Global/Local

The Global/Local section focuses on connections between Minnesotans and the world.

Oromo artist Kadir Said: Music changed my life

It was just a little past noon local time on a cold and breezy day in Minnesota when I met Kadir Said. Said, a legendary Oromo folk singer, arrived here eight days earlier.

MORE »

Remembering the holy innocents: Remarks for the Children of War candlelight service

Children are our most precious resource. They are our future as well as reminders of our past. They embody our hopes yet their vulnerability makes them available prey for those who seek domination over others.

MORE »

New Year's reflections: Human rights in 2013

I love December.  I love it because it brings some of my favorite things - snow and holidays and celebrations with family.  But I also love the quiet time at the end of Decembe

MORE »

Idle No More Flash Roundy fills Mall of America rotunda

When Mesha Camp and her husband lost their little girl seven days after she was born in October, they both knew that they wanted to do something to give back to their community.

MORE »

African ingredients for American tastes at Afro Deli and Coffee

With the release of our most recent report, Building Cross-cultural Commerce, Minnesota 2020 is highlighting ways we should reach out to new Minnesotans, immigrants, and refugees to continue new economic development avenues that keep consumer dollars local.

MORE »

Israel-Palestine: Politics for some, personal for me

Celebrations after the election quickly turned into worry and horror in my mind. On November 8, 2012 violence further intensified in Gaza and Israel. Further is key in this sentence because the violence is fairly consistent in this region and it is difficult to place a starting point in the latest escalation of violence.

MORE »

Got $25? Peace Coffee, Grow Ahead invite Minnesota micro-loans to Guatemalan coffee farmers

(Photos courtesy of Peace Coffee)

In an industry beset by unfair credit practices and delays, local roasters Peace Coffee and its parent organization, the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP), are offering an innovative new financing model.The groups are spearheading the Grow Ahead Foundation, an initiative where coffee drinkers can offer guaranteed loans to farmers and be paid back at the end of the season.

While coffee is the second most traded global commodity (after oil), fair trade coffee is a small scale product. According to the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, the farms that provide this product average less than eight acres per farm. Considering the nearly one-year delay between the blossoming of coffee flowers, the ripening, picking, and roasting of the fruit, and ultimately brewing coffee beans in your machine, the business plan for fair trade farmers is a complicated and risky endeavor that relies on loans to cover the start-to-finish process. 

MORE »

Going back, paying it forward: Miss Minnesota USA doing good on trip to Laos

Recently, Miss Minnesota USA 2012, Nitaya Panemalaythong, was invited by the U.S. Embassy in Laos to “help promote business, charitable, and cultural ties between Laos and the U.S.” She’s running a fundraising campaign at http://www.gofundme.com/hok38 in preparation for her trip, which will be the first time she has ever gone to Laos.

MORE »

A brave escape from Burma to Minnesota

My name is Roll and I was born in Burma. I have one sister. My parents were farmers. There was not enough food for us and we tried hard by ourselves. One time when I was two years old the enemies attacked my family and brought me to the town. After two months my grandfather gave money to the Burmese army and my mom received me back.

MORE »
Syndicate content