Guatemala City – Assessment Day at the Hospital

Guatemala City:
 
 
Today was one of those days where there was SO much packed
into one day, by the end of the day it felt like "this morning" was
yesterday!
 
Last night we had an organizational meeting and met the
doctors and helpers for the surgery. I was so exhausted by the time I went to
bed, I hit the bed and slept til my alarm went off at 6 am. We had a group
breakfast and then got on the bus at 7:15 am, driving through town to the
hospital.
 
If you saw the hospital from the outside, you'd never know it
was there. It is in a poor neighborhood and the buildings are a patchwork of
concrete and tin roofs. It is not the kind of neighborhood I'd want to wander
around in.. at night or during the day.
 
We entered the hospital and came into the assessment room. In
the next room there were dozens of families from all over Guatemala… parents
hoping that their child would be chosen for surgery. There were a few older
children, and one beautiful teen girl who had terrible scarring all over her
leg.
 
I appointed myself the official family photographer. While the
surgeon's assistants took the technical photos and took notes on the cleft
palates and cleft lips, I took photos of the human side of the
story:
 
The hopeful mother who tried to understand as the doctor's
diagnosis was translated.
 
The loving father who tenderly lifted his son onto the
examination table.
 
The teenage boy who burst into the most incredibly
heartbreaking smile as he left the exam, after being told he would receive the
corrective surgery.


QuiltBoy1_W

 
As the exams continued through the morning, we went out to the
many families waiting outside, and started handing out gifts to the mothers and
the children. First we gave them all a fabric tote bag. Then we gave each child
a handmade quilt. These quilts were donated by friends of Mission of Love in
Ohio. We had *just enough* quilts so that every child could receive one – whew!
We had 2 left over, and then there were one or two families that came later in
the day.
 
Then we began to distribute clothing and toys to the families,
and they put everything in the fabric tote bags. These people come from near and
far, and they have very little money or possessions, so these gifts were a
treasure beyond belief. The humble grateful smiles cannot be described with
words.
 
I should mention that when the C5 huge plane landed in
Guatemala City yesterday, it was stuffed with 10' x 10' huge paletts of relief
supplies, medical supplies, and clothing for the children. Much of this went on
trucks to a warehouse before distribution, but also much of it came to the
hospital. There were medical supplies not only for these surgeries, but also in
general to supply this community hospital.


C5Unloading_W

 
So as we distributed all these goodies to the children and
families, we took photos of all the children and the families. When I am able to
post these photos, you will understand why this team of doctors and helpers are
moved to come and volunteer their time to help these children. Everyone pays
their way to get here, pays for their own hotel, and contributes time and money
to this Mission of Love.
 
The assessment process had 2 teams of 2 doctors and several
assistants. To say it was intense would be an understatement. At one point I
suddenly felt completely exhausted, and I could have sworn it was noon. I was
shocked when I looked at my watch and saw that it had only been 2 hours since we
started! (8 to 10 am)  We all seemed to come to the same place at the same time
– and fortunately they were just finishing up with the last few
assessments.
 
Then the team went up stairs and had coffee and a snack. The
medical teams sat down to discuss their evaluations, and make the surgery
schedule for the week. It was interesting to hear them work out who would
receive which surgery on which day. This went on for quite a long time, then we
had a beautiful homemade lunch by the hospital's cook. The doctors had decided
to do 2 relatively simple surgeries for the afternoon, and our host took us out
to the Central Market downtown by the cathedral. On the way to the center of the
city, we passed shantytowns densely packed on the sides of the hills.
 
We also caught glimpses of the volcano that towers over the
city. Volcan de Fuego (volcano of fire) regularly seeps trickles of lava, which
can often be seen at night here. During the day there is often a cloud obscuring
part of the mountain, and I am hoping to get a good photo before I leave
Weds.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volc%C3%A1n_de_Fuego
 
The market was also very intense. It is 3 floors of densely
packed booths, selling crafts, food, and almost anything you can imagine. There
were many children working there. Our host told me that the government only
supplies free education through 6th grade, but many drop out by 2nd grade to
help with the family business. We saw babies, children and teens throughout the
market.
 
Then we went outside and walked around to the huge historic
cathedral.
 
 (The market is underground, behind the cathedral.) We went
inside and spent about a half hour. I lit a candle for Hanna (as I always do
when I visit cathedrals around the world) and we watched all the women wearing
beautiful handwoven ikat skirts. 

