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Scroll down this page to see some of the stalls and displays that were at Streatham's One World Week Justice Fair. Learn a bit about them and the justice issues they are concerned about - and how YOU can play a part in working for justice too!

World Development Movement (WDM)
Here a display is being set up by WDM, which campaigns on many fronts for justice for the world's poor, focussing particularly
on the responsibility of rich countries to address the problems and on mobilising public pressure for change.
For more information write to WDM at
25 Beehive Place, London SW9 7QR, Tel: 020 7737 6215 or visit their website www.wdm.org.uk.
Join
WDM - become a campaigner for justice!


Campaigning to get governments to change the rules in favour of the poor is one way to help them - but another is to create a market which
pays a fair price for the goods the poor produce. Traidcraft was set up to do just that - and a range of fairly traded foods was
available at the fair on this Traidcraft stall. Other items, including gifts and cards from Traidcraft, were also available in another part of the fair.
For more information about Traidcraft contact them at Traidcraft, Kingsway, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear NE11 0NE,
tel: 0191 491 0591 or visit the Traidcraft website (www.traidcraft.co.uk).
Fairly traded goods are available elsewhere, including many shops - look out for the Fairtrade mark issued by the Fairtrade Foundation (www.fairtrade.org.uk).
Many churches also sell fairly traded goods,
including English Martyrs and St Peter's in Streatham as well as Immanuel and St Andrew.
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Lambeth Credit Union
Poverty and injustice affect people locally as well as abroad and one way to help them is to form Credit unions, which provide
alternative savings and credit facilities to those offered by banks and building societies. A credit union is being set up in Lambeth and membership will
be open to anyone who lives or works in the borough. For more information visit the
Lambeth Savings and Credit Union website.

Guatemala Gifts
These attractive gifts are made in a village in Guatemala and are sold by someone who has direct contact with the people who make them.
Purchasing them helps a community in a developing country directly. For more information contact Streatham Justice Group (details
on the Introduction page).
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World Vision
Working models can illustrate the injustices of international trade rules. These models were part of the display by
World Vision, a Christian charity committed to serving the poor and
promoting the search for justice. A feature of their stall was the Alternative Gift Catalogue, from which you can buy anything from a fruit tree to
a water borehole for a poor community in the developing world - possibly instead of giving a gift to a friend or relative who already has everything! For more
information go to www.greatgifts.org, call 0845 600 6446 or contact World Vision UK,
Opal Drive, Fox Milne, Milton Keynes, MK15 0ZR, Tel: 01908 841000.

Streatham Drop-in Centre
Streatham Drop-In Centre for Refugees and Asylum Seekers is another project that deals with a local justice issue. Each Friday from 10:00am to
2:00pm at English Martyrs' Church Hall the centre provides a friendly welcome, a place to meet other
people, help with issues such as housing, schools and health, English classes, creche facilities and a light lunch, for displaced people who find themselves
in Streatham. All services are free. For more
information, or if you believe you could help as a volunteer, contact the centre at
English Martyrs' Church Hall, 2 Mitcham Lane, Streatham, London SW16 6NN
Tel: 020 8664 7432
e-mail dropin at emchurch.plus.com.
There were lots more, but we haven't got pictures of all of them. They included:
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Please note!
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Format updated (not content) 17 January 2007.
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Page design by David Gray 2004
© Copyright David Gray and PCC of Immanuel and
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