Archive for the ‘outreach’ Category

Trip to Iran

Third Trip to Iran Planned for April 28 – May 10!

Sam and Ruth N, for Neighbors East and West, are announcing plans for a third trip to Iran with visits to Tehran, Esfahan, Shiraz and other cities in between. The cost will be appr. $1350 for ten-day program in Iran, with a possible three-day extension to Shiraz and Persepolis for an additional $350. Travelers also need to obtain return airfare to Tehran from the United States (appr. $1200) and a visa to Iran (appr. $110). More information about this trip, accounts of earlier trips, and more information about Neighbors East and West can be found at the website http://neighborseastandwest.org or by contacting Ruth and Sam  (email: samn@earlham.edu ).

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Haiti Relief (AFSC)

From the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) :

On 01/20 AFSC  released $50,000 for the purchase of supplies for emergency medical stations, shelter, and other needs of survivors suffering from burns, amputations, and other serious injuries.  In this first phase of response, AFSC is partnering with Handicap International in these efforts.

AFSC has released another $50,000 to provide ten thousand meals over the next 100 days to families in three hard-hit neighborhoods of Port-au-Prince, Morne Hercule, Nevette, and Delmas neighborhoods.  Food is becoming an increasingly urgent priority.  In this phase of response, the AFSC is partnering with HEKS (Swiss Interchurch Aid).

Today (01/22)  AFSC staff prepare to travel to the Dominican Republic and Haiti to see the relief efforts underway and begin an assessment to identify additional pockets of need that are not being met by other providers. After the initial emergency phase, AFSC will commit our energy and resources to longer term reconstruction, recovery, and healing.

For more information or to donate online, please go to www.afsc.org/haiti.

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Haiti Relief (EFM)

From Evangelical Friends Missions (EFM):

In Haiti there are about a dozen Friends Churches with about 2000-2500 attenders, part of Evangelical Friends Church-Eastern Region. (The yearly meeting office is in Canton, Ohio.) The Haitian Friends are located 30 miles northwest of Port-au-Prince, Haiti along the coast. Many in these hills will be unlikely to get aid from other sources anytime soon, according to John Williams, Eastern Region Superintendent. Early reports include some deaths in at least one of the villages but information is still sketchy.

John Williams reported on 01/13 that William Bertram, a Friends leader in Haiti, had managed to reach his daughter Rose in the USA, and he and his wife Marie are safe. Their church had some damage. On 01/20 it was reported that Haitian Friends are already sharing with needy people clean drinking water from a deep well and generator-powered pump.  Funds from Eastern Region built this well! EFM equated the situation in Haiti as nothing less than a magnified scene from Jesus’s parable of the Good Samaritan; not one injured by the road but 200,000 dead, thousands of orphans, perhaps a million traumatized people and overwhelming need.
Emergency funds are greatly needed in Haiti. Their yearly meeting is planning to work with World Relief and possibly World Vision. All Haiti funds that come to Evangelical Friends Missions (EFM) will be forwarded to Eastern Region.

Please clearly mark your check either “Haiti-relief only” or “Haiti-where needed most.”  The latter gives Haitian Friends the freedom to help their ministries there too, for longer-term recovery. Send your gift to EFM, P.O. Box 525, Arvada, CO 80001 or directly to the EFC-Eastern Region office.

Evangelical Friends Missions asks us to pray for our Friends’ families who may be affected and others as well, and to pray that Haitians will help Haitians and break the mold of cultural dependency. Both EFM and AFSC suggest that what is most needed now is money. For more information and the latest on Friends and World Relief efforts, go to www.efcer.org and look for Haiti Bulletin #3 on their home page.

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New Date for Quaker Quest: Feb 20th

Because our original date for Quaker Quest, Feb. 6th, was cancelled due to snow, M&O has rescheduled the event for Saturday, Feb. 20th, 9am-4pm. Friends are asked to let Jana S (or any member of M&O) know again whether you are able or unable to attend for this new date. Also, please let Mary G know again what food you can provide for the potluck lunch.

