Showing posts with label Social Concerns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Concerns. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

A Religious Response to Climate Change – III: Our Daily Bread


Where: Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church 

602 North Wilmot Road, Tucson, Arizona 85711

When: 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM on Saturday, October 29, 2016
Mass (optional) @ 8:30 AM Lunch @ noon (free-will offering)

What: After our sessions had on 4 October and 13 December 2014 on global climate change and its likely impacts on the environment that sustains our lives, we meet now to review the science of global climate change and its projected consequences that impact our food supply. As a religious people, who pray for our daily bread, we seek understanding, wisdom and courage to take informed actions as good stewards of God’s creation.

Our five speakers on the different aspects of our chosen topic are:

• Katie Hirschboeck - Associate Professor of Climatology, Tree-Ring Lab, U of Arizona; National Catholic Climate Ambassador  CatholicClimateCovenant.org
The science of global climate change: update on where we are now and perspectives on where we are headed

• Clark Hansen - Regional Organizer in Organizing and Grassroots Capacity Building, Bread for the World
Hunger: current status of global food production and distribution; likely scenarios from climate change; and possible responses to meet the global needs

• Marco A. Liu - Director of Advocacy and Outreach, Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona
Hunger: current status of local food production and distribution; likely scenarios from climate change; and possible responses to meet our local needs

• Angel Wang - Committee on Creation Care, Episcopal Diocese of Arizona
Greening Episcopal Churches – What are Episcopalians doing to help address climate change?

• John Leech - Associate Priest, St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Tucson, Arizona
Theological reflections: spiritual context for environmental actions

In addition to general and group discussions, we will have opening, noonday and closing prayers.

There will also be information tables for different concerned groups including:

Bread for the World
Community Food Bank
Scraps On Scraps
Iskashitaa Refugee Network
Citizens’ Climate Lobby
Green Church

RSVP by sending an email to hsieh@dakotacom.net by 25 October 2016.  Many thanks!

Monday, June 20, 2016

Announcements for Week Ending June 25, 2016


Just a Reminder.....Casa Maria sandwich-making is this coming Friday, June 24th at 5 PM in the Smith Parish Center. Your help is needed to prepare sack lunches for the homeless and disadvantaged of Tucson. Volunteers can always use a few “eggstra” hands and as always “shelled” hard boiled eggs. Join them for fellowship and to help with this good work
_________________________________________________________________

From the Senior Warden:
The Vestry has had two days of intense conversation face-to-face with the finalist of the candidates. The Vestry is currently in deliberation and will make an announcement at the appropriate time. Thank you for your patience and participation.  Please keep on praying so God’s will be done. Amen. †
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Dear Friends at St. Michael’s,
Thank you for all your love and caring for me during my three months recovery from my fractured hip.  Your phone calls, visits and cards were a great support during the dark days. The sun is shining again and I am so grateful!
Thank you from,
Margaret Harnsberger
_________________________________________________________________

SIGN UP TO VISIT OPERATION STREAMLINE with the Social Action Committee on June 28! Every weekday at the Federal District Court in Tucson, up to 70 immigrants receive prison sentences after being charged with the felony of “re-entry after deportation.” This is your chance to witness en-masse legal proceedings. Sign-up sheets in back of church!

Drawing credit: http://www.janetgoldner.com
_________________________________________________________________

You are invited to join Parish Life for an evening of burgers, lively conversation and fellowship. Meet us at the ZINBURGER located at 6390 East Grant Road ~ Thursday, June 30th at 6:30 pm.  Sign- up sheets are located in the back of church.

__________________________________________________________


Reminder: Taizé Service this Tuesday, June 21 at 6:45 pm in church. All are invited to join us!

Contemplative Prayer Group will meet this Saturday, June 25th at 9:30 am at the House of Prayer. Everyone is invited to attend.



Sunday, June 19, 2016

Guatemala Sendoff Pix - Featuring the Blessing of the Jeep!

The 2016 Guatemala Project Sendoff took place Saturday, June 19th. All photos are by Senior Warden Ke Chiang "John" Hsieh.



Fr. Jorge Sotelo blessed the vehicle that has been 
donated to the Project for use in Guatemala.



Domingo Alvarez Ajanel, on a visit from Guatemala, discusses 
his work with the Maya communities.






Photographer Michael Hyatt, a Tucson Samaritan, 
donated the vehicle and will help drive.


Domingo and Project coordinator Ila Abernathy


Reception.

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Guatemala Project Sendoff!

You’re invited!
Guatemala Bound! Sendoff Fiesta
Sat. June 18, 5 PM
St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church
602 N. Wilmot Road (at 5th Street)




Welcome visitor Domingo Alvarez Ajanel, health leader and president of the 22 associated rural Maya communities St. Michael’s Guatemala Project serves. Alvarez has testified in D.C. on behalf of forensic teams working in Guatemala. He is completing a professional nursing degree on weekends.

