,” said Cr Baines.

Last week, Council agreed to establish a Fair Trade Steering Group, comprising of eight voluntary members to help promote the benefits of Fair Trade to the community and local businesses.

“We would particularly like to encourage residents and representatives from community organisations and businesses to submit an expression of interest in helping us to be a leader in social responsibility,” said Cr Baines.

In the coming months, Council will be developing new initiatives for businesses, schools and local groups to encourage broader community support for ‘Fair Trade’ products.

For further information or to receive a copy of the Fair Trade Steering Group’s Terms of Reference, please contact Priya Prasad on 9518 3577 or email priyap@monash.vic.gov.au.

Source – “http://monash.vic.gov.au/news/bulletin2009/bulletin-24feb09p4.htm





Q&A Cafe – Friday 27th of Feburary

20 02 2009

Q&A CAFE — ‘Be The Change’

Lead singer of ‘Anberlin’, STEPHEN CHRISTIAN, will be featuring in a Vision Generation Q&A night. Stephen co-founded ‘Faceless International’ and is passionate about speaking out for victims of trafficking and exploitation.

Also featuring:
CAMERON NEIL – Operations Manager (Australia), Fairtrade
MEAGAN PRICE – World Vision Foundation Thailand
AMY SHAND – State Director Vision Generation Victoria

Guest performance:
ANDREW KITCHEN – former lead singer of Antiskeptic

When: Friday, February 27th
Time: 6pm til late – Q&A starts at 7pm sharp
Where: Retro Cafe, 413 Brunswick St, Fitzroy
Cost: $5 – food and drinks can be purchased from Retro
RSVP: vic@vgen.org to secure your place

Q&A nights are pretty chilled evenings, where we can hear stories from inspiring advocates using their talents to make change. Guests share their passions and motivations in a casual interview setting where you can interact and be a part of the discussion. Whether you know a little or a lot about the injustices that shadow our globe, you can be sure to leave challenged and inspired to ‘be the change’ in your own world.





Australia’s Largest Chocolate Fondue Party

16 01 2009

Join the Stop the Traffik campaign at Australia’s largest chocolate fondue party to demand an end to child exploitation and trafficking in the cocoa trade in West Africa. Come along and learn more about the solutions available, talk to advocacy and campaign groups, sample Fairtrade Certified and other trafficking free products, and partake in the chocolate fondue!

When: Sunday, January 18, 10:30am-12:30pm

Where: Federation Square

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Watch the video below for more information, download the poster and share it with your friends and colleagues, forward them a link to this event, and come along and enjoy some tasty, child slavery free chocolate fondue!

- Source: http://www.fta.org.au/node/2299/view





Vgen Summer Challenge

3 01 2009

Vision Generation has set the Summer Challenge. There will be prizes for those who have demonstrated that they have completed this four part summer challenge.

Download & print this Summer Challege HERE

Challenge # 1: Meet your Member of Parliament
at their local office & inform them about the issues & the campaign

  • Talk to them about:
  • human trafficking
  • the Don’t Trade Lives campaign and
    your thoughts about the Australian chocolate industry’s inadequate response to the call to end child labour in cocoa harvesting.

Ensure your MP knows that Asia has by far the highest level of individuals trafficked and enslaved, and that those trafficked for labour purposes greatly outweighs those that are trafficked into the sex trade. Tell him/her that you want to see Australia take the lead to end trafficking in our region.

REMINDER: for those of you who met an MP during Trek, please also send that MP a personalised letter of thanks ASAP and cc a copy to us. Include a World Vision’s “Smiles” gift that you have purchased for them as a gesture of thanks. This will work best as purely a thanks and not to ask them for anything!

Challenge # 2 : Help spread the word!
(the Watch Forward Challenge!)

Hundreds of VGenners and tens of thousands of Australians have been shocked to learn the reality of how their chocolate is made: with the aid of child labour and exploitation. But not everyone knows about this yet.

  • Watch the clip ‘Big Chocolate – Bubbles of Nothing @ youtube.com/worldvisionstir or on the DTL website
  • Share this clip via email to 50 friends and/or colleagues and through your Facebook account
  • Challenge them to share your friends to forward it to 50 people they know!

Challenge # 3 : Speak out – Demand Ethical Chocolate

What to do:

  • make two phone calls to different stores each week from now until end December. (For telephone numbers of leading supermarkets and department stores, refer to the Action page at DontTradeLives.com.au.)
  • Tell your local department store and supermarkets that you’d buy ethical chocolate if they stocked it; and
  • Tell your supermarkets that you’d love to see them using Fairtrade cocoa in their own home brands.

