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jenergy   jenergy Jennifer Corriero's TIGblog
Jennifer Corriero's profile

Reconnecting to my Roots

Tonight I joined a dynamic discussion about how to make TheStoreFront Community project self-sustaining...and I couldn’t help but flash back into the early days of when TakingITGlobal was founded and we had our discussions on what future directions we would take and how our ideals and dreams could be transformed into actionable plans. Of course, even after 9 years of having the ‘idea’ of TIG, the essence of having challenging strategic conversations still remains part of my current reality – however the energy in the room this evening reconnected me to the Fall of 2000, when we hosted meetings with invitations sent out to friends, organizations and those who joined our website from Toronto.

IMG_0724

The dynamics of the room jolted from cohesive and interconnected to somewhat tense given the financial realities of the project. Earlier this year, a 1000 square foot store front space was established in order to serve as a support and communication network in the context of an urban village. Starting in January, the costs of rent will be doubled and the project in its current state does not generate enough revenue to afford costs of rent or administration. That said, an exciting range of events have taken place in recent months including a documentary with interviews of people in the neighbourhood, the inaugural BIG on Bloor Festival (bigonbloor.com/festival), the “b-l-o-o-o-o-r” design campaign including sales of well designed American Apparel t-shirts and bags, the “Everything Local” silent auction event and hosting of meetings, events and exhibits including the Afri Village Fest front window presence & photo documentation.

The project was made possible through a partnership between ThinkTankToronto, Business Improvement Area Office, and a group of students and faculty at the Ontario College of Art and Design (OCAD).

A key driver and designer of the initiative is a former TakingITGlobal staff member, Ghazaleh Etezal who is currently 21 and worked with us as a graphic designer in 2006. As I connected with Ghazaleh this evening, it was amazing to see her in action in her role as one of the connectors and in hearing people reference her contributions of design, research and coordination for TheStoreFront. It was also great to chat with Ghazaleh this evening and hear her attribute TakingITGlobal as part of her inspiration for the project.

IMG_0730

In many ways, the place based goals of creating community for TheStoreFront initiative are aligned with the global online community objectives for TIG. As explained on the website, TheStoreFront aims to be “the common space between two separate disconnected worlds of youth, institutions, neighbourhood NGOs, programs and services available within the BloorCourt and BloorDale Villages (Christie to Lansdowne on Bloor West).” On a conceptual level, it is intriguing for me to observe and be part of a conversation about how to grow and sustain a space that supports vibrant community engagement.

Some of the ideas shared this evening that are most interesting to me include:

- Having a paid membership fee (i.e. $10/month)
- Hosting regular meetings (weekly or monthly) for ‘members’ to attend which would serve as a social space, with topics of discussion
- Utilizing the space to feature the products of local artists (i.e. clothes, jewlery, artwork)
- Having a cafe space with organic chocolate & other organic snacks sold
- Renting out the space to community organizations for events/meetings
- Offering workshops to help meet needs of community members (i.e. English as a second language, or focusing on a particular craft/skill with guest speakers etc).
- Establishing a core base of volunteers (i.e. a partnership with the neighbouring Working Women Community Centre), to offer an experience for newcomers to Canada living in the neighbourhood which would help to ensure that core responsibilities are fulfilled (i.e. keyholders with people who are responsible for opening & closing up the space)

One concern that emerged from the discussions was the issue of timing and how challenging it will be to raise sufficient funds in time for the end of the year. There was some discussion on what the concept or project would be if it did not live in the specific space at 957 Bloor W – however most of the ideas generated were aimed at trying to keep the space alive.
If it ends up not being feasible to maintain the 957 Bloor W StoreFront space due to costs, my recommendation is to develop stronger partnerships with existing places designed for the community (i.e. local community centres, employment centres, libraries etc) and try to help revitalize existing spaces that are supported by the government and that have a history of serving the community. While I love the idea of transforming commercial spaces into being community driven and serving, it may be too challenging to develop a financially sustainable model at this current time due to current economic realities.

