Monday, March 3, 2008

Little NGO shop serves ‘just’ brewed coffee

By Jeffrey M. Tupas
Mindanao Bureau


Posted date: February 23, 2008

ONE CAN BARELY NOTICE the small structure a few meters from the Philippine Women’s College in Davao City, even during school breaks when the road is clear of the usual rush of students amid cars and motorcycles.

But for the observant and the curious, the coffee shop in Juna Subdivision is a sure magnet although it holds fewer than a dozen young patrons.

Coffee for Peace, painted in a dull yellow-and-forest green combo, looks like a bored bookstore unvisited for years and does not even speak of the great brew it offers to a growing clientele.

People behind the counter, however, are always ready to take customers to a tour of stories—inspiring and moving—about the lives of farmers from where they source their coffee, their own experience in taking care of the environment, and their take in building and fostering peace in areas once ravaged by armed conflict.

That, according to Krizanti Cruzado, research and development officer of the Peacebuilders Community, was the reason the café got its name.

Fund-raising roots

Opened in May last year, Coffee for Peace evolved from a fund-raising effort of the Peacebuilders Community, a nongovernment organization working for peace and reconciliation in conflict areas in Mindanao.

“We are doing a lot of things so the question was: How will we be able to sustain them? If we remain to be funding-based, there will certainly be difficulty in doing our tasks and delivering to the communities that need our help. We wanted to be self-reliant so we thought of putting up a coffee shop,” Cruzado says.

Why? Because “there is coffee in Mindanao and a lot of people are lovers of coffee … somehow, it is one of the few things that is common among the rich and the poor.”

The shop draws its supply of coffee from the B’laan of Mt. Matutum in South Cotabato.

Free trade

“We give justice to the people where we source out our coffee from. We follow fair trade. We brew coffee that is not just coffee … our coffee here is a just coffee. This we do while we continue doing our advocacy work,” Cruzado says.

The Peacebuilders Community buys premium Arabica at five times higher than the gate price of at least P25 per kilogram. It wants to pass on this kind of attitude to others who want to engage in the business as its partners, Cruzado says.

Her group also engages the community into becoming better financial and environmental managers.

“We are changing our hats. Everything that we are doing is so integrated with each other, and with others. We are doing peace and we are doing business in harmony with nature,” the NGO leader says.

Unique taste

She says her group is banking on the unique taste of its products. “There is no compromise as we give it all the way.”

The menu is riddled by the word “peace” attached to the food and drinks—peace tuna melt, peace butter toast, peace cheese melt, peace peanut butter toast, peace fruit juice, peace fruit shake, hot coffee for peace, iced coffee for peace, and misty peace tea.

The shop also offers Philippine Civet Arabica, one of the most sought-after coffee. And true enough, the brew could be one of Davao’s best.

Cruzado says that since the café opened, it has been receiving positive reviews from its many customers: students, young professionals, NGO workers, church people and missionaries, and people from the academe.

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Coffee for peace - international news

Ecumenical News International
News Highlights
29 February 2008


Protestant leaders call for end to US economic embargo on Cuba

Geneva, 29 February (ENI)--Protestant church leaders from the Caribbean and North America have called on the United States to lift its economic embargo against Cuba in the interest of justice and right relationships. The call was issued by the Caribbean and North American Area Council of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, which met in Georgetown, Guyana. The council described the embargo as "a violation against the Cuban people and an exclusion that impoverishes and causes harsh suffering for women, men and children", WARC said in a statement issued on 29 February from its Geneva headquarters. [269 words, ENI-08-0185]

Indian Baptist group issues '10 commandments' for elections

By Anto Akkara
Bangalore, India, 29 February (ENI)--One of India's Baptist churches has issued 10 commandments for voters ahead of elections for the northeastern Meghalaya state legislature scheduled for 3 March. The commandments urge electors to vote for "able and dedicated" candidates of integrity and of good moral character, and caution church members against voting for self-seeking politicians who make empty promises. Church members are also told to keep away from free dinners hosted by the candidates, and also not to accept or seek money for voting for the contenders, some of whom sponsor church members' trips to church conventions. The commandments carry a dictum in a Christian spirit requesting voters not to make "any negative comments on the candidates you are not supporting and completely avoid any verbal duel or fights" with others. [258 words, ENI-08-0184]

US tax service probes denomination over Obama speech

By Chris Herlinger
New York, 29 February (ENI)--The US Internal Revenue Service is investigating whether a speech at the United Church of Christ's 2007 general synod by Barack Obama, who is seeking to become the Democratic Party's presidential nominee, amounts to denominational engagement in "political activities". "We are confident that the IRS [tax service] investigation will confirm that no laws were violated," the Rev. John H. Thomas, the denomination's general minister and president, said in a statement. "The United Church of Christ took great care to ensure that Senator Obama's appearance before the 50th anniversary general synod met appropriate legal and moral standards." [297 words, ENI-08-0183]

Filipino-Canadian Mennonite uses coffee to help build peace

By Maurice Malanes
La Trinidad, Philippines, 29 February (ENI)--A Filipino-Canadian Mennonite missionary who left a life of comfort in Vancouver, Canada is helping to build peace in his native country, which he left more than 20 years ago, and one of his weapons is coffee. "My family and I were enjoying relative peace in Canada, but it's nice to be home again to enjoy the task of helping build shalom or salam [peace] in our country, especially in Mindanao," said the Rev. Daniel Pantoja, who heads the Peacebuilders' Community, a Mennonite team in the Philippines. The island is known as the scene of clashes between the armed forces of the Philippines and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, a separatist rebel group. Pantoja's organization has a centre for peace and reconciliation, and a café called "Coffee for Peace", which helps generate local, sustainable income for the organization's peace and reconciliation field workers. "The café is important because every time representatives of both the Mo!
ro Islamic Liberation Front and the Philippine military have coffee in our centre, they don't have any skirmishes during the rest of the day," said Pantoja. [593 words, ENI-08-0182]


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