FOUNDATION NEWS


 

Peacemaker Awards Honor Homey and Others Working for Social Change
Video, YO!TV Crew with footage from Claude Marks and the Freedom Archives,
YO! Youth Outlook , Sep 27, 2007

     • Click here to see streaming mp4 video.


 

 

Can we say no to war for 24 hours?

Karen Topakian
Friday, September 21, 2007

When the United Nations declared every Sept. 21 as the International Day of Peace, they asked us all, governments and people alike, to put down our guns for the day. The UN called for a global cease-fire and an observance of nonviolence for just one day, 24 short hours. Will we be able to do it?

     • Click here for full story.



  Photo Kurt Rogers/Chronicle

Mission youth hang with HOMEY to quell gang violence

Patricia Yollin, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, September 20, 2007

Steadily and carefully, Nancy Hernandez and Rafael Moreno turned out one poster after another in a San Francisco print shop. They all said the same thing: "Breakin' Down Barriers."

The words transcend mere sentiment. The people who produced them belong to HOMEY (Homies Organizing the Mission to Empower Youth), a nonprofit organization trying to quell the gang warfare that plagues their neighborhood.

     • Click here for full story.


 

 

S.F. Organization Helping High-Risk Youths
Keeping Teens Out Of Gangs In Mission

By Amy Hollyfield

SAN FRANCISCO, Sep. 20, 2007 (KGO) - Two Northern Californians are being honored today for their work toward peace. One of the awards from the Agape Foundation is going to an organization that tries to keep kids from falling into gang violence. The group has made a real difference in San Francisco.

The group is called HOMEY and the guys in the group really have street credibility -- so when they walk the streets in the Mission and tap kids on the shoulder and say 'hey you don't need to be in this gang, come with us' - the kids actually go with them.

     • Click here for full story.


 

 

Judge denies Cal Berkeley tree-sitters' request to remove fence

Carolyn Jones, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, September 1, 2007

UC Berkeley can keep tree-sitting protesters locked behind a chain-link fence for today's nationally televised Cal football game, a judge ruled.

Alameda County Superior Court Judge Barbara Miller on Thursday denied the tree-sitters' request to remove the fence, saying in a brief statement that the fence is a safety measure and does not constitute development of the site.

Tree-sitters, who have been perched in the Memorial Stadium oak grove since December protesting plans to clear part of the grove for a sports training facility, argued that the fence violated their right to free speech.

     • Click here for full story. (Note: The Agape Foundation has fiscally sponsored Save
        the Oaks Campaign since April 2007? Let me know if you don't receive it.)



  Photo courtesy SFGate.com

Virginia Resner -- strong advocate for reform of national drug policy

Carolyn Jones, Chronicle Staff Writer
Thursday, July 26, 2007

Virginia Resner, a longtime advocate for drug policy reform and the families of imprisoned drug offenders, died July 18 after a lengthy battle with breast cancer. She was 60.

Ms. Resner was co-author of the book "Shattered Lives: Portraits from America's Drug War," which won the Robert C. Randall Award for Achievement in the Field of Citizen Action from the Drug Policy Foundation in 2001. The book documents how families are affected by federal drug enforcement policy.

She was also president of Green-Aid, an Oakland medical marijuana legal defense fund that champions the plight of Ed Rosenthal, a former High Times columnist who twice has been convicted of violating federal drug laws for growing medical marijuana.

     • Click here for full story. (Note: Virginia Resner was a donor to the Agape
       Foundation. She was also a co-author of the book Human Rights and the US
       Drug War which the Agape Foundation funded the production and printing of
       in 1997 and 1999.)



  Photo Katy Raddatz

A feisty madam's mansion receives new calling as Meridian Gallery haven

Jesse Hamlin, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, July 2, 2007

The stately Perine Mansion at 535 Powell St., a French Second Empire red brick structure adorned with wrought-iron grilles, classical scrolls, cornucopia and a Palladian dormer rising through the mansard roof, was once home to Tessie Wall, the flamboyant San Francisco madam whose classy O'Farrell Street cathouse catered to college boys and other well-heeled customers.

Perched along the cable car line on the west side of the Powell Street hill between Sutter and Bush streets, the house was built in 1911 for a burgher named Perine by architect Conrad Meussdorffer, whose other elegant San Francisco buildings include the Family Club next door and the Tamalpais tower on Hyde Street, from which Agnes Moorehead flew out a window in the 1947 film noir classic "Dark Passage." The mansion was bought for Wall by her husband, Frank Daroux, a Tenderloin gambler...

