Wings of Hope
Articles and Photographs

Please pass any articles about Wings of Hope events to the Wings of Hope Coordinator. Click HERE for details.

Event Reports:

2000    (Back)

1999

Event reports not recorded.

2000 (see also the Wings of Hope 2000 Project Summary page HERE.)

The Crane and The Butterfly

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SECOND ANNUAL PEACE DAY - 2000
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Cranes for Peace Project
PEACE DAY - 2000
Sunday, August 6, 2000

Honoring The Children's Peace Statue
at the Plaza Resolana, Santa Fe, NM


Santa Fe Mayor, Larry Delgado, declared the Second Annual Peace Day in Santa Fe to honor the Children's Peace Statue which is the first International Children's Peace Statue in the world. This observance is in unity with the 53rd annual Peace Day declared by the Japanese in 1947 on the second anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. Peace Day - 2000 is dedicated to our children and future generations of the Earth.

At least 60,000 origami Peace cranes from around the world and local communities were hung by the children on the Children's Peace Statue. The folding of Peace cranes and the creation of the Children's Peace Statue was inspired by a true story of a Japanese girl, Sadako, who died 10 years after the bombing from leukemia which was known by the Japanese as "Atom Bomb Disease". She folded the first Peace crane. We are participating in a global initiative to fold a million cranes for Peace each year.

Hiroshima survivor, Takashi Tanemori told his prophetic dream, The Crane and the Butterfly, of encountering the mythic crane, Senba-Zuru, on the night before the bombing when he was 8 years old.

During the telling of his vision about meeting the crane, when Takashi described how the embers from the explosion became butterflies and flew heavenward, children in the audience released beautiful live Monarch butterflies to highlight of his story. The beauty of this act was nothing less than stunning, and the gasps were followed by silence as the crowd watched the colorful Monarchs dance and float like stained glass in the sunny breeze.

This dream played a major role in Takashi's journey from revenge to forgiveness. He now directs the Silkworm Peace Institute for Forgiveness.

A theater company of Japanese Elder Mothers, Soyokaze (meaning "Gentle Breeze"), shared traditional songs and dance. They came from Japan with readings to open the heart excerpted from testimony of mothers and children from Nagasaki and Hiroshima.

The Divine-Wow Theater Troupe from Studio 848 - San Francisco performed a dance of forgiveness in honor of Takashi's story. Together with members from the Wise Fools Puppet Intervention they announced Peace Day to the community in street performance all around Santa Fe.

The Monarch butterflies were provided by Jacob Groth, Steve and Linda Rogers of Swallowtail Farms company in Carmichael, California and Corsicana, Texas. As members, this special butterfly release was their contribution to the IBBA's special program called "Wings of Hope."


Certificate of Appreciation awarded to
Swallowtail Farms

Certificate of Appreciation

For the full story of Takashi Tanemori's dream and more about the "CRANES FOR PEACE" project, click HERE.


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On the Wings of Hope
with Flutterbies

Thank you to Jon Timko for permitting us to copy the following text and photographs from the Flutterbies web site. You can see the pictures full-size there.


As a special initiative this year, the International Butterfly Breeders Association (IBBA) members are adopting a service organization in their community to provide children and their families the opportunity to encounter and learn about these beautiful winged creatures.

As a member of the IBBA, Flutterbies has participated in the project by visiting the Summer day camp at the Cathedral Church of Saint John on July 28, 2000 . The camp kids had a chance to see the caterpillars up close and watch chrysalides change into butterflies right before their eyes. The program provided kids in inner-city Wilmington, DE a chance to learn and experience first-hand the amazing life cycle of the monarch butterfly.

As you can see by the expressions on the kids' faces, the program brought quite a bit of joy and knowledge "on the wings of hope".


Jon Timko
Flutterbies

July 2000

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Camp Catch-a-Rainbow

Cathy Wolfe
SunDance Butterfly Ranch.

