Upload
get-a-vision
View
260
Download
19
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
The 2013 Annual Report of the Charter for Compassion International. The Charter for Compassion is a document that transcends religious, ideological, and national differences. Supported by leading thinkers from many traditions, the Charter activates the Golden Rule around the world.The Charter for Compassion is a cooperative effort to restore not only compassionate thinking but, more importantly, compassionate action to the center of religious, moral and political life. Compassion is the principled determination to put ourselves in the shoes of the other, and lies at the heart of all religious and ethical systems.
Citation preview
1Charter for Compassion international
AnnuAl RepoRt 2013
ChARteR for CompAssion international
2 Charter for Compassion international
the globAl CompAssion movement
We do it without question for our
children, for the members of our
family, for those we know and love.
The nature of every human being is
to feel compassion for others. But the
structure of modern society thwarts
and distorts this natural desire. This
sense of separation and disconnec-
tion is so pervasive that unkindness,
indif ference, self ishness appear as
the norm and compassion, kindness
and caring are the outliers.
It could be said that the key missing
ingredient, the source of all human
suffering, of environmental devasta-
tion and social injustice -- the one
key difference-making element that
allows the human presence on this
planet to appear as the single sour
note in the symphony of creation --
is the absence of compassion.
Compassion is not something we
need to create, or manufacture. It
is something we need to unleash.
Because it is within us when we are
born. It is part of who we are. We
care because we are. The question
is: how can we unleash, release,
uncover what is already there, yearn-
ing to be expressed.
Beneath our culture of indifference
runs a deep river of compassion,
a vast aquifer of loving kindness
waiting to be tapped, yearning to
be released. We can unleash the
natural resource of compassion so
that the next generation can fulf ill
the promise of every generation:
and become what we actually are:
Human Kind.
CReAting CompAssionAte Communities thRough sCientifiC ReseARCh And gRAssRoots movement-building
In sociology, the term “social capital”
refers to benefits that accrue to both
individuals and groups when there
is cooperation. The core premise is
that social networks have value and
contribute to the strength, well-be-
ing and resiliency of communities
and individuals. If social capital is the
it is humAn nAtuRe
to CAReto CARe foR
to CARe Aboutto tAke CARe of
to eAse suffeRingto uplift
to smooth the wAyto CoopeRAte
to offeR suppoRt
In Cairo in the spring of 2011, millions of Egyptians demanded an end
to dictatorship and rebirth of democracy, rallied by a Facebook page
created by five young activists for human rights, including a young
woman named Nadine. In the summer of 2013, after the failure of
the new government to deliver on the promise of democracy, and
the military’s bloody suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood, Nadine
initiated a country-wide campaign to get every major political party
in the country to sign a specifically Egyptian version of the Charter
for Compassion., pledging compassion and nonviolence to be the
core principles of public life. Nadine said, “We can inject the fresh air
of the Charter for Compassion into Egypt’s poisonous atmosphere.”
98,888Likes on the Charter for
Compassion Facebook page
(up 40% in 12 months)
3Charter for Compassion international
glue that holds communities togeth-
er, what is the “social polymer” that
makes it sticky in the f irst place?
Compassion is the essential ingre-
dient for creating strong, cohesive
communities . Though in modern
usage compassion is often synony-
mous with pity, its original meaning
def ined an action, not an emotion:
from the Latin com—together—
and pati—to suffer. Like any action,
compassion should be something
observable, measurable, and repli-
cable. Moreover, it must have quan-
tif iable impact.