Send off a Jeep Cherokee and drivers, traveling overland through Mexico for Guatemala – a 2400 mile adventure. Photographer Michael Hyatt, Tucson Samaritan, donated the vehicle and will help drive.

Celebrate Maya survivals and a 23-year non-sectarian Project relationship emphasizing health, mutual learning, cultures, and indigenous rights.
  • Greetings from Arizona indigenous friends
  • Jeep blessing
  • Thanks and in-country updates from Alvarez Ajanel
  • Project information
  • Maya traditional textiles on sale


Light refreshments, gratis. Guatemalan foods available.

FREE. Donations encouraged to benefit Maya health volunteers, the communities served, and children who need special treatment – and help deliver the Jeep!

Information: Coordinator, (520) 623-3063, ilaa@mindspring.com. www.cprguatemalaproject.org. Church, 886-7292, www.smallangelstucson.org

Photos: Domingo with Project medical supplies purchased in-country, above. Young weaver, Pal, Area Xeputul. Michael with the donor jeep and communities’ logo. Coordinator Ila with same. Rural Ixil Area community. The Jeep will deliver supplies and move patients in this and other hamlets.

Monday, June 06, 2016

Announcements for Week Ending 6/11/2016

Reminder: Taizé Service this Tuesday, June 7th at 6:45 PM in church ~ all invited! Contemplative prayer 9:30 AM, June 11 ~ House of Prayer ~ All welcome

Reminder: Guatemala Project send off fiesta here Saturday, June 18, 5 PM including blessing of a Jeep Cherokee donated by a Tucson Samaritan who attends Southside Presbyterian, greetings from indigenous friends, and welcome to Domingo Alvarez Ajanel, health leader and president of the 22 associated rural communities with whom we work. Thanks to parishioner Robert MacArthur, who donated frequent flier miles to make Domingo’s trip from Guatemala possible.

Putt-ing Kids First event June 10th!
Please join the Blair Charity Group for a fun-filled family evening at Golf & Stuff June 10th from 6pm to 10pm.  The all-inclusive price covers all attractions food and beverage and supports the mission of the Blair Charity Group and Arizona Basketball Academy and its summer camps and monthly clinics.   Our two camps this summer will serve over 200 Tucson area kids in a program that combines basketball skills taught by current and former University of Arizona Basketball team members as well as former and current NBA players with a unique approach to incorporating life skills training.  We offer these camps and clinics to kids at no cost and our fund raising efforts support that mission.   Please see Peg Van Norman for tickets or purchase online at http://blaircharitygroup.org/

SIGN UP TO VISIT OPERATION STREAMLINE with the Social Action Committee on June 28!  Every weekday at the Federal District Court in Tucson, up to 70 immigrants receive prison sentences after being charged with the felony of “re-entry after deportation.” This is your chance to witness en-masse legal proceedings.
Sign-up sheets located in back of church.

Thanks to everyone who brought in lifesaving water and wonderful gifts of socks (great quality!) for desert walkers as we devoted last Sunday to welcoming the stranger among us. We also assembled 100 migrant food packs for distribution by Tucson Samaritans.  Artist Deborah McCullough and spouse Ed, both active Samaritans, delivered all our gifts, a full-to-overflowing carload.  Debbie writes, “Ed and I successfully unloaded everything with the help of a young migrant recently arrived sitting in the shade at Southside.  It was a generous gift from your church.  On behalf of those who will benefit and whom we will probably not meet personally, thank you.”

From now to June 19, please bring a limited number of supplies for Guatemala Project: reading glasses in great condition (150 to 3 00 magnification); adult and prenatal vitamins with minerals, children’s chewable vitamins with iron (iron is essential due to pervasive anemia).  For anything else, please check with Coordinator Ila Abernathy. We will haul supplies down in a jeep Cherokee donated by Samaritan Michael Hyatt. And don’t forget to join us Saturday, June 18th at 5 p.m. to bless the jeep, welcome community leader Domingo Alvarez Ajanel, who joins us from Guatemala, and celebrate the continuing adventure.

WHAT ARE YOU THANKFUL FOR? CHECK OUT THE EASEL IN THE SMITH PARISH CENTER FOLLOWING MASS!

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Photos from the Weekend


Canon Theologian, The Rev. Dr. Gil Stafford, presents
“Jesus: His Mind, His Mystery, His Magic.” Photos by KCH.


Announcement time!


The Rev. John Fife after his sermon


Food packs ready to go


Humanitarian supplies.

