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World AIDS Day: Seattle


Dec 4th, 2008 9:35 AM EST
By Sammi Fredenburg, ONE member, Seattle, Washington

Seattle ONE took part on World AIDS Day 2008 with Snohomish County RESULTS, the Snohomish County Health District and The Lifelong AIDS Alliance, as well as local, regional, national, and international AIDS prevention and treatment organizations to commemorate the day. With over 100 people in attendance, the evening started with a vigil march in a light drizzle down the road to the county’s AIDS memorial (only memorial of this kind in Washington State). There was also music by the local group Real Folk, a candlelight moment of silence, and networking with those who are HIV Positive, to encourage hope for a cure in our lifetime.

Speakers included Dr. Gary Goldbaum, director of the Snohomish Health District, and Teresa Rugg, a Snohomish County resident who spoke of her insights into the connection between HIV and tuberculosis in Africa. As Dr. Sanjay Gupta of CNN recently stated, in this day and age, TB somewhere in the world could quickly become TB anywhere in the world. Education and awareness is a frontline defense in preventing an epidemic. And evenings like this bring us together so those afflicted, and those close to those afflicted, needn’t feel so alone.

As Dr. Goldbaum told the local newspaper, The Everett Herald, “Locally our concern is preventing tuberculosis and HIV coming together. We are always on guard and encourage screening for HIV but we are always sensitive about TB and HIV together.”

An airborne disease, tuberculosis is particularly dangerous for those infected with HIV. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated one-third of those living with HIV are also infected with tuberculosis, and it’s responsible for nearly half of all AIDS deaths.

“People that are HIV positive can get started on medication and not develop AIDS for a long time,” Goldbaum said. “But we have new cases of HIV and AIDS — we are not doing enough. They are preventable.”

-Sammi Fredenburg

International UN Day in Seattle


Oct 27th, 2008 4:58 PM EST
By Sammi Fredenburg, ONE member, Seattle, Washington

After a week of meetings in Rome last week, Mark Brinkmoeller could have packed up and headed back home to DC. Instead, ONE’s Senior Director of US NGO Partnerships and Faith Relations spent a 24-hour travel day crossing the heartland to Seattle. We set a full schedule of events for him here, including meetings with faith groups, partner organizations, and even a concert. Still he never complained and the jetlag never showed. That is grace!

This year, International UN Day fell on Friday, October 24, and Mark was our keynote speaker. We wanted to hear how to engage the next administration, the next congress, and each other in order to lift the profile of the Millennium Development Goals. These are increasingly trying economic times and we feel far behind the curve. Mark embarked on a theme of hope. His interaction with the audience pointed the way. Measurements of progress are encouraging, and they open the doors to greater involvement. US funding has had a massive impact across Africa including TB/Malaria funding, antiretroviral treatment for AIDS, bed nets, and putting children in school. Through the grassroots activism of organizations that have made this a priority, millions of lives are saved and federal aid dollars over the course of this administration have morphed from Millions of dollars to Billions of dollars.

Saturday’s meetings included a relation-building coffee with leaders in the Seattle Islamic community. Mark’s knowledge and experience with Islamic organizations were extremely helpful. A new Islamic Faith-In-Action forum here in Seattle this winter will likely include the ONE Islamic Faith/ONE Sadaqa materials, and we shared the ONE multi-faith videos with them to use as well.

That night, the folk group “Real Folk” put on a benefit concert for ONE and RESULTS. Mark’s message of hope again resounded loud-and-clear encouraging us in our efforts to keep up the good fight in the north county. It’s gratifying to know that we are being heard and making a difference.

These events were also opportunities for the communities to take a photo with the traveling Jubilee USA Drop the Debt banner and sign up to ask the next administration to cancel the odious debts of highly-indebted poor countries.

Up here in Seattle, the group “Puget Sound Millennium Goals Project” couldn’t appreciate Mark’s support and encouragement more. Thank you Mark for an amazing week here, for promoting the great work of ONE and ONE Faith in the pacific northwest, and for helping Washington DC and this “other” Washington, um, “stay close!”

-Sammi Fredenburg

There’s no home-ish like Snohomish


Mar 31st, 2008 11:27 AM EST
By Sammi Fredenburg, ONE member, Seattle, Washington

SnohomishSnohomish RESULTS and The Snohomish County Health District (a community north of Seattle) held very inspiring event to honor World Tuberculosis Day (TB) at at the Wired & Unplugged Internet Coffeehouse and the region’s ONE members came out to support.

TB is the leading cause of death worldwide among women. More than nine million people are infected and nearly two million lives are lost to TB globally . Over one-third of the population of the earth has been exposed to the bacterium and is according to the World Health Organization, a new case develops every second. Not everyone infected develops the full blown disease, but one in ten will, and without prompt and thorough care, will die from this disease.

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Students Sleepless, But Not Voteless, in Seattle


Nov 12th, 2007 4:22 PM EST
By Chandler.Smith

The ONE Student | ONE Vote series came to a close Thursday evening at the University of Seattle. The event was amazing — students, politicians and ONE partners all coming together to lead the charge for the next generation of student voters.

The African Children’s Choir was there – and if you saw them on American Idol — I can tell you that they are even more energetic and inspiring in person. The crowd favorite was clearly “Oh Happy Day,” and at one point I almost jumped up in front of all 450 students to join the dancing.

FOX News anchor and ONE member Carl Cameron opened the conversation with a video message to encourage all participants to become educated about the issues of extreme poverty and global disease. Mike Allen of Politico.com moderated the conversations. State Senator Ed Murray and UW professor Patrick Murphy participated as well as ONE Vote ‘08 superstar and Rwandan political refugee Natalie Sugira. Loyce Mbewa-On’gudi, founder and president of the Rabuor Village Project, also joined in the conversation.

ONE Student | ONE Vote has been an incredible effort to get students involved in the electoral process and each panelist has been a fantastic addition to the ONE community. I’m already looking forward to the lasting effects that students will have on the election and all they will accomplish between now and November 2008.

-Chandler Smith

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