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Hula Hoop Dancing ...................................8 Classes are being offered all over South Vancouver to get people of all ages into the groove
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PRODUCED BY LANGARA JOURNALISM STUDENTS
NOVEMBER 5, 2015 • VOL. 48 NO. 5• VANCOUVER, B.C.
Pedaling flour to empower
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A Langara graduate and his brother have embarked on a unique mission to help people in Africa By JAKE COSTELLO
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Langara College graduate and his brother are hoping to expand on an international aid project that brings pedal-powered agricultural technology to rural communities. In 2013, Chris and Josh Hergesheimer travelled to Panlang, South Sudan and built a grain mill out of bicycle parts. The brothers funded the project with donations collected on Indiegogo, and chronicled their adventure in the book The Flour Peddler. According to Josh, who graduated from Langara’s journalism program in 2009, the brothers hope to expand with one or two projects per year, and starting with a tentative partnership with the Kuwangisana Organization, an aid group in Mozambique that reached out to the brothers after their project in South Sudan. Though the Indiegogo campaign worked once, they may have exhausted that resource, said Chris, who’s in Ecuador working on his PhD through UBC’s Land and Food Systems program. “We really hit the crowdfunding curve at the right time,” he said via Skype. Chris said this time they’ve applied for funding through private sponsors, who have asked to remain anonymous. He said that with their experience the brothers are in a good place to help companies fulfill corporate social responsibility commitments, adding, “One of these mills can impact 40, or 60, or 100 people in a community.” Pedal-powered machines can boost the quality of life in rural communities according to Jesse Cooper, project coordinator with Pedal Energy Development Alternatives (PEDAL), a nonprofit group that runs a community bike shop in Vancouver. PEDAL funds Maya Pedal, an organization in Guatemala that makes waterpumps, grinders, blenders and more out of bicycle parts. Cooper said using machines to help with manual labour allow work to be “more efficiently, or more effectively or much faster, or all three together.” He added gaining independence from fossil fuels, or other expensive forms of energy is “super empowering.” If their funding applications are successful the brothers are hoping to be on the ground in Mozambique next April. “This is not work,” Chris said. “It’s just passion.” Printed on recycled paper
‘I was very lonesome’ KATE RICHARDSON photo
Charles Fleming joined the Legion after his wife passed away. Fleming used to serve in the military and RCMP.
The Royal Canadian Legion gives crucial support to vets By KATE RICHARDSON
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he Royal Canadian Legion has continued to play an important role for South Vancouver communities and their veterans, despite the dwindling number of its members. Legions provide support for aging veterans, especially those of the Korean War and Second World War. While younger veterans from conflicts like Afghanistan have stayed away, according to Legion Branch 30 vice-president Tom Johnson. “They’ve diminished a little bit,” he said. “We don’t seem to be able to attract them.”
Charles Fleming joined the military in 1954 and toured in Germany before eventually joining the RCMP, started coming to the Legion for companionship after his wife passed away. “I was very, very lonesome,” he said. Reluctance to talk to family is not unusual for returning veterans says Oliver Thorne, director of operations at the Veterans Transition Network. The VTN is a national program based in Vancouver for all members of the Canadian Force, which the Legion funds. “Our program helps identify and overcome barriers to transition to civilian life,” said Thorne. As the largest military fundraising
organization in Canada, the Legion has supported VTN since it’s beginning in 1997, donating $500,000 in 2012 to turn the 15-year-old UBC program into a national organization. Thorn also said that VTN provides counseling services for soldiers that may have troubles talking about their past. For veterans coming to terms with their experience, Remembrance Day can be especially difficult. “For us, it’s really to honour and give quiet respectful thanks,” Thorne said. “For them, it’s a reminder of the death of someone close to them.” On Nov. 11, Legions all over Canada will hold ceremonies and rituals of remembering.
For us, it’s really to honour and give quiet respectful thanks. For them, it’s a reminder of the death of someone close to them OLIVER THORNE VTN DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
LEGION FACTS 1 2 3 4
Founded in 1926
One in three members of the Legion are veterans Recognized as Guardians of Remembrance in Canada Helps all vets in Canada directed toward family need
Source: Legion.ca
Killarney set to build badly needed seniors centre A long-awaited senior centre in Killarney is ready to be built after an agreement between the Vancouver board of parks and the Killarney Community Centre Society
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Soon they will have somewhere to come to share their memories, make friends MICH SOGA KILLARNEY SENIOR’S ASSOCIATION SECRETARY
By TESSA VIKANDER new agreement is bringing hope to South Vancouver seniors. The Vancouver board of parks and recreation has signed a deal with the Killarney Community Centre Society to build a new seniors centre, and is now seeking contractors to build it. The new centre won’t be completed for three years. Mich Soga, secretary for the Killarney Community Centre Senior’s Association (KCCSA) said “It’s a dream come true for the Killarney Community Centre. It’s really nice that the seniors will finally have their own space.” “Some of the seniors are very isolated,” Soga said. “Soon they will have somewhere to come to share their memories, make friends.” Soga said several of the neighbouring
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community centres don’t have a designated seniors’ programmer. As a result, many seniors come to Killarney from outside of the centre’s catchment MICH SOGA area. Secretary for She said once the the Killarney new centre is built, Senior’s Assocathere will be less tion strain for space at the community centre, adding if the KCCSA were to offer more programming right now, they would be taking space away from other centre users. “The new centre will offer luncheons
daily, (and) will be connected by a hallway to the fitness centre at Killarney,” she said. Nelson Didulo, South Vancouver resident and chair of the South Vancouver Seniors Hub, a seniors advocacy group, said if he wants to go for a seniors’ lunch he has to take three separate buses to the Kerrisdale Seniors Centre. “Once the Killarney Seniors Centre is built then it’s just one bus, only a 20 minute commute. That’s pretty good, so I will go more often,” he said. Park Board chair John Coupar said he heard from seniors during the consultation phase of the project that programming isn’t always in a convenient location. “[We need to do] some work on increasing seniors’ programs across the city,” he said.
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