Friday, May 27, 2016

Announcements for Week Ending 6/4/2016

Search Update: 
On Saturday, May 22, the Nominating Committee completed the second round of Skype interviews. After careful discernment, they submitted their recommendation to the Vestry. Please hold the Vestry in your prayers so that God's will may be done. Keep on praying! --Senior Warden John Hsieh

A Reminder: As part of the routine maintenance of our graveyard, faded or oversized decorations (exceeding 5" x 5" x 5") will be removed this week, beginning on Monday, May 30th. we appreciate your cooperation.

This Sunday (May 29) is Border Sunday! After worship, please join us in the Parish Center to prepare migrant food packs for Tucson Samaritans, enjoy the usual coffee hour treats and conversation, and after the 10:15 AM Mass, savor a pupusa prepared by a Guatemalan family seeking asylum. Sponsored by your Social Action Committee.

Sign up to visit Operation Streamline with the Social Action Committee on June 28th! Every weekday at the Federal District Court in Tucson, up to 70 immigrants receive prison sentences after being charged with the felony of "re-entry after deportation." This is your chance to witness en masse legal proceedings.

Putt-ing Kids First event June 10th! 
Please join the Blair Charity Group for a fun-filled family evening at Golf & Stuff on June 10 from 6 PM to 10 PM. The all-inclusive price covers all attractions, food and beverages, and supports the mission of the Blair Charity Group, and Arizona Basketball Academy, and its summer camps and monthly clinics. Their two camps this summer will serve over 200 Tucson-area kids in a program that combines basketball skills taught by current and former University of Arizona Basketball team members as well as current and former NBA players, with a unique approach to incorporating life skills training. They offer these camps and clinics to kids at no cost and their fundraising efforts support that mission. Please see Peg Van Norman for tickets of purchase online at http://blaircharitygroup.org.

Guatemala Project Sendoff fiesta is here on Sunday, June 18th at 5 PM, including the blessing of a Jeep Cherokee donated by a Tucson Samaritan who attends Southside Presbyterian, greetings from indigenous friends, and welcome to Domingo Alvarez Ajanel, health leader and president of the 22 associated rural communities with whom we work.Thanks to parishioner Robert MacArthur, who donated frequent flyer miles to make Domingo's trip from Guatemala possible.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Casa Maria this Friday - Special Instructions!

Friday May 27th - Casa Maria sandwich making.
St Michael's Parish Center   602 N. Wilmot

Please bring 1 dozen peeled hard boiled eggs
Please bring medium sized boxes for transporting the lunches.
If you can deliver sandwiches once or twice a year please let us know!
    

Due to 8th Grade graduation on Friday night, parking will be very limited!  Please read the following suggestions carefully. Choose the one that works best for you:

**Come EARLY, 4:15-4:30 and park in the alley east of the church
**Park at the Library and walk up the alley to the parish center
**Park on Brian Kent St. north of the church and walk south through the carport of the HOUSE of PRAYER, 6310 E. Brian Kent, to the church
**Park across the park on Corinth Ave, there's a paved sidewalk across the park to the alley
Questions? Contact Sue Peyron. Thanks for your understanding and flexibility!



NEXT CASA MARIA:  FRIDAY June 24th
Mark your calendars for 2016!   Casa Maria is every 4 weeks...

May 27th
June 24th
July  22
Aug 19th
Sept 16th
Oct 14th
Nov 11th
Dec 9th

Jan 6th 2017
Feb 3rd

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Announcements for Week Ending 5/21/16

The Wednesday Adult Education Class is beginning a new topic. We  are using Professor Charles Mathewes’ lecture course entitled “Why Evil Exists.”  Prof. Mathewes, a professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia (and an Episcopalian) discusses approaches to the problem of evil beginning with ancient Babylonian creation myths through the end of the 20th century.  The class meets Wednesdays at 10 am in the Womble Library.  You are invited to join us.

One of the lodges at Chapel Rock. Photo by KFB.

Wanted!  St. Michael's children for Chapel Rock Summer Camp! St. Michael's families for Family Camp! Check it out online at chapelrock.net/camps.  The children's and youth camps run monthly during the month of June. Family camp runs July 7-10. Registration ends at the end of May so act soon.The Diocese and our own parish can help with financial assistance.  Please contact our office as well as the Canon for Children's Ministries at (602) 254-0976.

Migrant Sunday May 29:   Sermon, socks, water, pupusas! 
Reverend John Fife, Pastor Emeritus of Southside Presbyterian Church, will preach. Become a good Samaritan by bringing in water...gallon jugs and 24-pack pints...as well as new cotton socks. Migrants in the desert need your help as the temperatures begin to climb! The risk of dying from dehydration and from blisters is high. On the same day, the Social Action Committee will organize our annual filling of snack packs for the Samaritan desert walkers' distribution to migrants. And at coffee hour, a Guatemalan family of nine, who fled their home and have applied for political asylum, will sell their home made pupusas. Please come with your appetite and help the Ortega family. 