     • Click here for full story. (Note: The Meridian Gallery received a loan from
       the David R. Stern Fund in 2005.)



  Photo courtesy Plenty Magazine

Not Your Average Turnip Truck
One Californian food justice group shows that local, healthy eating starts with education and a tricked-out rig.

By Tracie McMillan

The corner of Market and Brockhurst in West Oakland, CA doesn’t look much like a food mecca. A small church, a low-slung YMCA, and an elementary school occupy three corners of the treeless intersection. On the fourth corner sits the only clue: a two-story house converted to apartments, bearing a colorful, graffiti-lettered sign declaring, “Be Healthy!”

     • Click here for full story. (Note: The Agape Foundation fiscally sponsored People's
       Grocery from 2002 to 2006. The Foundation also awarded them a grant in 2002
       for their People's Grocery Mobile Market.)



  Chronicle photo by Mike Kepka

OUT OF IRAN
Five extraordinary Iranian Americans love both countries but loathe their leaders' war talk


Bob Cooper
Sunday, July 15, 2007

No one reads the headlines about the U. S.-Iran imbroglio -- which swings wildly between threats of war and flirtations with diplomacy -- more closely than Iranian Americans, who number 50,000 in the Bay Area. For them, Iran is not part of the "axis of evil," it's where a grandmother, brother or favorite cousin lives.

Most arrived here with the late-1970s diaspora, escaping the tyranny of the Ayatollah Khomeini only to face harassment by Americans who blamed them for the 444-day hostage crisis. Years later they were caught in the post-9/11 net of suspicion and scrutiny against all Middle Easterners, despite no hint of a connection between Iran and the tragedy.

     • Click here for full story. (Note: Banafsheh Akhlaghi won the Agape
       Foundation RIsing Peacemaker Award in 2006. She is the founder of
       National Legal Sanctuary for Community Advancement which Agape
       has been fiscally sponsoring since 2004.)


 

 

Feature: So grow the gardeners
Beth Waitkus is helping San Quentin's H-Unit cultivate the garden within

by Tanya Henry.

It's Friday afternoon at 2:30pm. As many as 25 men are meandering in to one of a handful of classrooms that surround San Quentin's medium-security H-Unit (predominantly for repeat offenders and parole violators) to learn about tending the prison's 1,200-square-foot organic garden. Beth Waitkus, founder and volunteer director of the nearly 5-year-old Insight Garden Program has had to turn away inmates from her hugely popular elective, as the maximum number of prisoners she is equipped to teach is 30.

     • Click here for full story (Note: The Insight Garden Program has been fiscally        sponsored by Agape since 2004 and received a grant in Spring 2006.)



  Photo: Mike Kepka

SELLING A POSITIVE SELF-IMAGE
Group weighs in on advertising impact


Lisa Hix, Special to The Chronicle
Sunday, June 10, 2007

These days, weight watching has practically become a national pastime.

Take "American Idol." While many believed that Jordin Sparks beat out the more heavyset Melinda Doolittle and LaKisha Jones thanks to her stunning looks, MeMe Roth had a different take. The rail-thin, self-appointed "anti-obesity advocate" appeared on Fox News to hurl insults, couched in unscientific definitions of "health" or "unhealthy," at the normal-size 17-year-old Sparks.

In magazines like Us Weekly, headlines scream that Nicole Richie is an unhealthy 98 pounds, while Jessica Simpson is photographed at an unflattering angle and called "fat" for weighing a mere 130 pounds. Anorexia and bulimia are the subjects of tabloid gossip, as if watching someone waste away of a deadly disease is a sport. Every blogger, commenter and troll has an opinion about what's healthy -- and what's sexy.

     • Click here for full story



 

Knitting Towards A More Peaceful Afghanistan

May 11 - KGO - More than five years after the overthrow of the Taliban, Afghanistan is still one of the poorest countries in the world. Rebuilding a nation ravaged by three decades of conflict is slow work. In this ABC7 Salutes, we meet Bay Area volunteers trying to make sure the Afghan people know they are not forgotten.

War-torn Afghanistan is half a world away from this San Francisco basement. But these women are trying to bridge that distance, one stitch at a time.

Ann Rubin: "Knitters have traditionally always responded to crisis and war by knitting for refugees and for soldiers. It's a long tradition."

