CPT INTERNATIONAL: Celebrate peacemaking by giving

Facebook
Twitter
Email
WhatsApp
Print

CPTnet
27 November 2012
CPT INTERNATIONAL: Celebrate peacemaking by giving

 
  God is good! (Las Pavas farmer)

Today,
Tuesday 27 November 2012, charities, families, businesses and individuals are
coming together to transform the way people think about, talk about, and participate
in the giving season. It’s a simple idea, and encourages generosity in the
wake of Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Tell everyone you can about what you are
doing and why it matters, for Christian Peacemaker Teams and other causes, on Crowdrise,
this #givingtuesday.

Join
us for this new tradition to spark a wave of giving. Check out Giving Tuesday and use this opportunity to make
a donation to CPT by becoming part of CPT’s Crowdrise effort (https://www.crowdrise.com/cptcolombia-christmas/fundraiser/christianpeacemakers/) today!
Click the donate button to donate or scroll down and join the fundraising team. (Pierre Shantz and Caldwell Manners from the Colombia team have kicked things
off.)

For further information or if you have any difficulties related to international transactions, please contact Sarah Thompson at outreach@cpt.org.

Categories

Subscribe to the Friday Bulletin

Get Ryan’s thoughts and the entire bulletin every Friday in your inbox, and don’t miss out on news from the teams, a list of what we’re reading and information on ways to take action.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Read More Stories

flag flies over building in sunlight

Fragile peace

Earlier this year, the Kurdistan Workers’ Party – the PKK – announced it would disband, bringing to a close a decades-long armed struggle against the

Welcome to Checkpoint 160

In August, CPT Reservist Maggie Hindley returned to Al Khalil/Hebron after a few years. She reunited with those she’d met before, and reflects on the changes in their daily lives after two years of war in Gaza.

A damaged house

A cold peace: a ceasefire without demobilization

Seven months on from the PKK’s unilateral ceasefire, bombardments and attacks by the Turkish Armed Forces in Iraqi Kurdistan seem to have ceased. But the increasing military presence by both actors makes the situation appear fragile.

Skip to content