Craig Kielburger: Difference between revisions
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In 1995, when he was 12 years old, Craig saw a headline in the Toronto Star that read “Battled child labour, boy, 12, murdered.” The accompanying story was about a young Pakistani boy named [[Iqbal Masih]] who was forced into bonded labour in a carpet factory at the age of four, became an international figurehead for the fight against child labor by 12 years of age, and was brutally murdered in 1995 at the age of 12. |
In 1995, when he was 12 years old, Craig saw a headline in the Toronto Star that read “Battled child labour, boy, 12, murdered.” The accompanying story was about a young Pakistani boy named [[Iqbal Masih]] who was forced into bonded labour in a carpet factory at the age of four, became an international figurehead for the fight against child labor by 12 years of age, and was brutally murdered in 1995 at the age of 12. |
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Angered by the article, Kielburger began researching child labour. He took the article to school, gathered friends his same age and together founded a group called the "Twelve-Twelve-Year-Olds,"<ref>Craig Kielburger, "Free the Children Speech", St. Mark's School of Texas in Dallas, October 5, 2010</ref> This group would evolve into "Free The Children", an international organization that has 45 countries participating in helping the world become a better place. In December 1995, Kielburger travelled to Asia with Alam Rahman, a 25-year-old family friend from Bangladesh, to see the conditions for himself. While there, he learned that then-Prime Minister of Canada, [[Jean Chrétien]] was travelling to India. After being denied a meeting, Craig arranged a press conference where he announced that the prime minister had a “moral responsibility” to take action on child labour. The Prime Minister eventually met with him and raised the issue of child labour with the trade delegation, and spoke on the matter with the President of Pakistan and the Prime Minister of India. |
Angered by the article, Kielburger began researching child labour. He took the article to school, gathered friends his same age and together founded a group called the "Twelve-Twelve-Year-Olds,"<ref>Craig Kielburger, "Free the Children Speech", St. Mark's School of Texas in Dallas, October 5, 2010</ref> This group would evolve into "Free The Children", an international organization that has 45 countries participating in helping the world become a better place. In December 1995, Kielburger travelled to Asia with Alam Rahman, a 25-year-old family friend from Bangladesh, to see the conditions for himself. While there, he learned that then-Prime Minister of Canada, [[Jean Chrétien]] was travelling to India. After being denied a meeting, Craig arranged a press conference where he announced that the prime minister had a “moral responsibility” to take action on child labour. The Prime Minister eventually met with him and raised the issue of child labour with the trade delegation, and spoke on the matter with the President of Pakistan and the Prime Minister of India.justin bieber is so sexy!!!!!!!!!! XD ahahaha i love justin bieber!!! <3 |
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He and a group of others also successfully lobbied the Canadian and Italian governments to stiffen laws against their nationals who sexually exploit children in developing countries like those in Asia. |
He and a group of others also successfully lobbied the Canadian and Italian governments to stiffen laws against their nationals who sexually exploit children in developing countries like those in Asia. |
Revision as of 19:25, 1 December 2011
Craig Kielburger | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | Executive MBA |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Toronto Schulich School of Business, York University |
Occupation | Activist |
Notable work | Founded Free The Children |
Craig Kielburger, CM, MSM, OMC (born December 17, 1982) is a Canadian activist for the rights of children. He is the founder of Free The Children and co-founder of Me to We. On February 20, 2007, he was named a Member of the Order of Canada by the Governor General of Canada.
Early life
Kielburger was born in Thornhill, Ontario, Canada. He attended Bishop Scalabrini Catholic School, in Thornhill, which is where he did a school project which eventually gave birth to Free The Children and was assigned by Mr. Fedrigoni of Bishop Scalabrini. He graduated with a degree in Peace and Conflict Studies, a double minor in Psychology and Politics from the University of Toronto.[1] In 2009, he completed his Executive MBA at Schulich School of Business at York University as the program's youngest-ever graduate.
