Brothers & Sisters International (BASI) Friends of the Congo (FOTC) Community Action Project (CAP) Anti-Apartheid Movement USA (AMUSA) The Universal Negro
Improvement Association (UNIA-ACL)
PAUL PUMPHREY
3536 Minn. Ave., Suite 200 Washington DC 20019 (202) 232-8936 broandsisinterna@aol.com Cell: (301) 257-6157
This Saturday November 19, 2010 and next Saturday November 27, 2010 Mothers for Africa invites you to help pack donations to be sent to Haiti. The donations are clothes, food and medical supplies. Food and drinks will be provided. It will start at 10:00 AM on both Saturdays. Please call us for more information at 626-710-6676. If you would like to bring medical supplies and bags of rice and beans please feel free to do so. Also, if you have any boxes lying around bring those too for packing. If it rains packing will be rescheduled.
Recession Fundraiser:
We at Mothers for Africa & Light Path for Haiti have been offered a really good deal to purchase transportation that we will utilize to transport our staff on the ground in Haiti. We are purchasing a van and a truck that will be used to transport supplies and set up Mobil clinics.
If we could get Six hundred people to go online and donate $10.00 at www.MothersforAfrica.org or mail us $10.00 to P.O. Box 6579, Altadena CA, 91003 we will have enough to purchase the vehicles and ship our supplies, If you can afford to send more money please do so, your donation will be spent wisely. Remember we are a 501 c 3 and it is a tax right off. For the record none of the money donated has been utilized to pay for our staff's airline tickets or our cost on the ground!
Building Housing in Haiti:
We have applied for our first grants to start building housing in Haiti.
Progress from last trip:
On our last trip we were able to feed 4 thousand people, sponsor more children; some of the children were on the brink of death from starvation. Please go online www.MothersforAfrica.org and sponsor a child today for as little as $26.00 a month or more.
Also, on our last trip our Volunteer Jackie started a Micro Loan project for women to rebuild their business. The women have already begun to pay back the money. The money will be recycled to others to help start more businesses. Please contact us if you are interested in this project 626-710-6676.
Letter to USAID:
I have attached a letter I sent to Mr. Porter from USAID regarding a conversation I had with him. I discovered that USAID was not passing out food stored in warehouses because I was invited by Congresswoman Maxine Walters to an update meeting on Haiti. The Congresswoman questioned him why USAID was not passing out food from the warehouses. Mr. Porter replied because they were waiting to see if there was going to be a hurricane. I spoke to him after the meeting and advised him that people were starving in Petit Goave Haiti. I got his card and follow-up with him about the situation. He advised me that I was mistaken and that there were no people starving in Petit Goave (which was the epic center of the earthquake). I sent him the attached letter. I called him and this is what he stated: There is now food for the people of Petit Goave Haiti to purchase". I asked him with what money? He stated: "People are now working just as much as they were before the earthquake". I advised him that I did not have statistics in hand, but that would seem impossible with most of the infrastructure destroyed from the earthquake. I also, advised him how I ran into two contractors from the US who could not get through the red tape and where on their way back home, so who is hiring the people. He then stated: "We (USAID) have food distribution centers in Petit Goave". I asked him were where they so we could send people to get food. He told me he would call me back and let me know. This was two weeks ago.
I followed up with an aid in Maxine Waters's office and she advised me that she spoke with Mr. Porter per my request and he advised her that I was mistaken about the starvation and that I did not know the definition of starvation. I advised her that we went to Haiti with a Medical team licensed to practice in the US and that they diagnosed the people not me. Nothing was resolved. I will do a follow up with them again next week and keep you posted. Please see video footage I attached of a two in half year old girl that was diagnosed as starving, she has since sponsored by us. Also, go to the website and see the child I sponsored. He is sitting in a chair. He was fourteen years old at the time and was so weak he had to be carried to our Doctor. Since I have sponsored him I received my first picture of him standing on his own and smiling for the first time, holding the money I sent him. This is truly what keeps me going in this business. Please, I encourage you to see the attached letter address to Mr. Porter and write him with your concerns. For this is your tax dollars not at work!
This is an emergency situation. I beg you for your help. We ran into many good hearted Haitian people that just need a fresh start. Haitian people are very proud people and are not used to these living conditions. All of the government buildings were destroyed; there is no government assistance to help them. Most of the money promised they have not received. There is more Non Profits on the ground in Haiti then anywhere around the world but you cannot see what they are doing. Those of you who know us, friends and family please help us.