On a final note...I do hope that the financial challenges can be overcome and that a proven model can be developed, shared and scaled with other communities!

Here's a list of who came:

Night at the Indies / Meow Films: Gurbeen
Community Arts Collective / Daily Bread Food Bank: Jim
BIG and BIG Festival: Ann
People Plan Toronto: Ann
DIG IN: Donna / Ann
Torontopedia: Himy
Working Women: Diana / Jessica
BloorCourt BIA: Shelley
IF Theatre: Sara
Supportive, active, creative, engaged dedicated locals: Ryan / Michelle / Phil / Darcy / Leah / Leigh / Chatherine S / Craig / Camilo
Delaware Residents (Street Festival): Rosalie
Delaware Open Space: Darcy
Humanist Movement: Nick / Roberto
Sistering (past Chair): France
Green Party: Steve
Annex Lions Club: Monica
Wireless Toronto: Gabe
Concord Café: Genoveva
Christie Ossington Neighbourhood Centre: Tim
Dufferin Grove Residents Association: / Rob
Anarchist U: Christian / Maggie
Laidlaw Foundation: Ana
Globe & Mail: Nadja
Property Owner 957: Robert Markovits
Chemistry Branding (consultant and partner): Will
Jim Allen Photo: Jim
TakingITGlobal: Jennifer

[unconfirmed]
Freedom Clothing: Amanda
Parkdale Liberty: Jennifer
ArchiTEXT: Zahra
Long & McQuade: Jon
Toronto Poets: Jason / Hajile
Linux Caffé: David



December 2, 2008 | 11:45 PM Comments  0 comments

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mfeussom   mfeussom J. Marc FEUSSOM's TIGblog
J. Marc FEUSSOM's profile

Cameroon/ Cameroun : Il faut sauver le jeune Bright, Save Bright’s Live

hostingpics.net

Nous avons été a été saisie de la situation dramatique que vit un jeune camerounais, ceci dans l’indifférence totale des dirigeants de son pays. Il s’appelle Fuh Afangwei Bright. Il est âgé de 4 ans. Sa vie est un calvaire pour lui-même, un supplice pour ses pauvres parents.La santé de Bright n’est donc pas brillante comme son nom aurait pu malheureusement l’indiquer. Selon sa maman Gladys Ambesso, voici deux ans: « Il a commencé à avoir dans son œil droit comme de la lumière ».



L’enfant alors âgé de deux ans, avait été opéré par des médecins à Bafoussam sans diagnostic préalable précis. Après une courte période d’espoir de guérison, l’œil droit de Bright s’est enflé devenant aujourd’hui une monstrueuse tumeur. Un autre verdict scientifique conclut alors qu’avant même de sortie de la jupe de sa maman, Bright est porteur d’une tumeur cancéreuse.

La dégradation de l’état de santé de Bright est poussée à tel point qu’il faille aujourd’hui le transférer d’urgence à l’hôpital central Yaoundé. Démunis, les parents de Bright qui vivent de prières et survivent par chance ne peuvent même pas se payer le transport routier entre Bafoussam et Yaoundé. Le risque que Bright surcombe à son mal est dès lors très grand si rien n’est fait dans les heures à venir.

Quelles sont donc les chances de survie de notre jeune compatriote?

Ses parents Godwill Fuh et Gladys Ambesso comptent sur l’humanisme de tous pour sauver un jeune camerounais, l’un de ceux là qu’à Etoudi on s’empresse de nommer fer de lance de la nation lorsqu’ils récoltent les lauriers sportifs.

Meurtri dans sa petite chair et du haut de ses 48 mois de vie seulement sur terre, un autre fer de lance de la nation vous regarde !