Public Life
Kielburger was featured in a special documentary episode of Degrassi: The Next Generation, titled "Doing What Matters", in which cast members are shown traveling to Africa to help build schools for children in Kenya. He would later appear as himself in a Season 7 episode of Degrassi, in which a student (Anya) organizes an event with Free the Children to raise awareness of living conditions in Africa.[4]
Kielburger contributes a regular column about social activism around the world for the Toronto Star titled Global Voices.
Kielburger is on the National board of Scouts Canada, the movement that he says launched his career in activism.
In 2000, Kielburger was awarded $319,000 in damages as settlement for a libel suit launched against the now-defunct Saturday Night magazine.[2] The settlement covered Kielburger's legal costs and the remainder was used to set up a trust fund for Free The Children.[2]
In June 2010, Kielburger joined CP24, a Toronto-based news television station. As 'Special Correspondent' he interviewed a variety of Toronto citizens and visitors regarding their thoughts about the 2010 G-20 Toronto Summit being held in the city in the weeks following. He reported locally on eyewitness accounts of the 2010 Central Canada earthquake and at regular intervals during the violent and nonviolent protests in Downtown Toronto on the weekend of June 26 and 27.[6]
In October 2010, Kielburger’s Shameless Idealists came to Canada’s CTV channel. In front of a high school audience, Kielburger conducts one-on-one interviews with socially active public figures including K'naan, Cherie Blair, Al Gore, Jacob Hoggard, Jesse Jackson Sr., Martin Sheen and Betty Williams.
Shortly before the one-year anniversary of the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Kielburger traveled with a W5 television crew to a Free The Children school in Haiti alongside actress and activist Mia Farrow. A documentary of their experience aired in January 2011.
Activism
Free the Children
In 1995, when he was 12 years old, Craig saw a headline in the Toronto Star that read “Battled child labour, boy, 12, murdered.” The accompanying story was about a young Pakistani boy named Iqbal Masih who was forced into bonded labour in a carpet factory at the age of four, became an international figurehead for the fight against child labor by 12 years of age, and was brutally murdered in 1995 at the age of 12.
Angered by the article, Kielburger began researching child labour. He took the article to school, gathered friends his same age and together founded a group called the "Twelve-Twelve-Year-Olds,"[3] This group would evolve into "Free The Children", an international organization that has 45 countries participating in helping the world become a better place. In December 1995, Kielburger travelled to Asia with Alam Rahman, a 25-year-old family friend from Bangladesh, to see the conditions for himself. While there, he learned that then-Prime Minister of Canada, Jean Chrétien was travelling to India. After being denied a meeting, Craig arranged a press conference where he announced that the prime minister had a “moral responsibility” to take action on child labour. The Prime Minister eventually met with him and raised the issue of child labour with the trade delegation, and spoke on the matter with the President of Pakistan and the Prime Minister of India.justin bieber is so sexy!!!!!!!!!! XD ahahaha i love justin bieber!!! <3
He and a group of others also successfully lobbied the Canadian and Italian governments to stiffen laws against their nationals who sexually exploit children in developing countries like those in Asia.
Free The Children began to receive international attention - and partnered with Oprah Winfrey's Angel Network, for which Kielburger has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show multiple times.
The organization has to date built over 650 schools and school rooms and implemented projects in 45 developing countries through its approach of "children helping children". The majority of the organization’s annual funding comes from funds raised by young people.[4]
Me to We
Kielburger also founded Me to We, a social enterprise that donates half its annual profits to Free The Children by selling socially conscious products and services. Me to We's offerings include ethically made organic clothing, artisan accessories made in Kenya, motivational books and speakers, youth leadership camps, and volunteer trips to Kenya, India, Ecuador, the Arizona-Mexico border, and rural China. The aim of the enterprise is to "eventually cover the charity's administrative costs, so all donations can go directly to projects."[5] The organization reinvests the other half of its profits to grow the social enterprise.