Hello All,

I just returned from my trip to Camp Catch-a-Rainbow, a Cancer Camp for Children, in MI, 900+ Miles, and Many wrong turns later........Never let your Best Friend navigate if she talks a lot! LOL! Anyway.....they were calling for rain, LUCKILY we were OK! I slept comfy in an old rustic cabin with 7 others, because we arrived late, we had to sneak in after many were asleep. Two of the campers were snoring so loud that we giggled outside before we could go in! It took us forever to get to sleep!

We woke up to a Beautiful setting, and many Happy Campers. The "Chapel" was wood stadium seating facing a platform and the Lake, along the lake was a "row" of milkweed. It was Perfect. I spoke to these people from the bottom of my heart. I invited the Children up to receive their Butterfly. I started the music, instrumental of Wind Beneath my Wings, told them to whisper their wish and to open their envelope.

It was Beautiful to see 125+ Monarch Butterflies being released! Parents were in tears. Many of the children gave me hugs and Thanked me. Of the 250 people 200 of them approached me to tell me how special that was. Many asked the Director if I could Come again, next year. The children were all so very touched. I was told that the children and Parents could Identify with me, because I had Cancer. A little girl named Page, ran to her cabin. She returned with the most Beautiful Butterfly Craft (the felt pipe things) and she wanted me to have it. She had made it at camp this week. I was so incredibly touched! It was perfect!

The videographer was there, and so was Fox news 17, of Grand Rapids. I cannot wait to see this footage! Wendy, my Best Friend of 16 years, was in tears! She said it was one of the most touching events that she had experienced! These children will forever look at the butterfly for Hope, Courage, and Strength. Many of the Children found a Butterfly and posed for Pictures after the Release.

I encourage all of you to Get Involved in this Project. It is by far more rewarding than you could ever know. You walk away with a wonderful feeling. Not to mention the Fact, that you are touching lives in a way that is so uplifting.

Special Thanks again to Cindy and Margarita for your Repeated involvement!
You are very special!

Time for this Cat to Hit the Hay!

Tootles,

Cathy Wolfe
SunDance Butterfly Ranch

July 2000

Monarch

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Hope, Hearts and Wings

A special Wings of Hope report by Rick Mikula
Hole in the Hand Butterfly Farm

Note: This report can also be found on the Wings of Hope Articles and Photographs page.

Well kids I'm back in the USA and the first thing that I need to do is to thank Janet Smith for her Wings of Hope idea. On July 22nd I did my project for 'Hope With Heart'.

It is a summer camp for children with heart transplants. What great kids. So smart, so alive, and most of all, so happy, despite the challenges that face them on a daily basis. They are all hooked on butterflies now that they know that they are so magical. The release was wonderful but paled in comparison to watching all the children running around squealing and laughing as they chased the butterflies. What was so, so, very nice about it all was that the older teenagers were just as caught up in the process as the younger ones. Many of the butterflies ended up on the noses of the releasers or on feeding sticks for pictures before their departure.

Thank you so much Janet for your wonderful idea. It was the most rewarding thing that I have done this year. I came away from the camp knowing how many lives that I was able to touch, and was able to leave without them knowing how deeply they touched mine.

To everyone; Please adopt a Wings Of Hope project. It will be the best gift that you ever gave to yourself. When a child come to you after a program and says "I want to be you when I grow up" you'll cry happy tears for a week. I know that I did. And yet it was so terribly painful for me knowing that many of them may not have the chance to grow up and this may be their last outing with butterflies. They are all so courageous. So very courageous.

Regardless, the children went to bed that night with happy smiles on their faces and dreamt about running through fields with butterflies as their friends.

Thanks Janet
Rick Mikula

July 2000

Painted Lady

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Flying on wings of hope

Article by Holly van Slamsbrook, Correspondent

Published: Saturday, June 10, 2000 in The Indianapolis Star
© 2000 Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc.

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Three short years ago, Cathy Wolfe would not have thought of becoming a monarch butterfly breeder.

The young Noblesville mother was busy caring for her 2-year-old son, running a day-care program out of her home and enjoying being pregnant with her second child.

Then Cathy, just 25 years old, was diagnosed with ovarian cancer.

Fourteen weeks pregnant, she underwent surgery to remove three cantaloupe-size tumors. Six months later, she delivered a healthy boy.