Over the past two decades, scientists
have applied a variety of methods
to summarize the social climate and
availability of social capital in any
community. A healthy climate, for
example, is one in which people have
a strong capacity to identify with
others and to create relationships
of trust. A community where com-
passion is fully alive is also a thriving,
resilient community whose citizens
are creative, can confront crises with
innovative solutions, can navigate
changes in the economy and the
environment, and can bounce back
readily from natural disasters.
the woRk of ChARteR foR CompAssion inteRnAtionAl is twofold:
• To promote a stir r ing vision
of how compassion can liter-
ally save humanity in the 21st
century and connect the global
compassion movement more
completely to itself;
• To demonstrate how compas-
sionate action has a concrete
and measurable impact on
human communities and the
social ecologies in which
they exist.
the tRipod of CompAssionAte ACtion Our core strategy is to develop the global compassion movement by
focusing our attention on the International Compassionate Cities Cam-
paign. Our principle tactic for helping the movement come to life is the
Compassion Games, an organization sponsored by the Char ter. One
of our most important public tools
is the Compassion Mapping
Projec t . The move-
ment will step into
global conscious-
ness during the
Wor ld Com-
pass ion Fes-
tival in 2015,
when people
w i l l ga ther
o n e v e r y
cont inent in
thousands of
cities and towns
to celebrate the
power of compas-
sion to transform the
world.
365,000Average weekly reach on
the Charter for Compassion
Facebook page (up 102%
in 12 months)
242Organizations
participating
in Charter for
Compassion Partner
page on Facebook (up
426% in 12 months)
4 Charter for Compassion international
In Walk Out Walk On, Meg
Wheatley and Deb Frieze tell
how Johannesburg’s Joubert Park
was transformed by community
effort . In a cascade of compas-
sion-sparked activism, a violent,
littered, ugly urban space became
a garden of beauty, peace, and
culture. Crime decreased when
a club of photographers started
to image everyone entering the
park. A women’s group cultivated
a corner where they grew vegeta-
bles to feed lunch to children in
a cooperative day care launched
in another corner. The day care
center hosted a literacy program
for parents of the children. Artists
and musicians gathered to cel-
ebrate and enrich the life of the
neighborhood. Compassion flow-
ered.
No city in the world is a “Compassionate City” in any abstract or for-
mal sense, just as no city is devoid of compassion. The ICCC is not a
cer tificate program such as the Good Housekeeping Seal, and there is
no single definition of a “Compassionate City.” Instead the ICCC is a
movement to help communities of all sizes incorporate compassionate
action into the fabric of their civic life.
• Government/city council formally signs the Charter for Com-
passion, issuing a public proclamation and/or resolution.
• Community leaders report great examples of how their com-
munity is already a place of compassion.
• Community-based committee forms to bring compassion to
life in practical, specific ways in neighborhoods, businesses, schools,
and congregations.
• City enters the Compassion Games.
• Community leaders participate in conference calls with activists
in other cities, using the Charter for Compassion web site to
share inspiration, learning, resources, and stories of their com-
munity’s journey toward compassion.
• City commits to participate in the World
Compassion Festival
inteRnAtionAl CompAssionAte Cities CAmpAign
steps foR A City to join the movement:
5Charter for Compassion international
The original challenge to play the
Compassion Games came from the
city of Louisville, KY in 2012, when
Mayor Greg Fischer asked his citi-
zens to perform acts of service in that
community during a period of several
days in April. His goal was 55,000
acts of service. Instead, more than
90,000 acts of service were record-
ed, including packaging 33,570 meals
for needy children, 9,000 volunteers
who picked up litter, 3,200 donated
books, and 950 blood donations. The
mayor proclaimed his city “the most
compassionate city in the world.”
“Anybody can do this,” Mayor Fischer
said. “It requires no extra money
from the city. It’s calling out the good-
will that resides in the people already.
So my challenge to my fellow mayors
is to take us on. And being a compas-
sionate city, we have to help you beat
us, of course, and we’d be delighted
to do so.”
The Compassion Games are a critical
strategy for promoting the practice of
compassion. Designed to make com-
munities safer, kinder, more just and
better places to live, the Compassion
Games program recruits cities, cam-
puses, organizations, and individual
players to perform acts of service
and kindness in neighborhoods, on
the job, in service-providing agen-
cies, and wherever their daily journey
takes them. The acts of service are
organized projects or simple acts of
kindness to aid a neighbor in need.
