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| REACHING OUT TEAM |
| The Monument
and Reaching Out Awareness Campaign Team |
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| Dr.
Michael Irving |
| Cheryl Irving |
| Wallace
Clint |
| Mark Conacher |
| Summer
Rea |
| Lynn Pearson |
| Bradfield
Chinhengo |
| Community
Resource/Network |
| Support
& Adjunct team |
| Board of
Directors |
| THE “REACHING
OUT" Monument's Circle of Friends |
| Canadian
Centre for Abuse Awareness |
| Canadian
Red Cross Abuse prevention Services |
| Child
Welfare League of Canada |
| Children’s
Aid Society of Toronto Foundation |
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THE MONUMENT
AND REACHING OUT AWARENESS CAMPAIGN TEAM
The content and people’s activities
for the campaign since its inception and the ChildAbuseMonument.org
Web Site are highly interrelated. The basic nature of
a truly multidisciplinary and holistic approach is that
all components are, by definition, inseparable from
each other. Every attempt is made to recognize all who
participated in the project, unless individuals indicated
they preferred anonymity.
(For more names
of those who have assisted us as part of the "Reaching
Out" team please see: Volunteers
Who Have Given the Gift of Time. If we missed
you please send an e-mail with your name and activity
so we may honour your contribution. )info@ChildAbuseMonument.org
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| MICHAEL
C. IRVING PH.D. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR/ARTISTIC DIRECTOR
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Sculptor/Psychotherapist, Michael
C. Irving, Ph.D. is the initial creator of Reaching
Out and the Child Abuse Survivor Monument Project.
Though his talents are multi-faceted, he has been
active in education, psychotherapy, art, business
and writing throughout his life. He practices private
psychotherapy and works with a wide variety of issues,
though his skill and extensive research is primarily
with survivors of child abuse and child sexual abuse.
A talented sculptor, he has been selling and exhibiting
sculpture in a wide variety of mediums for more than
thirty years. His stone and bronze sculptures are
in private and corporate collections and have been
exhibited internationally.
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Dr. Irving has won awards in art,
community peace building and for his work in protecting
children. He has published and lectured on art, myth
and psychology, and featured in print, radio and television
media. His vision that art and cultural activities can
bring about meaningful understanding and effect substantial
change, personally and socially, guides the focused
determination of Dr. Irving.
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CHERYL
IRVING, CHAIR OF THE BOARD
Cheryl Irving is the major figure
responsible for the successful 1999 Give us a Hand Tour.
She has always been instrumental is guiding the ship
of Reaching Out and The Child Abuse Survivor Monument
Project. For several years she dedicated her time to
seeing the project through its pinnacle phase. Cheryl
is one of three people who are most knowledgeable about
the Reaching Out project and programs. As a psychotherapist
with more than twenty-five years of experience in child
abuse issues, Cheryl brings particular sensitivity to
the project’s needs. She has a keen understanding of
the role of art in personal and social healing and extends
her talents to managing more than a hundred shows, exhibitions
and displays in a variety of venues. Cheryl’s greatest
skills are her abilities to evaluate, analyze, strategic
plan and organize.
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Cheryl created a quilt square
dedicated to those who are
supporters of survivors.
Zac made a quilt square
acknowledging the cycle of
violence can stop with one
generation. |
WALLACE
(AL) CLINT, MARKETING AND PROJECT AMBASSADOR
Al has been managing and working directly with the
public at exhibitions and displays across Canada for
fifteen years. He works as a coordinator, a point
person and a spokesperson. Al’s outgoing personality
and adept ability for conversation and fine tuning
business relationships helps him to be highly successful
in soliciting in-kind donations.
Extensive traveling throughout Canada has been a favorite
pastime of Al’s for more than fifty-five years. His
love of travel and his sensitivity to the community’s
response to the project messages on the concerns of
child abuse, place Al in a unique position to be the
point person traveling with the National Reaching
Out Tour. It is a tremendous asset that Al has expertise
in trucking and heavy machinery operation when managing
the tour displays and vehicles.
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Al retired on a Saturday and by
Sunday was an active member of our team. His presence
was very important to many of the sculptors. For him it
is the most meaningful "work" he has done in
his life. |

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MARK
CONACHER, PROJECTS MANAGER AND MEDIA RELATIONS
Mark was an executive with the Ontario
Public Service for over 20 years including stints with
the Office of the Children's Lawyer, Executive Assistant
to the Attorney General, Executive Director of the Police
Complaints Commissioner's Office and latterly as Director
of Corporate Relations for the Ontario Securities Commission.
He is one of the founders of The Teresa Group, a charitable
agency working with the Hospital for Sick Children to
support families with children with HIV/AID.
Mark's diverse and broad experience and connections
with the business and public sector communities his
been instrumental in facilitating valuable interest
and support. Mark has been key to leading the project
in the phase of turning the projects art and writing
into public awareness materials.
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SUMMER REA,
FUNDRAISER.
