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revelarts
01-12-2015, 10:03 AM
Victims of Terrorism acknowledgements, relief options, victim support and stories thread
thread is here as a way to acknowledge and maybe lend a hand to the many victims of terrorism around the world.
It's for info about the victims, their families and friends and relief efforts and agencies.

this is not a thread to talk about the terrorist or responses to terror or details of the politics about terrorism.
There are more than enough about that elsewhere on DP it seems to me.


to start here are a few charitable agencies with some background info.

Tuesday’s Children
http://www.tuesdayschildren.org
Tuesday’s Children serves every Child who lost a parent on September 11, 2001, every adult who lost their Spouse ,every Individual who lost an immediate family member, 9/11 First Responders and their families, Veterans who enlisted after September 11, 2001 and their families, International Young Adults who have been directly impacted by acts of terrorism, the community of Newtown, Connecticut as they utilize our model for long-term healing.

Wounded Warrior Project
http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/
Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) serves veterans and service members who incurred a physical or mental injury, illness, or wound, co-incident to their military service on or after September 11, 2001 and their families. On that date, America watched in horror as approximately 3,000 people died including hundreds of firefighters and rescue workers. Many warriors note a sense of duty to volunteer for the military following these tragic events.

Building Homes for Heroes
http://buildinghomesforheroes.org
Building Homes for Heroes® is strongly committed to rebuilding lives and supporting the brave men and women who were injured while serving the country during the time of the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. The organization builds or modifies homes, and gifts them, mortgage-free, to veterans and their families. It's our honor to support the men and women who have loyally and courageously served our country.

Red Cross Relief fund for UK victims of terrorism abroad
http://www.redcross.org.uk/What-we-do/Emergency-response/Relief-fund-for-UK-victims-of-terrorism-abroad
The British Red Cross relief fund gives immediate financial help to people who have been seriously injured or bereaved by terrorist incidents overseas. When terrorist incidents occur, it can be hard for the people affected to get financial help from insurance bodies. This fund – which we set up at the request of the government – provides an immediate payment of £3,000 to help people recover from the incident. This grant is not compensation for what victims have suffered.


a few other to check out
The Twin Towers Orphan Fund
http://www.ttof.org

Stop Soldier Suicide
http://stopsoldiersuicide.org/


May God bless and care for the bodies and souls of terrorist victims and their folks everywhere.

jimnyc
01-12-2015, 10:22 AM
Excellent idea, Rev! I'm VERY fond of the 'Wounded Warrior' project myself, although ALL of these links seem great. Sometimes these things are solemn reminders of how we got to where we are, and why these types of agencies exist. Sometimes we have a little extra and might be able to help someone, somewhere.

revelarts
01-13-2015, 09:58 AM
Link to the names and other info about the victims of the Paris attacks

http://www.buzzfeed.com/alisonvingiano/these-are-the-victims-of-the-terrorist-attack-on-a-french-ko#.tm2N17R8b

revelarts
01-13-2015, 10:28 AM
From Ny Times

Among the 12 people who were killed in the attack Wednesday on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo were cartoonists (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/08/world/europe/the-men-behind-the-cartoons-at-charlie-hebdo.html), a proofreader, a maintenance worker and two police officers. A police officer was killed the next day in a Paris suburb, and four hostages were killed at a kosher supermarket in eastern Paris on Friday.
These are profiles of the victims.
AT CHARLIE HEBDO
Stéphane Charbonnier
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Stéphane Charbonnier Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure> <aside class="marginalia related-coverage-marginalia nocontent robots-nocontent" data-marginalia-type="sprinkled" role="complementary">

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</aside>Mr. Charbonnier, 47, known as Charb, was the editorial director of Charlie Hebdo and the face of the newspaper’s defiant stance (http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/08/world/europe/charlie-hebdo-editor-made-provocation-his-mission.html) on publishing cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad. Mr. Charbonnier was a staunch left-wing activist, raised in a family of communists, said Daniel Leconte, a filmmaker who was making a documentary about the cartoonists. “He has this education, and this culture, which was one part of his personality, but at the same time he was totally radical.” Mr. Charbonnier’s insistence on publishing depictions of the prophet was not about religious ideology. It was, Mr. Leconte said, about “freedom, liberté.”


