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ANNUAL REPORT 2013 CHARTER for COMPASSION International

Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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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.

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Page 1: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

1Charter for Compassion international

AnnuAl RepoRt 2013

ChARteR for CompAssion international

Page 2: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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)

Page 3: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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)

Page 4: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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:

Page 5: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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)

Page 6: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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

Page 7: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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).

Page 8: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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)

Page 9: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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

Page 10: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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

Page 11: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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).

Page 12: Charter for Compassion International 2013 Annual Report

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