Author: michael

  • The Menstrual Pad Project!

    91bf7d5e-ebaa-404a-bca5-eeb4233dedc7The Conscious Connections Foundation and Ganesh Himal Trading are also launching a new Menstrual Pad Project in Nepal designed to create income for women in the remote village of Baseri and provide cloth menstrual pad kits for the 180 girls who receive Power of 5 scholarships! Inspired by Days for Girls, CCF needs to raise $1000 to purchase 1-2 treadle sewing machines for the Baseri Clinic, buy local fair trade material for the kits, train women in Baseri to sew the Days For Girls cloth menstrual kits and then coordinate distributing them to the Power of 5 girls scholarship recipients. All of this done in Nepal! It’s a win-win-win AND a great way for fair trade stores to get involved in funding a meaningful on the ground project. Most of us don’t realize that not having sanitary supplies often means DAYS without school for girls. And without gear for their periods girls can miss up to 2 months of school every year! It seems natural that if CCF raises money for scholarships for girls we need to also give them the gear they need to go to school! Of course we’ll look for your support in days to come and if you want to start a fundraising project in your store to help raise funds (like the Power of 5 bookmark campaign) Then stay tuned for the tales and teachings of Period Paddie! or call us at 509-448-6561! If you would like to make a tax deductible donation to this project you can write a check to: Conscious Connections Foundation PO Box 342 Spokane, WA 99210 Please write: Menstrual Project in the memo line! You can also donate here:

      Conscious Connections Foundation www.consciousconnectionsfoundation.org is a registered 501(c)3 with the IRS and all donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. Tax #47-1602190.

  • Spokane Company Example of Progress in Fair Trade

    By 

    Spokane Public Radio

    The Ganesh Himal Trading Co. warehouse in Spokane County invites people with Tibetan prayer flags at the door.
     
    View Slideshow

    The Ganesh Himal Trading Co. warehouse in Spokane County invites people with Tibetan prayer flags at the door.
    Paige Browning Spokane Public Radio
     

    https://dev.ganeshhimaltrading.com/wp-content/uploads/112814PB_Ganesh.mp3

    Listen to the broadcast above!

    A fair-trade company based in Spokane celebrates 30 years in business this holiday season. The evolution of Ganesh Himal Trading, from 1984 until now, tells the story of fair trade in the US.

    Fair trade, as defined by the Fair Trade Federation, “supports farmers and craftspeople in countries who are socially and economically marginalized”. Denise Attwood and Ric Conner came upon fair trade before the term existed, and they came into business by accident. After college they set out to trek for a month in Nepal.

    Conner: “And before we went trekking we bought two sweaters from a Tibetan refuge family…”

    And they loved them.

    Conner: “…And we went back to Loeb Song, the person we bought the sweaters from, and we said these were great sweaters thank you so much. And he says ‘can you help me sell these sweaters’, and we go ‘well, maybe’.”

    ‘Maybe’ turned into yes, and Conner and Attwood started shipping sweaters and other goods from Kathmandu to Spokane where they’d sell them at college campuses, friend’s homes, and the Spokane Civic Theater.

    Attwood: “You know our whole business really was based on this idea of direct trade with people, getting the money directly in their hands, paying them a fair wage, trying to help them create lives where they could send their kids to school, where they could have stability.”

    By the early 1990’s Attwood says they became familiar with other small companies around the nation who had the same mindset.

    Attwood “The North American Alternative Trade Organization… and it was at that conference in Washington DC that we then began to formulate the concept around fair trade.”

    In 1997, a group of these companies created the first US fair trade certification system. By the early 2000s fair trade storefronts were opening in the US. Ganesh Himal helped create one in Spokane, Global Folk Art, which has since become Kizuri. As they moved into wholesale, Attwood and Conner started crafting the products alongside the Nepalese producers.

    Attwood: “… And so we would go figure out, okay this is a great fit, or maybe this needs to be a little bit bigger, or these need to be different colors…”

    And Ganesh Himal set out to encourage traditional Nepalese craft work, like the handloom, but adapt the materials to Western audiences.

    ;Attwood: “There aren’t a lot of people here who use the type of floor mat that they weave. So I went to them and said what if I took this 3×6 floor mat and instead we made it into a table runner. They said what’s a table runner?”

