Monday, December 7, 2009

GCC World AIDS Day Event


Global Citizen Corps leaders gathered to make some noise on Sunday, December 6th in Portland ,OR. With live music, facts and figures hanging from red balloons and a lot of energy they joined together to build awareness about the global AIDS Pandemic.

Last year 2.7 people became infected worldwide, half of which were young people between the ages of 15 and 24. That breaks down to nearly 6,000 people under 25 infected each day.

Now 33 million people around the world are living with HIV/AIDS and women account for 50 percent of those cases. Although the pandemic is worldwide, Sub-Saharan Africa has been hardest hit—the area accounts for around 10% of the world’s population but it accounts for 67% of all people living with HIV/AIDS.

Due to slightly increased access to improving drugs, the number of people living with HIV/AIDS has risen. Despite this around 2 million people still died of the disease in 2008.

All these scary statistics hung from the red balloons just above visitors’ heads at the Action Center in Portland to help people understand the realities of the AIDS pandemic.




Created with flickr slideshow.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Don't Stop Believing




You know how certain songs can take you back to another time and place? For Global Citizen Corp leader Casey Drobnick the song “Don’t Stop Believing” by Journey transports her back to one of her first experiences with the Global Citizen Corps community.

Casey had spent a summer in the Dominican Republic helping to build houses and was struggling to adjust to life back at home. With a new outlook on the world and her place in it she was feeling like her new way of seeing things was not shared by many people—until she found Global Citizen Corps.

After she joined he attended a leadership summit. For Casey the clear highlight of the summit was a two-hour video conference with like minded GCC leaders from Iraq. There she was in the middle of a large group of American kids, chatting and discussing serious issues with kids from Iraq! The Iraqi students sang traditional Kurdish songs and Casey and the other American kids sang “Don’t Stop Believing”—you know: “Just a small town girl, livin’ in a lonely world. She took the midnight train going anywhere!”

After the Global Citizen Corps Summit and the video conference Casey knew that she was not alone in his desire to see real change in the world. There are plenty of people with the same hopes and dreams—they just have to be found. And Global Citizen Corp is a great place to find them.

World AIDS Day



By the end of the day AIDS was completely erased— at least in halls of Wilson High School. Global Citizen Corp Leaders there organized activities for World Aids Day on December 1st. The day is set aside for the world to focus on the continuing spread of the AIDS pandemic and to raise awareness on how to prevent it. To educate their peers GCC leaders wore red and encouraged their classmates to do the same in a display of solidarity with those afflicted. They put up posters around the school with facts and statistics and had a table set up in the hall where they passed out pins, ribbons and informational booklets. On the wall they had a banner that spelled out AIDS with condoms that were meant to be pulled off as a reminder of the simple things that can be done to prevent AIDS. By the end of the day the banner was blank, the table and posters were gone— any trace of AIDS had symbolically disappeared.



Monday, November 23, 2009

Gaza/Portland Student Leader Video Conference



One of the coolest parts about GlobalCitizenCorps is how it provides great ways for student leaders across the world to meet and discuss the issues that affect them. On November 12th GCC Students from Gaza, Palestine met via video conference with fellow leaders in Portland Oregon. They discussed a wide range of topics--everything from food and music to what it's like to live in a war zone. By the end it was clear that both groups, half a world away, shared many of the same passions and goals for the world.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

A River Ran Through It

What would you do if your city’s livelihood suddenly dried up? Students in Khanaqin, Iraq faced this very question after their city’s river disappeared due to a dam that was built in Iran. They took their voices all the way to the Kurdish Parliament— this is their story.


Until recently agriculture was a main source of income for many of the people of Khanaqin. The climate was dry but the Alwand River flowed through providing the water needed to grow crops. The river also gave the city a source of drinking water, fish, and recreation.


Then a dam was built upstream in Iran. The water stopped flowing and the riverbed and fields became dry. Many of the townspeople lost their livelihood and were forced to flee to find food and a living elsewhere.