The cathedral was facing a huge plaza with a fountain, and the
President's House is across the plaza. However the plaza was full of people and
a festival, and there was a huge line stretching around the plaza, full of
people waiting to ice skate!  The sides of the plaza were lined with more vendor
booths selling all kinds of beautiful Guatemala handmade products and textiles.
We walked through the crowd clutching our bags – there are many pickpockets and
gangs here, we were told.


Ikats1_W

 
We drove back to the hospital, and found that the surgeries
were not complete yet. After 1 1/2 hours of waiting, we were told that the 2nd
surgery had just been successfully completed. I was able to go into the
operating room and see the 11 year old girl who had just had a golf-ball sized
tumor removed from her upper lip. She was still unconscious from the general
anesthetic. She was just a beautiful girl with a band-aid on her lip at that
point. What a miracle!
 
I am learning about what it takes to correct a severe cleft
palate. In the case where there is a huge hole in the top of the mouth, they
have to harvest bone from the edge of the hipbone, and put a bone graft in the
roof of the mouth. Aha, so that's how they do it!  The cleft palate is not
always apparent when you look at the face of the child. As I listened to the
doctors discussing their diagnosis and surgery plan, I also learned that many of
the children have fistulas too. The cleft lips are snipped open and then
stitched together. I am just trying to comprehend the whole thing.


CleftBaby1_W

 
Another thing I realized quickly is that these trips are an
opportunity for the doctors to work on problems that they would hardly ever see
in the US. It is kind of like how a battefield surgeon is best equipped to work
in an emergency room – because afterwards they've seen it all. Every time these
docs come here, they see things they've never dealt with before. They put their
heads together until they agree on a diagnosis and a surgery plan. It is really
something.
 
So tomorrow I've been invited to come into the operating room
and witness a surgery first hand. Actually they offered to let me scrub up and
hold the retractors, but I don't think I can handle that. They said I can watch
as much or as little as I want, and that I can watch more than one surgery.
Anyway tomorrow 8 surgeries are going to happen – 8 children's lives are going
to be changed forever due to the unconditional love and generosity of this
amazing group of people.
 
I am curious if I can watch without passing out. We'll
see.
 
Tomorrow night we've been invited to attend the ballet recital
of the head doctor's daughter. Dr. Edgar runs this community hospital as a
community service. He is clearly there to serve the indigent people. The Mayans
are treated like 2nd class citizens here, and their children with cleft palates
are treated as outcasts. So it really takes awhile to comprehend the enormity of
what it means for this many people to come from the US to make this happen.
There are 13 people who have come from the US on this trip. The next Mission of
Love trip in February is for the Way-Bi Children's Hospice, and there are 23
people signed up for that trip.
 
The one-woman Force of Nature named Kathy Price simply cannot
not be described. She brings all of these people together, gets the Air Force to
airlift massive tons of aid for free, and manages to hug and kiss and personally
interact with everyone who crosses her path.
 
Several families could not make it to the hospital for
assessment today, because there was a terrible earthquake in their area (several
hours away) a few weeks ago. 
 
The doctors said that cleft palate and cleft lip is
statistically and genetically more prevalent in Latin America and Asia, and less
common in Europe and Africa.
 
Tonight at dinner I saw next to a 6 year old girl, (our bus
driver's daughter) and  I taught her songs in English, including the Itsy Bitsy
Spider, complete with hand gestures. She pressed me to "Play! Play! Play"" and
teach her more and more songs until she passed out at 9 pm.
 
I took over 900 photos today, so it will take me a little
while to sort through them all.
 
Tomorrow the big surgeries begin. It is going to be a big
day.
 
Tuesday we are going out to the countryside so they can show
me the school for the blind children, and the site where the Children's Hospice
is being built on a mountaintop.
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A Story To Be Told

C5Unloading_W

 

By the time you receive this newsletter, I will have flown down to Guatemala City today.
I am catching a 6 am flight in Denver, so I can meet Kathy Price (director of Mission of Love) and a team of surgeons in Houston.
We will fly down to Guatemala together, and they will prepare for a week of cleft palate/lip surgeries.

eQuilter has supported Mission of Love's work for 12 years, and during that time they have made many trips such as this to serve those who have nothing in Guatemala,
Honduras, Isla Mujeres, and elsewhere.
Finally, I decided since we topped the $1 million mark with our total
charity contributions, it is time for me to go along to support the
team, to take photos, and tell the story.