Voici le contact de la famille de Bright: 00 237 75 46 41 15 et le 00 237 75 87 25 27
-------------------------------------------------
Fuh Bright Afangwei: hopes for a bright future, not insight? ( CRTV source)

The story of Fuh Bright Afangwei can hardly be told without holding back tears.Born of 23-year, Fuh Godwill and 21-year Ambesso Gladys, the story of this 4-year little boy started in 2006 when the child complained of right eye pain. The parents whose monthly income can be estimated at 25000 FRS CFA ($50) instantly took their first son in quest of a proper diagnosis.

After criss-crossing a numbers of health centres in the small locality of Bafut where they lived, the boy was later referred to Acha Annex in Bafoussam, a Hospital reputed for treating relatively complicated eye problems.

Godwill and Gladys welcomed the doctor’s proposal to carry out a surgery on the sick eye; they even braved the financial cost involved in the treatment.



Bright’s right eye was operated upon; that was to begin a new page in the medical history of this little boy who was just two at the time.

Four months after the operation, Bright’s mother recounts that the skin around the eye progressively bloated.

Several consultations at other medical centres proved fruitless, and Gladys and Godwill cried aloud for help.

The Director of the Bamenda Provincial Hospital heard the cry of desperation and referred Bright to the Obstetric, Gynaecological Hospital Yaoundé.

In his referral letter of 23rd October 2008, the Director noted that the child had been diagnosed with Right Orbital Tumour.

Since then, this family from Bafut, a rural area in the North West Province , is painfully subjected to the odds of Yaoundé, the capital city.

The burden is heavy but they still cling on hope even though, there have been no apparent improvement on the child, so far.

Close to six weeks after this new adventure, no solution seems to be insight and as one of our readers indicated, the clock is ticking faster for Bright and the confused Gladys and Godwill now depend on people of goodwill to give them more reason to hope.


This is the Bright's family contact : 00 237 75 46 41 15 et le 00 237 75 87 25 27


December 2, 2008 | 12:57 PM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

For Women, AIDS Day Comes With Dose of Frustration

Monday, 01 December, 2008
Women's eNews

On Dec. 1, the 20th annual World AIDS Day, health advocates are raising the
alarm about the quadrupling of HIV-AIDS among American women and the failure
of the U.S. heath care system to address this growing pandemic.

(WOMENSENEWS)--Heidi Nass was prepared to die.

In 1995, when Nass was diagnosed with the human immunodeficiency virus that
leads to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, most women with HIV-AIDS
succumbed to the disease in less than five years.

"Doctors had me taking 13 pills a day, including new drugs called protease
inhibitors," says Nass. "My medications gave me constant diarrhea, terrible
vomiting and drug-related pancreatitis. Physically miserable and emotionally
devastated, I didn't see how I could go on living like that."

Since protease inhibitors have been improved--and since they've proven
effective at treating HIV-AIDS--Nass' prognosis has turned around. Today,
she takes three pills daily with no noticeable side effects. She's healthy
in her body, happy in her life and productive in her work as a treatment
educator at the HIV Care Program at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

For 280,000 HIV-positive women in the United States, new treatments have
revolutionized care, making it possible to live on for decades and to bear
children without transmitting the disease.

That's the kind of victory that HIV-AIDS activists will be celebrating today
at a World AIDS Day meeting at the Women's Resource Center at the University
of Oregon in Eugene; at a benefit featuring jazz singer Loretta Holloway in
Greenville, S.C.; at a "Girls Night Out" discussion forum in Augusta, Ga.;
and at a Black AIDS Institute gala featuring actress Sheryl Lee Ralph--and
honoring five female HIV-AIDS activists--in New York City.

But at the same time, women's health advocates are marking the 20th annual
World AIDS Day with more than a hint of frustration.

"Key scientific questions aren't even being asked," says Dazon Dixon Diallo,
president of SisterLove, an Atlanta-based HIV-AIDS advocacy organization for
women. "The disease's impact on female fertility and reproduction is barely
being addressed."

