31 July 2008

The Body Shop At Home Values Award

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager


It's my pleasure to introduce Rebecca Croxford from the Albury Wodonga region in NSW. Rebecca is a superstar At Home consultant who also took out this year's The Body Shop At Home Values Award at their conference on the weekend.

In January Rebecca fundraised for and travelled to the East African Mission Orphanage, in Kenya where, in the midst of an election crisis and ethnic violence, she volunteered to help care for the orphans.

Rebecca is donating the award's $500 cash prize to the orphanage. To read more click on the below article which appeared in The Border Mail.

30 July 2008

The Body Shop Loganholme vs Domestic Violence



Please click on the article above to read this great article about our Loganholme store! Congratulations to the team on helping to get publicity for the campaign and raise awareness in their local community!

www.stopviolence.com.au

29 July 2008

Emma's Story

By Emma Mulquiney - The Body Shop's Marketing Coordinator

I had the amazing fortune of being born into one of those families you see in 1960’s sitcoms. After 22 years of marriage, my parent’s disagreements have never escalated above an exasperated ‘you were supposed to get milk on your way home’. I’ve only ever seen Dad throw one item at Mum. A bread roll at a BBQ. And that was only because she was squirting him with the tomato sauce.

So to me, domestic violence was something that ‘happened to other people’. I’d never seen it, apart from the movies, and I had some pretty strong opinions about it. When the topic was broached, I’d quite loudly voice how wrong it was, and declare I’d never allow it to happen. No one ever deserved to be a victim of abuse, and I’d stand up and defend those who were in a heartbeat.

I was very, very wrong.

This story happened to friends of a friend of mine….as all good stories do. Invited to their house for dinner, this couple were never going to be accused of being sickly sweet, they certainly have their differences. Over dessert, they started arguing, and while I’m not going to waste time rambling about the topic, you can rest assured that it was pretty trivial. Fuelled by alcohol, the argument turned into a heated fight. Tears streaming down her face, she got up from the table to leave and go home.

But she didn’t get very far. I sat there, in disbelief, and watched as he prevented her from leaving at least five times by slamming her head into the wall cabinet behind her. Pushing her backwards against the wall. And shoving her back into her chair so hard she clunked her head against the table. According to my sources, she had some pretty nasty battle wounds to nurse (and by nurse, I mean conceal from family and friends) for the next week.

And what about me? Full of opinions and conviction, surely I saved the day with a tirade of abuse and a heroic dash to get our fair victim into a taxi home??

I did nothing. I sat there in shock. I sat there and watched. I sat there silently and said nothing. Then, when my boyfriend at the time decided that it was time for us to leave, I got up and left that poor girl sitting helplessly at the table in tears. And what’s even worse is that I am pretty sure that I can (until now) count on the fingers of one hand the number of people I’ve told. I certainly didn’t contact the authorities to report what I’d seen. The sad fact is that for all of my opinions, I had no idea what I should, and more importantly could, do.

So the moral of this horrid story? Don’t be the owner of opinions, be the owner of actions. Get involved, get the facts and get behind our Break the Silence on Domestic Violence campaign. Make sure you don’t just know what you think, know what you should do.

Grab a handful of information cards, distribute them to family and friends, and spread the word. And while I’m certainly not suggesting that you start trailblazing into every suburban home to rescue damsels (or gentlemen) in distress, everyone should know their rights, and their options.

And as for me? I’m about to hit Adam up for a stack of cards to pass onto this girl next time I meet her for a coffee. Because it’s better late than never.

www.stopviolence.com.au

25 July 2008

The Body Shop - The Glen vs Domestic Violence


By Katie Phillips - Manager -The Body Shop, The Glen (Victoria)

We had a super day with the cards and I strongly recommend we spread the word of getting the cards into PACKS and have at the ready to hand out. If its done for them they take it!

I had a lady from Child Protection today who took a pack and said she would come back for more she wanted to show her colleagues. We have forwarded out 10 packs to Cara House which is a org which helps young girls that have been effected by abuse...

Our mission is to network with all schools in the Waverley district and send out more packs, and network with people in our circle. We're also using our personal circles of influence. One staff member is married to a police man and my sister-in-law is a DHS - child protection officer, both are going to help us to hand out more.

I wanted to let you know HOW EMPOWERED I feel because TBS is a retailer that sells SOAP and we have professionals in the field of domestic violence seeking information from us and taking our cards to use in their environment HOW AMAZING THAT A RETAILER IS LEADING THE WAY. This makes me feel that we can achieve ANYTHING if we CHOOSE to do something about it.

GO TEAM VALUES!!!!

