owl Posted March 9, 2007 Share Posted March 9, 2007 Note: I am not posting this for any kind of personal gain, or because I know anyone in this charity, or because I knew about this charity before today. I saw this today on the Christian Science Monitor website, and thought I'd post it here. It seems like a worthy cause. Those rangers go through a lot just to protect these gorillas. If you donate to the site, you can give them a reason to continue the fight against violent poachers and help to help protect the rangers' families. I sent $50 their way this morning. Christian Science Monitor article: http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0309/p01s04-woaf.htmlplace to donate: http://wildlifedirect.org/gorillaprotection/?page_id=17 Just a thought for a Friday. If you got paid today, that's all the more reason to donate! Web charity helps save Congo's gorillas (and rangers)Donations made on the Wildlife Direct website pay the salaries of the park rangers who protect the endangered apes. GOMA, DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO - On a blackboard in a classroom in Stratton Elementary School in Colorado Springs, Colo., a montage of photographs and fact sheets has been pinned up under the heading "Silverback Gorillas." Together, the 43 children in the second-grade class give $244 a month to support a rarely paid and poorly equipped wildlife ranger half a world away in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Joseph Aloma Major is a foot soldier in the war to save the world's critically endangered mountain gorillas, an employee of the Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature (ICCN), Congo's wildlife service. Before the money started flowing from Colorado, directly donated online via a new charity website, http://wildlifedirect.org, Mr. Aloma could barely do his job. He had not been paid for several months. His patrol post had no fuel and no vehicle to put it in. And, until last month, he faced the danger of attacks from rebels commanded by dissident Army General Laurent Nkunda, whose troops controlled much of the land surrounding the park. But now that Congo's government has signed a cease-fire with Mr. Nkunda's forces, the area is safe enough to patrol. And thanks to generous donations from people like Stratton second-grader Kori Hernandez, who donated her entire piggy bank (about $30), rangers like Aloma are now getting the money to make protection of the endangered gorillas possible again. Risky area for gorillas and humans The 3,000-square-mile Virunga National Park, a World Heritage Site in eastern Congo where Aloma works, is home to 100 of the world's last remaining 700 mountain gorillas. For 13 years or more, it has been a hideout for a jumble of armed militia who have wreaked havoc across the region. Go here to read the rest:http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0309/p01s04-woaf.html Quote Link to post Share on other sites
IATTBYB Posted March 9, 2007 Share Posted March 9, 2007 Not the The Human Fund thread that I was expecting. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
owl Posted March 9, 2007 Author Share Posted March 9, 2007 But aren't you glad it's not another of 975 new threads about Sky Blue Sky? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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