Archive for the ‘ Events ’ Category

Fair Food Across Borders Presentation

9:00pm – Thursday, Feb. 19, 2009

Free admission

University of Miami 

Learning Center room 192

Chiapas Media Tour

FAIR FOOD ACROSS BORDERS SPRING TOUR 2009

The Chiapas Media Project/Promedios announces our new bi-national advocacy campaign: Fair Food Across Borders. Fair Food Across Borders (FFAB) reveals the human rights abuses faced by migrant farm workers in Mexico who harvest many of the fruits and vegetables we eat here in the US.

The Fair Food Across Borders Campaign seeks university, cultural and community-based sponsors to host presentations for Spring 2009.  The centerpiece of the FFAB campaign is the new CMP/Promedios video, Paying the Price: Migrant Workers in the Toxic Fields of Sinaloa.  Paying the Price examines the impoverished lives of migrant farmworkers from the town of Ayotzinapa, Guerrero. We follow them from their community to their lives as migrant workers in a large Sinaloa agribusiness camp, Buen Año, where they pick exotic Chinese vegetables for export to the US and Canada. We see the hardships faced by these workers in their community of origin, largely abandoned by the local and state governments to the inhumane and slave-like working conditions they encounter in Buen Año. Paying the Price presents the polarized reality of how migrant workers are seen in Mexico: through the eyes of agribusiness representatives these working families are portrayed as merely an annoying, culturally backward necessity to be dealt with in order to reap their multi-million dollar profits.

Melody Gonzalez, FFAB National Coordinator (from the Student/Farmworker Alliance, ally organization of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers), will present Paying the Price.  Presentations last between one-and-half to two hours, and include video screening and discussion about the role of agribusiness and internal migration in Mexico, NAFTA, and corporate and consumer responsibility in the US.

Fair Food Across Borders asks for an honorarium based on the means of the host organization to help continue the work of the FFAB Campaign.

For further information, please e-mail us at info@fairfoodab.org

Background

It is estimated that there are over one million migrant farmworkers in Mexico.  The majority of these farmworkers come from the southern states of Mexico like Oaxaca and Guerrero.  These families are forced to leave their communities, among the poorest in Mexico, because they have no other way to survive.  They leave their communities from four to six months a year to work in the fields of northern Mexican states like Sinaloa, where they encounter deplorable and over-crowded housing, exposure to toxic pesticides, child labor, and sub-poverty wages. What makes their situation more severe is that when they return back to their they have barely saved enough money to survive until they have to return to work in Northern Mexico six months later.

In northern states like Sinaloa, Sonora and Baja California there are thousands of transnational agribusiness companies producing a wide variety of products from tomatoes to watermelons.  The majority of the fruits and vegetables from these northern states are for export to the U.S. and Canada.  These companies make great profits from these migrant farmworkers, and the companies who buy from them, like Wal-Mart, reap even greater profits from this “cheap” labor across the border.  The lack of regulation and enforcement of human rights in trade agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) facilitate and perpetuate this exploitation.
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Black History Family Festival – Hosted by TML

Saturday, February 28

1-5 p.m.

711 NW 6th ave

 

Touching Miami with Love is hosting a Family Festival on February 28, 2009 in honor of Black history month. TML’s youth are hosting the event as a fundraiser to help them go to camp during spring break!

The youth will perform famous speeches and poems of African American leaders.  They will also sell artwork they created during the TML after school program. 

Call 305-416-0435, ext 202 for more info. 

www.touchingmiamiwithlove.org

MLK: Service Project

Martin Luther King Jr. said “Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.“  Join with thousands of Americans across the country as they commemorate Martin Luther King’s vision and dream by serving their communities.

This Saturday, January 17th, from 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM, we will be participating in a service project at Olinda Elementary School in Liberty City.  Liberty City is a predominantly African American community of Miami with a history of oppression and poverty.  As we show love to the people in that community, we move toward the healing of deep seated wounds and the reconciliation of a very divided city.  Show that love by fixing up the school these children have to be in every single day.  We will help paint murals and landscape the school.