Taizé Service will be held on Tuesday,  May 17th. You are invited to join us for forty five minutes of prayer, scripture readings and music.  Just a perfect way to spend your early evening time.  Bring a friend!

PARISH LIFE AT THE DAKOTA CAFÉ ~ THURSDAY, MAY 19 AT 6 PM ~ In Trail Dust Town on Tanque Verde on the West side before you reach Kolb.  Sign-up sheets in back of church. All are invited.

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

This Weekend...Car Wash, Rummage Sale, and the Sierra Club Presentation!

Mark your Calendar!  Boy Scout Troop #122 will be having a CAR WASH and RUMMAGE SALE - THIS Saturday, April 23 beginning at 7 AM in the North Parking Lot at St. Michael’s. We need your cars for washing and gently used items. Collect your gently used items and deliver them to the North Parking Lot on Friday, April 22nd from 5:00 PM until 8:00 PM. The Boy Scouts thank you for your help!

Social Action Committee meets Sunday, April 24, in the Womble Library following 10:15 Mass. Every one welcome as we plan activities for the next few months. Agenda items: Peggy Van Norman. 

Attend the environmental presentation "From Border Walls to Border Lands" with Dan Millis of the Sierra Club's Borderlands Program, this Saturday, April 23. 9 AM coffee will be followed by a 9:30 AM program with stunning visuals, new perceptions on the border. ​FOR IMPORTANT DETAILS, SEE BELOW!

Have a wonderful weekend,

Blessings,

Nancy

You’re needed to greet our guests!


We’ve invited the community to join us this Saturday, April 23 ,9 AM at the Smith Parish Center, for a visual, informative look at environment and border lands with Dan Millis, Coordinator of Sierra Club’s Borderlands Program since 2008. Coffee and conversation start at 9 AM, program at 9:30.

Grace-St. Paul’s is helping promote the event. Calendar releases and e-invites have gone out.

Now we need you! It isn’t just that we are hosts. This will be an excellent program, informative and factual, painlessly educational, with a succinct Power Point and stupendous visuals, and opportunity for discussion and questions.

If you can help by bringing coffee hour treats, or helping set up or serve, or being a greeter, please call or e-mail Ila, You are really, really needed!

Perfect pairing with the Boy Scout car wash / rummage sale. Come check out the “reuse and recycle” items, then pay the Boy Scouts to spiffy up your car while you enjoy coffee and the program.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Border Walls to Border Lands - April 23rd at 9 AM


“From Border Walls to Border Lands: Environmental Impacts of U.S. Border Policy,” an interactive visual presentation by Dan Millis, Sierra Club Borderlands Program coordinator, takes place Saturday, April 23, 9 a.m. at St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church, 602 N. Wilmot Road (at 5th Street), in the Smith Parish Center. Admission is free.

The activity opens with coffee and other refreshments, informal conversation, and exhibits. Millis’ presentation, which covers international boundaries from San Diego to Brownsville, with a focus on Arizona, begins at 9:30 and will end around 10:30. Planners say to expect surprises as participants rethink how they visualize borders.

Grace-St. Paul’s Green Committee and St. Michael’s Social Action Committee co-sponsor the event one day after Earth Day. They remind of the spiritual responsibility, as acknowledged in an Episcopal Eucharistic prayer, to respect and cherish “this fragile earth, our island home” (Book of Common Prayer, p. 370).

Information: St. Michael’s Social Action (520) 623-3063); http://www.sierraclub.org/borderlands.

A concurrent car wash and rummage sale by Boy Scout Troop 122 begins outside at the same location at 7 AM, North parking lot. Come and check out the bargains, then arrange to get your car washed!

Saturday, March 05, 2016

News from Guatemala, plus Announcements Through March 12th, 2016

A Note from Ila Abernathy and the Guatemala Project:
Dorothy and I are in Nebaj, waiting the word if Petrona de Paz, well known to RN Sarah, can leave the hospital in Nebaj tomorrow for new tests in El Quiche.  We had to cut short our time in rural Santa Clara Area (3 communities, 2 best approached on foot, after a 6-hour pickup truck ride to the first) in order to accompany Petrona de Paz to the hospital in Nebaj, for transfer to the cancer hospital in Guatemala City.  We were hoping for departure tomorrow, but it had to be delayed until Monday, while tests were ordered.  We are so concerned not to let this last opportunity slip away for Petrona that we are hiring a pickup truck to follow the ambulance to El Quiche, where two more tests have to be done before we arrive in the capital.  [Social worker got one for free, one at reduced rate, which we will pay].  See earlier note to a few folk below, which gives a bit about the medical condition.  Even the doctors here had never seen a carcinoma quite like this one.

