Author

Charity

Poverty Buster #6: Give a Displaced Iraqi Hope for the Future

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has called the Iraqi migration the largest and fastest-growing crisis of its kind in the world. Although many of the displaced are professionals with business and trade skills, most have little or no access to jobs, schools or health care.

Iraqi kids
Photo credit: Ashley Clements/World Vision/Jordan

Did you know that:

  • An estimated 60,000 Iraqis flee their homes every month?
  • Since the start of the war in Iraq, approximately 4.4 million Iraqis—half of them children—have been displaced?
  • More than 2 million Iraqi refugees have left the country, most fleeing to neighboring Jordan and Syria?

Global Impact member charities, including Mercy Corps, World Vision, Church World Service and International Rescue Committee, are working in both Iraq and Jordan, concentrating on the most critical needs: emergency supplies, health care, food, education and employment. They are reopening schools, immunizing children and providing employment for families.

Your gift of $100 can help pay school fees or provide essentials like textbooks, backpacks and school supplies such as notepaper, scissors, rulers, pens, pencils and crayons for three Iraqi children.

Global Impact is dedicated to helping the poorest people on Earth. Representing more than 50 of the most respected U.S.-based international charities in giving campaigns across the nation, Global Impact touches more than 400 million lives worldwide through disaster relief, education, health training and economic programs that promote self-sufficiency.

1 CommentCharity

It only takes 2 minutes!

This guest-post is brought to you by Rinnah.

I’d like to ask you to take just two minutes of your Internet time (from checking email, web-surfing or blog-hopping) to check out these very special websites:

The Hunger Site
For just a click a day, the website promises to donate a cup of food for the hungry. If you can click-thru on an ad or to a site that interests you in the course of your surfing, why not take a moment or two to click-thru to this site? Hungry people in places like Africa will thank you for it even if they don’t know how their food came about. Pelf also blogged about it sometime back here.

FreeRice
This is also another feed the hungry site, but they do it differently by making you exercise your grey matter a little bit in the process. You have to play a word game, and for every word you get correct twenty grains of rice will be donated. There’ll be a visual graphic on your screen showing you how many grains of rice you’ve successfully donated and I find that really motivating (for me, at least) to keep on playing the word game. Not only do I get to enhance my vocabulary, I also get to do a bit for charity at the same time.

So, can you take a bit of time to click-for-charity? Do a good deed everyday :o)

Rinnah writes about anything and everything that strikes her fancy over at It’s all about the spin…

1 CommentCharity

25 uses for an old toothbrush

This post has been published in The Good Rabbit.

I don’t know about you, but my dentist recommends that I change my toothbrush every 3 months. I don’t brush my teeth as hard as I brush my toilet bowl, but still, toothbrushes are meant to be replaced every 3 months! Well, if you use an Oral-B toothbrush, you could rely on the fading blue stripe on the bristles as an indication that it’s time to get a new one, but if you aren’t, just set your alarm to ring every 3 months, LOL.

Old toothbrushes
Image credit: Magdalena.

So what do you do with all those old toothbrush you’re accumulating? WHAT?! You mean, you throw them all away?! Some of the many uses of an old toothbrush:

  1. Scrub shower corners, tile and the bottom of your shower sliding door if you have one.
  2. Have a keyboard? Use the toothbrush to clean between the keys.
  3. Clean out your lemon or garlic press with a toothbrush.
  4. Brush your combs clean with an old toothbrush.
  5. Clean your finger nails after gardening.
  6. Clean and oil tools and car parts.

- Compiled by Gloria Campos @ AboutMyPlanet

Recommended reads:

Comment?Environment

Page 7 (of 66)« First...«56789»...Last »