    They have since designed place mats, coats, Christmas stockings, and items saved from going in the waste stream, like tire rubber turned into purses and wallets. They now work with 14 producer groups in South Asia.

    Attwood: “And so now we sell to over 250 fair trade stores. So in the process of 30 years as the fair trade movement has grown, we have a customer base now that understands exactly what we’re doing…”

    Conner: “The only retail we do anymore is the fair trade festival coming up this weekend at the community building.”

    The festival is open Friday and Saturday with a number of fair trade vendors. Part of the proceeds go to a new Ganesh Himal project in which they give scholarships for Nepalese girls to go to school.

    Flipping through a slideshow of the past 30 years, Conner acknowledges they’ve experienced personal growth through their work, but he’s ready to be back where they started.

    Conner: “We’ll see where we go from here, I’m ready to let the next generation take their shot at it really. I just want to go trekking.”

    The festival of Fair Trade happened Friday-Sunday after Thanksgiving in Spokane’s community building. Ric Conner presented his 30-year slideshow Saturday at 3:00 at Aunties Bookstore. He says he would be willing to show it again for groups in town.

    Copyright 2014 Spokane Public Radio

    Read Ric and Denise’s story:

    30 Years of Fair Trade in Nepal

  • Magic Scarf video! See how it’s done Ganesh Himal Style!

    Watch Austin from Ganesh Himal Trading create beauty with this wide magic scarf! So many ways to wear it, so much fun too!

    http://youtu.be/s1-KN7xaymI

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  • 30 Years Of Fair Trade Instills Hope

    Thirty years ago, after cattle were chased off the runway, Denise Attwood and Ric Conner’s plane touched down at the old Kathmandu airport.

    “We had no idea the defining moment in our careers had taken place,” said Denise, “but after 30 years, almost as many trips, a civil war, abdication of the monarchy and the transition to some sort of democracy, our lives and work are still bound to Nepal.”

    Denise Atwood of Ganeesh Himal

    Denise Attwood made a Tibetan retreat space with a Buddha for their back yard.

    While that country has seen many changes, it remains one of the poorest countries in the world.

    “Our initial foray into what we now call ‘fair trade’ began innocently with the purchase of two wool sweaters from a Tibetan refugee family. We are proud of our association with the Tibetan community and we wouldn’t be where we are today without their honesty and hard work,” Ric said.

    It became apparent to Ric and Denise that many talented Tibetan artisans and craftspeople could use what they could provide, access to the U.S. market and a fair wage. Within a few years, they established relationships with 12 cottage industries and development aid projects, most of which—like the Association for Craft Producers (ACP)—they still work with.

    Their venture has grown into a full-time business. Now Ganesh Himal Trading LLC helps support hundreds of craft producers in Nepal and sells to more than 250 retail outlets in the United States and Canada.

    Principles of fair trade provided a template for their interactions in Nepal, even before there was a fair trade movement.

    Those principles are:  “Treat people with respect, make sure they get a fair return for their work, provide continuity over time, safe working conditions, design assistance and financial support,” Denise said.

    “Over the years, we have provided other assistance to our Nepali family.  Education in Nepal can help alleviate poverty,” she said.  “We have seen people we work with save everything to put their children through school.  Now the next generation uses their education to help others.

    Ric Conner, Ganeesh Himal Trading
    Ric Conner in the 1980’s with a producer in Nepal.

    “Our trekking guide and good friend Ram, who has a first-grade education, has two boys, whom we are putting through school. Pradeep, the eldest, helps his father with business, leads groups of college students to remote parts of Nepal and dreams of building the first school in his village,” Ric said.

    Denise’s friend, Laxmi, a village weaver who organized weavers, used money she made to send her daughter, Sudha, to high school, college and graduate school for social work.

    Sudha came back to take over her mother’s work organizing village weavers and creating new products.

    Kesang, the middle daughter of Tibetan producer partners and friends, has a family who values education. Her father, Namgyal, escaped Tibet as a child and went to school and college in India. Her mother, Pemala, has just a sixth grade education.

    After finishing college in the United States, Kesang went back to Nepal.  Following in her parents’ footsteps, she started a knitting group, called Padhma Creations, on the Nepal/India border. Padhma Creations works with women who are victims of abuse, abandonment, civil war or the threat of trafficking.

    Over the years, Ganesh Himal has supported the “girl child education fund” of the Association for Craft Producers, a nonprofit that provides low-income women with skills training and employment.

