This store in New York lets you buy Christmas presents for refugees

Shayan Oman, a visitor from Perth, Australia, poses for photos during a snow storm in New York's Times Square January 26, 2015. A massive blizzard slammed into the U.S. Northeast on Monday, canceling thousands of flights, curtailing mass transit and closing hundreds of schools, as officials warned that the storm could dump as much as 3 feet of snow on the region.  REUTERS/Adrees Latif  (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENVIRONMENT) - GM1EB1R0LZ801

Choose Love lets you buy emergency blankets, solar lamps and legal services for those in need. Image: REUTERS/Adrees Latif

Kate Whiting
Senior Writer, Forum Agenda
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Tills in Europe will be ringing loudly from Black Friday onwards, as consumers make the most of pre-Christmas sales.

But there are two new stores where spending money will leave you empty handed.

Choose Love is a pop-up store run by the charity Help Refugees. After a successful opening in London in 2017, which raised over £750,000, the original shop is back, with a new branch opening in New York on Giving Tuesday, 27 November.

The stores invite shoppers to “shop your heart out, leave with nothing, and feel the love”. They present a range of essential items and services - from emergency blankets to school bags and legal fees for a separated family. Once ‘purchased’, these will be distributed by the charity and its partners across Europe and the Middle East.

Image: Help Refugees/Choose Love

Choose Love will also offer bundles designed to meet specific needs - such as for mothers and babies - as well as sleeping bags and support for the homeless in the UK and the US.

Shoppers are encouraged to interact with the items available and find out why they’re needed - and the stores are divided into sections exploring different stages of a refugee’s journey: survival (emergency blankets, warm clothing and food); shelter (tents, sleeping bags and hygiene packs) and future (educational materials, a dictionary and keys to a home).

Record crisis

In 2017, according to the UN Refugee Agency’s Global Trends study, there were record levels of displacement - with 68.5 million people forcibly driven from their homes, more than the population of Thailand. That is one person being displaced every two seconds.

The study found 25.4 million refugees had fled their countries to escape conflict and persecution, 2.9 million more than in 2016, and the biggest increase the UNHCR had seen in a single year.

Image: Help Refugees/Matthew Firpo

Last year, the London store and its online version helped provide refugees with:

- 800,000 nutritious meals

- 3,556 nights of accommodation

- 25,000 essential winter items for adults, which included 5,000 blankets and 11,000 items of clothing

- 100,000 essentials for babies and children including 77,000 packs of nappies.

Josie Naughton CEO of Help Refugees says: “Last Christmas, the shop became a beacon of compassion in the heart of central London. Choose Love helped people from all walks of life feel empathy for refugees – and do something practical to help.”

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Global support

The store opening comes as the world moves one step closer to agreeing the UN’s global compact on refugees, which was set in train by the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants.

Adopted in September 2016 by the UN General Assembly, the declaration recognized unprecedented levels of human mobility and stated: “We acknowledge a shared responsibility to manage large movements of refugees and migrants in a humane, sensitive, compassionate and people-centred manner.

“We will do so through international cooperation, while recognizing that there are varying capacities and resources to respond to these movements.”

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In a speech to the UN General Assembly in October, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, said: “Refugees, if given the opportunity, can also be catalysts of humanity, solidarity, of a sense of shared purpose in society – in other words, of all that binds us together and makes us stronger in facing global challenges.”

As world leaders struggle to find policies and strategies to cope with the unprecedented flow of people, individuals now have the opportunity to show how much they care about the plight of refugees by buying a Christmas gift of real worth.

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