     • Click here for full story (Note: afghans for Afghans has been fiscally sponsored by        Agape Foundation since 2002)



 

Senders can show support or sympathy with post-abortion e-cards

LISA LEFF
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO - A nonprofit that runs a national post-abortion telephone talk line has unveiled a series of electronic greeting cards that concerned friends and family can send to a woman after she chooses to terminate a pregnancy.

"Women having abortions are calling our line because often they don't have someone to talk to - it's a stigmatized issue," said Aspen Baker, founder and executive director of Oakland-based Exhale. "So the chance to honor and acknowledge someone's experience by calling upon something that is within our social practices and social mores seemed important and could go a long way toward supporting people."

Like Exhale's confidential talk line, the six e-cards available on the group's Web site were designed to be nonpartisan and encompass the range of someone's potential responses to going through an abortion.

     • Click here for full story (ON THE NET http://www.4exhale.org )



  Chronicle / Michael Macor

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Invest in the community, save the youth

Justin Berton, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, February 19, 2007

In 2001, Jakada Imani voted against Proposition 21, the controversial ballot initiative that increased sentences for juvenile criminals. The legislation, which California voters ultimately approved, allowed prosecutors, rather than juvenile court judges, to decide whether youths ages 14-17 should be tried as adults. Activists feared that the new law would introduce more teenagers to an already overcrowded prison system.

In the wake of the election, Imani, along with a handful of other youth activists in Oakland, founded Books Not Bars, a nonprofit dedicated to ending youth incarceration.

     • Click here for full story (Notes: Jakada Imani serves on the Agape Foundation
       Peace Prize Awards Committee and emceed the 2006 event.)



  Photo courtesy sfgate.com

Norman Frank Beville -- longtime peace activist

Rick DelVecchio, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, January 27, 2007

Norman Frank Beville, a deacon, prison chaplain and peace activist who gave sanctuary to families fleeing El Salvador's brutal civil war in the 1980s, died of respiratory failure on Jan. 18 at a hospital in Oakland. He was 70.

Mr. Beville died of multiple organ failure after nine hours of open-heart surgery, said his wife, Sherry Larsen-Beville.

A memorial service will be held today at 10 a.m. at St. Leander's Church, 550 W. Estudillo Ave., San Leandro.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Frank and his wife Sherry have been longtime
       donors to Agape and fellow peace activists.)



  Deborah Mesa-Pelly

Is There a Post-Abortion Syndrome?

By EMILY BAZELON
Published: January 21, 2007

Early on a windy Saturday morning in November, Rhonda Arias drove her Dodge Caravan past a Wal-Mart at the end of her block and onto the Interstate. She was beginning the 50-mile drive from her house in southwest Houston to Plane State Jail, where she is, as she puts it, an “abortion-recovery counselor.” To Arias, that means helping women at the prison who have had abortions to understand how that procedure has stained them, and how it explains what has gone wrong in their lives. The prisoners’ abortions, she told me, “have a great deal to do with their pain.”

     • Click here for full story (Note: Exhale has been fiscally sponsored by the
       Agape Foundation since May 2002.)


 

Kabul's orphans:
Part one


Sun Media's Doug Beazley talks to Fauzia Assifi of International Orphan Care about the plight of thousands of children in the Afghan city of Kabul.

     • See video clip (Best viewed with Flash Player 8 or higher)


 

Mosaic Comes to the Big Screen

The popular East Bay movie theaters, the Parkway and the new Cerrito Speakeasy, have offered Mosaic Project the opportunity to screen a short Mosaic video before every movie shown at the theaters. They will also have Mosaic information tables at each theater. Watch the video online at:

http://web.mac.com/randomorder1/iWeb/Mosaic_parkway/2ndRevison.html

And/or check it out at the Speakeasy Theaters on the big screen!

     • www.mosaicproject.org (Note: Mosaic Project is the 2005 Agape Foundation        Peace Prize winner.)


 

Give peace a chance; give peace some cash

TIS THE season for charitable solicitations.

Inspired by the spirit of holiday giving and spurred by tax incentives, many people wait until the year's end to make donations. Since most nonprofits receive at least half of our annual donations during this time of year, it is not surprising that we back-load our requests and reminders.

With so many worthy and needy organizations asking for your help, how do you choose where to donate?

The Agape Foundation is challenging individuals and foundations to turn your seasonal wishes for peace on earth into reality by funding peace and social justice work.