Sunday a few hundred families will come to the hospital for the
assessment day, hoping that their child will be chosen for the
corrective surgery.
45 children will be chosen, and I can't even imagine how hard it is to
tell most of the families that their trip to the hospital was for
nothing.
Kathy tells me that many of them come barefoot, because they've never
had enough to buy shoes.
These are the people we will serve during this week.

Monday will be the first surgery day.
I am taking a 2nd suitcase stuffed with toys and plush animals, to give to the children after their surgery.
I will spend the day with the families, supporting them before, during and after the surgeries.
It is going to be a long day, but what an incredible gift to be there on such a day.

Tuesday we are hoping to spend a day in the country, to visit the building site of Way-Bi, which will be a children's hospice.
I will write about all of this in my newsletter Tuesday night.
I hope to have time to blog each day, and post photos each evening.

So I just want to thank all of you for helping us to get to this point, where we can give Mission of Love and our other charities dependable ongoing support, so they can pursue big projects such as this one.

A couple years after we adopted Sophie, I went back to China on a McCalls tour.
One day I slipped out and visited a local foster group home that cared for orphans who were receiving surgery in Beijing.
They had come from all over China, and were either waiting for corrective surgery, or recovering from surgery.
Until these kids had their surgeries, they were unlikely to be adopted.
Their little lives were on hold.

At the end of this week, 45 young Guatemalan
kids will have the rest of their lives to look forward to…thanks to
the generosity of the surgeons who donate a week of their life, and the
diligent compassion of Mission of Love.

I am proud to support this work, and I invite you to come along with me
on this journey, as we see what our eQuilter donated dollars can do to change the world
for these 45 children.

We are collecting and posting photos related to our Hurricane Sandy quilt relief effort, and if you would like to donate a quilt (or many quilts!) be sure to check out the details on our project page.
The quilts are rolling in, and I know Friday one of our distributors
picked up 250 quilts to be handed out at a relief center this weekend.

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Creative Nudge – Sandy Quilts – Setting Goals


SandyQuilts1_550

The Hurricane Sandy quilts are
rolling into the Timeless Treasures warehouse in Roselle, New Jersey.
They are also being dropped off in person at our eQuilter warehouse in
Boulder Colorado.
In the last week I've meet a couple of the generous quilters who stopped
by to share their quilts, and was lucky enough to be able to thank them
in person!

To all the rest of you working hard to make quilts and ship quilts for
our Hurricane Sandy relief effort – please accept this as my personal
cyber thank you hug!

We now have some photos of quilts at the Timeless warehouse, quilts being distributed on Thanksgiving, and quilts arriving at eQuilter.
In addition we have photos sent by Denise, who is helping us with one of our distribution points in New Jersey.
Her photos depict the destruction after the storm, but she said these are not photos of the worst hit areas.
She said those areas were off-limits and behind National Guard lines.

If you would like to contribute to this photo page – please send your photos to us at eQuilter and we will share them with everyone.
As we get more photos of the quilts and recipients, we will get them online on this page as fast as possible!

This effort will continue through December and January, at which time we
will assess if and how long we will continue the project.
Please try to send your quilts to arrive at the Timeless warehouse by
end January.

Sunday was my birthday, and every year as the Earth makes another trip
around the Sun, I start working on my goals for the coming year.
For the next year, I have set a goal of going on a creative retreat, and
going on a mission trip with one of our charity groups.

Well guess what? One of them is coming true sooner than I imagined.
Saturday I am going to a developing country on a cleft palate/lip surgery trip.
Watch my next 2 newsletters for this story.
You will be amazed.
eQuilter is a sponsor of this surgery trip so I want to take you along to experience the good that our 2% of sales is doing around the world.

Are you starting to think about your creative goals for 2013?

Feel free to share your thoughts here!

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Houston Quilt Market – 2013 Preview

SusanCaneMabel_550

 

Many thanks to all of you –
individuals and guilds – who are busy making and
shipping relief quilts for the Hurricane Sandy victims
.

Timeless Treasures Fabrics is
gearing up to receive thousands of your donated quilts! As the packages start to
arrive and are distributed around the East Coast and NYC/Metro area, we will be
sure to pass on any photos we receive of the quilts and the recipients.

Feel
free to share the link for the project page!