I have also attached an interview I did on 102.3 FM KJLH with host Dominique Daprima talking about the incident with USAID (before I sent the letter). I have also been on www.LIBradio.com with Keidi Adwadu discussing this issue.
Please join Mothers for Africa and Light Path for Haiti on our next trip:
Please join forces with us on our next trip in March and you can witness firsthand what is going on in Haiti. Please, if you cannot attend the next trip do a fundraiser for us. Thank you for your attention to this serious matter.
Paul Anthony Pumphrey has been an organizer and activist for over forty years. Mr. Pumphrey is a co-founded and member of the board of directors for Friends of the Congo (FOTC). FOTC is a non-profit advocacy organization based in Washington, DC. FOTC was established at the behest of Congolese human rights and grassroots institutions in 2004, to work together to bring about peaceful and lasting change in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which was formerly known as Zaire.
In July of 2006 Mr. Pumphrey represented FOTC as an international observer to the DRC first held national election in forty years.
In 1998, Mr. Pumphrey co-founded Brothers and Sisters International (BASI) as is economic development and human rights in the Americas, the Caribbean and Africa.
As the international liaison for BASI, Mr. Pumphrey develops working relationships with grassroots organization in the Bahamas, Haiti, the Ivory Coast, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Namibia. This includes attendance at national and international conferences on economic development.
In Haiti, Mr. Pumphrey works to expand education, especially in the countryside and creates business enterprises that will fund economic development efforts and improve living conditions of the common people. He has also served as an international observer to several national elections. In 1995, as the international liaison for Campaign of a New Tomorrow (CNT), Mr. Pumphrey help organized teach-ins and delegation visits to Haiti. He also raised money, school supplies and secured electronic equipment for Haitian grassroots organizations.
Mr. Pumphrey’s community activism in Prince George’s County is exemplary.In 2000 the Public School’s superintendent appointed Mr. Pumphrey to co-chair a committee which developed a new curriculum for a new criminal justice academy.At the invitation of the Chief of Police, Mr. Pumphrey currently serves as a member of the Chief’s Citizen Advisory Council, which counsels the police chief on community issues.Mr. Pumphrey also co-founded the Community Action Project (CAP), which provided community advocacy for over 165 poor families.CAP organized liaisons between city council, police and other governmental relationships with the local community. CAP help organized tenant organizations, neighborhood watch, and held political education classes.
Mr. Pumphery’s political work spans over four decades.In 1968, ‘78, ’83 and ‘88Mr. Pumphrey was a deputy coordinator of crowd control for the Southern Christian Leadership’s (SCLC) Marchs on Washington; and for the Stand for Children March in 1997. He volunteered with Jesse Jackson’s 1984 and 1988 bid for the US Presidency; and the Ron Daniel’s 1992 bid for the US Presidency. Mr. Pumphrey became the Washington, DC co-chair of Campaign for a New Tomorrow, an offspring from Mr. Daniel’s Presidential campaign, as well as the Chairman of the Rainbow Coalition, an offspring from Mr. Jackson’s Presidential campaign.
In 1975, Mr. Pumphrey became the co-founder and national organizer of the Anti-Apartheid Movement USA (AMUSA).AMUSA was one of the first organizations to provide educational programs about apartheid on university campuses, high schools, and in community organizations.AMUSA worked with the liberation movements in southern Africa including ANC in South Africa, SWAPO in Namibia, and the Patriotic Front (PF) in Zimbabwe (all three of these organizations represent the current majority-elected governments in their respective countries).
Mr. Pumphrey is also an effective union organizer.He was shop steward and member of the executive board of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 2093 (AFSCME), a union in Washington, D.C. Mr. Pumphrey also helped organize unemployed steel workers in Pittsburgh in the early 1980’s.In 1972, Mr. Pumphrey became a union organizer for the United Farm Workers Union in the state of Florida.Mr. Pumphrey worked with migrant farm workers in the central, southern and eastern regions of the state in the areas of citrus, vegetables and sugar.Mr. Pumphrey coordinated two different offices that administered the contract between UFW and Minute Maid (a Coca-Cola subsidiary); organized sugar workers during a strike; assisted farm workers with their Worker’s Compensation claims, and lobbied in Tallahassee (the state capitol) for better working conditions for migrant farm workers.
Early in his career, Mr. Pumphrey founded the Summer Fun Day Camp which was devoted to serving the needs of youth-at-risk in Montgomery County, Maryland.The camp provided educational, recreational and cultural services for over 150 youth and had a staff of over 25.
Mr. Pumphrey is a member of Universal Negro Improvement Association, UNIA Division 330.
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