All local members and attenders are urged to attend this event sponsored by Clear Creek Meeting. This is an exploratory session for us to find out what Quaker Quest is (a structure first developed in the U.K. for both inreach and outreach for local meetings) and to see if we might want to sponsor some public Quaker Quest sessions in the future. It will include a sample panel with Clear Creek members and time for sharing with one another. Please make it a priority to attend!

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April newsletter highlights: Do you feel led?

Over the past several years Clear Creek Meeting has given strong and unobtrusive support to Richmond’s Conflict Resolution Center (CRC).  One of the early leaders of the Center was Margaret L., who was also a member of our meeting.  Since Margaret’s stewardship, the Center has seen a fairly rapid turnover in leadership, staff, and decline in funding.  Within the past year leadership in the Conflict Resolution Center has benefited from the wisdom and energies of Newell P.-S., and Lonnie V., as president and vice-president respectively, Tracey P., and Peter S. as  board members, and Jane S. as a board supporter.

Through the presence of these Clear Creek Friends and other friends, Quakers are maintaining their concern that conflicts within the Wayne County community in homes, schools, prisons, and elsewhere are being resolved without violence.  This is accomplished through mediation and conflict resolution trainings carried out by CRC.  Resources needed to provide the varied mediations and trainings have diminished over time to the point where CRC’s ability to continue operations is being challenged.  If you feel led to acquire additional information about the financial status of the organization or are led to support its work, please contact its Director of Community Outreach, Barry Cramer, at 973-8511.  Barry Cramer may also be reached by postal mail at:

Director of Community Outreach
Conflict Resolution Center
P.O. Box 1564
Richmond, Indiana 47374

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Please hold in the Light

Please Hold In The Light:  The family of Michael B. & Gwen H. for the passing of Michael’s father ; Leslie L. as she recovers from knee surgery; she expects to be able to return to work on April 27; Herb and Amanda F. as they recover from hip surgery– Herb said, “Hip, hip, hurray;”  Mary Anne G. as she deals with heart issues;  Larry H.’s niece who at age 10 is beginning to deal with the problems of childhood diabetes.

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March newsletter highlights: donations needed

  • Donate Food for the Community Food Pantry:  Richmond’s Community Food Pantry, a non-profit organization comprised of representatives from Richmond churches, needs donations of canned, jars and dry foods to meet the growing needs of our community. Clear Creek Friends Meeting has participated in this effort through individuals bringing food to donate on the first Sunday of the month and through other volunteer efforts. Currently Larry H is taking our first Sunday donations to the Food Pantry.  If you have food that has been sitting unused in your cupboard or wish to purchase something to donate, please mark your calendar to bring it on first Sundays.  The biggest need is for canned fruit, peanut butter and jelly.  If, on the other hand, you are in need of extra food to meet your financial needs, please speak to Jane Stowe or our clerk Dave Garman in order to obtain the necessary voucher to be able to pick up the free food.  You may also make a donation to the Food Pantry by making a check out to Clear Creek Meeting and earmarking it for the Food Pantry.
  • Donate Used Stamps to Quaker organizations: Used stamps can be brought to Clear Creek Meeting on Sundays to put in a small box; they will then be sent by Jane S to the Quaker Missions Project of Mattapoisett Monthly Meeting in care of Brad Hathaway, PO Box 795, Mattapoisett, MA 02739-0795. Stamps may be left on their envelopes or not; they may have more value if left on. This project has provided over $50,000 to Quaker organizations, including Right Sharing of World Resources.
  • Donate to Right Sharing of World Resources: Roland K writes that individual donations to RSHW were 10% lower this past year though they are still managing well. This established Quaker nonprofit organization with its office at Quaker Hill makes loans to individuals living in poverty in India, Kenya, and other countries to fund small micro-enterprises to help them and their communities get back on their feet.  Check out their website at www.rswr.org.  If you care to donate, send your contribution to:  Right Sharing of World Resources or RSWR, 101 Quaker Hill Drive, Richmond, Indiana 47374-1926.  For questions call 765-966-0314.
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Open Arms Initiative

Below is an article on Open Arms, a faith-based resource sharing cooperative in Richmond. The article appeared in the Friendly Visitor, the newsletter of West Richmond Friends Meeting, and was written by their Pastor. Nancy F. is the Clear Creek representative to the Open Arms resource sharing cooperative.

