2004 Grantees
GENERAL SUPPORT GRANTS
Idaho Human Rights Education Center ($2,500)
Mission: To deliver human
rights education throughout Idaho; specifically, efforts to improve the
position of people who are or may be victimized because of mental or
physical disability, race, religion, ethnicity, perceived class
difference or sexual orientation.
Funding: Through this
grant for general operating expenses, the Fund for Idaho supports the
Idaho Human Rights Education Center as a partner working toward peace,
justice and human rights. Ongoing programs include the "Bullying Has
Never Been Cool" campaign; K-12 Human Rights curriculum for Idaho
developed in collaboration with the Idaho Department of Education;
conversion of an illustrated presentation for elementary school
students about the history of human rights in Idaho into a web-based
program; creation of a Resource Center of materials available for
lending throughout Idaho; teacher training on human rights education;
and a human rights art contest for students.
PROJECT SUPPORT GRANTS
Interfaith Alliance of Idaho ($2,500)
Mission: To provide an
inclusive faith perspective and a statewide interfaith voice speaking
in terms of love, respect, healing and diversity.
Project: Using this grant
, TIA-ID will develop discussions and workshops to be used by Idaho
faith communities to openly discuss faith and sexuality, dismantle the
oppression of heterosexism/homophobia, become "open and affirming"
congregations, and change the institutional oppressions they have been
consciously or unconsciously perpetrating. TIA-ID will partner with
LGBT leaders within congregations and with religious leaders and
non-profit coalitions doing anti-oppression work. The Fund for Idaho
supports the Interfaith Alliance of Idaho as a partner in countering
those who would use religion to justify violent responses to people and
public policies with which they disagree. Ongoing TIA-ID programs
include the Interfaith Religious Leaders network; Community Response
Networks in Boise, McCall/New Meadows and Canyon County; Overcoming
Hate workshops; Kitchen Table Trialogues bringing women and youth of
Islam, Judaism and mainstream Christianity together; and religion and
the 2004 elections. Chapters serve Pocatello, Boise, Nampa, McCall,
Moscow and Sandpoint.
Buenas Noticias Farmway Village Newsletter ($1,500)
Mission: To provide
Spanish-language information to migrant and seasonal farmworkers about
events, issues and opportunities (including basic human and civil
rights) and sources of higher-education funding for youth.
Project: Farmway Village,
a housing project owned by Caldwell Housing Authority, is home to an
estimated 900 residents of migrant and seasonal farmworker background.
It is unique for its multi-generation and mixed-status characteristics.
For example, in one household one might find a family containing a U.S.
citizen, a Legal Permanent Resident and a person with no status. The Buenas Noticias
co-founders and production team of two women, one man and a female
youth are all first-generation immigrants who understand first-hand
their neighbors’ limitations to full participation in the wider Idaho
community, especially the lack of information available in Spanish.
This newsletter addresses in common and understandable language the
events, issues and opportunities important to the community, including
basic human and civil rights. It also encourages teenagers to be more
involved in their community and their schools by offering a
youth-edited section addressing issues they feel are important to them
and containing information on financial aid and scholarships to enable
post-high school studies. This grant funds production for one year (12
issues, 250 copies each) of Buenas Noticias. (Fiscal agent: Idaho Community Action Network)
Community Gardens of Boise ($2,500)
Mission:
To engage senior citizens and newly arrived refugees in their
community, provide training in language and life skills, and promote
self-worth and inclusion.
Project: In partnership
with the Idaho Office for Refugees, this grant will create community
gardens at Ahaveth Beth Israel Synagogue and the Newcomer Education
Center. These gardens will serve senior citizens and newly arrived
refugees, enhancing their self-worth and inclusion as well
as encouraging cultural exchange, English language practice, and
interaction between adults and students. The gardeners will enjoy the
fruits of their labor, thus saving money on food. Specifically, this
grant will pay for tools and supplies such as hoses, seeds and mulch.
This project dovetails with other programs under the umbrella of
Mountain States Group Inc.: Agency for New Americans, English Language
Center, Foster Grandparents and Retired Senior Volunteer Program.
(Fiscal agent: Mountain States Group)
Community Intercultural Center 2004 Community Forum ($2,000)
Mission: To bring cultures together through education, information and participation.
Project: This project is
an opportunity for collaboration and capacity-building among community,
faith and business leaders, educators, young people, and refugees and
immigrants. The Fund for Idaho supported the first Community
Intercultural Center Community Forum, held in Boise in October 2003.
This grant will help institutionalize the forum so it can continue into
the future. The 2003 Forum brought together 200 adults and teenagers to
engage in discussion and foster social action around issues of
diversity and culture. They drafted community action steps that the
2004 Forum will follow up. The 2004 Forum also will publish information
about volunteer resources and needs, create new collaborative
mechanisms for improving cross-cultural/diversity understanding,
identify and involve new community partners and refugee/immigrant
leaders, and identify at least six concrete, measurable action steps.
Idaho Model Environmental Education School Network ($2,500)
Mission: To produce
environmentally literate citizens with the skills, knowledge and
commitment to live in harmony with their natural surroundings. By
stressing long-term thinking about Idaho’s quality of life and our
finite natural resources, the network hopes to move society toward
sustainability.
Project: At eight Idaho
schools (in Hagerman, Pocatello, Moscow, Nampa, Salmon, Ft. Hall Indian
Reservation, Bonners Ferry and Hailey) enrolling 2,066 students (413
from ethnic minorities), 44 educators will use the Environment as an
Integrating Context for improving learning (the EIC model). They will
teach students about both ecological and social-political systems and
the ways they affect each other. This grant and other sources will
support the network for one year. (Fiscal agent: Idaho Environmental
Education Association—IdEEA)
Treasure Valley Public Access Television ($1,418)
Mission: Build community
and increase diversity by facilitating television programming
opportunities for recent immigrants to the Treasure Valley.
Project: This project will
empower high school and college-age immigrants to produce TV, telling
their own stories in their own voices instead of having others produce
videos for or about them. Six young men and women from Afghanistan,
Somalia and the former Yugoslavia will develop a group of trained video
producers in a 10-week course covering all aspects of video production
from concept development to final broadcast. The grant will pay for
training, tapes and producer fees. Some material will be televised in
the makers’ native languages and aimed at immigrant audiences. Other
programming will be in English and aimed at a more general audience.
Y Que! Northwest Latino Youth Conference ($1,500)
Mission: To put on a
conference for youth, created by youth, addressing the rights of youth
of color and empowering them to become leaders in the movement for
social justice; create a structure to facilitate ongoing relationships
and work throughout the region.
Project: In 2003, the
first-ever regional Immigrant Rights Conference, held at Boise State
University, gave birth to a youth caucus that resolved to create
greater opportunities for student leaders: Youth on a Quest to Unite
and Empower (Y QUE!). This acronym—translated as "So What?!" in
Spanish—represents their passion to be active in the movement for
social change, invoking attitude, courage and confidence. This
first-ever youth conference will be held May 21-23, 2004, at Boise
State University. It will attract progressive youth and their
organizations; raise awareness about access to higher education,
immigration issues, prejudice and racism in schools, racial profiling
and criminal justice reform; give organizing tools to upcoming leaders;
and establish an annual gathering and a regional structure to support
communication and grassroots community work. Organizers hope to create
a nationwide network of grassroots progressive youth in the next five
years. (Fiscal agent: Idaho Community Action Network)
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