This should have happened two years ago. With the cooperation of everybody, and our presence, and assurances we would accompany all the way to the capital, we got her out of remote Xecoyeu by ambulance on Wednesday (will send photo of the "road"). I sorta had to promise the moon to the sometimes-reluctant husband that we would cover any uncovered medical expenses and his food and transportation in the capital, so feel free to send tax-deductible donations to St. Michael's Guatemala Project, 602 N. Wilmot, Tucson, 85711. Dorothy Chao and I will cover any new expenses personally and get reimbursed after we return to Tucson March 10.

For you medical types, it's a "massive" (approx. 18 x 27 cm.) carcinoma of the left breast, and an earlier, much-delayed biopsy indicated it is a "comedocarcinoma." Dorothy promptly looked it up on her smart phone, and it's a type that usually doesn't metastasize. But this has gone on for three years, and there was also infection when we arrived. Wish the best for Petrona. She is 37, has 8 children.

Ila

More about Petrona and her journey: Patrona dePax Lopez - Welcomes to Ixil and Quiche Mayan Communities ______________________________________________________________

Announcements

United Thank Offering (UTO)

Envelopes and / or Thank Offering boxes are available in the back of church. Please be as generous as you circumstances will allow.
______________________________________________________________

~ You are Invited ~
Please join us THIS MONDAY, March 7th at 5:30 PM in the Smith Parish Center as we enjoy a meal with our friends for the Islamic Center of Tucson. (Reservation sheets in back of church).
______________________________________________________________

Ladies, mark your calendar for Wednesday, March 16th.  The Episcopal Church Women, ECW, will meet at 10:30 am. in the Smith Parish Center.  All women of St. Michael’s are considered members and are invited to attend for fellowship, lively conversation and a chance to make new friends.
_______________________________________________________________

Dear Parishioners, I need your help. Our membership data base is seriously outdated.  People have moved, changed addresses, changed phone numbers and/or email addresses.  Please take a moment to complete an update form, even if you have not made any changes. Simply complete the update, fold it and drop in the collection basket, take it home and bring it back next week, or simply mail it. Thank you for your thoughtful consideration in this important task.              
 ______________________________________________________________

Taizé is celebrating its 5th Anniversary at St. Michael’s! Join us
for a special reception following the March 15th Taizé Service at 6:45 pm.
_______________________________________________________________

March 17th ~ POZ Café Luncheon.
St. Michael's is once again participating with 2 other churches and TIHAN in putting on the March 17th POZ Café luncheon. We have been asked to donate 40 rolls of paper towels, 80 boxes of Kleenex, and 320 disposable razors. These items will be put in the care packages that are given out at the luncheon. The razors and Kleenex can be purchased at the Dollar Tree for a dollar. Please help us fill up the chest in the back of the church. Cash donations to buy these items are also welcome.
We need 6 volunteers to help the day of the luncheon, March 17-time is 8:30 am to 2:30 pm.  (Sign-up sheet in back of church.) See Dianne Gundersen or Diane Tyron for details.
_______________________________________________________________

JOIN PARISH LIFE FOR A St. Patty’s Day Feast!
Thursday, March 17th at 6:30 pm
St. Michael’s Smith Parish Center
$10.00 per person
Music provided by Dave Erhardt and friends!
And Piper ~ Michael Leeming

Dinner prepared by Chef Andy O’Bruno and includes traditional corned beef and cabbage, potatoes, carrots and bread pudding.  Beer additional. Reservations sheets in back of church and reserve no later the March 11th.


Thursday, March 03, 2016

Update - Dinner with Islamic Center of Tucson


 ~ You are Invited ~ Please join us on Monday, March 7th at 5:30 PM in the Smith Parish Center as we enjoy a meal with our friends for the Islamic Center of Tucson. (Reservation sheets in back of church). Please note that the meal has been rescheduled from Thursday, March 10th. As you may know, Muslims in Tucson and elsewhere have been under increased pressure recently due to ignorance, suspicion and outright bigotry on the part of other Americans. Please help us extend a welcome to our fellow Tucsonans in the spirit of tolerance and friendship.