Star ting in 2013, the Games now
run each year from September 11th
through September 21st . By the
fall of 2013 the program spread to
include New York, NY; Los Angeles,
San Francisco, Orange County, CA;
Atlanta, GA, Milwaukee, WI; Cincin-
nati, OH; Nashville, TN; Houston,
TX; Phoenix, AZ; Gurgaon, India; and
a national project that will began in
Los Angeles but will spark campaigns
in many cities: the LGBTQ Compas-
sion Games. Every city that joins the
International Compassionate Cities
Campaign is invited to also be a host
for the Compassion Games. By the
fall of 2014, we expect to have over
150 cities, from every continent,
fully engaged and taking part in the
Games. Many more will join by the
fall of 2015.
CompAssion gAmes
120,000Newsletter reach (up
33% in 12 months)
19Cities participating in
Compassion Games in
September 2013 (up
950% since 2012)
6 Charter for Compassion international
The Compassion Mapping Project
(CMP) is a combination of social
science research and large-scale social
intervention and innovation. The
Project builds on studies of pro-so-
cial behavior on college campuses
conducted by Dr. Daniel Mar tin of
California State University – East Bay
and Stanford University’s CCARE;
and on a Compassion Games project
to crowd-map compassionate acts.
The Project integrates social media
applications that allow individuals to
record their own actions and the
actions of others with online tools
that aggregate that data. The Project
has two high-level goals: 1) to enlarge
our understanding of the impact of
compassionate action on commu-
nities, and 2) to create broad social
change.
The premise of our experiment is
that par ticipants become aware of
compassionate actions--elevation be-
havior—by using an online tool based
on the Ushahidi crowd-mapping plat-
form and Google Maps. Based on
analogous research results Dr. Martin
completed in a university setting,
we hypothesize that par ticipants
being exposed to positive behavior
will repor t a strong desire to act
pro-socially, and have a significantly
higher level of flourishing and com-
passion for others than control group
non-participants. As quality of life is
measured longitudinally, we will use
these measures to establish impact
across time. As a result, the exper-
iment should be able to measurably
encourage pro-social behavior.
CompAssion mApping pRojeCt
The California Institute for Women is a prison for women. In Sep-
tember 2013, 1560 women inmates joined residents of 20 cities through the
world to celebrate the Compassion Games. The CIW women performed acts
of loving kindness (of their own choosing), recorded them with their names
and housing units, and placed them in a box in a centralized location. The
numbers were tallied a few times during the week and a graph was placed in
each unit so that the women could see how they were doing. Organizer Rev.
Shayna Lester said, “It is the hope of the Warden that all women will want to be
part of this. We expect and have seen great enthusiasm by the women for this
project. No one will be a loser.”
1,322U.S. Mayors (cities
exceeding 30,000
population) voting to
endorse the International
Compassionate Cities
Campaign
7Charter for Compassion international
This will be the f irst large-scale demonstration of the
impact of character qualities such as compas-
sion, forgiveness, future-mindedness, and
generosity on the quality of life in
cities. It creates a social feedback
loop that encourages fur ther
investment of social capital.
The Compassion Mapping
Project will help us to
have an impact on the
pub l i c conve r s a t ion
about sustainability, re-
silience, and innovation,
he lp to dr amat ica l ly
expand the network of
activists and citizens who
are consciously par t of a
global compassion move-
ment , and help to build a
permanent platform that can
suppor t an increasingly inf luential
“collaboratory” in which we can launch
future experiments in the social science of
compassion.
the CompAssion mApping pRojeCt will AnsweR the following bRoAd ReseARCh questions:• How does elevation — the pro-social feelings that individuals experience
when repor ting and witnessing compassionate actions — impact individual
states of compassion and well-being across a broad range of criteria.
• What is the impact of heightening awareness of compassion and pro-
social behavior across a broad range of social indicators (city quality of life,
organizational assessment surveys, student climate surveys).
8 Charter for Compassion international
woRld CompAssion festivAl
419Charter for Compassion
Partner organizations (up
144% in 12 months)
159Grassroots organizing
circles in International
Compassionate Cities Campaign
(up 177% in 12 months)
The World Compassion Festival,
scheduled for September 11-21,
2015, will be a tipping point in history.
Compassion will become a meme
that permeates our world culture.