“Something’s Happening. . .

About 6 or 8 months ago, I (Josh Brown) had a phone call from Wayne Copenhaver over at First Friends Meeting. Often when we get calls from people in the community who need help, Wayne and I work together to try to meet those needs.

Wayne shared a concern which I’ve felt for a long time – so many of the needs we hear about are too big for one congregation, or even for two or three congregations, to handle.

The requests are endless – for food, for emergency housing, for help with utility bills or prescriptions, for car repairs, for rides, for all of the things which everyone needs. As the economy has gotten tighter, churches and service organizations in our area have had record-breaking numbers of requests.

The other thing which we saw, is that poor people often spend dozens of hours trudging from one office to another, making phone calls on borrowed phones, being told at one place or another why they don’t qualify for this program or why the funds are all gone for that program.

Out of these two needs – the limited resources of churches, and the endless, discouraging search for help – something new is being born.
Wayne asked me to meet with representatives from other churches and service organizations, to see if we could set up some kind of a clearinghouse, where resources and needs can be brought together.

Several proposals of this kind have been tried and failed over the years. But we’ve met half a dozen times this summer and fall, and this time it looks as though we might just get things off the ground.

The clearinghouse is going to be called Open Arms – a name which suggests both the open arms of God’s love, and also that we want to welcome people with open arms, rather than turning them away.

The purpose statement of Open Arms says, “Open Arms Ministries is a faith-based coalition which provides a clearinghouse for ministries serving our area in the name of God, with the intent that needs are met and that lives are transformed.”

Open Arms will receive need requests either in person at an office in downtown Richmond or over the phone. Volunteers will check the validity of requests, and refer people to the appropriate place where they can receive help.

Our plan is to work with existing services, and not shut down any services which are meeting a need. We will encourage the formation of new ministries, while not duplicating services already provided by secular service organizations or government programs.

Each church or participating organization will have one representative on the board. Each church must also agree to support Open Arms financially or in kind, and help recruit volunteers to staff the clearinghouse. Volunteers will also come from places like the Earlham Volunteer Exchange, Retired Senior Volunteers Project, service clubs and organizations. Participating churches and organizations will provide and update an inventory of resources and services which it wants to make available through Open Arms.

In a major step, First Friends has agreed to pay the salary for a part-time coordinator for up to 2 years. The coordinator will supervise the recruitment and training of volunteers, oversee grant writing, maintain the database and report to an Executive Committee. We are looking for office space downtown, and the United Way has already donated computers for the office. You can expect to hear more about this exciting new project in months to come. Please pray for our success, and ask how you can help!

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Query for August

Do you encourage and support the educational activities of Friends? Are you interested in the schools of your community and concerned to establish practices in these consistent with the values you cherish as Friends? What efforts are you making to increase your understanding of your Quaker and other religious heritages and their relation to other religions?

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Swing Semester is in full swing

Satya Stark-Benjar is participating once again in the presidential election year effort by college students and other young people to make a difference by working for progressive efforts for a ten week program. Participants are matched with progressive city resident hosts in swing states. To find out more and to donate online go to www.swingsemester.org . You may also mail a check to “Swing Semester” at 1133 19th Street, NW, 9th Floor, Washington, DC 20036. Satya asks us to consider sending our stimulus rebate checks to support this historic political immersion program initiated by young people.

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