We are asking you to think about making your dollars go farther by investing in organizations that target the root causes of social problems. Shift your giving this year, or match your donations to traditional charities that offer palliative care with gifts to organizations that seek to heal our whole social body.

     • Click here for full story



  MARK ARONOFF / PD
 

Peace center director helps soldiers opt out
Forestville activist honored as nonviolence champion

By KATY HILLENMEYER, THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Published: Monday, Sep 25, 2006

Active-duty soldiers trying to sever their military ties have penned Elizabeth Stinson's phone number on their arms. One Georgia man contacted her after seeing it scrawled on a bathroom wall in an Oklahoma City Greyhound bus station.

"We quit counting at 472," said Stinson, when asked how many servicemen and women she's helped opt out after deployments in Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Okinawa and elsewhere. "We get contacts from all over the world through our Web site."

     • Click here for the full story about Agape's 2006 Long Haul Peace Prize winner,
       Elizabeth Stinson.



  Chronicle/Chris Stewart

De-recruiter wins Long Haul Prize

Meredith May, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, September 16, 2006

When military recruiters set up a table at a high school in Sonoma County, chances are Elizabeth Stinson is taking a seat right next to them, to try to urge youngsters not to enlist.

The director of the Peace and Justice Center of Sonoma County counts at least 400 people she's "de-recruited" from the military, a statistic that helped her win this year's Long Haul Prize, given to the most active activist in politically active Northern California.

"Teenagers are trying to separate from their parents as individuals, so they're vulnerable to a recruiter," said the 57-year-old Forestville mother of three, surrounded by posters of Malcolm X, Mahatma Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr. in her Santa Rosa office.

     • Click here for full story



 

Dr. Frederick Pratt

Dr. Frederick Pratt was a dedicated physician, local and international volunteer, and peace activist who above all else gave himself entirely to the service of mankind. On the beautiful morning of August 25, 2006, Dr. Pratt died in his home surrounded by family. In addition to his wife Patricia M. Pratt, who shared with him his passions and work, Dr. Pratt is survived by his children Gwynne Pratt, Daryl Pratt and wife Alison, Marcelle Pratt and husband Dr. David Koster, Serena Pratt and fiance John Robinson, and Dr. Dyveke Pratt; grandchildren Kelan Pratt and wife Jeannette, Carin and Jennifer Pratt, Arthur, August and Arie Koster; great-grandchildren Sydney and Lauren Pratt and many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased in death by sister Elizabeth, and brothers Robert and Arthur Pratt.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Dr. Fred Pratt was a longtime donor to the Agape
       Foundation, the Emmy Lefson Memorial Fund for Peace, Social Justice and Human
       Rights and the Wayne R. Hultgren Memorial Fund for Peace and Social Justice.)



 

New Leaders Council | One Year Anniversary
With Our Featured Speaker
Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi

House Democratic Leader

Food provided. No-Host Bar. Join the Host Committee
(write or raise) New Leader $1000 and up Adam Borelli, Anthony Sisneroz Mentor $500 Amber Maltbie, Leighton Woodhouse, Nicole Rivera, Nancy Bui, Owen Jackman, Devin Lavelle Progressive Entrepreneur $250 Sam Arons, James Joun, Amy Weiss, Denise Heitzenroder, Gautam Barua, Francisco Cendejas, Hillary Sledge, Armando Pastran, Jr., Sarah Hersh, Winston Bonnheim, Shantha Susman, Pamela Bachilla, David Bluestone, Courtney Mayeda, Jonathan Elkin Ticket $50
Students $20 with ID
Thursday, June 1, 2006

5:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Bambuddha Lounge
601 Eddy Street
San Francisco, CA 94109

To join the Host Committee or to RSVP, e-mail Adam Borelli

Please make checks payable to "Agape Foundation" with "New Leaders Council Project" in the "memo".

The New Leaders Council is an organization that advances progressive causes by recruiting a diverse group of young progressive leaders, training them through a comprehensive leadership development program, matching them with mentors, and executing a job placement program. For more information, visit www.newleaderscouncil.org.

Contributions to New Leaders Council are tax deductible through our fiscal sponsor. http://www.newleaderscouncil.org/donate


 

 

Posted on Mon, May. 22, 2006

Providing support after an abortion
Emotional needs afterward are often overlooked. It is critical that they be addressed.