In over 100 major cities around the
globe, in simultaneous and globally
coordinated events, thousands will
come together to celebrate compas-
sion and declare their determination
to wake the spirit of compassion to
transform the world.
plAtfoRm foR CompAssion
The Festival will serve as a launch-
pad for the global compassion move-
ment, a platform for compassion in
action that will inspire people--es-
pecially young people-- to dedicate
their lives in service to a goal larger
than themselves: addressing the
causes and conditions of suffering in
our world such as climate change,
economic disparity, lack of access to
clean water, sustainability, pover ty,
nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons , disenfranchisement of
women, decreasing biodiversity and
interreligious conflict.
In keeping with the vision and ulti-
mate intended results of the event,
the World Compassion Festival will
be created “from the bottom up”—
catalyzing a movement that already
exis ts , highlighting the inspir ing
stories of compassion that offer
guidance and hope for our journey,
providing oppor tunity for people
of all cultures and ages, generating
gravity from the mass of collective
consciousness, and producing mo-
mentum at all levels of magnif ication
that will insure that the spirit of the
event never ends.
CelebRAtion And CeRemony
We will combine the most tradi-
tional forms of ritual and ceremo-
ny with the lates t technological
tools of communication and social
media . We wi l l use the tr an-
scendent power of contempo-
rary and traditional music, video,
sacred ar ts, poetry, and dance to
create an emotion-
a l contex t for d i -
a logue , educat ion
and transformation.
We w i l l e m p l oy
the most successful
techniques in com-
b in ing on l ine ex-
per iences with live
interaction.
We w i l l u se t he
World Compassion
Festival as an open
space umbrella or container for
thousands of self-produced events
of a l l s izes . We wil l aggregate
these events and create a mosaic
of human engagement that wi l l
provide all par ticipants with the
realization that they are a par t of
something much bigger than their
immediate event or community.
Self-awareness is a prerequisite to
organizations, initiatives and local
communities becoming a “move-
ment .” While an open source ,
grassroots approach is consistent
with our organizational philoso-
phy, it is also impor tant to track
par ticipation, record interactions
and fos ter ongoing network ing
oppor tunities in order to provide
some measure of “success ,” give
the Wor ld Compassion Fes t ival
funders quantif iable metr ics , and
guide our future activity.
34Healthcare Partners of the
Charter for Compassion
(since April 2013)
9Charter for Compassion international
In the 21st century, scientif ic evi-
dence has mounted for compassion
as an essential ingredient in main-
taining thriving, healthy, resilient,
and innovative enterprises, insti-
tutions, and communities. Business
leaders are discovering that invest-
ment in compassionate policies and
planning goes straight to the bot-
tom line. Teachers are learning that
compassion is an essential ingredi-
ent of a successful education, the
very foundation for understanding
how one’s ideas, solutions and ac-
tions may affect others. Mayors and
civic leaders around the world are
exploring compassion as their core
strategy to build bridges across
par tisan divides and f ind innovative
solutions. Your suppor t can make a
crucial difference. Email contact@
char ter forcompassion.org.
Contribute NowCharter for Compassion
220 2nd Ave. S., Unit #113
Seattle, WA 98104
(a project of Compassionate Action Network
International, a US-based 501(c)(3) nonprof it
organization, EIN# 26-4836556)
charterforcompassion.org
youR suppoRt
21Cities that have publicly
endorsed the Charter
for Compassion (up
133% in 12 months)
36,658 – Average monthly
visits to Charter for
Compassion web sites – (up
382% in 12 months)
30Educational institutions that
have signed the Charter
for Compassionate Schools
(since August 2013)
“The United States Conference of Mayors applauds the cities who
have adopted compassion as a key policy for their communities;
and…recommends that other cities explore the use of compassion
as a key component to achieve core objectives in their communi-
ties… the United States Conference of Mayors [will] provide future
opportunities for exploration and discussion among mayors on the
role of compassion as an effective policy for their communities; …
the work of the mayors’ exploration [will] result in the development
of policies, procedures, tactics, and practical guidance on the inte-
gration of compassion in programs to address the holistic wellness
of communities especially as it relates to those most at-risk.”
