Jump to content

Volunteering at the Bread of Life Fair Trade Centre


USAJ

Recommended Posts

Volunteering at the Bread of Life Fair Trade Centre, 263 Barry Road, East Dulwich, SE22 0JT.

What does volunteering mean to you? Helping others?, Meeting new people?, Making friends? Learning new skills? Making me more employable? These are some reasons given by volunteers but voluntary work can raise self-esteem and boost confidence, especially if you have been out of the job market for some time. Our volunteers are a mixed bunch - retired, unemployed, recovering from ill health (including mental health), former carers who wish to return to the world of work, students.


Why not come along and find out more about volunteering with us, the Fair Trade centre is open Monday to Friday 10 am - 4 pm and on Saturdays from 10 am - 1 pm


The Fair Trade Centre helps people in developing countries by selling their products. The producers get a fair wage for their product, so they get enough money to provide food for their family, send their children to school and they get an extra premium for example to build a school, well or a health centre for their village.

Producer Story from Traidcraft.

Smrity Swajay is one of 850 Bangladeshi women who rely on sales of embroidered purses and cards for Traidcraft to help their families including being able to give their children an education. She can also save 1,000 taka a month from her earnings to save for her family?s future. These women do not work in sweat shop factories.

I do the odd saturday mornings there from 10 - 1pm, a great change from my usual job. I have met some interesting people there - customers and volunteers alike. Every so often the centre adopts a charity and raises a set sum of money for that charity. We raised ?1000 for Help for Heros a couple of years back.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • They're not. But the work to build bunds which hold significant amounts of water in Dulwich and more recently Peckham Rye parks, was undertaken to mitigate the impacts of poor drainage and sewerage infrastructure (which was under invested in for years) causing flooding to properties. The latter is (as I understand it) the responsibility of the water companies. I believe taxpayers have paid for the underinvestment in infrastructure by the water companies in two ways; firstly, by paying to have the changes made to the parks (I never got a clear answer from Renata on this forum when I asked, but think this is the case); and secondly through the loss of amenity those schemes inevitably create when those parks are waterlogged through the winter months. As I said, privatised profits, socialised costs.
    • Our waste collectors tip the food bins straight into garden waste. 
    • It looks to me as if the water companies don't have responsibilities for land drainage generally.  See for example: "In 1989 the Thames Water Authority was partly privatised, under the provisions of the Water Act 1989[3] with the water and sewage responsibilities transferring to the newly established publicly quoted company of Thames Water, and the regulatory, land drainage and navigation responsibilities transferring to the newly created National Rivers Authority which later became the Environment  Agency."  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thames_Water_Authority  
    • So what you are saying DR is Yvette Cooper becoming the new Priti Braverman?*   (*That's a scary combination of the two)
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...