Sunday, May 5, 2024
ADVT 
Life

8,000 walkers in Vancouver joined the World Partnership Walk across Canada

Darpan News Desk, 30 May, 2017 12:09 PM
    Today 8,000 residents from Vancouver and surrounding communities joined Canadians in cities across the country for World Partnership Walk, Canada’s largest event dedicated to raising funds to help fight global poverty. This year for the nation’s 150th, organizers invited Canadians to lead by example and demonstrate what it means to be a Canadian by walking for a more peaceful, prosperous and equal world for all. 
     
    An initiative of Aga Khan Foundation Canada (AKFC), the Walk is a national campaign that requires the talent and dedication of thousands of donors, volunteers and sponsors. This year, those who took part in Vancouver gathered together in Stanley Park and raised more than $2 million in donations. At press time, the amount counted equalled $2.14 million and organizers said they were still counting donations. Over $100 million has been raised nationally since the Walk began in 1985. 
     
    The Walk gives Canadians the unique opportunity to empower communities living in some of the poorest parts of the world to lift themselves and their families out of poverty. For more than 35 years, AKFC has brought the best of Canada to the world, to change people’s lives for the better. 
     
    World Partnership Walk supports Aga Khan Foundation Canada’s development programs in Africa and Asia—initiatives that improve access to quality education and health care, increase food security, create economic opportunities for women and men, and build strong, resilient communities and local institutions that will continue to support better futures for all. 
     
    For anyone who wasn’t able to attend the Walk but would still like to donate, visit World Partnership Walk Donation. The World Partnership Walk campaign continues until June.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Dishonouring the Silence in Honour Killing

    Dishonouring the Silence in Honour Killing
    Khalida Brohi was 16 when her cousin was killed in an honour killing case. In that phase of shock and trauma, Brohi decided to take her first step confronting honour killing, challenging the social infrastructure controlling lives and choices of women. 

    Dishonouring the Silence in Honour Killing

    For a mold-free home

    For a mold-free home
    A leaking roof, leaking pipes or even a wet carpet can all promote mold growth. Basements, kitchens and bathrooms are prime locations for the growth of unwanted mold. 

    For a mold-free home

    Festivals to Try this Summer

    Festivals to Try this Summer
    You’ve probably heard about the big ones like Bard on the Beach and Richmond Night Market – but there is a hotbed of small, fringe festivals that are worth checking out. Here are five underrated festivals around Vancouver that should be on your radar.

    Festivals to Try this Summer

    How To Add Value To Your Resume

    How To Add Value To Your Resume
    Here are four ways to ensure you are on the right path to becoming a desirable employee and standing out of the crowd from other job applicants. 

    How To Add Value To Your Resume

    May 17 Is World Hypertension Day: Hypertension Can Put You At Increased Risk Of Stroke

    May 17 Is World Hypertension Day: Hypertension Can Put You At Increased Risk Of Stroke
    Ignorance, people say, is bliss. Not so with hypertension though. For, uncontrolled high blood pressure, if left untreated over a prolonged period, can cause a stroke by damaging the blood vessels in the brain, health experts have warned.

    May 17 Is World Hypertension Day: Hypertension Can Put You At Increased Risk Of Stroke

    Indigo launches its first-ever coffee table book

    Indigo launches its first-ever coffee table book
    Celebrating Canada's 150th birthday, the book is titled The World Needs More Canada

    Indigo launches its first-ever coffee table book