– US Conference of Mayors, June, 2013
10 Charter for Compassion international
2013 donoRs to the ChARteR foR CompAssionAbdul Hay Abbass
Abigail Rangel
Adam Mauer Elliott
Adam Smith
Adar Howard
Alan Artner
Alan Werring
Alayne Sulkin
Alexandra Brookshire
Alina Coryell
Alina Rossano
Alison Pignolet
Allen Sussman
Amy Eilberg
Amy Geishert
Amy Murray
Amy Silverman
Amy Sprague
Andrea Brenneke
Andrea Lubner
Andrea Wenet
Andrew Himes
Aneela Charania
Angie Antill
Angie Buysse
Ann Cavanaugh
Ann Fox
Ann Springer
Ann Williams
Anna Riley
Anna Sanford
Anne Burke
Anne Hopkins
Anne Stadler
Anne Vedder
Anthony Toole
Anthony Waters
Antonio Estrada
Antonius Vissers
Astrid Berg
Atlantic Philanthropies
Baking for Good
Barbara Kelly
Barbara Lahav
Barbara Newton
Barri Rind
Bernadette & William Miles
Bert Green
Betty Ann Richter
Betty Tong
Beverly Krush
Bill Bruehl
Bill Peregrine
Blair Carleton
Bob Niles
Bob Schneider
Bonita Bryant
Bonnie Shulman
Brenda White
Bridgett Chandler
Bridgett Neal
Brie Pawlak
Bruce Wallace
Byron Yount
Carmel Williams
Carmen Altamirano
Carmen Olson
Carol Mastenbrook
Carol Ray
Carole Hendrix
Carolyn Healy
Carolyn Lamond
CaroLynne O’Donnell
Catherine Heitz
Cathie Crawford
cecile moochnek
Celeste Johns
Celso Nucci Filho
Charlene Ohnstad
Charles Barker
Charles Goedeke
Charlyene Blazey
Cherida Smith
Cherida Smith
Cherie Gray
Cherilynn Tilford
Cheryl LeClair
Chris Fontana
Chris Terry
Christina Dawson
Christine (Chris) Smith Oxford
Christine Dodd
christine leahy
Christopher Schroeder
Christy Drogosch
Christy Drogosch
Christy Kendall
Cindy Shepherd
Claire Box
Claire Glennon
Claire Tocknell
Claudia Lynch
Colin Meiser
Colleen Loehr
Connie Moffit
Constance Sullivan
Cora Slieker
Corry Duindam
Craig Darling
Cynthia Figge
Cynthia Sears
Dale Coye
Dan Cooperstock
Dana Goodfriend
Daniel Lieberman
David Carleton
David Lazerwitz
David Lewis
David Louch
David Rose
David Storey
David Whitlock
Deanna Hollas
Deb Grover
debi rosenblum
Deborah Clendenning
Deborah Loe
Deborah Michael
Delphine Stevens
Denice Bourke
Denise Davidson
Denise Niles
Dennis Terrick
Derrick Cunningham
Diana Feldman
Diana Schiro
Diane Bacigalupo
Diane Kroll
Diane Monroe
Dick Schaap
Diogo Rolo
Dirk Zijlstra
Donna Mullins
Dorinda Hale
Doris Balant
Doug Exworthy
Douglas Brunt
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Williams
Dr. Ahmed Moustapha
Dr. Helen McConnell
Dr. Linda AK Thompson
Duane Nickull
Duane Pullin
Duncan Saunders
Dylan Smith
Earl Laman
Ed Casper
Ed Maurer
Ed McKenna
Eddie Griffiths̀
Edo Carter
Edward Moydell
Edward Soo
Eileen Christiansen
Eileen Crowell
Eileen Flanagan
Eileen Jill Whittington
Ela Esterberg
Elain Gifford
Elaine Nelson
Elisa Jaffe
Elisabeth Reinhard
Elizabeth Archer
Elizabeth Hitchman
Elizabeth Lin
Elizabeth Little
Elizabeth Raymer