We are also going to
work with Mission of Love to get a
truck full of relief supplies to devastated areas that are not receiving Red
Cross or FEMA aid.

*********************

Hey! I haven't had a
chance to share some of our favorite collections that we previewed at Houston
Quilt Market!

These are just a few designers and collections that we've
bought for the next several months…keep an eye on our newsletter for these as
they arrive early 2013.

Fabrique-istan by Paula Nadelstern from
Benartex
Salt Water by Tula Pink from Free Spirit
Alchemy by Amy Butler
from Westminster Fibers
Sunstreaks by Patrick Los, McGregor's Market by Janet
Wecker-Frisch
Welcome to Sesame Street from Quilting Treasures
Marblehead
Glistening Christmas II by Ro Gregg
American Heroes from Windham
Baum
Honey Honey by Kate Spain from Moda
Art Nouveau Christmas from Fabric
Freedom
Love Flows by Jan Douglas for Maywood Studios
Lario by 3 Sisters
from Moda Fabric
Savonnerie by American Jane from Moda Fabric
Glamping by
Mary Jane from Moda Fabric
2wenty Thr3e by Eric & Julie
Comstock
Science Fair from Andover Fabrics
Celebracion by the Museum of
New Mexico
I Can Fly by Mark Lipinski from Andover Fabrics
The Simpsons,
Family Guy and Archie Comics
STAR TREK licensed lines, Outer Space (Glow in
the Dark)
Stonehenge Ornamental Christmas and Starry Night from
Northcott
Maxine 3: Halloween and Christmas
Dr Seuss' Green Eggs & Ham
and How the Grinch Stole Christmas
Manhattan Modern by Michelle D'Amore
Ho
Ho Ho, Let It Snow by Nancy Halvorsen
Extreme Color by Paula Nadelstern from
Benartex
Claridge Manor by Yuko Hasegawa from RJR Fabrics
Renaissance
Garden by Jinny Beyer from RJR Fabrics
Pretty Sporty by Dan Morris from RJR
Fabrics
Aurora Borealis by Rosewood Organics from Frond Design
Studio
Daydreams IV by Stephanie Brandenburg from Frond Design
Studio
Sunprint Hand-Dyes and full range of Ombre Hand-Dyes
The Giving
Quilt by Jennifer Chiaverini from Red Rooster Fabrics
Floragraphix Batiks
& Winter Wonderland by Jason Yenter – In The Beginning
It's a Guy Thing
by Steve Vanderbosch from Elizabeth's Studio

Personally, I am totally
psyched about the Star Trek collection!
(Yes, I am a Trekkie
Nerd.)

*********************************

TODAY'S FEATURED ART
QUILT:
This dramatic eye-catching "photo collage" type quilt was a
prize-winner in Houston. It is "Mabel-1952 REO" by Susan Cane. The quilt was
created from a photo, taken by Susan's husband, of their antique truck.

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Quilters, Engineers and Rwanda….

Last Friday I went to an Engineers Without
Borders gathering for CU Engineering students, professors, and EWB
donors. (like us!)

Here is a link to a video showing one of the projects that
eQuilter is directly supporting in Rwanda, with the CU student chapter, and the NASA Johnson Space Center chapter of EWB.

Andrew Maier
has also visited our offices recently to tell us more about the Rwandan
Orphans Project. I thought you might enjoy seeing the smiling faces of
some of the children we are helping there!

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*Hurricane Sandy – 5000 Quilts* – URGENT UPDATE

Please help to spread the word –

donated Hurricane Sandy quilts need to be shipped directly to Timeless Treasures.

They need to be clean, new or like new, no odors or no animal hair.

Do not pass on info about this relief project without the Project LINK! Thanks!!!

http://www.equilter.com/cgi-bin/webc.cgi/quiltrelief.html

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Join us for a very special concert and benefit for Hurricane Sandy relief!

For our friends in Colorado – we are
sponsoring a fabulous concert with some very special musicians – to
benefit Hurricane Sandy victims. Thurs Nov 29 at The Academy, a historic
building 2 blocks from Chautauqua Park. Hope to see you there!