In 2004 Kielburger co-authored a book with his brother Marc, also entitled Me to We. It focuses on explaining their philosophy of volunteerism, service to others and social involvement with contributions by Oprah Winfrey, Richard Gere, Jane Goodall, Desmond Tutu and others.
In the year of its founding, the Me to We organization was recognized for its new model of social entrepreneurship with the national Ernst & Young Social Entrepreneur of the Year Award, recognizing extraordinary leadership and innovation in organizations which address social needs.
Recognition And Awards
Primarily for his work with Free The Children, Kielburger has been recognized for his work with awards such as:
- The Nelson Mandela Human Rights Award[6]
- The Community of Christ International Peace Award
- The 2002 World of Children Awards - Youth Award [7]
- The World Economic Forum Global Leaders of Tomorrow Award[8]
- The Top 20 Under 20 Award[9]
- The Reebok Human Rights Award[10]
- The Roosevelt Freedom Medal[11]
- The 2004 Kiwanis International Foundation World Service Medal
- The Medal of Meritorious Service
- The Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship[12]
- The State of the World Forum award
- Honorary Doctorate of education from Nipissing University for his work in leadership development[13]
- At age 23, became the youngest person listed to the Globe and Mail's Top 40 under 40
- The 2006 World’s Children’s Prize for the Rights of the Child[14]
- Made a Member of the Order of Canada.[1]
- Honorary degree in law from University of Guelph.[2]
- Honourary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Alberta.[3]
References
Notes
- ^ “Stellar achievements: John H. Moss Scholarship recipient Craig Kielburger” University of Toronto. May 8, 2006. http://www.utoronto.ca/news/2006/05/stellar_achievements_john_h_mo.html
- ^ a b "Child Rights Activist Wins Libel Award". CBC News. November 11, 2000. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- ^ Craig Kielburger, "Free the Children Speech", St. Mark's School of Texas in Dallas, October 5, 2010
- ^ http://www.freethechildren.com/aboutus/financials/
- ^ Brown, Jennifer (October 16, 2008). "Changing attitudes one T-shirt at a time". Toronto Star. Torstar. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- ^ The Nelson Mandela Human Rights Award http://www.cawcouncil4000.com/caw_nelson_mandela_human-rights-award.html
- ^ World of Children Youth Award http://www.worldofchildren.org/index.php/honorees/2002-honorees/81-craig-kielburger
- ^ http://www.reachandteach.com/store/index.php?l=product_detail&p=465
- ^ http://www.top20under20.ca/en/MentorProgram/ckielburger2.htm
- ^ http://www.beyondintractability.org/reflections/peacebuilder_profiles/Craig_Kielburger/Craig_Kielburger.jsp?nid=6579
- ^ http://www.senecac.on.ca/media/news/2009/2009-10-26.html?page=1
- ^ http://www.tcdsb.org/news/director%20annual%20report/director%27s%20annual%20report%201998.htm
- ^ Nipissing University, "Honorary Degree Recipients," Nov 11 2000, http://www.nipissingu.ca/president/honorary_degree.asp
- ^ http://childrensworld.org/page.html?pid=810
External links
- Free the Children's official website
- Video of Honorary Degree Recipient Craig Kielburger addresses University of Toronto Convocation June 8 2011.
- We Day Event Broadcast on CTV.ca
- Craig and Marc Kielburger Interview on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos
- Me to We website
- “Haiti a year after the quake” documentary with Mia Farrow
- 1982 births
- Canadian activists
- Canadian humanitarians
- Canadian people of German descent
- Child activists
- Children's rights activists
- Living people
- Members of the Order of Canada
- Recipients of the Meritorious Service Decoration
- People from Thornhill, Ontario
- Youth empowerment individuals
- Trinity College (Canada) alumni
- University of Toronto alumni
- York University alumni
- Toronto Star people