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    Haitian art sale: Small fundraiser can make big difference


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    International organizations and big-name entertainers are raising millions of dollars for relief efforts to help the victims of the earthquake in Haiti: a telethon with Wyclef Jean and George Clooney, millions of $10 phone donations to the Red Cross, Kanye West and Snoop Dogg singing "We Are the World."

    But there are also many smaller-scale fundraisers going on. Organizers of last Friday's Haitian art sale at St. James Episcopal Church in Minneapolis say they hope that people realize it's not only the amount of money raised, but the way it's used that can make a big difference in Haiti's recovery.

     

     

    For the past 15 years, three Episcopal congregations in Minneapolis and Edina have collaborated with local organizations in Haiti to help feed and educate some of its most impoverished children. Volunteer workers from St. James, along with St. Luke's Episcopal Church in Minneapolis and St. Albans Episcopal Church in Edina, have made regular trips there, building relationships within communities and working under the guidance of the Haitian Episcopal Church to build and maintain schools.

    Members of these congregations have personal and emotional ties to the people of Haiti. Photographer Gary Eckhardt, a member of St. Albans, donated some of his photo collages to the art sale. He showed me pictures of children and their school, where he had worked during his most recent trip to Haiti last fall. He's heard that the school was destroyed by the earthquake, adding, "all these kids, we have no knowledge of whether they survived or not."


    Herb Grika, the coordinator of the event.
    MinnPost photo by Steve DateHerb Grika, the coordinator of the event.


    Jane Peck, a member of St. Luke's, said her trips to Haiti have taught her that a little money can go a long way. "We've realized that if you want the money to work well and if you want projects to work well, you have to be working on a grass-roots level with Haitian people themselves," she said. "You have to have people on the ground working for years in that country."

    Herb Grika, who is not affiliated with the sponsoring churches, was asked to coordinate the art sale and readily agreed after learning the money would be used for immediate lifesaving expenses through two organizations, Episcopal Relief and Development and Partners in Health.


    Photographer Gary Eckhardt sold some of his photos.
    MinnPost photo by Steve DatePhotographer Gary Eckhardt sold some of his photos.


    Haitian artists created most of the items up for sale. Grika was able to obtain many pieces of art, and also donated several from his own collection. "We were able to get works, not only from Haiti, but from Africa and by Native American artists, donated from friends and members of the churches," he said.

    Grika told me that most of the art was sold during the six-hour sale at St. James lastFriday. The remaining items were put up for sale the next day at a similar event held at Alliance Française in Minneapolis. The three churches raised about $7,000.

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    Steve Date
    Illustration by Hugh Bennewitz

    minnpost.com/stevedate


    Steve Date is a teacher in the Minneapolis Public Schools and a part-time video journalist and documentary filmmaker. He recently made a film about a company-owned coal mining town in West Virginia, called "Welcome to Coalwood". To see more of Steve's work go to his website, See to Sea Productions. He also has a blog called "Trying to Pay Attention". Steve welcome ideas for video reports and can be reached at sdate@minnpost.com.

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