As an additional perk, all participants will receive a delicious free meal from the Lost and Found Saloon.

If you are interested in joining, please email Julie at uvita2007@gmail.com by WEDNESDAY.

Creatives Mission Trip: Haiti

Curt is leading a mission trip to Haiti.

Haiti Mission Trip
When: March 22-29

The Haiti Water Project is looking for a few creative types who want to use their creativity to help bring clean water to people in Haiti.

Here’s the deal: Come to Haiti March 22-29, 2009. We want 10 or so creative, motivated, hard-working souls to enter into this reality with us. Come and understand. Come and tell the story. Come and be an advocate.

We’re interested in people who are unswerving in their passion for any or all of these areas: photography, videography/film production, writing, visual arts, music, awareness-raising, grant writing, etc. If you have a gift, we can find a way for you to serve.

The goal is to use the time together in Haiti to come up with creative new ways to tell the story of the place and people of Haiti. We want to present Haiti as a place full of beautiful people and possibility, a place of hope, a place where people strive not only to survive but to live with dignity. We want the week together to produce something concrete to help tell some of Haiti’s story and to raise awareness for the need for clean water. We want to bring you together here to get people where you live moving to help meet the needs of our neighbors.

A few of these spots are already filled. Please email us at hwp@caribnaz.org if you are also interested and available. Please include what you hope to contribute to this fury of goodwill and generosity.

Cost and other logistics are available after initial contact.

Overtown Folk Life Festival

Come out and enjoy live entertainment, food, games, arts & craft, legacy exhibits and a visit from Santa as Miami celebrates the revitalization of Historic Overtown this Holiday Season.

Enjoy Live Performances By:
Angie Stone, Gerald Austin from the Manhattans, The Miami Junkanoo Band, and many more.

Saturday, December 6, 2008
From 11 am till 7 pm
NW 3rd avenue (between 10th and 12th streets)

Free Concert: Kuyayky and friends

Kuyayky and friends are hosting their annual benefit concert this Saturday.  There will be dancers, colorful costumes, traditional food, and lots of music.  There’s no cost to attend, but all donations go towards Christmas food baskets and musical instruments to impoverished families in the Andes. The event is outdoors, so come prepared for whatever the weather is!  Hope to see you!

Saturday December 6, 2006
@ 6 p.m.
560 NE 129th street, Miami, FL

www.kuyayky.com

Want to help with Mosaic’s Advent preparations?

Just in case you’ve missed our schpeels on ADVENT here is some useful information:

  • Advent is a part of the churches liturgical calendar and dates back centuries ago.
  • It is a time of preparation for Christmas, the celebration of the birth of Jesus.
  • It is supposed to resemble the hope and expectancy that the OT Jews felt during the time they waited for the messiah.
  • And it is supposed to parallel the way the church is in hope and expectancy for the second coming.

During this holy season we, as Mosaic, will join with the rest of the body of Christ throughout the world in reading the same scriptures, singing similar songs, and promoting the peace and justice of God’s Kingdom.

So here are some ways you can participate:

  • Lead Mosaic in a prayer or verse
    • Reading Advent versus during worship time: Please email me and let me know if you can commit to reading 2 verses on a Sunday. We need at least TWO persons to commit to this each week of Advent.
    • Light a candle in the Advent wreath and lead Mosaic in a prayer. We need at least ONE PERSON to commit to this each week of Advent.
  • Servanthood
    • Serving Locally- Check out the post on Mosaic Miami to find out info on serving Touching Miami with Love.
    • Serving Globally- More information will be posted on the site and talked about on Sunday about serving the Haiti Water Project.

Please email me with the Sunday that you’re available and what you’re interested in doing. Thanks for being an active participant in worshiping as a community.