Tuesday, March 01, 2016

Announcements for Week Ending March 5th, 2016

March 17th ~ POZ Café Luncheon.
St. Michaels is once again participating with 2 other churches and TIHAN in putting on the March 17th POZ Café luncheon. We have been asked to donate 40 rolls of paper towels, 80 boxes of Kleenex, and 320 disposable razors. These items will be put in the care packages that are given out at the luncheon. The razors and Kleenex can be purchased at the Dollar Tree for a dollar. Please help us fill up the chest in the back of the church. Cash donations to buy these items are also welcome. We need 6 volunteers to help the day of the luncheon, March 17-time is 8:30 am to 2:30 pm. (Sign-up sheet in back of church.) See Dianne Gundersen or Diane Tyron for details. ________________________________________________________________

Dear Parishioners, I need your help. Our membership data base is seriously outdated. People have moved, changed addresses, changed phone numbers and/or email addresses. Please take a moment to fill out an update form (even if you have not made any changes). Simply complete the update, fold it and drop in the collection basket, take it home and bring it back next week, or simply mail it. Thank you for your thoughtful consideration in this important task. Blessings, Nancy
____________________________________________

 ~ You are Invited ~ Please join us on Thursday, March 10 at 5:30 PM in the Smith Parish Center as we enjoy a meal with our friends for the Islamic Center of Tucson. (Reservation sheets in back of church).
____________________________________________

JOIN PARISH LIFE FOR A St. Patty’s Day Feast!
Thursday, March 17th at 6:30 pm St. Michael’s Smith Parish Center $10.00 per person Music provided by Dave Erhardt and friends! Dinner prepared by Chef Andy O’Bruno and includes traditional corned beef and cabbage, potatoes, carrots and bread pudding. Beer additional. Reservations sheets in back of church and reserve no later the March 11th. _____________________________________________________________

All are invited to attend the Taizé Service this Tuesday, March 1, at 6:45 pm in church. All are welcome.

 _________________________________________________

United Thank Offering (UTO) A program of the Episcopal Church since 1889 invites people to offer prayers of Thanksgiving to God and to distribute thank offering monies through the Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society. Envelopes and / or Thank Offering boxes are available in the back of church. Please be as generous as your circumstances will allow. ___________________________________________________________________

CASA MARIA ~ FRIDAY MARCH 4 ~ 5:00 PM SMITH PARISH CENTER, BRING A FRIEND AND DOZENS OF HARD BOILED ~ SHELLED EGGS AND JOIN US FOR THIS GOOD WORK!

Thursday, February 04, 2016

Guatemala Project Briefs

February 3, 2016



VISIT COUNTDOWN, February / March Delegation and team work
Leaving Tucson February 22 --
Coordinator Ila, and retired RN Lahna Chaffee
Leaving Tucson February 23 -- RN Dorothy Chao of Tucson Samaritans, and writer / St. Michael’s Vestry member Reed Karaim.
Meeting us in Guatemala
 -- The Rev. John R. Smith and spouse Terri Smith.
Return to the U.S. -- Reed returns March 2, Lahna is with the Project until March and then with friends, and Dorothy and Ila return March 10, after whirlwind visits to multiple locations.

GOOD NEWS from Guatemala and the Equipo de Salud

DepoProvera order
 -- Using Project grant money, health leader Domingo Alvarez arranged the at-cost purchase, through the NGO Wings / "Alas," of 200 units of the 3-month injection preferred by many rural women and no longer consistently available through the Health Ministry. That’s 200 women who will be able to continue family planning for another 3 months, particularly important as the Zika virus enters the region (see "Zika" below). More Depo is needed. Equipo de Salud estimates last year were that, for all 22 CPR communities, 383 women were using this method and would want to continue. Once we see how this distribution fares, we will order more if necessary, again using Fowler Fund and Arizona Diocesan Millennium Development Committee grant monies.

Cooperation on the order, and costs
 -- A member of St. Alban’s, the tiny English-language Episcopal mission Fr. Smith shepherds in Antigua, first suggested we contact Alas ("Wings" in Spanish). This non-governmental organization focusing on family planning does not work in the areas where we go but agreed to special order at their low cost (about $3.33 per unit). We asked if it would be all right to make a small charge, so there would be money with the local health workers to buy more needed medicines. ALAS administrators indicated that they never give away medicines and ask Q15 from patients (around $2 for 3 months’ protection), exactly the sum the Equipo de Salud was mentioning. People are very poor, but this is not unreasonable, especially considering the health and monetary costs of pregnancy. And people value what they pay for.

The attachment includes a photo of a vinyl sign the Equipo de Salud and we designed for use last year in our "giras" (circuits), made in Guatemala City through Domingo’s contacts for a big $7. Consults and our tests, free. Medicines and supplies from the U.S., free. Medicines the Project buys in Guatemala, reduced price, with funds staying in the community to support the little local "clinics" (one visitor said better to call them "health huts," as they aren’t clinics as we know them).

St. Alban’s plans to host
one or more of the Equipo de Salud before we arrive, so they can begin to know the Project, the communities, and the needs. Thank you, St. Alban’s.

Welcome to Magdalena Chavez
, Community Tesorito, who replaces Berta Sic? as liaison in the capital and her community, where her father Gabriel has long been an active health promoter. Magdalena has nurse training (like an LPN) but no regular work. When I talked by telephone with Domingo and her last Saturday, she was learning from Domingo how to maintain fiscal accountability for Project expenditures of money -- not simple, given individual receipting for uses for emergency transportation and for small payments to upwards of 25 rural health workers.

