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Hermann Josef-Hack’s Refugee Colouring Book

100 Days on La Repubblica

The Rainforest Foundation UK

Postcards From the Future

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Hermann Josef-Hack’s Refugee Colouring Book

The Painting Book for Refugee Kids
German artist Hermann Josef-Hack (featured on Day 42) has created a special drawing and colouring book for refugee kids in Sri Lanka. Based on the idea, that refugees not only need medical help, food and drinking water but also cultural care, the colouring book is a way for children in refugee camps to tell us and other kids in Europe how they live and what they feel.
” I started the project this February in Sri Lanka, on the east coast in the hazard zone of the 2004 tsunami. The children I worked with had been taken to refugee camps after the tsunami had wasted the whole area. Shortly after that, the civil war caused many more lives to be lost and again, the families had to look for shelter in refugee camps of the United Nations.
After I had shown the children some photos about my home, I asked them to sketch and paint how they regard their homes in order to show their works to children in German schools. Back in Germany, I visited several school classes to show the results of the Sri Lancan pupils and photos of my visit to them. Then the German pupils of the same age started to draw and paint their painting books for the Sri Lancan kids. This series will be continued with more refugee kids and more European classes next year to raise attention for the needs of refugees, especially forced climate migrants.” – Herman Josef-Hack
For more information visit www.hermann-josef-hack.de
The Rainforest Foundation UK

About the Rainforest Foundation UK – Day 32
Today’s Image has been contributed by The Rainforest Foundation UK.
The Rainforest Foundation works to secure land and resource rights for indigenous and forest communities which is vital for the protection of rainforest lands, and for reducing poverty of the people that depend on them.
Without rights, or land titles forest communities face exploitations as industrial logging, agricultural clearances, oil and gas exploration, government policies and even nature conservation efforts are evicting the very people from the forest who have been its custodians for centuries.
Since it was founded in 1989 the Rainforest Foundation has helped protect more than 100,000 square kilometers of rainforest and in the next 20 years we aim to protect 1,000,000 more square kilometers of forest by securing land rights for indigenous forest peoples.
For more information or to support our work visit The Rainforest Foundation UK.
Postcards From the Future

Today’s Image – Day 31 – has been contributed by Robert Graves and Didier Madoc-Jones and is currently included in the London exhibition “Postcards from the Future”.
“‘Postcards From The Future’ at the Museum of London opened to universal acclaim on the 1st October this year. It features 14 landmark views of London transformed into scenes illustrating how the impact of climate change may shape our city.
Their purpose is not to predict the future but to elicit a response and debate on this crucial issue facing all of us.
The show and events have been supported by prominent environmental figures including James Lovelock and Sir Crispin Tickell.
London Futures : Didier Madoc-Jones and Robert Graves – Talk about creating ‘Postcards From The Future’
Didier and Robert talk about the inspiration, motivation and creative processes behind their ‘Postcards From The Future’ images.
Open to the public : Free entry : When : Nov 2nd 2010 at 18.30hrs
For more information please visit: www.postcardsfromthefuture.co.uk