Peace + Justice,

Leslie

It’s about listening and responding. God speaks the divine word of love and mercy; we respond in gratitude and praise.” — Waiting in Joyful Hope (Daily reflection books)

Christmas can [still] Change the World

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The story of Christ’s birth is a story of promise, hope, and a revolutionary love.

So, what happened? What was once a time to celebrate the birth of a savior has somehow turned into a season of stress, traffic jams, and shopping lists.

And when it’s all over, many of us are left with presents to return, looming debt that will take months to pay off, and this empty feeling of missed purpose. Is this what we really want out of Christmas?

What if Christmas became a world-changing event again?
In December, we will be taking time to truelly reflect on the meaning of Christmas.

[Worship Fully]
It starts with Jesus. It ends with Jesus. This is the holistic approach God had in mind for Christmas. It’s a season where we are called to put down our burdens and lift a song up to our God. It’s a season where love wins, peace reigns, and a king is celebrated with each breath. It’s the party of the year. Entering the story of advent means entering this season with an overwhelming passion to worship Jesus to the fullest.

[Spend Less]
We like gifts. Our kids really like gifts. But consider this: America spends an average of $450 billion a year every Christmas. How often have you spent money on Christmas presents for no other reason than obligation? How many times have you received a gift out of that same obligation? Thanks, but no thanks, right? We’re asking people to consider buying ONE LESS GIFT this Christmas. Just one. Sounds insignificant, yet many who have taken this small sacrifice have experienced something nothing less than a miracle: They have been more available to celebrate Christ during the advent season.

[Give More]
God’s gift to us was a relationship built on love. So it’s no wonder why we’re drawn to the idea that Christmas should be a time to love our friends and family in the most memorable ways possible. Time is the real gift Christmas offers us, and no matter how hard we look, it can’t be found at the mall. Time to make a gift that turns into the next family heirloom. Time to write mom a letter. Time to take the kids sledding. Time to bake really good cookies and sing really bad Christmas carols. Time to make love visible through relational giving.

[Love All]
When Jesus loved, He loved in ways never imagined. Though rich, he became poor to love the poor, the forgotten, the overlooked and the sick. He played to the margins. By spending less at Christmas we have the opportunity to join Him in giving resources to those who need help the most.

For more ideas, visit: www.adventconspiracy.org

ADVENT RETREAT: Discovering Christmas Everyday

When: December 6, 2008, 9am-6pm
Where: St. Anthony Chapel

St. Thomas University
16401 NW 37 Ave
Miami Gardens FL 33054
Fr. Matthew Linn, SJ will be conducting our annual Advent Retreat on December 6, 2008 from 9 am to 6 pm at St. Anthony Chapel on the campus of Saint Thomas University. The title of the retreat will be “Discovering Christmas Everyday: Healing the Past, Present and Future”.

Pre-Registration Cost Per Person: $15.00. 5 persons pre-registered together: $10.00 PP (Pre-Registration must be received by 11/24/08)

For more information, please call Cynthia at (305) 628-6641 or email crose@stu.edu

The Great GREEN Family festival

When: November 15 & 16, 2008
10am-5PM Saturday & Sunday

Where: 24801 SW 187 Avenue, Redland at the Fruit and Spice Park

Tickets: available at the gate $6 per person, kids 12 and under are free.
For more info call 305-247-5727 or visit www.myspace.com/greatgreenfamilyfestival or www.REHSonline.com

Bring a blanket on Saturday to lay on the lawn and enjoy live music by Groove Kitchen, Psychadelic Mist, Usual Suspects.

On Sunday, sew your own cloth grocery bag from Morsbags: Sociable Guerilla Bagging.

Special Presentations include Green Trends Fashion Show
Soul Full Eating by Maureen Whitehouse Reducing Household toxins by Migule Cisneros Abreu

Buy local, independent, & handmade, from over 40 vendors.