'Still Falling Through the Cracks'

"HIV-AIDS has become a chronic disease instead of a death sentence," says
Dawn Averitt Bridge, founder of the Well Project, an Atlanta-based HIV-AIDS
advocacy group for women. "Twenty years after the first World AIDS Day, this
disease still remains a crisis because women are still falling through the
cracks."

Since 1988, the incidence of HIV-AIDS has quadrupled among women, who are
the fastest-growing group of new patients. Women account for a quarter of
new infections, and inadequate prevention, screening and treatment are to
blame.

"HIV-AIDS has become a woman's disease before our eyes." says Nass. "And
poverty, racism and institutionalized sexism are making certain groups of
women especially vulnerable."

Though women account for only about a third of HIV patients in the United
States, they are in many ways more endangered by the disease than men. Due
to microtears sustained in the vagina during sex, HIV is transmitted from
men to women much more readily than it is from women to men, making women
especially vulnerable during heterosexual contact that accounts for 80
percent of their infections (with injection drug use accounting for the
remaining 20 percent).

In both sexes, HIV compromises the immune system that normally protects the
body from disease. But in women, it carries a higher risk of liver problems,
pneumonia, rashes, yeast infections and susceptibility to sexually
transmitted infections.

Women of Color at Higher Risk

For women of color--at heightened risk due to the fact that they often have
lower incomes and inadequate health care--the disease's spread is of special
concern to advocates.

Hispanic women are five times more likely to contract HIV than white women,
and African American women are 21 times more likely to do so, according to
the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Among black women, the disease has become so rampant that it is this group's
leading cause of death in the 25-to-34 age bracket.

Health advocates say the rapid-fire spread of HIV-AIDS among women is fueled
by the health care system's failure to address it.

Though women account for 27 percent of HIV infections, they account for just
17 percent of HIV-AIDS research subjects.

In the 1990s, studies showed diaphragms and the spermicide nonoxynol-9 did
not protect women against HIV, as previously hoped. Researchers started
developing microbicides, topical products that prevent HIV from infecting a
woman's cells and give her more control over prevention than condoms do
because she doesn't have to negotiate their use with a partner.

But under the Bush administration, the Bethesda-based National Institutes of
Health devoted only 2 percent of its AIDS budget to microbicide research,
and trials of two major microbicides failed.

'A Decade Away From a Vaccine'

"Testing the other 55 microbicides in development will take several more
years, and we're at least a decade away from the creation of an HIV vaccine
that could help women as well as men," says Anna Forbes, deputy director of
the Washington-based Global Campaign for Microbicides.

Just as in scientific research, screening measures for women are falling
short. HIV tests are not a routine part of women's health care even though
surveys by the Washington-based American Foundation for AIDS Research
indicate 67 percent of women assume they're tested for HIV when they are
screened for other sexually transmitted infections. Due to a lack of
adequate testing, the foundation reports, 25 percent of HIV-positive U.S.
women don't realize they're infected.

Gender inequities in treatment persist. Studies published in the New England
Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association
indicate female HIV-AIDS patients are more likely than male counterparts to
live in poverty and face barriers to health care, making them less likely to
receive protease inhibitors and antiretroviral drugs, the most effective
medications.

Along with these practical problems come the shame and stigma that seem to
hit female patients especially hard. Surveys by the American Foundation for
AIDS Research show most HIV-positive women feel isolated and conceal their
status from co-workers, friends or family members for fear of being judged.

But advocates do see some rays of hope.

New "rapid" screening tests using blood or saliva take 20 minutes, compared
to the two weeks required by older tests. Most pregnant women in the United
States are now screened for HIV during prenatal exams. Antiretroviral drugs
have helped lower mother-to-child HIV transmissions from 25 percent in the
early 1990s to less than 2 percent today.

Health advocates commend Congress for its continued funding of the Women's
Interagency HIV Study, which was launched in 1993, enrolls 3,800 women and
is co-sponsored by seven health agencies. It is the largest continuing study
of its kind in the United States to date.