Summer Rea comes to us from Oakville
where she ran her own business doing commercial and
residential interior design. As a survivor of childhood
abuse, Summer participated in our workshops and has
her hand on the Survivor Monument. Summer volunteered
at events where the Monument was displayed, speaking
with people that would come up and ask questions,
but she always wanted to ‘do more’, to contribute
in a larger way. After volunteering for the newsletter,
it was suggested to her that she do fundraising for
the Monument Project – she jumped at the opportunity.
Being a survivor of child abuse,
Summer has a vested interest in wanting to put an end
to child abuse. Although skeptics tell her she is unrealistic,
she forges on, believing that all that is necessary
to bring an end to child abuse, is to shine a glaring
light on abuse, so that it becomes socially unacceptable
to allow it to continue. To quote Summer, “In the 60’s,
who would have believed that drinking and driving would
become socially unacceptable? Remember how people would
say,‘Don’t go home now. Well, if you must, at least
have one for the road.’ Drinking and driving wasn’t
frowned upon and yet now, people are embarrassed (as
they should be) if they are found drinking and driving.
The same can be said of smoking. In 1983, when I wouldn’t
let my husband smoke in the house, people were appalled
that I wouldn’t let him smoke in his own house. I responded
with, ‘They are my lungs’. Times are changing and I
am determined that before I die, child abuse of any
kind will no longer be tolerated and victims won’t feel
shame for what was done to them.” Although not a “professional”
fundraiser, Summer has done wonders for furthering our
cause and bringing in donations. We are grateful she
is on our side.
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LYNN PEARSON,
VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR
Lynn has been a professional coordinator
of volunteer resources in a social service setting for
10 years. She was formerly a Volunteer Coordinator for
the York Region Abuse Programme and Manager of Volunteer
and Communications Services for the York Region Children's
Aid Society and currently serves as a volunteer on the
Abuse and Assault Committee of York Region.
Lynn has been an advisor on the support and participation
of volunteers since the early days of the Monument Project.
Lynn was key to the organization and implementation
of the projects activities surrounding participation
in Child Abuse Awareness Month, October 2001. Upon completion
of the many activities of that campaign she began right
away planning and organizing next years Awareness Month
with the projects intention of involving children and
School Boards in the 2002 "Give Us A Hand Campaign".
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BRADFIELD CHINHENGO, WEBMASTER.
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COMMUNITY RESOURCE, NETWORK SUPPORT
AND ADJUNCT SCULPTING TEAM
The Project Team for the National
Awareness Program, Tour and Site Launch is drawn from
many sources. The variety and degree of people involved
speaks of the maturity of the Reaching Out Program.
Hundreds of community participants helped to create
the quilt squares and poems completed on the monument
as well as the images and messages used in the Public
Awareness Campaign.
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Marina and Vagif work with the
meticulous detail of applying quilt squares
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Doug, Debbie and Greg celebrate
their contribution as the sculpting of the "Reaching
Out" nears completion.
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Michael C. Irving, Ph.D., Tsuyoshi
Matsuura, Nina Bregman, Marina Reshetnikova, Doug
Robinson, Debbie O’Roark, Mike Maston, Greg Angus,
Vagif Rakhmanov and Phil Sarazen created an international
representation of highly skilled professional sculptors
and artists who cleaned up the quilt squares, sculpted
the full size monument figures, and applied quilt
boarders and quilt squares to the monument. Their
extraordinary contribution assists in creating the
professionally finished, high quality monument and
widely distributed public awareness materials. Sid
Murray and Garry Bakuniec fabricated custom tools
and industrial patterns specifically for the monument
sculpting.
Cindy Smith
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Agnes Samler, E.D., her Board
of Directors and the many staff of the Toronto Association
for community living have recognized the significance
of education, protection and healing for the most
vulnerable in society. In providing space and many
work environment comforts they have been the largest
contributers to The Survivor Monument Project.
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Art Research and Technology Enterprises
in Lancaster, Pennsylvania are providing the highest
quality art foundry work available. Principles, Steven
Kline, Becky Ault and Mike Cunningham are particularly
proud of their participation in the Reaching Out Monument
and due to their keen interest have contributed more
than is typical with a foundry.
Alistair Coleman and Joost Pelt
of project management firm Mobius Group Inc. and architects
Ferris ad Quinn Associates Inc. and Frank Hamilton have
been involved in site planning for the project. Tom
Anselme, Project Coordinator, Peter Manna Air Canada
Centre and their staff are significantly involved in
final site project planning and construction. Larry
Tanenbaum of Warren Construction brings together resources
for site implementation and construction.
American film maker Laura LeMarr and Canadian senior
award winning Cameraman Phil Pendry have kept a DVD
video archive of the project and materials that are
valuable for Public Service Announcements. Graphic Action,
The Portables, Graphic Alternatives, Harold Toivainen
Photography, Ken Nice of Walt Disney Productions and
Michael C. Irving, Ph.D. created professional award
winning displays that are used in exhibitions and public
awareness campaigns.