By Aspen Baker

The Guttmacher Institute, the nation's premier research agency on reproductive and sexual health, just released its report, "Abortion in Women's Lives," a detailed account of the circumstances and decisions leading to abortion.

What the report lacks, however, is something commonly overlooked in the debate about abortion: an understanding of the emotional needs and coping strategies of women after they undergo an abortion.

Since 2002, my organization, Exhale, has operated a talk line for women and men to call after an abortion. The line is staffed by trained volunteers and offers nonjudgmental peer counseling, information and referrals in five languages. The cornerstone of Exhale's service is respect for the belief systems - religious, social and political - of all callers.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Exhale has been fiscally sponsored by the
       Agape Foundation since May 2002.)



  Photo by:
  San Jose Museum of Art

You Shouldn't Have!
On the NEA's 40th, the Art of Politics

By Philip Kennicott
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 15, 2006; Page C01

An interesting convergence will occur Wednesday, when the National Endowment for the Arts begins a three-day celebration of its 40th anniversary at American University's Katzen Arts Center. Inside the impressive new facility, commandingly perched on Ward Circle in Northwest, is an exhibition of political art, or "Visual Politics: The Art of Engagement," as it is called by the curators. This is art as provocation, political commentary, utopian imagination, protest and, sometimes, pure unmitigated rage. It deals with gender, race, war and imperialism.

It is, to its core, exactly the sort of art that got the NEA into so much trouble more than 15 years ago.

     • Click here for full story (Note: The Bell Project has been fiscally sponsored by the        Agape Foundation since July 1994.)



  Chronicle photo by Darryl Bush

Nearly 10,000 anti-war protesters gather for march through S.F.

Carrie Sturrock and Meredith May, Chronicle Staff Writers

Saturday, March 18, 2006

More than 10,000 enthusiastic anti-war protesters filled the streets of San Francisco this afternoon as they trekked through the city to mark the third anniversary of the war in Iraq.

The colorful crowd of protesters was boisterous but well-behaved as they made their chanting, sign-waving way through the city. About 400 police officers turned out along the parade route, but most had little more to do than traffic control.

Organizers were both surprised and excited by the unexpectedly large turnout. By 1 p.m., the march stretched for blocks along Mission Street. It took nearly a half-hour for all the varied groups of protesters to pass through the intersection of Fifth and Mission streets.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Grandmothers Against the War became fiscally
       sponsored by the Agape Foundation in March 2006.)


 

 
Tone Shifting in Abortion-Rights Movement

by Julie Rovner

Morning Edition, March 14, 2006 · The presence of two new justices on the U.S. Supreme Court has scrambled the nation's abortion debate. Those who oppose legal abortion are torn between pursuing more restrictions on the procedure or an outright ban. At the same time, backers of abortion rights have their own internal disputes over how -- or whether -- to reframe their message.

Public-opinion polls consistently show that a majority of Americans supports at least a limited right to legal abortion. Yet abortion opponents are consistently winning battles at the state and federal level.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Exhale has been fiscally sponsored by the
       Agape Foundation since May 2002.)



  Karen Bleier / AFP - Getty Images
Politics of Choice
As the pro-life movement gains ground, abortion activists are holding an unprecedented summit to re-examine their strategies—and the ethical aspects of the debate.


WEB EXCLUSIVE

By Martha Brant
Newsweek

Feb. 6, 2006 - Aspen Baker does something most women don’t do: she talks about her abortion. When she got pregnant at 23 she wasn’t ready to be a mother and her relationship was already dissolving. Pro-choice, Baker unexpectedly found herself facing a moral quandary about her decision. “I really struggled,” she says. After the abortion, she figured she’d be given a list of support groups or even just a number to call. But the California hospital that performed the surgery sent her home with only a prescription.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Exhale has been fiscally sponsored by the
       Agape Foundation since May 2002.)



  Photo: SF State News
Salt songs cycle makes award-winning film

When a group of Southern Paiute people met with American Indian studies faculty Melissa Nelson and Philip Klasky four years ago to record a 142-song cycle, they had no idea that their dedication to native traditions would evolve into an award-winning film. But "Salt Songs Trail: Bringing Creation Back Together" took the top prize for documentary shorts at the 2005 Native American Film Festival. Since then, Nelson said, "we're getting requests to screen it all over the country."

     • Click here for full story (Note: Phil Klasky is a former Agape Foundation Board
       member and current member of the Board of Advisors.)