They also cheer the Food and Drug Administration for putting "fast-track"
HIV-AIDS drugs on the market quickly if their makers agree to study the
drugs' effects on women.

As they look ahead, women's advocates say they would like to revise the
federal Violence Against Women Act so it funds more HIV screening and
treatment for domestic violence survivors. They also hope to pass the
Microbicide Development Act, which was introduced in the Senate in 2007 by
President-elect Barack Obama and which would establish a permanent
microbicide branch at the National Institute of Health.

Molly M. Ginty is a freelance writer based in New York City.

Women's eNews welcomes your comments. E-mail us at editors@womensenews.org.
--
Rachel M Jacobson
Program Director
Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS
www.iAIDS.org | www.youthaidscoalition.org

December 2, 2008 | 11:36 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Your VOTE counts...Vote NOW...

==========
West Africa
===========


Benin
Burkina Faso
Cote d’Ivoire
Gambia
Ghana
Guinea
Liberia
Mali
Mauritania
Niger
Nigeria
Saint Helena
Senegal
Sierra Leone
Togo

Akinbo A. A. Cornerstone
Nigeria
+2348064464545

December 2, 2008 | 11:31 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Dear GYCA Members - Voting has began...

We're excited to announce that the election for the next round of regional focal points is now open and will stay open until December 12! To vote for the RFP of your region, please go here: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=O9HvclSdFE9_2fcdN_2bKQDLMA_3d_3d. You are only allowed one vote and that vote is for the RFP for your region.

Before you vote, please visit GYCA's countries by region page (http://www.youthaidscoalition.org/pages.html?page=regions) because GYCA has
specific criteria for placing a country in a region. These might be different from what you would expect, so it is best to double check before you vote.

This is the first time that GYCA members will vote for their RFPs and we look forward to your participation in this process!

Thanks!

=============================
West Africa Candidate: Akinbo A. A. Cornerstone (Nigeria).....VOTE NOW !

December 2, 2008 | 11:26 AM Comments  0 comments

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yassirovich   yassirovich Yassir EL OUARZADI's TIGblog
Yassir EL OUARZADI's profile

Trouvons ENSEMBLE des solutions au réchauffement climatique
About this event: Les enjeux du réchauffement climatique


Bonjour et bienvenue parmi nous !!

Contribuez dès maintenant en postant un message sur ce site web concernant vos projets reliés à l'environnement ou si c'est juste pour débattre d'une question environnementale, utilisez les forums de discussion de notre page de projet. Pour inviter vos amis à joindre le projet, cliquez sur la liste des membres dans la page d'accueil et ensuite sur Inviter un membre.

POUR DEVENIR MEMBRE du projet intitulé Trouvons ENSEMBLE des solutions au réchauffement climatique, visitez : http://projects.takingitglobal.org/ecologique

Si vous préférez participer au groupe concernant le même projet, visitez: http://groups.takingitglobal.org/ecologique

Yassir
http://profiles.takingitglobal.org/yassirovich

November 28, 2008 | 2:34 PM Comments  0 comments

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sessi   sessi Sessi's TIGblog
Sessi's profile

Leadership Action : connaissance des enjeux d'affaires et sociaux
Related to country: Canada


Pari réussi pour la deuxième session de formation Leadership Action, organisée par la Jeune Chambre de Commerce de Montréal (JCCM)* le 26 novembre dernier, au centre ville de Montréal. Encore une fois la JCCM a su répondre aux attentes des participants avec brio.
Le thème de l’atelier était axé sur la notion de connaissance: connaissances professionnelles approfondies et sensibilité aux enjeux d’affaires et sociaux.

Animée par deux experts du monde des affaires, la JCCM, toujours fidèle à son approche intergénérationnelle a opté pour une formule encore plus interactive !
Une combinaison gagnante qui a eu le mérite de permettre la contribution de chacun des participants.

