A fanfare here
a blast of trumpets
the online database we've been working on has gone live. When you click on the Giraffes' names below, you'll be instantly transported into said database, where you'll be looking at the reasons that Giraffe was commended. The database is in beta form
we're adding more stories and photos daily
but there's enough in place for you to have a go. Try out the system
you can search for stories by location, by name, by the problem addressed
and let me know how it works for you.
Dan Bassill, founder of Cabrini Connections, a great student-mentoring program in Chicago, wants you to see the
videos teens in his program have done and
an interview that shows other communities how to get such programs going.
Chellie Kew
reports that the Q Fund's school in Zambia is open for 414 students,
many of them orphaned by the AIDS epidemic. In order to educate these
kids, classrooms and offices had to be built and teachers trained and
certified, and a lot of chances taken

in true Giraffe mode. Find out
more at
www.qfund.org.

News from Sierra Leone

the people of that nation were asked to vote for the most effective non-governmental agency in the country. Over 300 groups were in the running, and the winner is

Giraffe
John Bangura's
Hope-Sierra Leone. The group's budget is a fraction of what's spent by other nonprofits operating there, making Hope-SL's impact even more impressive.
Gloria Flora, honored for defending US National Forests against exploitation, tells us that she's working with a grassroots effort to protect Montana's Rocky Mountain Front. She's also helping Alaska do a Climate Change Action Plan, modeled on one that she did for Montana. And in her spare hours, she's become a "missionary for biochar." To find out what that is, check in at
www.s-o-solutions.org.
Irving Fradkin let us know that his
Dollars for Scholars has now raised 2 and a half
billion dollars for young people to go to colleges and to trade schools. Well, he's been at it quite awhile. Would you believe 50 years?
Sandy Dore says that he's now teaching grad students at Gonzaga University, a visiting professor of social justice. Dore was commended as a Giraffe for standing up to racist hate groups that were trying to recruit his high school students in Vancouver BC. He's still guiding young people away from racism, and from gangs.
Watch for more updates on Giraffes-in-action, in the next Heads Up.