The work and donation of these high
quality commercial art people is supported with further
donations for promotional materials and services from
Adanac Press, Business Depot, First Impressions, Kinkos,
Picotte Plastics, Warehouse Plastics, Captain Copy,
CP Used, In-Kind Canada, Design International, DEB
Video Productions. Gwartzman Canvas and Art Supplies,
Peter McCann Architectural Models, Self Serve Copy
Centre, Toronto Image Works, MacWarehouse, Intercity
Printing, Copies With Edge, Artistat, ARRIS Inc.,
Cira Co., Command Print.
Our presentations and displays are
exceptionally successful in their reach, in part, due
to the generous gifts of good quality materials placed
in the hands of highly talented people. This long developed
network is available for our current and future phases
of our project.
AMJ Campbell Van Lines is working
with us to design a drop bed truck/sculpture display
for the National Cross Canada Tour. Many people and
organizations previously mentioned are also involved
in creating the traveling exhibit trailer.
Debbie O’Rourke, Robyn Irving, Ph.D.,
Harold Toivainen, Alison Black, Spencer Whyne, Yuuko
Kanagi and many volunteers have created a large project
photo archive that is valuable for the ChildAbuseMonument.org
Web Site and public awareness campaign content. The
International School of Design and Technology, Hawk
Productions and Molstar Entertainment have taken project
archived materials and used them for Child Abuse Awareness
Public Service Announcements. Clinicians, survivors
and child abuse stakeholders developed and attended
the research forum that generated the Information Highlights
on What Canadians Need to Know about child abuse. These
are used as information boards for quilt square art
exhibitions and are resource materials for public awareness
activities.
Children from across Canada provide visualization drawings
and messages that are used for some of the quilt square
content and are valuable contributions for the public
awareness material content.
A network of musicians associated with Subtonic Monks
volunteer to provide project events with music accompaniment
ranging from high classical, through choral, jazz and
steel band and reggae. Their range of music blends in
with, and enhances, gatherings of doctors and business
people or students and artists. Phil Sarazen, Glenn
Gibson, Jeffory Burke, Peter Jarvis, Rick Monaco, Bridgette
DeBernardi, Phil Morris, Andrew Frost, Glendale Phillips,
Curtis Jones.
A variety of grocery stores, restaurants, high end chefs,
and event organizers have rallied behind our cause to
donate food and supplies for events. A group of project
volunteers turn what is donated into some spectacular
events.
Community Volunteers make significant contribution to
every aspect of the project. The list above attests
to the wide variety of professional and business people
who volunteer to the project. These volunteers make
up an even larger, active group, committed to the Reaching
Out Monument project.
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The Board
of Directors is comprised of an artist, an accountant,
an educator and two psychotherapists. The project
began as a grassroots organization of professionals
and community members with a direct or secondary witness
stakeholder interest in responding to the tragedy
of child abuse. The board is made up of an array individuals
who collectively have an understanding of the basic
activity areas of the project and have a great personal
dedication to seeing the project through its three
millennium phases. The project board has never been
a collection of high-powered business or political
people taking the project under their wings, rather
this has been the role of Circle of Friends.
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THE
REACHING OUT MONUMENT’S CIRCLE OF FRIENDS
Our Circle
Of Friends membership is headed by Sylvia Fraser,
Chair and represent the media, politics, business,
the arts, sports, social activists and the nonprofit
sector. At critical times and developments the Circle
of Friends offer advice, direction and networking.
The Circle of Friends includes:
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COMMUNITY PARTNERS AND SUPPORTERS
The Canadian Centre for Abuse Awareness
provided, for a time our Revenue Canada Charitable Number
Sponsoring. Ellen Campbell, Executive Director and Sanderson
Layng, Chair of the Board of the Canadian Centre for
Abuse Awareness have given the project support, advice
and direction for five years. The Centre has hosted
"Reaching Out" exhibits at their events over
the years and has participated as a partner/sponsor
of our 1999 national tour, awareness campaign and other
local "Reaching Out" activities.
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The Canadian
Red Cross Abuse Prevention Services (APS) were the major
participating partners of the 1999 Give Us A Hand Tour
and public awareness campaign. They provided several
staff people in each of the thirteen cities of the campaign
and organized for us an even larger number of trained
volunteers. APS will continue to participate in another
tour, and in the unveiling and content for building
and developing the ChildAbuseMonument.org Web Site.
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Child Welfare
League of Canada (CWLC) is in discussions with us as
participants in the "Reaching Out" National
Tour and the Monument Unveiling. The launching of the
first Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention Month for the
new millennium took place in conjection with CWLC and
several of its partners. CWLC partners with most of
the agencies and programs in the country responding
to child well being, and child abuse concerns. As partners
they would would be able to provide us with extraordinary
resources and liaisons for various activities associated
with the Reaching Out National Tour, the Monument Unveiling
and the promotion of Child Abuse and Neglect Prevention
Month to a national scale.
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Children’s
Aid Society of Toronto Foundation (CASTF) was a partner
in out 2001 "Reaching Out" launch of the
first child abuse awareness month of the millenniium.
They have used the "Reaching Out" cast paper
quilt sqares for awards and acknowledgement gifts.
We look forward to a continuing significant relationship
with a number of elements of "Reaching Out"
and the potential of its legacy.
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