    “Two years ago, learning there wasn’t enough money in the fund to keep girls in school,” Denise said, “we promised to do what we could, and the Power of 5 was born to raise donations to fund the project each year so 180 children stay in school.”

    With the success of that campaign, and the establishment of the Baseri health clinic, Denise, their  son Cameron and co-worker Austin Zimmerman formed the nonprofit, Conscious Connections Foundation.

    It is an exciting time for people in Nepal as children grow up and take their parents’ place in the struggle for dignity and fairness, Denise said.

    “Fair trade is a growing idea, whose merits appeal to more consumers,” Ric said. “In addition, the value of girls and women in education and in the marketplace are being recognized.”

    Mary Frankhauser, a coordinator of the Jubilee fair-trade sale Friday and Saturday, Nov. 7 and 8, at First Presbyterian Church, 318 S. Cedar, will show a video in honor of the 30th anniversary of Ganesh Himal.

    “It sets the standard for a key component of fair trade, a long-term relationship between artisans and business owners,” said Mary.

    Ric and Denise will also sponsor, with Kim Harmson of Kizuri, the annual Festival of Fair Trade from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday through Sunday, Nov. 28 to 30 at 35 W. Main.

    In honor of their 30 years of fair trade, Ric will present a slide show, “Looking Backward-Looking Forward: A Retrospective Slide Presentation Celebrating 30  Years of Fair Trade in Nepal,” at 7 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 25, and 3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 29, at Auntie’s Bookstore, 402 W. Main.

    For information, call 464-7677, visit festivaloffairtrade.com.
    Copyright © November 2014 – The Fig Tree

    Published by The Fig Tree, 1323 S. Perry St., Spokane, WA 99202
    509-535-4112 / 509-535-1813

  • Ganesh Himal Trading’s Recycled Tire Products Help the Environment and Provide Work for Paraplegics

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    The common disposal method of tires in Nepal is burning.  In response to black billowing clouds of smoke, one of Ganesh Himal’s producer groups offered to purchase numerous tires in hopes of improving air quality.   From these tires came the first of Ganesh Himal Trading’s tire bags which today has developed into over 30 products! The bags have become SO popular that the gentleman responsible for burning the tires now has a full-time job searching the Kathmandu valley for MORE tires.

    Unlike scrap rubber from factories, our rubber has seen many miles of Nepali road making each one entirely unique! This is sourcing raw materials at its finest!

    Ganesh Himal’s recycled rubber tire bags are now hand stitched by paraplegic’s who have suffered spinal injury and are being rehabilitated at the SIRC hospital in Banepa, Nepal http://techoutsolutions.com/sirc/. In February of 2014, Ganesh Himal Trading’s producer partner, Sadle Traders, was asked by the project manager of SIRC to train 5 of their patients to sew these bags so that they could create a livelihood for themselves and their families. This money helps them to be self-sufficient and gain skills for their future. Each brass buckle is hand made by Sundar Lama, a spinal injury victim trained by the Sadle Traders sister company Asal-General Udyog. Sadle Traders is happy to be a part of this team to rehabilitate spinal injury victims and Ganesh Himal is proud to stand beside them and purchase their products. We all appreciate your purchase of these recycled rubber tire bags and your support of this endeavor.IMG_0614

  •  IMG_0428The beginning of the school year is, for me, a very chaotic and vexing time, and this year more so than ever. In a few months I will be going into my senior year of high school, and there is no way that I will let it slide by, I am determined to give my all, and start it off with a bang! For many of my peers and friends this is the time to shop for the newest name brand clothing and the latest in the line of classroom equipment so that they can be at the top of their game academically while still being able to look “cool”.
     
     Being a standard teenager, the same things race though my mind on a daily basis: “what is this years style going to be like?”, “can I afford this without dipping into my Prom savings?” and most importantly “would the girls think I look cute in this?”, but being fortunate enough to know about and live in the near vicinity of various fair trade stores in my town has allowed me to forego much of the usual angst of this pre-school mania. Shopping fair trade allows me to find edgy outfits and equipment that will set me apart from most high schoolers, clad in outfits direct from the nearest mall, while still being able to prepare myself academically for the top tier colleges that I am applying to and help me make the splash that I am looking for in my senior year.
     