Elizabeth Robins
Ellen Dunder
Emily Fischer
Emily Neilson
Eric Atwell
Erik Lawyer
Erin Erin
Eugene Lubarsky
Faith Hayflich
Faith O Miller
Farouq Abdul-Aziz Abdullah
Feroud Seeparsand
Florence Wilton
Francesco Izzo
Francoise Martin
Franklin Adkinson
Freda Thompson
Fredda Goldfarb
G Anne Guenzel
G Dale Meyer
Gary Davis
Gary West
Gayanne Leachman
Gayle Johnson
Gayle Podrabsky
Genie Palmer
Georgia Gibbs
Gerard Rohlf
Gigi Wickwire
Gilles Bouchard
Gillian Gonda
Gladys Thomas
Gloria Guldager
Glynn Olive
Gordon Gamble
Greg Lyle-Newton
Greg Scully
Gretchen Krampf
Gus Mansor
Gwen Prince
Gwendolyn Gipson
Hakan Stensson
Hannah Menkin
Harriet Royer
Hector Totti
Heide Felton
Heidi Eijgel
Helene Frichot
Henriette Kelker
Herndon Inge
Idalice (Dee) Dickinson
Irene Lugsdin
Irene Watson
Isabel Pascoe
Isobel Bishop
Ivan F Mendenhall
James Bodie
James Bourgeois
James Bryan
James Carroll
James I. Gow
James Kieronski
James Malley
James Malley
James Sances
Jamie De Luce
Jamie McReynolds
Jamie Rawding
Jan Assink
Jan Grosvenor
Jan Johnson
Jan Kritzer
Jan Staniforth
Jan van der Wulp
Jana Barber
Jana Pallis
Jane Stavoe
Janet Buckle
Janet Clarke-Hazlett
Janet Sherwood
Janet Vickers
Janet, L. Smith
Janice O’Keeffe
Janie Wendelken
Jayasri Ghosh
Jean Swenerton
Jeanine Hill-Soldner
Jee Young Kim
Jeff Coopersmith
Jeff Ploussard
Jeff Schallenberg
Jena Cane
Jens Molbak
Jerome Chroman
Jerry Millhon
Jerry Rankin
Jessica Fairchild
Jim Lawton
Joanne Quinn
Joanne Wright
jock mctavish
Jody Burns
John Angus
John Gill
John Gubbings
John McCormick
John Metcalf
John Miller
John Mills
John Milnes
John Reed
John Sandstrum
John Williams
Jolanda Verweij
Jonathan Otis
Jonathan Willen
Joyce Cox
Joyce T Kerns
Judith Greenstein
Judy Pigott
Julia Curry
Juliana Gill
Julie M. DiScipio
Justin Grady
K Malaika Walton
Karen Rogers
karen smith
Karl Poetes
Karl Poetes
Kate Wolfe-Jenson
Kathern Sheffield
Kathleen Cummins
Kathleen Morris
Kathleen O’Grady
Kathryn Horvat
Kathryn Stanger
Kathy Fonte
Kathy Payne
Kay Arnold
Keith Luebke
Kellie LaRue
Kelly McKown
11Charter for Compassion international
Continued...Kenneth Hamilton
Kerry Kozlowski
Kevin McNally
Kilvert Croft
Kim Armstrong
Kim Ashley
Kimberly Bonk
Kimberly Daugs
Kristina Hudson
Kyung Jin Kim
Larry Johnson
Lars-David Bergmark
Laura Ellen Muglia
Laura Hirshfield
Laura Turner
Laurence Kerr
Laurie Lyall
Lavonne Dorsey
Lawrence Axelrod
Lenore Mewton
Leon Norell
Leonora Burger
Leslie Spero
Levent Ultanur
Libby Miller
Lila Aurich
Linda Breneman
Linda Kollofski
Linda Leeser
Linda Maxwell
Linda van dyken
Lindy Fok
Lisa Goldsmith
Lisa Goldsmith
Lisa Porad
Lois Lighthart
Loranell Breyley
Lori Fithian
Lori Markowitz
Lori Wong
Louise Irving - Ber-kowicz
Lucinda Keils
Lucy Dougall
Lynn Epnett
Lynn Gariepy
Lynnaea Lumbard
Lynne Brazg
Maaike Bakker