When the cancer recurred after Johnathan Thomas's birth, doctors performed a successful hysterectomy.

Now 28, Wolfe heads Hamilton County's Relay for Life, a nationwide fund-raising and community-awareness event sponsored by the American Cancer Society.

Helping other people, she says, has helped her recover.

"If my story affects even one person, then it's worth sharing."

Relay for Life is a 24-hour event held in a track setting. The two sites in the Metro North area are in Hamilton County at Carmel High School and at Boone County at Zionsville High School. Both events will be June 16-17, beginning at 7 p.m. Friday.

Relay teams in both counties are composed of 10-15 people. Members take turns walking or running around the track, so the team is continuously participating during the 24-hour period.

Wolfe started speaking to interested groups about her cancer experience two years ago. The Community Hospital staff had bonded with the young mother during her cancer treatment and knew her story would help other patients.

Then her brother designed a candle the Cancer Society sells as a fund-raiser. Cathy Wolfe makes them by hand in an Indianapolis shop, sometimes working late into the night to meet orders.

Raising monarch butterflies is the latest step on her personal road to recovery and part of her plan for this year's relay.

Monarch butterflies, the ancient Indian legend goes, can convey wishes to the Great Spirit that cannot be heard on earth. They will be released during opening ceremonies at Hamilton County's relay as a symbolic gesture of hope.

Wolfe and her husband, Pat, are members of the International Butterfly Breeders Association. They raise monarchs in their home and offer them for nonprofit release to groups like the Cancer Society.

They've named their home breeding effort SunDance Butterfly Ranch.

"We've always liked butterflies," Cathy Wolfe said. "To us, they are natural symbols of hope that can uplift and encourage families facing difficult circumstances."

Last year, Relay for Life was held in 2,500 communities nationally and raised $127 million, one-third of the Cancer Society's total budget. Indiana volunteers raised $3.1 million at 76 sites -- $11,000 in Hamilton and $10,000 in Boone.

Organizers plan to surpass those numbers this year. Hamilton County donations were way ahead of schedule two weeks before the event, Wolfe says, and Boone County organizers hope to increase their county's numbers to $25,000.

Proceeds are used for cancer research, educational programs, early detection programs and local patient services.

"One in three people will be touched by cancer", said Boone County co-chairwoman Sherry Keene. "We want to raise awareness so the community sees that the ACS (Cancer Society) uses this money to try to stop the disease."

The Hamilton and Boone relays share common goals, but will feature local touches.

Boone County is planning a pancake breakfast, an alternative walk through a Zionsville subdivision for residents who are not part of a relay team, and performances at the track by 19-year-old country singer and Lebanon resident Amy Crawford. Tom Carnegie, voice of the Indianapolis 500, will announce the relay's start.

Hamilton County's event will feature the monarch butterfly release, an open microphone for cancer survivors to share their stories and a marketplace staffed by representatives from Mary Kay Cosmetics, Longaberger Baskets and others.

Both counties are planning luminaria ceremonies at 10 p.m. Friday, when more than 1,000 candles will be lighted as wishes to cancer survivors or memorials to victims. In Boone County, they will line the track and spell out the phrase "Hope and Cure" in the stands.

Both groups will begin their events with a survivors' lap. Last year, more than 250,000 survivors walked that lap nationwide.

Many of last year's participants in both counties are returning for this year's relay. Once you've experienced the event, they say, you're hooked.

Like Melissa Cawi of Zionsville, they got involved because people in their own families were dealing with cancer.

"Some survived, and some did not," she said. "This event was close to my heart, and it turned out to be a good, fun social time, good for my health and good for the community."

For Cathy Wolfe, being involved in Relay for Life is one more way to recover.

There's a feeling, she says, that she has experienced as a survivor, and she believes many cancer patients have shared.

"Sometimes it's hard to understand why you survived, and some other people didn't," she said. "There are so many feelings and emotions, and you just want to reach out.

"That's why I want to have an open microphone during the relay. People who want to speak deserve to have their stories told. They need to share their struggles, triumphs, and tragedies."

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© 2000 Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc.


Monarch

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International Butterfly Breeders Association, Inc.




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