SandraWongNyckelharpa

http://www.sandrawongmusic.com/calendar.html

Thursday, November 29th, 2012

The Academy

From Trondheim to Colorado –
7pm

970 Aurora Ave.
BoulderColorado80302
US
Price: Free – donations for hurricane S

From Trondheim to Colorado- A rich and diverse evening of music
from many corners of the world (Norway, Sweden, Appalachia, Africa, and
beyond), Jazz and Originals. Kirsti Huke from Trondheim, Norway
(voice, guitar, piano) Sandra Wong (nyckelharpa, violin) Greg Harris
(vibraphone, piano, percussion and Ghanian Gyil) John Gunther (flute,
saxaphone) Charles Parker Mertens (bass)
Admission is free, accepting donations for Hurricane Sandy Relief.
Sponsored by Louise Pearson, eQuilter.com and Terry Myrwang Holum.

http://www.myspace.com/kirstihukequartet
http://www.myspace.com/kirst ihuke
www.sandrawongmusic.com
www.myspace.com/sandrawongmusic
gtannerharris.tumblr.com
www.vibequintet.blogspot.com
http://music.colorado.edu/faculty/john-gunther/
https://portfolio.du.edu/pc/port?portfolio=cmertens

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Hurricane Sandy – 5000 Quilt Challenge – Update

***

Many thanks to all of you who are working on quilts, or who have just shipped out quilts for our massive Hurricane Sandy quilt relief project.

The link for this project is on the LOWER LEFT of the eQuilter Home
Page, in case you need to pull up the information on a mobile device.

Please read through the guidelines carefully before sending us a question or before shipping a quilt.

The Timeless Treasures
warehouse is preparing for the huge wave of packages to start arriving
this coming week.
Their staff will be processing all of the thousands of packages –
opening, sorting, safely storing, then staging to send them out to our
trusted organizations who will personally distribute the quilts.

The owners of Timeless are still without power, as are most of our
industry contacts on the East Coast.
We hope to get as many bed-sized quilts out to the hurricane victims, as
SOON as possible, but the project will go on for three months and
perhaps beyond.

Mission of Love is gearing
up to take a truck full of relief supplies to the East Coast, and we are
about to post a challenge grant so you can donate to MOL via Paypal to
help fund this part of our relief effort – watch for details on Facebook
and my Tuesday night Creative Nudge enewsletter.

Victoria Findlay-Wolfe is also helping us to identify distribution points in the NYC and metro area.

There are MANY relief efforts well underway now, and I want to be clear
that ANY effort that you support is just fantastic! We are not "in
competition" with any of them – but we do want to caution you to make
sure you are giving to an authentic and reputable group.
In the past we've seen there have been a few people who take advantage
of these events for their own gain, so just be sure whoever you work
with is a known entity.

Over the years, working with Mission of Love, we've distributed 10,000 comfort quilts for relief efforts after 9/11, Haiti, Katrina, the Japan tsunami, Colorado Fires, and other smaller projects for various orphanages and other disaster relief.

We have a LOT of experience with this volume of quilts, and our main
focus is treating the quilts with the very special respect and value
that they deserve.
It is just not the same as handing out blankets.
It is a very special gift of love when a person who has lost everything –
receives a handmade gift of love from a stranger.

Be sure to check our project page for updates, and feel free to share this link!

We now have SIX new videos from the awards ceremony and winners at the Houston Quilt Festival.

Be sure to check them out – ENJOY!

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eQuilter – Hurricane Sandy – 5000 Quilt Challenge

MarianneWilliamson_550

Now that the election is over,
I am hoping that we will see more information about what is really
happening post-hurricane on the east coast.

I've been in touch with friends and business contacts since the storm
hit last Monday night, and it is clear to me that the media has not been
able to cover the scope of the disaster.

Many thanks to all of you (!) who have emailed and called, asking how you can help.

Tonight I am putting out a call to quilters all over the country, to donate 5000 quilts to the victims of Hurricane Sandy.

You donated over 3000 quilts for 9/11 survivors, and over 2000 quilts
after the Japan tsunami.
I just KNOW that you are all asking – what can I do to help? As the
media begins to report more of the vast destruction from the storm, I
know more of you will be moved to make and donate comfort quilts.

So we are going to work in partnership with Timeless Treasures Fabrics to provide the means to collect and distribute your quilts to those most in need.

The first phase of this effort is over the next 3 months: Timeless
Treasures is offering us not only their warehouse space, but also their
staff for the huge task of processing the thousands of packages we
expect to receive in response to this need.