~ Katie

22 July 2008

Bendigo Body Shop vs Domestic Violence


Please click on the above to read this article about our campaign that appeared in the Bendigo Advertiser 22/7


Domestic Violence Campaign Photos

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

Greensborough



Melbourne Central


Northland



Northland


Collins Street


Reports are coming in of multiple stores already selling a third of their Lip Care Duos in their first day and predicting they will sell out by the end of the week! Store staff are creating their own decks of all 20 types of cards, wrapped in a white ribbon, to give to customers at till point. Schools and domestic violence support services are calling The Body Shop's head office requesting multiple packs of cards to distribute via their own networks too... woo-hoo!

Keep up the great work!



21 July 2008

Break the silence on domestic violence



Today The Body Shop Australia proudly launches it's 5th campaign against domestic violence and relationship abuse.



This year we've partnered with the White Ribbon Foundation and together we're trying to break the silence on domestic violence.



According to data from the ABS one in three Australian women will experience physical or sexual violence in her lifetime.



Of 500 women aged between 16- 30, surveyed by The Body Shop, 71% claim they would confide in a friend, while only 37% would turn to official authorities such as the police or a support group.  More than a quarter (27%) of women said that they wouldn't know where to get help if they were in a violent relationship.





You can help break the silence by:

  • emailing the link to our campaign website www.stopviolence.com.au to all your friends. Be sure to add it to your Facebook page too!

  • picking up some of the free, wallet-sized, information cards from one of our stores to share with your friends.

  • buying a limited edition Shea Butter Lip Care Duo - with all proceeds going to White Ribbon's work implementing school education programs that teach students about respectful relationships and non-violence.

16 July 2008

Study finds rape-in-marriage horror

By Adrian Lowe via The Age
The author of a report which has revealed shocking details of rape within marriage in Victoria's north-east says she believes the problem is more widespread.

The report was launched today in Benalla and author Deb Parkinson told The Age she had been surprised at what the interviewed women had been through and the brutality some had endured.

Researchers from Women's Health Goulburn North East and the local Centre Against Sexual Assault, interviewed almost 80 people over a two-year period from across the region, including victims, community workers and police.

"We had suspected that partner rape happened from some previous research we'd done but the extent of it really quite shocked us,'' Ms Parkinson said. "I think that the community doesn't recognise that partner rape exists in that way.




"I don't think there's anything particular about here that's any different. There's certainly issues about rurality but I think a lot of the findings relate equally well to women in cities, like the effects on women - why women won't seek help, why they don't want to report. What's particular about rurality is that conservativeness that often comes with it.''

Researchers interviewed one woman whose back was broken while being anally raped and another whose husband hit her around the head and then held a pillow over her face while he raped her. A third raped his wife of six weeks.

One victim told researchers she reported her rape case to her church minister, who told her to pray about it.

"It wasn't just the rape, it was hitting and verbal abuse and theft and drugs. It was a text book abusive marriage. I said to them, 'What if he kills me first?' They said, `At least you'll go to heaven','' the victim said in her interview.

The interviewed women were uneasy about the research and questioned where the line was drawn between rape and "just getting it over and done with''. They also suggested "it's just part of the compromise'' and that "you don't feel like it, but you do it for him''.

Ms Parkinson said many women were not aware they had been raped until after the event, or when they were told that their partner's actions constituted rape.

During interviews, police said many men believed they had a right to have sex within their marriage and would not describe their actions as rape. "If they had to be 100% honest they'd say, 'I did take advantage of her, but stuff it, she's my wife, it's Saturday night','' one officer surveyed for the report said.

Ms Parkinson said rape within marriage was not recognised as a problem in the community because its attitudes had not caught up with the law.

"The law was changed in 1985 to say that rape in marriage is a crime, and it's a serious crime, but as a community we're still hung up on a sense of conjugal rights that a man has - his entitlement to sex from a wife and I think that across the community that people think you can't really have rape in marriage.''

#######################

Our 5th major campaign to Break the Silence on Domestic Violence launches on Monday, and not a moment too soon. I hope we can educate our customers that any form of rape is a crime and any form of sexual abuse including partners pressuring, manipulating, tricking, forcing or blackmailing is an inexcusable violation of human rights and unacceptable in our community. We want friends of people in abusive relationships to do a lot better than the priest mentioned in this article!

~ Adam

14 July 2008

beyondblue, depression and a little bit of AFL

By Amanda Young - The Body Shop, Melbourne Central.

One in five people experience depression at some stage in their lives. That statistic comes from beyondblue. It's a sobering thought; there is a high likelihood that you, or somebody that you know, has suffered, or will suffer, at least one episode of a depressive illness. It is one of the most common mental heath problems, yet there can be such a lack of awareness of the issue that sufferers have no choice but to face stigma, or to suffer silently.