Une vingtaine de jeunes professionnels/entrepreneurs, répartis en groupes de 4 ont été invités tout au long de l’atelier à réfléchir sur différents exercices, et ce en 3 temps : individuellement, en sous-groupes, enfin en partageant le fruit de leur réflexion à l’ensemble du groupe. Les participants étaient aidés par un questionnaire, une feuille de route et les rétroactions éclairantes des présentateurs…

D’une part, Francois Taschereau, directeur général d’Edelman relations publiques à Montréal, et gouverneur à la JCCM, qui a cumulé plus de 20 ans d’expérience en affaires publiques et communications corporatives, à titre de consultant ainsi qu’au sein de grandes entreprises et du gouvernement du Canada.

D’autre part, Frédéric Michel, président de la JCCM et directeur principal, Services-conseils, Gestion des risques et Amélioration des opérations chez KPMG depuis 2007. Titulaire d'un diplôme en ingénierie de l’Institut Chimique et Textile de Lyon (France), et d'un MBA de l’École de gestion Telfer de l’Université d'Ottawa, il a reçu en 2008, le prix Tremplin de l'Association des MBA du Québec.

Voici une brève synthèse des exposés des experts :
C’est bel et bien dans l’action que l’on développe ses capacités de leadership. Le leadership ne s’enseigne pas, il se développe tout au long de notre carrière.

Les compétences techniques ne suffisent pas. On peut être le meilleur des experts, mais ne pas savoir mobiliser et motiver une équipe, trannsmettre des connaissances, résoudre des conflits...
François Tashereau nous a parlé de la gestion des priorités en nous illustrant par des exemples précis (conversations stériles avec des collègues, réunions trop longues et non-productives…)

Il a également insisté sur l’importance de la lecture pour développer ses compétences de leadership (livres, journaux, revues, magazines…), en mentionnant qu’il ne sert a rien de TOUT lire mais qu’il faut s’atteler à lire des choses pertinentes relatif à ses champs d’intérêt et d’expertise. En d’autres mots, lire mieux et plus efficacement (notamment en prenant des cours de lecture rapide si nécessaire).
Aussi l’exercice proposé par Francois Tashereau sur le "Need to know", "Nice to know" et "Don’t need to know" a permis à chacun des participants de mieux comprendre comment il peut gagner du temps et mieux gérer le volume d’informations auquel il est souvent exposé dans son travail.

Frédéric Michel nous a exposé de façon claire et succincte les principaux points à retenir concernant la gestion de risque.

La notion de risque est inhérente à toute activité humaine. Dans le domaine des affaires, que ce le secteur des ressources humaines, des communications, des technologies etc, on est tous exposés à des risques…La notion de risque empêche l’atteinte de l’objectif tandis que l’opportunité la maximise.

Il y a 4 stratégies de gestion de risques :
- éviter le risque
- accepter le risque
- transférer le risque
- mitiger le risque (en d’autres mots le réduire)

La dernière option est la plus souvent présente dans le milieu des entreprises.
Quant aux discussions, elles ont été productives et fructueuses. Voici les principaux points qui ont été mis en commun lors de l’échange collectif :

• Identifier les domaines où l’on a besoin d’élargir ses compétences
• Être à l’écoute
• Sortir de sa zone de confort
• Être proactif
• Se créer des opportunités
• Être toujours à l’avant-garde
• Aimer ce que l’on fait
• Être conscient des risques et des opportunités
• Gérer ses priorités (et entre autres savoir dire non!)
• S’inscrire aux 5 -6 blogs (flux RSS) concernant l’actualité de notre domaine d’activité
• Organiser l’échange d’information
• Savoir déléguer
• Équilibre vie travail famille
• Être intelligent dans son réseautage
• Se constituer un plan d’action
• Se faire "challenger" par un coach

En bref, c’est à nous tous de rester maîtres à bord de notre processus de développement de connaissances, de savoir identifier ce qui est bon, pertinent de connaître ou non pour nous-mêmes, de suivre notre propre cheminement tout en faisant un bilan et en se remettant en question régulièrement.