Maha Vajra
Mahtab Mah-moodzadeh
Malka Maizel
Marc Sachnoff
Margaret Cunningham
Margaret George
Margaret Karam
Margaret Lindquist
Margaret Loehr
Margie Ford
Margot I. Duley
Maria Pe
Mariaesther Mo-ro-Garcia
Marianne Jaspar
Marie Bellman
Marie Charnley
Marie Francoise Barnhart
Marilyn Cvetic
Marilyn E. Kiani
Marilyn Shinyei
Marilynne Cahn
Marina Gharabegian
Mark Cavitt
Mark Churchill
Mark Lupfer
Mark Mathijssen
Marnie Genre
Marta Breed
Martha Andrews
Martha Miser
Martin Kerlin
Mary Ann Black
Mary Ann Reynolds
Mary Ann Zimmer
Mary Arden
Mary Barron
Mary Colwell
Mary Ellen Michael
Mary Ellen Michael
Mary Helen Schwarzkopf
Mary Jo Harper
Mary McLaughlin
Mary Pipa
Mary Ringelstetter
Marzi Pecen
Matt Galindez
Matthew Caretti
Matthew Solari
Maudi Alabiso
Maura Pare
Maureen Leyser
Maureen Sue Ellison
Maxine Freed
Maya Nader
Meg Knight
Melvin Hardy
Meri McCoy-Thompson
Michael and Trude Lisagor
Michael Braun
Michael Falck
Michael Fox
Michael Tjebben
Mickall Gabriel
Mihaela Gheorlan
Mike Milojevich
Mike Schaefer
Mike Tourtillott
Mike Wheeler
ML Carver
Mohamed Ali Mou-lakani Saheed
Mohsin Bajwa
Molly Arnn
Monsita Faley
Mordy Levine
Morrene DeVinck
Moshe Dunie
Muhammad Babar
Muhammad Siddiqui
Myriam Savage
Myung Visser
Nan McMurry
Nancy and Tunc Togar
Nancy Beaudette
Nancy Carnan
Nancy Greenspan
Nancy Hanna
Nazim Nizar
Nell van de Meerakker
Nermina Harambasic
Neven Matthews
Nick Shepherd
Nicky Immel
Nicole Bauer
Nigel Gresswell
Niina Kahra
Nora Smith
P. Lane
Page Pless
Pam (Priscilla) McKulka
Pamela Eakes
Pamela Hawkins
Pamela Rhodes
Patricia Howard
Patricia S Snowden
PATRICK Hogan
Patty Bilhartz
Paul Arnesen
Paul Cook
Paul Entwistle
Paul Mackenzie
Paul Naish
Paul Shoemaker
Peggy Patrick
Perseus Munshi
Peter & Betsy Arizu
Peter Ahn
Peter Cowley
Peter Kaufman
Petrea Baker
Rachael Pettus
Randall Solomon
Rebecca Knowles
Reina de Wit
Reina de Wit
Rene Fontaine
René Smits
Rev. Craig Rev. Craig
Rev. Timothy Phillips
Rhoden Streeter
Rich Conti
Rich Van Dellen
Richard Flanagan
Richard Morton
Richard P Hyland
Rita Hibbard
Rob Howard
Robert McAdams
Robert Miles
Roderic Owen
Roger Clark
Roger Holmes
Roger Krause
Roger Rimel
Roma Gasper
Ron Ayotte
Ron Feinberg
Ronald Gilbert
Rosanne Lapan
Rosemary Moore
Rosemary Taverna
Roz Solomon
Rozita Youseflan
Ruby Layson
Ruth Habermehl
Ruth Modric
Ruth Thomas
Ryn Van Riper
Sally Eberhard
Sam Demas
Sandie Donnelly
Sandra Exelby
Sandra Walsh
Sanford Rosenzweig
Saren Nelson
Sean Bonsell
Sergio Romero
Shannon Corbin
Shannon Cruzen
Sharon Fite
Shauna Woods
Shelley Dillon
Shelly Braden
Sheri Herndon
Sheryl Harmer
Shi Jinho
Simcha Shtull
simon morley
Sophie Solomon
Stacy Lawson
Stacy Luks
Stan Kehl
Steinar Almelid
Stephanie Noon
Stephen Batty
Stephen Brown
Stephen Markowitz
Steve Nation
Steve Osvold
Steve Varey