Elsa Cayat
Ms. Cayat, 54, the only woman killed in the attack, was a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst and columnist for Charlie Hebdo, where she wrote a bimonthly column called Le Divan (The Couch), the newspaper Le Parisien reported. Her aunt, the author Jacqueline Raoul-Duval, said that Ms. Cayat had found a “second family” in her colleagues at the satirical weekly, according to ELLE magazine.


Georges Wolinski
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Georges Wolinski Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Wolinski, 80, was born in Tunisia to a French-Italian mother and a Jewish father from Poland. “He loved life, alcohol, women,” Mr. Leconte said. “A free man. I loved him.” He was very prolific and reveled in broad caricature and in skewering taboos, said Françoise Mouly, the art editor of The New Yorker. Nothing, she said, was sacred to Mr. Wolinski — neither the feminist movement nor religion — and his willingness to push limits was an inspiration to many contemporary artists. “Certainly he managed to transcend bad taste,” she said, with a drawing style that was deliberately quick and rough but that focused on ideas. “He made it his trademark,” she said.


Bernard Maris
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Bernard Maris Credit Christophe Abramowitz/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Maris, 68, an economist, author and columnist for France Inter radio who also contributed to Charlie Hebdo, was killed alongside cartoonists at the weekly newspaper’s editorial meeting. His death was announced by Radio France’s chief executive, Mathieu Gallet, on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon. “Our collaborator Bernard Maris is one of the victims of the attack against Charlie Hebdo,” he wrote. “France Inter is crying and our thoughts go out to his family.” Mr. Maris was also an economics professor at Université Paris 8.


Bernard Verlhac
Mr. Verlhac was known as Tignous. (Most of the cartoonists at Charlie Hebdo used some sort of pen name.) He was born in 1957 and contributed to a wide variety of publications, according to Le Monde, the French daily newspaper. “He was the last one to enter the team,” Mr. Leconte said, describing the group that was at the heart of Charlie Hebdo’s creative output. “He was in a way more shy in person. But not when he draws. His caricatures are so dynamic.”


Ahmed Merabet
Mr. Merabet, 40, a police officer who was killed as he lay wounded on the ground, inspired a Twitter hashtag, #JeSuisAhmed — I am Ahmed — as many praised him for defending a newspaper that was accused of insulting his Muslim faith. At a news conference on Saturday, relatives called him a pillar of their family. “My brother was Muslim, and he was killed by fake Muslims,” said Malek Merabet. The family also urged people to “stop conflating things, triggering wars, burning mosques or synagogues.” Officer Merabet was assigned to the police precinct in Paris’s 11th Arrondissement, according to Rocco Contento, a police union official who knew him. “He was a nice person, very likable, always with a smile and very professional,” Mr. Contento said. Officer Merabet, whose parents were from North Africa, lived in a suburb north of Paris with a large immigrant community, was unmarried and had no children.


Philippe Honoré
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Philippe Honoré Credit Francois Guillot/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Honoré, 74, was the fifth Charlie Hebdo cartoonist to be declared killed in the attack, according to the news agency Agence France-Presse. His cartoon of the leader of the Islamic State group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi — wishing his audience a happy new year and “above all, good health!” — was the last drawing to be posted on Twitter before the attack. After publishing his first drawing in the newspaper Sud-Ouest at the age of 16, Mr. Honoré went on to collaborate with several French media outlets.


Frédéric Boisseau
Mr. Boisseau, 42, a maintenance worker employed by the Sodexo services company, was killed in the lobby of the building when the attack started. The company said that Mr. Boisseau was married, with two children, and that Sodexo staff members had mourned him with a minute of silence at midday on Thursday. A statement by Sodexo’s chief executive, Michel Landel, on the company’s website expressed “immense sadness” over Mr. Boisseau’s death. “All together, we share the feeling that it is intolerable that one of our colleagues lost his life in such tragic and unfair circumstances, in the name of a cause so contrary to our values,” Mr. Landel wrote.