We are working to identify multiple trusted organizations to distribute
your quilts in the hardest hit areas: Rockaways, Long Island, New
Jersey, and Staten Island are locations that need us the most right now,
where we can channel this relief to those in need quickly.

I have posted guidelines for this massive relief effort on this page, and we ask you to read through ALL the details carefully before contacting eQuilter's Customer Service with any questions.

Please do NOT contact Timeless Treasures – so we can let them focus their resources on receiving the quilts.

Ship your quilt to New Jersey by a trackable method to confirm receipt,
and be sure to put a label and message of comfort on the back of your
quilt!

Feel free to share the link for the project page!

We are also going to work with Mission of Love
to get a truck full of relief supplies to devastated areas that are not
receiving Red Cross or FEMA aid.
On Saturday night we will also issue a challenge for matching funds, to
fund this relief effort…watch the newsletter for more information.

Many thanks to Ellen and David Brown at Timeless Treasures, Victoria
Findlay-Wolfe who is helping us identify distribution points, and Kathy
Price at Mission of Love.
Thanks to many others who are helping us identify relief organizations this week.
Our biggest thanks to all of you who are making and sending the quilts!!!

sharing your Passion for Fabric…
Paul and Luana Rubin

* The quilt shown above was photographed at the Houston Quilt Festival – and is by Marianne Williamson.
Sophie thought it looked like a hurricane! *

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Hurricane Sandy Quilt Relief

Yes, we ARE initiating a disaster relief quilt drive for those
affected by Hurricane Sandy
!
 
The events of the past week have been so unbelievable. I will start by
saying – for all of you affected by Hurricane Sandy – our most sincere thoughts
and prayers go out to you and your families, and your communities.

We
have been inundated with messages from all over the US and indeed around the
world, expressing concern, and asking "how can we help?"…and and we are
humbled at how many have reached out to us, asking us to coordinate another
quilt drive for the hurricane victims.

The answer is – yes of course we
will coordinate another disaster relief effort. I have asked the director of
Mission of Love to help us again, and Kathy has agreed.

So tonight I am
issuing a challenge to our friends, customers, our guild contacts, and anyone
else who wants to help:

We are going to
collect and distribute 5000 quilts to those affected by Hurricane
Sandy.

We will work to make sure that the quilts go to those most
drastically affected by the hurricane's destruction.

Right now almost all
of my east coast contacts are dealing some difficult aspect of post-storm
trauma. Some are "just" dealing with no power, no heat, no water, no food and no
gas. All of this with another storm bearing down on the area.

Others have
had their cars smashed, their boat washed out to sea, and the worst so far is
one of our industry's beloved talents has had her house smashed by a tree…but
they escaped with their lives. Another contact had a neighbor killed by a
falling tree. They all say – they feel so lucky not to have sustained the
devastation suffered by their neighbors.

From what I am hearing from my
east coast contacts, the destruction and power outages are so widespread, that
we can't possibly comprehend the scope of the situation.

As this quilt
drive comes into focus, as I get in touch with my various industry contacts, I will update
this page daily.
There will be another detailed update in my Creative Nudge
on Tuesday night, so watch for that as you stay up to watch Election
Returns
. (It is almost over – yeah!)

In case you are new to eQuilter,
in addition to raising over $1
million for charity
over the years,

we have coordinated many thousands of comfort quilts donated and delivered
over the years for 9/11, Katrina, Haiti and Japan
tsunami survivors
.
http://www.equilter.com/cgi-bin/webc.cgi/quiltsforjapan.html

Feel
free to share this
link
for our project, with any individual or guild who you think might be
interested in participating. The bottom line is – yes you can start planning and
making the quilts you'd like to donate to Hurricane Sandy victims.

Our
humble and sincere thanks to those of you who have helped in the past, and those
of you who will help with this effort.

 
I will be posting details and guidelines as quickly as possible.
 
It has been my experience with this type of disaster, that bed-sized quilts
are what is most needed.
 
We will accept lap-sized quilts and crib quilts, but we really encourage
you to send at least twin or full sized quilts for those who have lost
everything. We want to keep these people WARM for the winter, so if you can send
it soon that is best, but we will continue this project for many months.
 
We will not be accepting afghans, pillowcases, or other non-quilt items. We
want to stay focused on our goal of collecting and distributing 5000
quilts.
 
See our page for last year's quilt drive for Japan, if you'd like to get a
preview of how this project will unfold.
 
Thank you!!! – Luana
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