Susan A Neufeldt
Susan A Neufeldt
Susan Baar
Susan Bannon
Susan Coyle
Susan Crowell
Susan Duke
Susan Salidor
Suzan LeVine
suzanna davis
Sylvia Malzacher
Sylvia Niedner
Tamara Torres McGovern
Tami Grayevsky
Tea Yim
Teresa Mayberg
Teresa Roche
Terrence Oder
Terry and Jane Chadsey
Terry Anderson
Terry Taylor
Theresa Bullard
Therese Hartwell
Theressa Harrigan
Thomas Goose
Thomas Graf
Thomas Orme
Thomas Sommerfeld
Tim Spooner
Tim Sullivan
Timber Hawkeye
Timothy Hawley
Timothy VanSusteren
Tina Spangler
Tish Bell
Tom Fisher
Tom Williams
Tony White
Twila Roberts
TZiPi Radonsky
Ulla Barr
Valera Ainsworth
Valerie Hauser
Vanessa Tierney
Vera Carlyle
Veronica Shaw
Victoria Randlett
Wanausha Rashed Khafaf
Wendy Bramwell
Wesley Baker
Will Poole
William and Martha Stewart
William Casey
William Foy
William Hobler Jr
William Idol
William Kennedy
William Munro
William Salicath
William Stuart
William Weis
Winifred Reilly
Winter Lazerus
Wynelle Snow
Yaffa Maritz
Yasmine Rafii
Ype Akkerman
Yvette Claeys
Yvonne Younes
Zahra Kassam
Zoe Kaufman
Images in this doc-ument by f igurative painter George Clair Tooker, Jr. (August 5, 1920 – March
27, 2011).
12 Charter for Compassion international
ConsolidAted stAtement of finAnCiAl ACtivities
stAtement of finAnCiAl position
IncomeCorporate Contribution 110.00
Corporate Matching Gifts 21,00.00
Foundation Grants 47,100.00
Individuals - Major Donors 158,500.00
Individuals - Annual Fund 36,838.02
Interest-Savings, Short-term CD 2.30
Total Income 244,650.32
Assets
Checking/Savings 31,927.00
Other Assets 4,973.00
Total Assets 36,900.00
Liabilities and Equity
Total Liabilities 3,353.00
Total Equity 33,547.00
Total Liabilities and Equity 36,900.00
Operating RevenueGrants 45,000.00
Major Donors 131,000.00
Annual Fund 35,000.00
Fiscal Sponsorships 32,750.00
243,750.00
Operating Expenses Fundraising 9,959.00
Management 21,945.00
Programs 170,266.00
Sponsored Programs 39,361.00
241,531.00
Expense
Business & Legal Fees 288.00
Accounting Fees 780.00
Design Services 700.00
Website Support Services 4,707.16
Banking/Brokerage Credit Card Fees 955.00
Website Development 3,000.00
Rent, Parking, Utilities 1,647.06
Software & Online Services 472.02
Postage, Mailing, Printing 199.00
Supplies 1,924.43
Telephone, Telecommunications 171.98
Computer Hardware 1,280.04
Insurance - Liability, D and O 831.00
Payments To Aff iliates 1,900.00
Contract Staff 113,148.83
Payroll 93,335.00
Taxes 8,813.00
Travel, Meetings, Conferences 7,286.00
Total Expense 241,438.52
Net income 3,211.80
pRe-Audited Results • oRdinARy inCome / expense • july 2012 thRough june 2013
pRe-Audited Results • june 30th 2013
opeRAting Revenue
opeRAting expenses
Grants
Annual Fund
Major Donors
Fiscal Sponsorships
Fundraising
Management
Sponsored Programs
Programs