I have recently been through a debilitating bout of depression which lead me to a month-long stay in a psychiatric hospital. I was fortunate enough to have a wonderful friend who voiced his concerns to me over the change in my demeanour, encouraged me to seek help, and was always a shoulder for me to cry on. My family and I are so grateful to him for being there, when some people reacted unfavourably to what I was going through, thinking it was just a mood change, or a phase I was going through. Depression isn't just a mood you can snap out of. It encompasses your entire world, strips you of your self-worth, leaves you feeling hollow and desperate.

Armed with more information I hope that people will no longer have to suffer in silence. If people are as lucky as I was, to be surrounded by caring friends and family, the tiniest act can have the biggest impact. beyondblue is a wonderful resource for those who would like to learn more about depression and related mental health issues, and has links to other useful resources. And for footy fans, on the 25th of July, the Hawks and the Cats will play for the beyondblue Cup to raise awareness of depression. There will be 2 public forums (1 for each team) in the lead-up to the game. More information can be found on the beyondblue website.

~ Amanda

08 July 2008

Responsible Travel

Image: Arctic Sounds

I've just come across a great website called Responsible Travel.
They handpick inspiring holidays from all over the globe to give a fantastic experience to the traveller at the same time as making a real difference to local people and the environment.

I thought...so it's basically The Body Shop of travel agencies... then, when reading the 'About Us' section I discovered it was actually set up by a former Head of Marketing at The Body Shop (UK). responsibletravel.com was even financially backed by a small group of private investors including Anita and Gordon Roddick!

So how does it work?
From their website:
We do not claim to have addressed every single issue relating to responsible travel, as these are both complex and variable in each destination. Rather, we have created a way for the industry and tourists to work openly together to improve tourism for travellers and local communities.

All industry members have been screened to meet the required environmental, social and economic criteria for responsibletravel.com. You will find summaries of how they have achieved this, and their full responsible travel policies on the site. In addition, we require a short summary of the responsible travel aspects of every trip and form of accommodation on the site.


I like it.


I'm thinking about going to India in January for a holiday but also to visit Teddy Exports (the Fair Trade community where we get all our massagers from). I'm not sure if it works for people travelling from Australia but I'm definitely going to check it out.

www.responsibletravel.com

03 July 2008

Melbourne: Climate Emergency Rally

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

To everyone in Melbourne: Join the Climate Emergency Rally on July 5 to send a wake-up call to state and federal governments.

New coal, new freeways and expanding sea freight, and desalination plants all increase our use of fossil fuels at a time when we must be cutting back dramatically. We are calling for a halt to these irresponsible projects, and urgent action to stop global warming.

To send this important message to the government, we are going to form a 140-metre-long human sign to spell the words: 'CLIMATE EMERGENCY!'


(Don't forget to wear red!)

For more information click on the poster or go to http://climaterally.blogspot.com

Act locally with Greenpeace
Get involved with Friends of the Earth

01 July 2008

Children of Burma

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager


Group Shot
Originally uploaded by .ash

This is a photo taken by my friend Ash, who I used to work with in World Vision. He's a great photographer and currently posted in Burma where he's helping the Burmese recover from the biggest natural disaster to hit Asia since the Boxing Day Tsunami. He writes in the caption:

"Kids in a cyclone-affected village in the Myanmar Delta happily pose for a picture. Up to half the kids in this village were lost in last month's cyclone. "


Their smiles are amazing.
The statistic sobering.

Katie's East Timor experience

By Katie Phillips - The Body Shop - The Glen, Manager

RONALDO, The CUTEST kinder kid EVER

I have been apart of an amazing group of people who have returned from East Timor that participated in the Child Friendly Space – Children on the Edge (COTE) Playscheme 2008.

To live in the community and experience all aspects of East Timor is an experience that I will never forget – nor will I give up on. Not everyone will want to go, or feel like they could go – but there are lots of ways that you can still participate and ensure that this centre runs and provides the village of Viqueque a safe space where children are welcome to learn and play – regardless of income, race and religion.

The journey began in December when my application was successful and that’s when the fundraising began – this enable us to purchase supplies and to fund our expenses of airfares and accommodation. It was a challenging time to raise the funds – but I believe that we all created awareness about this organisation and the amazing work it does.

Tri massagers are the best way The Body Shop staff can contribute, by promoting the values behind this groovy little gadget – not only will The Body Shop Australia donate the whole $9 profit to COTE East Timor, you will also support Teddy Exports another amazing Community Trade group.

You can also jump online to www.childrenontheedge.org and make a direct donation to East Timor.

If you want to check out more of my photos go here.

~ Katie

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