    Random strangers will stop me in the halls and ask where I got a specific article of clothing and practically beg them to tell me where they can find the store, friends eye my attire with look of cautious curiosity at first, asking if American Eagle opened a new line and when I respond with the eventual “no”, they inquire as to how they can get their hands on something similar.
     
    The ability to stand out and stand up for something which shopping fair trade allows for, has given me the gift of being a leader in my own high school. Contrary to many modern concepts, you can support a world that is economically stable, long lasting and based on partnership while vying with the most outfit aware, best dressed students.
     
    As a young adult, fair trade gives me a glimpse into a world that is vastly different than the one which I live in now, a world that I want to be part of and a world that I want to live in which is why I am starting off my senior year by becoming a conscious consumer and shopping fair trade!

    -Cameron Conner

  • Certified or Committed Fair Trade?

    What’sTHAT THING the difference? 

    1) “Fair trade” now means many things. It is important to distinguish between fair trade certified products and fully committed fair trade companies.
     
    2) FTF members are fully committed fair trade companies. We support artisans and farmers who are often ignored by conventional corporations and many times struggle to compete. We are deeply committed and connected to them.
     
    3) Fair trade certification is a tool that allows larger corporations to clean up their existing supply chains. Increasingly, certification has moved away from farmer cooperatives and now includes
    large factories and farms that are audited for basic health and safety, with an extra percentage
    added to the price (known as the “fair trade premium.”)
     
    4) Fully committed fair trade companies have built ethical behavior into their DNA. It is part of every decision and process. Companies that sell certified products sometimes source only a small percent on certified terms. It’s a positive direction, but the degree of commitment can vary tremendously.
     
     
     
     
    Why does it matter? 
     
    1) Although they both use the words “fair trade,” these approaches are not the same. Fair trade
    certification is a tool for auditing farms and worksites. Fully fair trade companies seek deeper
    relationships and are totally focused on ethical supply chains for everything they purchase.
     
    2) Historically, fair trade implicitly meant a holistic approach to trade. That’s not the case anymore.
    This has challenged all of us to be clearer about what we do, and why it’s important.
     
    3) Fully committed fair traders are dedicated to all nine fair trade principles. Long term, respectful
    trading relationships are at the core of our model. Through these relationships, we create change.
     

    Fair Trade Federation 
    July, 2014 

  • Erin’s Teenager & Fair Trade Survey Update!

    Preliminary Results are in on my Teenagers and Fair Trade Survey!

    So far I have about twenty responses on survey 1 and about fifteen on survey 2. Even though there

    are not many responses, there is an apparent trend.

    Survey 1:

    The results of this survey made me extremely happy. For starters, all teenagers say they care about what

    fair trade stands for and would mostly make a fair trade purchase over a non fair trade purchase if the

    products are similar. The last question asked if you would now purchase a fair trade item, knowing what

    a purchase represented, and all said yes.

    Survey 2:

    The most interesting results we acquired from this survey is that most people do not know of a fair

    trade store in their city and the number one factor that drives teens away from a fair trade purchase

    is availability. Another interesting piece of information was found when asked if they can tell the

    difference between a fair trade product and non fair trade product. About 35 percent said yes, 28

    percent said no, and 35 percent said sometimes.

    I hope to get more responses soon!

  • Teenagers and Fair Trade?

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    My name is Erin and I have been interning for Ganesh Himal since November. Throughout my time at Ganesh Himal, the idea had been brought up about what teenagers know about fair trade. Teenagers make up a large consumer group and we wanted to know what they know about the items they purchase. Then we wanted to know if they knew or cared about fair trade. And finally if they know about fair trade, what might drive them toward or away from a fair trade purchase.

    I put together two surveys to see what teenagers my age may know about fair trade. The first survey asks questions such as, if you have ever heard of fair trade, do you know where a fair trade store is in your city, and do you strive to make a difference in someone else’s life.

    The second survey is geared towards those who know about fair trade. We designed this second survey to see what factors may drive teenagers toward or away from fair trade purchases and if they were to buy a fair trade idem, what would it be?

    If you would like to distribute the survey to teens in your area, please feel free to share these links and the information will come back to me and I am looking forward to see what results we can collect!

    Survey 1
    Survey 2

    Stay tuned for my updates and finding on this project. I am excited to starting the conversation on teenagers and their buying preferences with the fair trade community!