Anyway, I just posted a guest interview there that I did with Gary Loewenthal, the Founder and Director of the Worldwide Vegan Bake Sale. It is a great movement/organization, and when I heard they were looking for blogs to interview for, I jumped at the chance! Then I thought I would post it here as well, because being vegan and raising money, especially for animal charities, are things Phoebe is quite passionate about. Below are my deeply probing questions and Gary's responses--as well as some helpful links in case you want to get involved!
1. Can you give readers a little background information on the Worldwide Vegan Bake Sale? When and how did it start?
In late 2008, shortly after Compassion for Animals
got started, we met and were talking about what we could do. Someone
said "How about a vegan bake sale?" I loved the idea. We could merge
vegan outreach with this fun and well-known part of Americana.
Since
I'd never been part of a bake sale, I searched online for tips. At some
point I came across the Great American Bake Sale, which is a loose
network of bake sales under the sponsorship of two sugar companies, and
the proceeds go to fighting hunger. For whatever reason, while staring
out the window five minutes later, I thought, "What about the Great
American Vegan Bake Sale?" It actually seemed possible, especially if we
let the bake sale organizers decide what to do with their proceeds. As I
mulled over the idea, it seemed we should include Canada and Mexico,
also, and call it the Great North American Vegan Bake Sale. I talked it
over with another member of the group, and by the end of the phone call,
it was the Worldwide Vegan Bake Sale.
I
created a bare-bones website and Googled the web for groups that I
thought would be most likely to participate. Shortly after sending out
the first batch of invitations, I got signups from Canada and New
Zealand. It had just started, and already it was international. I hoped
for a dozen bake sales the first year; we had over 80, and VegNews magazine awarded it "Veg Event of the Year."
Bake
sales have several appealing features for fundraising. They're fun,
creative, and community-oriented. They pair well with brochures and
other forms of outreach. They create a friendly atmosphere which makes
it possible to have fruitful discussions about topics that in other
environments might cause heated discussions. We've found also that it
attracts people who don't usually volunteer.
A
vegan bake sale is a great way (not the only one, of course) to do vegan
outreach. It lets people know that they can still have mouth-watering
desserts and muffins and so forth if they're vegan. It naturally brings
up questions about eggs and dairy. It's a good vehicle to let people
browse and/or buy vegan cookbooks.
'
While
there's no perfect timeframe (every date has a conflict, we've
learned), the end of April is not too hot, not too cold in most of the
world, and it's during school so campus groups can participate --but
it's not too close to finals. The date range changes slightly each year
so we can encompass two weekends. We're not real strict, though. If you
want to participate but cannot do so during the "official" timeframe,
whenever you can make it is fine. Each year, about 90 percent of the
bake sales are in the official week-plus, and the other 10 percent are
outside it.
About
130 groups and 160 bake sales. I say "about" because we had some cases
like a group holding a bake sale one day and a subset of the group
holding a bake sale the next weekend. Each year the number has climbed
up.
First
let me say that every vegan bake sale, of any size, is awesome.
Participants have included a city council member's office, a classroom,
two brothers on the front porch, and a vegan bar. There have been three
online bake sales that were part of the WVBS. It's always exciting when
we get a new country. The first three years, we didn't have any
participating bake sales in Germany. Then last year we got a signup from
there, and then another, and so on, until there were twelve
participating vegan bake sales in Germany. This year, so far, France and
Wales are new countries.
I'm going to have to go with chocolate cookies. But I like variety better than any one item.
The website is www.veganbakesale.org.
Not only does it explain the basics of the WVBS and have a signup form
and current schedule of participating bake sales, it also has a ton of
tips on bake sales and vegan baking, an intro to veganism, highlights
from past years, web banners, and more. The Facebook page is
veganbakesale and the twitter page is wwveganbakesale.
Thanks for reading, and happy baking!
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