When in town, Berta still stays at the house in Mixco where CPR offices are located, but now that she has a "real" job in social services, she is frequently in other parts of the country. We miss her.

ON ORDER for the February - March visit: Fourteen otoscopes (for checking ears, but with other uses) from Cascade Health Care Products, Portland, Oregon, a midwifery supply that gives us a sweet discount. We’ll keep one for team use and distribute the others to health promoters, who were begging for this basic tool last summer. We’ll also order more hemoglobin test cards, pregnancy tests, prenatal and children’s vitamins. Cheryl Meyers, who takes our orders at Cascade, has her own small education project in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya. To learn about that, go to www.kawangwarekids.org, or on Facebook, Kawangware Kids.

ABOUT ZIKA: The CPR-Sierra communities where Chikungunya arrived with fury last year are also at risk for Zika, which may well cause severe birth anomalies like microencephaly. Primarily, these are El Triunfo on the Pacific coastal plain, and Tesorito, in the "Boca Costa." I asked Magdalena Chavez if Zika had arrived in Tesorito, and she said yes, but with a qualifying lift of her voice, appropriate since a firm diagnosis requires lab work. Chikungunya (in terms of joint pain, something like classic dengue on steroids) was a major problem last year, so one can expect Zika and attendant worries about birth defects. Thank climate change. Danger will be greater after late May, when the rainy season starts.

Why all the attention in the popular media? Word Health Organization [WHO] predicts a global epidemic. Hesperian Foundation has rushed out a brief teaching sheet on Zika in English and in Spanish, which I forwarded to Domingo. We’ll also take copies to use during the visit. If you want to check it out, go to www.hesperian.org and click on the appropriate link. Worth reading.

SUMMER PLANS
Teams for June and July, 2.5 to 3.5 weeks, moderate to very strenuous, depending upon communities. E-mail if you are interested, and we will share information as it develops, plus application and lots of detail. Expect meetings re definitive plans after mid-March. Health professionals, generalists, and really flexible people, respectful of indigenous cultures, most welcome. Spanish helps.

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Social Action Announcements for 1/17/16

SUNDAY, 1/17 - take a mini-trip to Guatemala during coffee hour following 10:15 a.m. Mass., beginning at 12:10, after you’ve had time to socialize.  A few photos, brief overview, and time for questions about the Lenten Journey, February 23 - March 2 (optional extension to March 9). Great for people just curious, as well as those contemplating the journey. Snacks provided. Need more information but can’t stay?  Contact coordinator Ila, 623-3063, ilaa@mindspring.com, or pick up a leaflet in the back of the Church.

SOCIAL ACTION COMMITTEE meets briefly Sunday after 10:15 a.m. Mass in the Womble Library, beginning 5 minutes after the Postlude concludes.  Agenda includes questions from the Search Committee about how the committee might function as we continue with transition. We’ll also talk about further interaction with the Islamic Center, and a possible modification to the "prophetic" sign. Everyone welcome to participate. We are an open, consensus-driven committee.

MON. JAN 18, MLK Day Freedom Singalong with Ted Warmbrand, TEMPLE EMANUEL. 225 N Country Club, 3-5 PM.  Information, ITZABOUTIME 623 1688.

WED. JAN 20, 6:30 to 8 p.m., our Eastside neighbor, St. Matthew’s Episcopal Church, cordially invites us to an immigration forum with Fr. Sean Carroll, S.J., of Kino Border Initiative. Larry Waggoner of St. Matthew’s vestry asks especially that a few Episcopalians with prior savvy re these issues come, as his parish begins to learn about the Arizona border and immigration. 9071 E. Old Spanish Trail. Directions, information: http://stmatthew.azdiocese.org/. Larry Waggoner, 520-329-9739.

Needed: Frequent Flier miles to donate for Parishioners and others going on the Lenten Journey to Guatemala. United, American, or Delta. Best schedules presently on American. Please contact Guatemala Project Coordinator Ila, 623-3063, ilaa@mindspring.com, and she will connect you with someone who needs them. Felipe Molina, long-term Yoeme (Yaqui) supporter of the Project, would like to go and needs this support.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Per Mother Clare, announced at today's Parish planning meeting:

Islamic Center of Tucson is hosting an interfaith program at 5 p.m. this Thursday, Dec. 17.  To car pool from St. Michael's, meet Mother Clare in the church parking lot at 4 p.m.  We westside folk can just join the St. Michael's group at the Islamic Center, 901 E. First Street, before 5 p.m.  Mother Clare says the Islamic Center was a gracious host to 4th graders from St. Michael's, and she is very committed to our supporting them in this venture.

