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Grafton Group plc: No Ethics. No Heart. Just Hypocritical Profiteering?

category galway | rights, freedoms and repression | news report author Saturday September 22, 2007 18:34author by TD - Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign

Grafton: The Unacceptable Face of Capitalism!

On its website Grafton Group plc purports to recognise "the importance of conducting its business in a socially responsible manner" claims, however, best daubed on a whited sepulchre and then power hosed off to reveal the cynical profiteering and hypocrisy beneath:
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Despite an commendable accomodation with Limerick IPSC last November, where the manager of Atlantic Homecare, pending clarification, removed Israeli manufactured goods for sale, Grafton Group has been toughing it out with us since by reshelving the offending items in question, ignoring all our letters and pleas to address our humanitarian concerns and polite requests to live up to its professed ideals of "Corporate social responsibility".

Grafton through its DIY outlets, flogs Israeli manufactured, Keter plastic garden sheds, storage bins, etc, items that can be easily outsourced elsewhere, rather than do the decent thing, on point of black principle, against the grain of its own ethos, it aids and abets the economy of a criminal state which makes the egregious crimes of Apartheid South Africa peccadilloes in comparison?.

Related Link: http://www.ipsc.ie

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Comments (5 of 5)

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author by TDpublication date Sat Sep 22, 2007 18:37author address author phone

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author by Raymondpublication date Tue Sep 25, 2007 18:26author address author phone

Just one cavil, Tommy: "the unacceptable face of capitalism" implies that capitalism has an acceptable face!

author by TD - IPSCpublication date Wed Sep 26, 2007 12:32author address author phone

As Marx would not disagree? : The face of a faceless world, the heart of a heartless world, the soul of soulless conditions.

author by Cronuspublication date Sat Sep 29, 2007 18:58author address author phone

Any chance of some more pictures TD?

author by JohnHMpublication date Mon Oct 01, 2007 23:47author address author phone

Israeli village brings hope for 'lost' youth

BBC News, Hof HaCarmel, northern Israel

When Adam arrived at Yemin Orde Youth Village as a frightened and bewildered 17-year-old, in June 2006, it was the end of one long journey and the start of another.

His odyssey began four years earlier when Janjaweed militiamen attacked his village in Darfur, Sudan, sending him fleeing for his life.

Alone and separated from his family, Adam trekked from one village to another, eluding rebels, sleeping rough and spending time in jail, before escaping to Egypt.

One night, in Sinai, he says, he saw the twinkling lights of Israel and simply walked across the border. He was arrested, jailed again, then sent to live on a kibbutz.

While there, his plight came to the attention of Dr Chaim Peri, the 66-year-old director of Yemin Orde, who arranged his transfer to the village.

Just one year on, Adam, a Muslim, is a happy, well-adjusted student, who has excelled in the study of robotics.

"The children who come here are not necessarily Jewish, but we believe all children who reach the shores of Israel are our business," says Dr Peri, who, as a baby, was himself placed in a children's home.

For the past 54 years, the business of Yemin Orde has been to provide a home and a future to abandoned and at-risk children from around the world.

At present there are some 500 residents in the village from about 20 countries as diverse as Sudan, Guinea and China, each with a story like Adam's.

'Family for life'

Situated on a peak on the Carmel mountain range, the 77-acre village is an oasis of tranquillity, a vital ingredient in the healing of children scarred by years of conflict and abuse.

It's as international a community as there can be - it epitomises Israel
Dr Chaim Peri
Director, Yemin Orde

Named after Orde Charles Wingate, the controversial British army officer who trained Jewish underground forces in the 1930s, the centre provides a safe refuge, education and life skills for destitute children from the age of five, through adolescence and up to the age of 19, and, in some cases, beyond.
"We don't expel kids from here. Period," says Dr Peri. "While only one in 10 graduates stay on, those who leave know that we're always here for them, like a normal family."

It is an ethos which resonates with those who have passed through Yemin Orde's doors. Some return to get married here, while others stop by to visit or stay to mentor newcomers.

In the village dining hall - which doubles as the venue for community weddings - the sound of chatter and hubbub fills the air.

Here the village's multicultural character is most visible, as children of all races and religions sit together and eat.

"It's as international a community as there can be," says Dr Peri. "It epitomises Israel."

The Israeli state refuses to allow Palestinian refugees to return to their former homes within the country's pre-1967 borders, arguing such a move would threaten Israel's survival as a Jewish state.

It is a policy which Dr Peri supports.

"We embrace Muslim kids here, wherever they come from, but I cannot come up with any positive statement in terms of the 'right of return' for Palestinian refugees," he says.

"It's a new reality now and refugees have resettled all over the world. We are in the business of survival."

Hard times

Outside, the midday sun beats down on the verdant grounds, where the children live in some 20 whitewashed, red-roofed homes - the boys on one side, the girls on another.

The living quarters are named after historical figures, such as Aristotle, Martin Luther King and Abraham Lincoln.

We try to give them a sense of security, but the reality of Israel is creeping in all the time
Susan Weijel
Village official

"Our mission is to take kids from the margins of society and take them to the margins of leadership," says Susan Weijel, a village official.
"Our only expectation from them is that they give back to society."

The village, which depends financially on benefactors from around the world, is well-equipped, with two schools, science and computer laboratories, a swimming pool, gymnasium and a synagogue.

There is also a small shop, but the children are free to come and go to the shopping centres of Haifa, just 10 minutes' drive away.

In the summer of 2006, however, Yemin Orde's proximity to Israel's main northern city was far from convenient, when Israel went to war with Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.

"Two weeks before the war, a family of brothers and sisters from the former Soviet Union arrived at Yemin Orde. They kept having to run to the shelter in a place where we'd told them they'd be safe," says Ms Weijel
"Most of our staff and hundreds of our graduates were fighting in Lebanon," she adds. "Two former Ethiopian students from here were killed."

With tensions rising over the northern border again, this time with Syria, the complex has stepped up its emergency drills.

As we walk, an air raid siren wails as part of a practice, sending hundreds of children streaming through the grounds.

"We try to give them a sense of security, but the reality of Israel is creeping in all the time," says Ms Weijel.

Despite such uncertainties at home, Yemin Orde's reputation has begun to spread beyond Israel's borders.

A sister village, modelled on Yemin Orde, is already being built in Rwanda, where some 15% of the population were orphaned by the genocide in 1994.

"When I think of all those who perished I think of what they could only have given to the world," says Dr Peri.

"That is why we are sending our Ethiopian kids as delegates to Rwanda, to instil in those children the belief that they can change the world, that they are destined for greatness."

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/middle_east...6.stm


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