Boresha

Giving Back

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“The children of Uganda are asking for survival,
they are asking for peace.”

(Quote from the Invisible Children documentary film)

Boresha is directly donating a percentage of its proceeds to the non-profit organization, Invisible Children, to help put an end to the horrors of war. With every cup of Boresha coffee you too can help the children in northern Uganda by giving them back their childhood, their dreams, and their lives.

SAVOR A DELICIOUS CUP OF BORESHA COFFEE AND HELP SAVE A CHILD’S LIFE.

A Violent History of War

For the last 20+ years, a war has raged in northern Uganda, forgotten by most of the world. Since 1987, a rebel group known as the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) has been fighting for power against the government of Uganda. The LRA holds no territory in Uganda, but operates out of southern Sudan, conducting cross-border attacks in Uganda. Abducted children have fought this war, primarily. It is estimated that more than 30,000 children have been abducted and forced to fight for the LRA. Currently, those abducted are estimated to comprise 80 to 95 percent of the LRA's forces.

Innocent civilians are strung vulnerably in the balance between two sides that have lost sight of the people. The government of Uganda has failed to protect its citizens from this rebel militia that has abducted thousands of children, subjected them to torture or sexual violence, and forced them to fight in a violent guerilla army. And while peace talks are currently underway to bring much-needed resolution to this humanitarian crisis, the war still wages on, carrying with it the devastating abduction of innocent children.

The Raw Reality

It is a grave, desperate situation where the children fear the night,
they fear to sleep at their own homes.”

(Quote from the Invisible Children documentary film.)

The Lords Resistance Army (LRA) is an army of rebels headed by Joseph Kany and run from the jungles of northern Uganda. Its mission is to overthrow the government of Uganda and it will stop at nothing, even if it means forcefully abducting, brainwashing, and brutally killing children. In a war that has been waging on for 20+ years, and where people have long grown weary of supporting its cause, the LRA brutally kidnaps children in a violently mad effort to continue their war.

Over 30,000 children have been abducted to date. The prime victims are children from five to twelve years of age, because they are big enough to carry weapons, but small enough to sneak into schools and steal more children.

The children are forcefully abducted from their villages by the rebels and brainwashed into being soldiers, brainwashed to kill. They are taken into the jungle and desensitized through violent indoctrination. Those who are too weak to make the journey into the jungle are chopped up with knives and left to die. They are taught nothing but to kill, to kill through beating, knifing, and shooting. If they try to escape, they are brutally tortured and killed, their limbs intentionally cut off in front of the other children to instill horror and fear into their minds should they even think for a second to do the same.

Instead of being able to play and go to school like normal children, these children live in absolute fear. They have nightmares and dread sleeping in their own homes, terrified that will be forcefully abducted by the rebels and killed.

In a desperate effort to escape from the LRA, the innocent children of northern Uganda must sleep away from their families and commute as far as 10 miles every evening into town centers and makeshift camps in order to avoid being kidnapped. This tragic trend of "night commuting" has increased, with up to 50,000 children now walking every night to safety, to sleep in places where the space is limited and they must sleep tightly packed together on the hard concrete floor, with just a thin blanket to cover some of them.

The ones that miraculously manage to return to their villages are severely traumatized. They have been forced to kill or have witnessed somebody being killed. The children are abducted before they learn to read or write. They do not have the chance to go to school and grow up their whole lives in the bush, so all they know to do is to use guns, to use violence, to kill. The result is children that exhibit high levels of aggression, resorting to playing games of a violent nature, and whose drawings are bloody depictions of abductions, weapons, and war.

These children live each day in a desperate situation.

Invisible Children

Invisible Children, Inc. is a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide healthcare, safety, and education for the children of northern Uganda.

With coverage on Oprah, CNN, the National Geographic Channel, and more, Invisible Children was born from the wave of responses of people having seen the documentary film exposing the effects of a 20-year war on the children of Uganda, where children are both the weapons and the victims.

Invisible Children vigilantly strives to give each of these children a name, a face, a voice, and an education.

Boresha is proud to team up with the Invisible Children organization and donate a percentage of its proceeds to the children of northern Uganda. You too can actively make a difference and help the children in northern Uganda, one cup of coffee at a time.

SAVOR A DELICIOUS CUP OF BORESHA COFFEE AND HELP SAVE A CHILD’S LIFE.

Fair Trade Pricing / Sustainable Quality

Boresha is committed to enhancing the livelihoods of farmers by purchasing coffee beans at fair trade pricing, and to contributing to the preservation of the environment by establishing relationships with organic coffee growers which adopt sustainability principles into their farming practices.

Fair Trade Pricing

Fair trade pricing guarantees that the coffee was grown responsibly, and that the farmers who grew the beans got a fair price for them. Paying farmers a premium price for their products contributes to quality of life for coffee growers and their communities by:

  • Ensuring that they are taking home more money for their harvest to help support a better life.
  • Creating direct trade links to farmers and their cooperatives, bypassing exploitative middlemen.
  • Creating a positive impact on farmers and their communities by enabling them to put money back into their operation and invest in training and education for workers.

Sustainability

Sustainability is an attempt to provide the best outcomes for the human and natural environments both now and into the indefinite future.

According to the World Commission on Environment and Development, assembled by the United Nations in 1983, sustainable development is defined as development that "meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs."

Organic farming protects farmers and the environment from unsafe applications of fertilizers and pesticide, promoting a sustainable environment and sustainable agriculture for future generations.

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