Many other towns along the path of the river, which originates deep in the mountains of Iran and empties into the Persian Gulf, also lost their sources of livelihood due to the river’s disappearance.


According to international law it is illegal to monopolize the use of a shared resource that crosses borders. Iran was perhaps unwittingly violating human rights however they seemed unperturbed by the struggles they had induced. The struggling people downstream were angry but did not know what to do.




Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.


Enter Omar W, a Global Citizen Corps leader. He and a group of fellow students created a plan to get their story heard and to inspire action. They visited 22 affected villages along the river path and compiled a list of data. In the areas they visited they found that with the river gone, agriculture as the main source of income, had dropped from 95% of people to around 5 % and 43 families had to emigrate from the area due to drought.


Then they gathered more than 100 people and 15 international channels for a conference called “Restoring Life to the Alwand River.” The conference produced a set of ideas on how to proceed. First: Request a meeting with the Kurdish Parliament. Next: Try to get media coverage and political pressure on Iran increased. And finally: consider the construction of their own dam on the Iraqi side of the border to trap any water still trickling and save it for summer.


It is not easy to get a meeting with anyone from the Parliament. Omar and the group made many phone calls requesting some face time and finally a meeting with Dr. Arsalan Baiz, the Vice President of the Parliament was granted with only 12 hours notice. They were a 9 hour car-trip away but packed up quickly and drove all night to the Kurdish Capital making sure their statements and requests were just right on the way.


The ideas from the conference were discussed with Dr. Arsalan along with the possibility of securing annual water ratios and potential compensation for the affected areas. The Vice President thanked the group and promised to

take their issues before the entire parliament.


Omar and those who joined him for the cause left very proud of all they had been able to accomplish. They felt a new sense of empowerment—that they could really make a difference.



Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Leadership Summit Inspires Teens to Become Activists


Here is a news article about the Global Citizen Corps Leadership to go along with the video and pictures posted below.

High school students from across the country met in New York in early October and participated in a Leadership Training Summit. The Summit take place every year to encourage and assist young people interested in global activism. Similar summits were held at the same time in other parts of the world. Meetings were set up via satellite allowing the New York group to see and chat and even sing with the Iraqi group!


www.voanews.com



www.globalcitizencorps.org

More From the Leadership Summit in Portland


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.


www.globalcitizencorps.org

GCC Leadership Summit 2009: Portland


The Mercy Corps Global Headquarters in Portland Oregon hosted its very first Global Citizen Corps (GCC) Youth Leadership Summit from October 9th through 12th! The summit brought together 25 high school leaders and GCC alumni from across the US to develop their awareness and provide tools for action on global issues such as hunger, health, climate change, human rights, conflict and access to education.

The students who met in Portland are part of an international program that connects youth leaders from around the world through online dialogue and action projects. The program is now active in the USA, UK, Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq and the Palestinian Territories.

Student leaders participated in discussions and workshops on the issues with Mercy Corps staff, an amazing crew of Global Citizen Corps alumni, guest speakers, and went on local field trips. They were also able to participate in a live video conference with their peers in Iraq to discuss the issue of access to education, and they ended the event with a talk from Mercy Corps CEO, Neal Keny-Guyer.



www.globalcitizencorps.org

Global Citizen Corps on Blogger.com

Welcome to the Global Citizen Corps' blog! If you're not familiar with us, we are a part of Mercy Corps, an international development organization that works in over 38 countries around the world. Global Citizen Corps is Mercy Corps’ international youth program that brings high school and university aged students together to make a difference on the issues that matter.

Our theory is Awareness + Action = Impact. Students from around the globe discuss issues like climate change, conflict, education, health, human rights, hunger and water. They learn how to take action on these issues in their communities and how together we can make a collective impact. This blog is about this international network of youth who are determined to make a difference. It’s also a way for you to get involved. Welcome, enjoy and don't forget to check out www.globalcitizencorps.org to get involved in the conversation or learn more about ways you can build awareness and take action.