Jean Cabut
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Jean Cabut Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Cabut, known as Cabu, was born in 1938 and studied art in Paris. He helped found Hara-Kiri, the predecessor to Charlie Hebdo, after serving in the military in Algeria. “He’s an artist, a poet, a sweet man and a great journalist,” said Mr. Leconte, the filmmaker. He said Mr. Cabut was always drawing, sketching even places he passed every day. Mr. Cabut’s style, Ms. Mouly said, was political, and similar to Saul Steinberg, a style more familiar to American audiences. He often caricatured politicians, and his most famous character was Le Grand Duduche, an awkward adolescent. Ms. Mouly compared his cartoons featuring that character to the work of the American cartoonist Jules Feiffer. His political drawings “didn’t stop him from drawing Muhammad,” Ms. Mouly said. “Whatever was at the topic of the day.”


Mustapha Ourrad
Mr. Ourrad, a proofreader at Charlie Hebdo, was an orphan who was born in Algeria and moved to France when he was 20, according to the Le Monde. He was a self-taught man who impressed friends with his erudition, the newspaper said.


Michel Renaud
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Michel Renaud Credit Danyel Massacrier/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Renaud, 69, a former journalist and the founder of a cultural festival in his hometown, Clermont-Ferrand, was killed alongside Charlie Hebdo staff members, according to Agence France-Presse, which quoted Olivier Bianchi, the mayor of Clermont-Ferrand. Mr. Bianchi told the news agency on Wednesday that Mr. Renaud was visiting the cartoonist Jean Cabut, who had been the guest of honor at the previous festival.


Franck Brinsolaro
Mr. Brinsolaro was in charge of guarding Mr. Charbonnier, who had received protection since 2011 when Charlie Hebdo was attacked for publishing caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad. On Wednesday, Officer Brinsolaro fired two shots before the attackers killed him, a police union official said. Officer Brinsolaro had two children, according to the regional newspaper L'Éveil Normand, which said on its website that its editor in chief, Ingrid Brinsolaro, was his wife.

AT THE SUPERMARKET
Yoav Hattab
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Yoav Hattab Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Hattab, 21, was a student in Paris. His father is the director of a Jewish school in Tunisia, where his family lives, according to Le Parisien. His brother said that Mr. Hattab often went shopping at the supermarket on Fridays for Shabbat because he lived in Vincennes, the Tunisian website Kapitalis reported.

François-Michel Saada
Mr. Saada, 63, was a former executive who was married for more than 30 years, according to Le Parisien. He had two children, Jonathan and Emily, who live in Israel. A friend described him to the newspaper as an “exemplary” husband and father: “He was someone who was extremely upright, who led his life for the happiness of his family.”

Philippe Braham
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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Philippe Braham Credit Agence France-Presse — Getty Images </figcaption> </figure>Mr. Braham, 45, worked for a commercial IT consulting company, according to Le Parisien. He attended a synagogue on Montrouge, the newspaper reported, and his children were enrolled at a Jewish school near where a female police officer was shot and killed in a southern suburb of Paris on Thursday.

Yohan Cohen
Mr. Cohen, 22, worked in the store and lived in the suburb of Sarcelles, which is known for its Jewish population, according to The Jerusalem Post. A shopper, Jeremie Agou, told the newspaper that he saw Mr. Cohen every week when he went there to buy groceries. Mr. Cohen was the grandson of a famous Jewish-Tunisian singer who died a month before him in December, Le Parisien reported. The deputy mayor of Sarcelles, François Pupponi, said that Mr. Cohen’s family was devastated. “He was a nice boy,” Mr. Pupponi said. “I knew him by sight and his friends, too. This is a tragedy that affects all of the city and the Jewish community.”


IN A PARIS SUBURB
Clarissa Jean-Philippe
Ms. Philippe, who was in her 20s, was a police officer who had been on the job a short time and was still in training, according to Le Monde (http://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2015/01/08/clarissa-jean-philippe-25-ans-policiere-tuee-dans-l-exercice-de-ses-fonctions-a-montrouge_4552214_3224.html). Her colleagues described her as “lively and dynamic.” She was from the French Caribbean island of Martinique, where she left behind her family to move to Paris, according to Paris Match magazine (http://www.parismatch.com/Actu/Societe/Clarissa-la-policiere-tuee-a-Montrouge-martinique-685626). She was responding to a report of a traffic accident in the suburb of Montrouge when a suspect wearing a bulletproof vest shot her and drove off. Her death is believed to be connected to the other killings.


http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/12/world/europe/terror-attacks-in-paris-the-victims.html?_r=0

Drummond
01-14-2015, 05:19 AM
Victims of Terrorism acknowledgements, relief options, victim support and stories thread
thread is here as a way to acknowledge and maybe lend a hand to the many victims of terrorism around the world.
It's for info about the victims, their families and friends and relief efforts and agencies.

this is not a thread to talk about the terrorist or responses to terror or details of the politics about terrorism.
There are more than enough about that elsewhere on DP it seems to me.


to start here are a few charitable agencies with some background info.

