CRS Coffee Project: Justice in Every CupCatholic Relief Services Catholic Relief Services today launched its CRS Coffee Project, an ambitious plan to boost consumption of fair trade coffee by directly marketing the coffee to the 65 million Catholics in the United States. The CRS Coffee Project has a two-pronged objective:
"If there are more people in other countries like the United States willing to buy our coffee at a better price, then we may yet survive these difficult times," said Encarnacion Suarez, a 60-year-old coffee farmer in Nicaragua who participated in the press conference today. "We could then improve our home, the children could eat better, enjoy better health and attend school." CRS coffee will be supplied through the Interfaith Coffee Program of Equal Exchange Inc., a Canton, Mass.-based fair trade company. The coffee, in turn, will be sold primarily through parishes that participate in the program. The coffee will also be available through CRS Fair Trade website at www.CRSFairTrade.org. The program doesn't just sell fair trade coffee, however. It also educates consumers about how current trade policies create an uneven playing field for smaller, poorer countries in the world market. The program also has an advocacy component that offers guidance on how Catholics here can campaign for positive change and give voice to the needs and concerns of coffee farmers like Doña Suarez who are struggling to put food on the table and provide an education for their children. "The CRS Coffee Project is the first among what we hope will be many wide-reaching, national programs that connect Catholics in the United States to the people we serve around the world who are struggling to get the basic necessities for life: adequate nutrition, education, medicine," said Joan Neal, CRS deputy executive director of U.S. Operations. "As the largest organized denomination in the U.S., Catholics collectively can have a direct, substantial impact on the lives of small-scale coffee farmers by taking a simple step: choosing fair trade coffee." Another advantage of the CRS Coffee Project: A percentage of every pound of fair trade coffee purchased will go back to the farmers through the CRS Small Farmer Fund, a standing resource that supports agriculture and long-term development. THE PLIGHT OF COFFEE FARMERS
HOW FAIR TRADE HELPS
For more information, or to contact Catholic Relief Services, see their website at: www.catholicrelief.org |
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