Post by the Scribe on Mar 26, 2019 5:04:42 GMT -5
AMELIA'S ARK ANGEL SOCIETY announced the PANGOLIN PROTECTION Campaign:
"Sanctuary! Not Soup!" What do these pages spell out?
"WE PROTECT PANGOLIN!"
Ark Angel put its focus on the precious Pangolin of Zimbabwe in the Kapane, Zika, and Ngamo schools and Amelia's Ark Angel is growing! For first time, Amelia took two American volunteers into the Tsholotsho district schools neighbouring the Hwange National Park so that Amelia and her team could personally interact with the children in rural villages to teach them about the tragedy of poaching innocent little Pangolin.
In 2017 Amelia was invited to the home of Cecil the Lion, the lion who was so tragically murdered by an American "hunter" in a canned lion hunt. Seeing that the Cecil campaign was such a success, Amelia continued to follow her heart and her passion into the heart of Africa: Zimbabwe. Amelia's campaign to stop lion and elephant poaching is ongoing and takes place alongside education about other endangered species.
Amelia accepted the invitation to the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, by Isabel Lynch and Lindsay Norman, founders of the Hwange School Project. www.facebook.com/NgamoPrimarySecondarySchoolLibraryProject/
DONATE TODAY secure.squarespace.com/checkout/donate?donatePageId=547fdc29e4b0057b9b1b6a30
The Pangolin is the single most illegally trafficked animal on earth and their complete extinction is eminent if we don’t do something NOW! These mysterious gentle beings are in great peril and will soon face total annihilation. The Ark Angel Pangolin Campaign is entitled: “Sanctuary not SOUP!”
Amelia and her team taught children in three schools in Zimbabwe about the possibilities of getting lucrative jobs in the tourism business so that they can grow up to conserve their national treasures: lions, elephants, and the magical Pangolin—what few there are left on the planet. Let's gather our strength and educate children about these remarkable animals before the Pangolin leave this earth forever. Your love and concern MATTER! Please watch this video and see if these miraculous beings don’t melt your heart:
Pangolin are on the critically endangered species list, meaning that they are one of the most endangered animals on Earth, and they exist only in few places on the planet--Zimbabwe and even hidden in the bush of Zambia.
Zimbabwe is one of their only natural habitats on Earth, but they are being poached so dramatically, they are about to leave the planet completely--unless we do something FAST! Amelia did something fast, and flew to Africa to draw Pangolin, dance as Pangolin, eat as Pangolin (with their long sticky tongues, this was fun!) and to make up theater games about Pangolin and poachers so that these children understand there are alternatives to giving in to an evil poacher who will offer them vast sums of money. Moyo, my amazing volunteer, works for the school district in Zimbabwe to raise funds so that these children can go to school. He's demonstrating here how easy it is for a poacher to pick up a defenseless Pangolin and walk off with it. One of my American volunteers, Elaine Goodrich, noticed that two of the children in our classroom did not have shoes. She was reduced to tears. She made a generous donation on the spot so that all these children would have shoes on their feet. Choosing to help these children is easier than you may think. Helping is its own reward, and nothing could bring more joy than helping the children and endangered animals of this world, even if it means one at a time.
If we don't, who will?
"Sanctuary! Not Soup!" What do these pages spell out?
"WE PROTECT PANGOLIN!"
Ark Angel put its focus on the precious Pangolin of Zimbabwe in the Kapane, Zika, and Ngamo schools and Amelia's Ark Angel is growing! For first time, Amelia took two American volunteers into the Tsholotsho district schools neighbouring the Hwange National Park so that Amelia and her team could personally interact with the children in rural villages to teach them about the tragedy of poaching innocent little Pangolin.
In 2017 Amelia was invited to the home of Cecil the Lion, the lion who was so tragically murdered by an American "hunter" in a canned lion hunt. Seeing that the Cecil campaign was such a success, Amelia continued to follow her heart and her passion into the heart of Africa: Zimbabwe. Amelia's campaign to stop lion and elephant poaching is ongoing and takes place alongside education about other endangered species.
Amelia accepted the invitation to the Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, by Isabel Lynch and Lindsay Norman, founders of the Hwange School Project. www.facebook.com/NgamoPrimarySecondarySchoolLibraryProject/
DONATE TODAY secure.squarespace.com/checkout/donate?donatePageId=547fdc29e4b0057b9b1b6a30
The Pangolin is the single most illegally trafficked animal on earth and their complete extinction is eminent if we don’t do something NOW! These mysterious gentle beings are in great peril and will soon face total annihilation. The Ark Angel Pangolin Campaign is entitled: “Sanctuary not SOUP!”
Amelia and her team taught children in three schools in Zimbabwe about the possibilities of getting lucrative jobs in the tourism business so that they can grow up to conserve their national treasures: lions, elephants, and the magical Pangolin—what few there are left on the planet. Let's gather our strength and educate children about these remarkable animals before the Pangolin leave this earth forever. Your love and concern MATTER! Please watch this video and see if these miraculous beings don’t melt your heart:
Pangolin are on the critically endangered species list, meaning that they are one of the most endangered animals on Earth, and they exist only in few places on the planet--Zimbabwe and even hidden in the bush of Zambia.
Zimbabwe is one of their only natural habitats on Earth, but they are being poached so dramatically, they are about to leave the planet completely--unless we do something FAST! Amelia did something fast, and flew to Africa to draw Pangolin, dance as Pangolin, eat as Pangolin (with their long sticky tongues, this was fun!) and to make up theater games about Pangolin and poachers so that these children understand there are alternatives to giving in to an evil poacher who will offer them vast sums of money. Moyo, my amazing volunteer, works for the school district in Zimbabwe to raise funds so that these children can go to school. He's demonstrating here how easy it is for a poacher to pick up a defenseless Pangolin and walk off with it. One of my American volunteers, Elaine Goodrich, noticed that two of the children in our classroom did not have shoes. She was reduced to tears. She made a generous donation on the spot so that all these children would have shoes on their feet. Choosing to help these children is easier than you may think. Helping is its own reward, and nothing could bring more joy than helping the children and endangered animals of this world, even if it means one at a time.
If we don't, who will?