Tuesday’s Children
http://www.tuesdayschildren.org
Tuesday’s Children serves every Child who lost a parent on September 11, 2001, every adult who lost their Spouse ,every Individual who lost an immediate family member, 9/11 First Responders and their families, Veterans who enlisted after September 11, 2001 and their families, International Young Adults who have been directly impacted by acts of terrorism, the community of Newtown, Connecticut as they utilize our model for long-term healing.

Wounded Warrior Project
http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org/
Wounded Warrior Project® (WWP) serves veterans and service members who incurred a physical or mental injury, illness, or wound, co-incident to their military service on or after September 11, 2001 and their families. On that date, America watched in horror as approximately 3,000 people died including hundreds of firefighters and rescue workers. Many warriors note a sense of duty to volunteer for the military following these tragic events.

Building Homes for Heroes
http://buildinghomesforheroes.org
Building Homes for Heroes® is strongly committed to rebuilding lives and supporting the brave men and women who were injured while serving the country during the time of the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. The organization builds or modifies homes, and gifts them, mortgage-free, to veterans and their families. It's our honor to support the men and women who have loyally and courageously served our country.

Red Cross Relief fund for UK victims of terrorism abroad
http://www.redcross.org.uk/What-we-do/Emergency-response/Relief-fund-for-UK-victims-of-terrorism-abroad
The British Red Cross relief fund gives immediate financial help to people who have been seriously injured or bereaved by terrorist incidents overseas. When terrorist incidents occur, it can be hard for the people affected to get financial help from insurance bodies. This fund – which we set up at the request of the government – provides an immediate payment of £3,000 to help people recover from the incident. This grant is not compensation for what victims have suffered.


a few other to check out
The Twin Towers Orphan Fund
http://www.ttof.org

Stop Soldier Suicide
http://stopsoldiersuicide.org/


May God bless and care for the bodies and souls of terrorist victims and their folks everywhere.

Just seen, Revelarts.

Well .. better late than never ! But - at least you've answered my challenge, and you've done a creditable job with it in the process.

Acknowledged w/thanks.:clap::clap::clap:

revelarts
01-23-2015, 03:14 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TT__Y8ZghQM

This Veteran And Service Dog Share A Very Special Bond
November 27, 2014
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When our brave men and women return home from war, they experience a litany of issues. The main problem is adjusting to civilian life. Over the course of their service, they mold their minds and bodies to be ready for battle. So, when they return to everyday life, the mental and physical obstacles they face in an attempt to regain control and normalcy can become too much to handle. Unfortunately, some veterans eventually succumb to the pain. Some choose to numb themselves with drugs or alcohol and still others ultimately choose to take their own lives. However, if these heroic humans just had a little help, anything that could serve as a loyal support system, they may be able to complete their transition to civilian life far more smoothly.

This particular veteran found himself in a predicament similar to that of his peers. Upon his return, he struggled in his everyday life. After being wounded in battle and fighting dark stages of depression, Kenny Bass realized something had to change. That's when he met his "Battle Buddy," his canine helper.


That name soon became the title of his foundation to help other veterans segue back into a normal lifestyle. The benefits Kenny received from his own "Battle Buddy" were so great that he decided he needed to share this with other struggling vets struggling in their own recuperation process.


According to their website, the "Battle Buddies" foundation does a number of things to help vets, including "providing highly trained psychiatric and mobility service dogs and therapy dogs to veterans of all eras suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress, Traumatic Brain Injury, and physical limitations at no cost. Connecting Veterans to employment opportunities within our network of Veteran-focused organizations. Building a community of peer support for Veterans and their families through programs, events, and social media."



http://sfglobe.com/2014/11/25/this-veteran-and-service-dog-share-a-very-special-bond/?src=sidexpromo&pid=28874&tg=do_296



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revelarts
11-14-2015, 12:40 AM
Bumpped to add to this new attack.