  Photo: © Tribstar.com
Stephanie Salter: Filling a need for ‘pro-voice’ abortion counseling

By Stephanie Salter
The Tribune-Star

It started out as a small, personal quest. A handful of women came together around a shared need: Each had ended a pregnancy with an abortion — or knew someone well who had — and discovered there was no one without an agenda to whom she might talk about the experience.

The women were not looking for someone who would turn their decision into an opportunity for religious evangelization, conversion or condemnation.

     • Click here for full story (Note: Exhale has been fiscally sponsored by the Agape
       Foundation since May 2002 and in 2005 was a recipient of a short-term loan from
       the David R. Stern Fund at the Agape Foundation.)


 

Gird for irony, bay blunder

By Sam McManis -- Bee Staff Writer

Policy wonks, political junkies and pocket protector-wearing engineers probably have long planned to curl up on the couch Saturday and watch a documentary about the ongoing construction of the new Bay Bridge.

But, really, why should the rest of us care to view "The Bridge So Far - A Suspense Story" (5 p.m. Saturday on Channel 10)? After all, doesn't all that political squabbling, bureaucratic mumbo jumbo and engineer geek-speak just make your hair hurt? All we really care about is crossing the bridge on a Saturday night without getting stalled in traffic or tossed into the bay if the Big One hits, right?

     • Click here for full story (Note: Over the years, filmmaker David L. Brown has been         the recipient of several grants and short-term loans from the Agape Foundation.)



  Photo: Chronicle/Kay Raddatz
Behind the garden wall
Not only plants grow in this garden
Some San Quentin inmates are digging their way out of prison


Noelle Robbins, Special to The Chronicle

Saturday, January 14, 2006

It is hard not to notice the gray. Pale gray buildings surround an expanse of asphalt. Men in blue move in a somber fashion through a landscape of windswept concrete. For a first-time visitor to San Quentin State Prison, there can be a sense of foreboding and, frankly, fear.

But then a splash of vivid color bursts forth -- tucked into a small area bordered by steel-gray fencing and shadowed by a looming charcoal-gray tower. A garden, stitched into the corner like a bright calico patch lovingly tacked onto the frayed edge of a dull gray flannel blanket, glows in the late-afternoon sun.

     • Click here for full story



  Photo: Chronicle/Darryl Bush
SAN FRANCISCO
Ocean Film Festival nets 27 offerings
International, local themes range from surfing to politics


Patricia Yollin, Chronicle Staff Writer

Saturday, January 14, 2006

The third annual San Francisco Ocean Film Festival is a place where penguins, surfers, middle-aged mermaids and Bay Bridge construction workers can all peacefully coexist -- at least for one weekend.

"It's a small niche in the world of environmental filmmaking," said Sid Hollister, a member of the festival's content committee. "This year, we were able to combine good, high-quality films with a variety of subject matter. That's always an iffy proposition."

     • Click here for full story (Note: Over the years, filmmaker David Brown has been
        the recipient of several grants and short-term loans from the Agape Foundation.)



  Photo: Chronicle/Paul Chinn
Local Group Financing Grassroots Organization

ABC7 Focus On Solutions

By Willie Monroe

Jan. 9 - KGO - Their goal is promoting social justice. Their method is financing small grassroots organizations. In this ABC7 Focus on Solutions, the Agape Foundation has been doing this for more than 30 years.

The People's Grocery needed a truck to distribute fresh produce and healthy food to west Oakland which has a shortage of grocery stores.

Families against California Three Strikes needed help with the initiative campaign of 2004.

And the Mosaic Project needed help spreading its message of tolerance to young people.

They all called on the Agape Foundation.

Karen Topakian, Agape Foundation: "We think it's very important to fund those groups that don't have access to traditional resources. We want to be a place for those on the edge ideas, and issues of social change. We want to provide a place for people to come for funding and find support to continue with their issues."

     • Click here for full story and video



  Photo: Chronicle/Paul Chinn
S.F. clown juggles humanitarian missions
Moshe Cohen gives people in crisis a reason to smile


Singeli Agnew, San Francisco Chronicle, 12/16/05
After Hurricane Katrina, San Franciscan Moshe Cohen traveled to the packed shelters in Baton Rouge, La., hoping to help the victims of the storm. His collection of relief supplies included a red clown nose, 2-foot-long shoes and several supersize fake...

Clowns without Borders has been a fiscally sponsored project of the Agape Foundation since 1995.