From the Facebook event listing:

The Islamic Center of Tucson invites you to join us for an evening to bring together the many faiths and cultures in our community. Let us unite together in our humanity against all violence and bigotry.
This is open to all people in Tucson who support peace, love and justice for all people.

These are hard times in this country, not just for Muslims, but many of the minorities that reside here. We aim to make the ICT a place where all people feel comfortable and safe and extend that feeling to the greater Tucson community as well.


Who: The Entire Tucson Community

What: A gathering of peace and unity.

When: Thursday, December 17th | 5:00 PM

Where: Islamic Center of Tucson | 901 E 1st St.

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

St. Michael's International Holiday Bazaar - A Call for Participants


Dear new and former Bazaar participants:
We’d like to invite you to participate in the 2015 International Holiday Bazaar at St. Michael’s, Dec. 5 (Saturday evening, 3 - 7 p.m., optional) and Dec. 6 (9 a.m. to 3 p.m.). Please join us. Former participants, note a slight name change.

WHO CAN PARTICIPATE: Socially-committed, non-violent non-profits, Parish groups, and Parish artists only. Space is free for non-profit groups. Parish artists donate 10% of their gross to the Church’s Social Action Committee.

WHAT WE NEED TO KNOW NOW
[your application]
(return this by e-mail or regular mail, even if you have already talked with us)
Do you plan to participate?
If so, please list the following:
Contact person
– name, e-mail, and phone number(s):
Group name, mailing address
(other address information), what you plan to sell, and who benefits:
Participation dates: Saturday and Sunday? Sunday only?

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Saturday setup,
between 1 and 3 p.m., for 3 p.m. start. A morning option will be arranged.
Sunday setup:
between 8 and 9 a.m. preferred. Between 10 and 11 a.m. is possible (we'll save space ONLY if you indicate you are choosing this option).
Food groups:
Sunday only. Plan to start serving around 11:00 a.m. Church coffee hours will provide basic refreshments until then. St. Michael's Social Action Committee does the Saturday free reception. You are responsible for your own Health Department permits.
Loading / unloading:
Drive around the back (N. side) of the church, down a drive that says "Do not enter." There are breeze way doors on the north and east sides of the drive.

SATURDAY EVENING.
ALL GROUPS (except one potential food group) WILL BE INSIDE. SUNDAY ONLY GROUPS WILL BE OUTSIDE, in the adjacent patio.

REMINDERS:
Socially-committed, non-violent non-profits, Parish groups, and Parish artists only. Space is free for non-profit groups. Parish artists donate 10% of their gross to the Church’s Social Action Committee. Refugees sponsored by any of the non-profit refugee groups are very welcome. You can leaflet but MUST have stuff to sell.
You do not have to be a 501 C-3 nonprofit if you are known to us or can demonstrate that you meet the criteria (we love small programs).
Sunday only is an option, but Saturday only is not.
We provide one 6-foot table, and you do the rest. We do our best to allocate space so that each group will have at least 9 feet of space, even inside on Saturday night.
You take all your money home – no percentages to us.
We do ask you to report how much you gross, so we can know the success of the event. If you have a terrific day and want to make a voluntary small contribution to help cover costs, we won’t turn it down.

INDOOR SPACE is at a premium but we fit everyone inside on Saturday evening. Groups coming Sunday only will be outside unless they make special arrangements.
Saturday groups who want to spread out can have more space if they opt to move outside on Sunday (Guatemala Project does this). We can’t control the weather but will make sure outside groups are under sheltered walks if it is rainy.

MUSIC
– Still a work in progress, but Mzekala has confirmed for Saturday, and Ted Warmbrand for Sunday. We think some of our other Sunday favorites will return.

SECURITY –
You are welcome to leave your tables set up indoors over Saturday night. We do not hire special security, but the coordinators will be the last to leave and will make sure the hall and all entrances to the adjacent patios are locked. Most of us like to cover our items with a sheet or cloth.

SAGE ADVICE –
Variety in pricing and in articles for sale seems to help. So does being present for the entire event. If you come late with one product, expect a small return.
Fine arts traditionally have not done well, but someday there will be an exception.
Low-cost items generally sell well, but there have been many "high-end" exceptions.

THE MORE THE MERRIER
(until we reach 30 groups total) – Please encourage your favorite groups that meet the criteria to participate. Variety and enthusiasm help us all.

PAST RETURNS:
Last year, among all groups, around $6200 changed hands. In 2007, before the economic downturn and before alternative shopping events were so common, the total was over $9,000. However, amounts for individual groups have varied considerably.

PLEASE CALL IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR NEED MORE INFORMATION.
ILA ABERNATHY (520) 623-3063, ilaa@mindspring.com
[Note – we have a new committee. Once initial contacts are made, you will be notified of a new contact person.]