*Les partenaires du Programme Leadership Action: Secrétariat à la Jeunesse du Québec, Défi de l’entrepreneuriat Jeunesse



November 27, 2008 | 8:13 PM Comments  0 comments

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jenergy   jenergy Jennifer Corriero's TIGblog
Jennifer Corriero's profile

Art for me
About this category: Arts & Media


layout

Art for me
is a journey
into the unspoken, unknown, unwanted and unheard
realities of our shadows
and of our hopes.

We are suspended in time
glimpsing in the mirror
of our future and our past
They flash before us and cause a jolt
of hope, of fear, of want, of release.

Our senses on overload
we admire and adore
our object of fascination
representing the idol we love
and demon we hate.

we forgive
we empathize
we heal
we bathe
in beauty
and bliss.

This is art
for me.

November 27, 2008 | 12:46 AM Comments  0 comments

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mfeussom   mfeussom J. Marc FEUSSOM's TIGblog
J. Marc FEUSSOM's profile

Prenez vous " TIG " au petit déjeuner?

Prenez vous " TIG " au petit déjeuner?

Si ou pendant combien de temps?

Si non pourquoi?

Image hébergée par Casimages.com : votre hébergeur d images simple et gratuit

A vos commentaires

November 26, 2008 | 3:47 AM Comments  0 comments

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mfeussom   mfeussom J. Marc FEUSSOM's TIGblog
J. Marc FEUSSOM's profile

Le Saviez - vous : Environnement - Réchauffement climatique Les gaz à effet de serre plus présents que jamais

La concentration de CO2 dans l'air et des autres gaz à effet de serre ont battu tous les records en 2007, révèle l'Organisation météorologique mondiale, faisant craindre une accélération des effets du réchauffement climatique.

November 26, 2008 | 3:43 AM Comments  0 comments

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lwfyouth   lwfyouth Roger Schmidt's TIGblog
Roger Schmidt's profile

It is not an option


This is a series of blog posts concerning youth participation. The articles will be published every Tuesdays in the coming 7 weeks.

Before looking into the passage, try to ask yourself which of the following statements best describes your view on youth participation.

1. Youth participation is not very much a pressing issue. Youth will become older and by then they will still meaningfully participate in the church. Somehow by then it will be the better timing for them to participate after they have gained more experience.

2. Youth participation sometimes just does not make sense. Why should we engage those youths? You know, some of them are just naïve, arrogant and lack of experience. What is the point to include them when we have all kinds of experts?

3. Engaging a certain number of youth is essential. But it should not be pushing higher and higher. For instance, 10% of youth in an international meeting is already reasonable. Given the fact that not many of them speak, what is the point for having more?

             Even if you may accuse me of betraying the youth, I could not entirely disagree with the above statements. In some cases, those views are partially right while in many cases they were being used as an excuse for delaying and impeding youth participation. 

            One fundamental understanding should be made clear. Encouraging youth participation is not a choice. As it is clear in the bible that church should be inclusive to women and man, lay and ordained and young and old. One cannot decide whether to promote youth participation by conducting a cost-and-benefit analysis. It does not work that way. 

            Although I believe meaningful youth participation is essential for a church to grow healthily, it often gives rise to a handful of challenges before bearing fruits. For instance, When a church try to engage a youth representative in its council, the elders soon realized that it hampers the ‘efficiency’ of decision making as the youth often see things differently (But it is exactly why we should engage the youth)

            Engaging youth may not bring immediate benefit to the churches but more challenges to be dealt with. It could be one of the major reasons why youth participation is always being put at the bottom of the agenda. 

             However, it is clear that no single group should monopolize the governance of the church as all are called by God to serve him and build His church. Striving toward a more inclusive communion is a mandate for the church. It is not an option.

      

November 25, 2008 | 5:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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