     • Click here for full story


 
Peace Coalition founder to get Baha'i Human Rights Award

Valori George, a founder of the Peace Coalition of Monterey County, will be awarded the Baha'i Human Rights Award at Monterey County's annual Human Rights Day luncheon on December 3, 2005. The event is co-presented by the local members of the United Nations Association, Amnesty International and the Baha'i Community, among others.

Speaker will be Bill Monning of Carmel, a longtime community activist, attorney and professor at the Monterey Institute of International Studies and the Monterey College of Law. he will speak on "Enforcing Human RIghts: A Challenge at Home and Abroad."

The luncheon, which is open to the public, will be at the Elks Lodge, 150 Mar Vista Drive, Monterey. Registration begins at 11 a.m. followed by lunch and the program at noon.

Valori George is the director of the Monterey Peace and Justice Center which received a $2,000 grant from the Agape Foundation's fhe Emmy Lefson Memorial Fund for Peace, Social Justice and Human Rights in the fall of 2005.


 
Berkeley program wins peace prize
Elementary-focused Mosaic Project honored by group that promotes nonviolent change
FROM STAFF REPORTS

BERKELEY — A Berkeley-based program that sends elementary school students to an outdoor camp to learn about diversity, respecting others and resolving conflicts without violence has won a peace prize.

The Mosaic Project won the Rising Peacemaker Prize and a $500 award from the Agape Foundation, a San Francisco group that promotes nonviolent social change.

     • Click here for full story


 
Mosaic Wins Agape Peace Prize
By MATTHEW ARTZ

A Berkeley organization that sends elementary school children from different income levels into nature together to help them better understand one another was awarded the Agape Foundation’s 2005 Peace Price.

The prize, awarded to Mosaic, includes a $500 donation and technical consulting.

     • Click here for full story


 
For Immediate Release: September 22, 2005

Agape Foundation Honors Northern California Peacemakers with Awards for Grassroots Approaches to Nonviolence

San Francisco - As opposition to the war in Iraq continues to grow, the Agape Foundation celebrated the role of Bay Area social justice activists in spreading the principles and practice of nonviolence by presenting its first annual Peace Prize awards to two Northern California peacemakers. More than 100 of the region’s most committed investors in nonviolence gathered for an impassioned show of respect for representatives of today’s diverse, dedicated peace movement.

"The Agape Foundation continues to strengthen grassroots peace and justice movements as it has done for generations," said political activist and scholar Daniel Ellsberg, known for his role in exposing government deception during the Vietnam War.

     • Click here for full press release


 
Capacitar group’s mission to heal earns recognition
By GENEVIEVE BOOKWALTER
SENTINEL STAFF WRITER

With teams in 26 countries, Santa Cruz group Capacitar International teaches disaster and trauma victims "empowerment and solidarity."

Those efforts have earned them the Long Haul Award from Agape Foundation in San Francisco, a nonprofit group that awards small grants to "nonviolent social change organizations."

Capacitar stood out in the group of eight nominees because "it’s a model easily replicated of team building and self development," said Agape executive director Karen Topakian.

"It works to not only respond to people in communities who have been victims of violence, but to heal the community so the violence doesn’t continue."

Pat Cane, who founded Capacitar in the mid-80s and is now co-director, echoed Topakian’s sentiments.

     • Click here to read the full story


 
Wondering what to do on September 11? Come on down to the 911 Power to the Peaceful Social Justice Forum, on Sunday, September 11 from 12-8 at the CellSpace, 2050 Bryant Street @19th. Agape Foundation is a proud partner of this historic event.

Van Jones, Founder & National Executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights will speak briefly about the importance of collaboration and solidarity and then moderate a discussion focused on realistic solutions for change. The summit is free and food and drinks will be provided by generous, in-kind sponsors.

     • Download event flier
     • For more info or go to http://www.powertothepeaceful.org/


Craigslist Foundation Nonprofit Boot Camp, Saturday 8 October, San Francisco, don't miss it!

Once again the Agape Foundation is partnering with the Craigslist Foundation to provide information and resources for emerging nonprofits. Fifty dollars will buy you access to seminars, workshops and panels, and an Exhibit Hall.

     • Download this flier
     • For more info or go to http://www.craigslistfoundation.org



  Photo: www.brucehasson.com
Bruce Hasson, the founder of The Bell Project, one of Agape Foundation's fiscally sponsored groups, will hold an exhibition at the Italian Cultural Institute in San Francisco. He will be showing current sculptures and prints including two bells, one which was made of melted firearms. Exhibition dates are September 1-30th. The opening reception is September 1st from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at 425 Washington Street, Suite 200, San Francisco.

