Monday, June 09, 2008

Fundraising Template Letter

We have put together a template letter for you to send to friends, family, and acquaintances to get sponsors for . Download the template letter (PDF) (DOC)

Dear Friends and Family:

You probably know about the AIDS pandemic ravaging Africa. But did you know these staggering statistics? In 2007, AIDS claimed the lives of 3 million people, including 570,000 children. In sub-Saharan Africa 74 children die every hour and a half. That would be equivalent to ALL the kids in our church dying during one worship service on a Sunday morning. There are over 12 million AIDS orphans in sub-Saharan Africa. In South Africa alone, there are over 1.2 million kids who are orphans due to AIDS. That would be like having ALL the kids in Minnesota living without any parents.

You probably know about the AIDS pandemic ravaging Africa. But did you know that you can do something about it? I am part of a fundraising movement called “join the Race.” The “race” refers metaphorically to the race to save lives, but also to Ironman South Africa which our friend Mike Pluimer plans to race in April 2009 to raise money and awareness for CRWRC’s Embrace AIDS campaign. Completing an Ironman is certainly a challenge: a 2.4 mile swim, a 112 mile bike and a 26.2 mile run. I have also committed to completing these distances…only I have a year to do it! We are called iJoiners and in addition to committing to exercise, we have also each committed to raise at least $500 for Embrace AIDS and to recruit at least one iJoiner.

I am writing today to ask you to consider sending a gift to CRWRC or becoming an iJoiner! You can do either of these easily on the Join the Race website found at www.jointherace.org. (And even if you can’t do either of these options right now, I encourage you to check out the website -- it will tell you more about what we’re up to!) If you choose to send a donation or to become an iJoiner, please indicate on your form that you are sponsoring me or that I recruited you—that way all the statistics stay up-to-date. If you become an iJoiner you can keep an on-line exercise log, chat on the blog, email training questions to Mike, and keep track of his exercise regimen. You can also follow my progress toward this Ironman goal!

You probably know about the AIDS pandemic ravaging Africa. Today is your chance to do something about it and join the Race! Please also keep all of us and the people of Africa in your prayers.

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Thursday, June 05, 2008

AIDS Intro

For over 40 years, CRWRC has been working with communities to overcome poverty. In communities around the world, AIDS is overwhelming the healthcare system and disintegrating family and community support networks.

Development programs, improved agriculture, infrastructure for small businesses, and other advancements are all falling apart as people and communities struggle to deal with this disease.

Currently there are about 40.3 million people around the world were living with HIV and AIDS, 4.1 million people were newly infected this year, and 2.8 million people lost their lives. The UN Secretary, General Kofi Annan told the UN General Assembly on June 2, 2006 that “the epidemic continues to outpace us.”

Unfortunately, those most affected by this crisis are those least able to respond to it - the poor, hungry, and under-educated. These people are often the first to get infected. Once ill, they are even less likely to be able to work to pay for food or health care they so desperately need. This, in turn, leads to complications with their illness, unhealthy choices, and a spread of the infection.

In fact, poverty and HIV and AIDS feed one another in a vicious cycle that cannot be broken without help. Poverty causes people to be poorly nourished and to be poorly educated; as a result they are more prone to fall ill with AIDS-related diseases, and less likely to be able to access the health care they so desperately require.

Poverty sometimes presses the male head of a household to look for work in a far away major city. During a time of prolonged absence from his spouse and the norms of his community, the man may succumb to the temptation to be unfaithful. Some time later, the man may return home sick, and infect his wife. Any future children are also at high risk of contracting the disease.

The desperation of poverty also drives women to turn to prostitution, stay with an unfaithful husband, or put up with abuse, and may prevent them from protecting themselves from HIV infection even when they know that their partner is HIV-positive.

Children, too, are impacted. Many are born with HIV and AIDS, their parents get sick and die, and the children are left on their own to face a life of poverty where they the cycle of AIDS and poverty threatens to spiral downward even further. Many of today’s cases of HIV infection are in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Fortunately, the global crisis of AIDS is starting to receive the attention it deserves. Twenty-five years after the disease was first identified, media and celebrity attention has finally begun to increase public awareness of HIV/AIDS. Voices like Nelson Mandela, Angelina Jolie, Bill Hybels, Stephen Lewis, Rick Warren, Bono, Sharon Stone, Bill Gates, and Bill Clinton have encouraged public action and are pressing world leaders to make AIDS a priority in international spending. CRWRC rejoices that people of influence are adding their voices to the call for compassion and justice. Now we are encouraging Christians around the world to join the Race.

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