Challenge #4: Contact 10 chocolate boutiques

This can be in person or by mail and encourage them to switch to ethical chocolate.
For chocolate boutiques to promote themselves as truly stylish, they require more than fashionability, they must have integrity and quality.

For contact details of your local chocolate boutiques, visit their websites:

Send all your stories and succeses to donttradelives@vgen.org & they will add your story to http://www.vgen.blogspot.com/!

- Source: http://vgen.blogspot.com/2008/12/vgen-summer-challenge.html





10 Shocking Facts About Global Slavery in 2008

19 11 2008

Written by Caroline Ny

2008 witnesses the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade in America. Amidst the celebrations, what many people fail to realize is that slavery persists today in the modern world on an enormous scale.

In spite of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights adopted by the UN in 1948 stating that “slavery and the slave trade shall be prohibited in all their forms,” the figures accompanying the modern slave trade seem inconceivable in a global society that prides itself upon its modern-day values and emphasis on human rights.

1. There are more people in slavery now than at any other time in human history.

According to research carried out by the organization Free the Slaves, more people are enslaved worldwide than ever before.

In its 400 years, the transatlantic slave trade is estimated to have shipped up to 12 million Africans to various colonies in the West. Free the Slaves estimates that the number of people in slavery today is at least 27 million.

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center suggests that three out of four slavery victims are women and that half of all modern-day slaves are children. ‘Countless other’ people are in other forms of servitude which are not legally classified as slavery, according to the Anti-Slavery Society, described ambiguously by some as ‘unfree labour’.

2. The value of slaves has decreased.

A slave in 1850 in American South cost the equivalent of approximately $40,000. According to figures published by FST, the cost of a slave today averages around $90, depending on the work they are forced to carry out.

Photo by saibotregeel

A young adult male laborer in Mali might only fetch $40, whereas an HIV-free female might attract a price of up to $1000.

Expert Kevin Bales says that because modern slavery is so cheap, it is worse than that of the Atlantic slave trade.

People have become disposable and their living conditions are worse than ever before as a result of their value.

3. Slavery still exists in the US.

Estimates by the US State Department suggest up to 17,500 slaves are brought into the US every year, with 50,000 of those working as prostitutes, farm workers or domestic servants.

According to the CIA, more than 1,000,000 people are enslaved in the US today. Thousands of cases go undetected each year and many are difficult to take to court as it can be difficult to prove force or legal coercion.

4.Slavery is hidden behind many other names, thus disguising it from society.

These names are chattel slavery (the traditional meaning of slavery), bonded labor, trafficking, forced labor, and forced marriage, amongst others.

Photo by saibotregeel
5. The least known method of slavery is the most widely used.

Bonded Labor occurs when labor is demanded in order to repay a debt or loan and the cyclical nature of debt and work can enslave the person for the rest of their life. Some conditions are so controlled that slaves are surrounded by armed guards while they work, many of whom are slaves themselves. This has been found in Brazil. It is estimated that there are 20 million bonded labourers in the world.

6. Human trafficking has recently been described as “the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world.”

This shocking claim was made by former Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright. The UN estimates trafficked human cargo generates around $7 billion dollars a year.

Photo by gigawebs
7. To buy all bonded laborers out of slavery could cost as little as $40 per family.

The $40 figure was provided by the Center for Global Education, New York. Kevin Bales compares the total cost of ending all slavery with one’s week’s cost of the war on Iraq.

8. Free the Slaves believe it is possible to end all slavery within 25 years.

Ending slavery won’t be easy, but humanity is up to the challenge.

9. Many slave-produced goods might reach your home without you realizing their origin.

Industries where slave labor is often highly suspected include cocoa, cotton, steel, oriental rugs, diamonds and silk. Currently the only way to ensure the products you buy are slave-free is to buy Fair Trade certified goods.

Photo by saibotregeel
10. Your actions affect global slavery.

By buying fair trade, learning more about modern slavery, spreading the word, and joining a movement such as Don’t Trade Lives you as an individual can help abolish slavery completely.

With the number of slaves rising due to increasing economic returns, a universal lack of awareness and anti-slavery laws not being enforced, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center believes “efforts to combat slavery will have only limited effectiveness” unless something is done on a larger scale.

The bicentennial of the abolition of the slave trade would be better commemorated by every individual taking meaningful action to help end the exploitation of human labor once and for all.

Find the full article @ http://matadorchange.com/10-shocking-facts-about-global-slavery-in-2008/