The Bell Project promotes world peace by using melted-down firearms to cast
bells which incorporate images of nonviolence and environmental concerns.

     • Bruce Hasson - http://www.brucehasson.com
     • Italian Cultural Institute - http://www.sfiic.org/



  Photo: afghans for Afghans
Attention knitters: Agape Foundation fiscally sponsored group afghans4Afghans is launching a new campaign to knit and crochet wool sweaters, vests, hats, socks and mittens for 5,000 Afghan girls and boys at orphanages, children's centers and clinics by September 16 (in time for the items to arrive in Kabul before the cold)

     • For more info go to http://www.afghansforafghans.org
     • Or download this PDF flyer


 
Punch Theater, one of Agape Foundation's recent fiscally sponsored groups,
was featured in the San Francisco Chronicle's Datebook section on Monday,
July 25, 2005.

     • Read the article at sfgate.com


 
Pepper Spray Torture Victims Win Legal Victory

In the Spring of 1999, the Agape Foundation Board of Trustees made a grant to the Headwaters Action Video Collective to distribute their video Fire in the Eyes, an emotive portrayal of the pepper spray torture of nonviolent forest defenders, who challenged authority with civil disobedience. These activists filed a civil rights lawsuit to prevent police from using pepper spray as a "pain compliance" tool. Six years later, the jury rendered a unanimous verdict in their favor.

     • Read about it on the Save Our Civil Liberties website,
       http://www.saveourcivilliberties.org/en/index.shtml.
       Scroll down to the posting on 29 April 05.



  Photo: Lewis M. Levine
The Agape Foundation made an Alice Hamburg Emergency Grant to Not In Our Name for the "Saying No to War: When Conscience Requires Refusal" A Symposium hosted by the Social Transformation Concentration, Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center from 2:00-4:00 PM at the Rollo May Center, Saybrook Graduate School and Research Center at 747 Front Street, Third Floor, (Corner of Broadway, just two blocks from the Embarcadero and Broadway Muni Stop on the F line) in San Francisco. Admission is free to the public

This event features US Army Sargeant Kevin Benderman and his wife Monica Benderman. Kevin applied to the Army for conscientious objector status and has had his application declined. Jeff Patterson, a National Staff Member, Not in Our Name, is a former Marine Corporal who was the first publicly known 1990 Gulf War resister.

     • For more info: http://www.topia.net/kbsf.html


 
CESAR E. CHAVEZ HOLIDAY PARADE AND FESTIVAL 2005
Join San Francisco's celebration commemorating the life and work of labor and civil rights leader Cesar Chavez.

DATE:   Sunday, April 3

TIME:     11:00 a.m. - To march in the parade, assemble at the foot of Market Street.
             12:00 Noon - The parade starts.
             1:00 p.m. - The program and festival begin at San Francisco's Civic Center.

For more information, please call (415) 552-2911 or e-mail: CECparade@yahoo.com


 
Eyes Wide Open is a multimedia exhibit on the human cost of the Iraq War. The exhibit has traveled to over 40 cities including the Capitol Lawn in Washington DC on Memorial Day, Philadelphia during the Fourth of July Weekend, and Boston and New York during the Democratic and Republican Conventions. Since its premiere in Chicago in March 2004, Eyes Wide Open has drawn tens of thousands of visitors and has received extensive local, national and international coverage.

The exhibit will include:

- 1358 pairs of boots of US soldiers killed in Iraq... and counting
- 1000 pairs of shoes - men's, women's and children's, which represents the tens of
   thousands of Iraqi war dead
- A 24-foot "wall" of names and incidents identifying Iraqi civilian deaths

     • For more information, please go to www.afsc.org/eyes



  Photo: SF Chronicle
Lucile Wolfe Green of El Cerrito, a former philosophy professor, author and peace activist who wanted an elected assembly within the United Nations to represent people around the world, died from cancer Jan. 22 at her home. She was 87.

Professor Green, who taught at Merritt College in Oakland for 20 years, was the founder and president of Citizens for a United Nations People's Assembly, based in San Francisco. It is one of many activist groups she led that sought to abolish war through worldwide democracy and law.

     • Read the entire article on sfgate.com



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