Friendst-shirt - Show Me Your Pitties Vintage Shirt
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In keeping with the Show Me Your Pitties Vintage Shirt in addition I really love this LVMH-owned beauty brand’s commitment to increasing its sustainability efforts, specifically around bees which have been a part of its heritage since its inception in 1828, Guerlain has partnered with OFA and UNESCO on an ambitious program to train 50 women beekeepers from different biospheres over five years. The effort, which launched in June, aims to repopulate 125 million bees by 2025. In addition to helping reverse the devastating consequences climate change, pesticide use, and invasive species have had on the honeybee population, the program is also designed to create female-led employment and education opportunities in selected micro-economies. Following the training, Guerlain will outfit each participant with 50 hives and local swarms in their home countries. “It’s insane that we are often still in discussion about why girls’ education is important. It’s angering that we have to keep explaining this,” laments Jolie, whose work as a Special Envoy to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has given her a firsthand look at how lifting women up can support entire communities. “These kinds of things make a difference in how women can become less vulnerable and in some cases even survive this life.”
Hindered by COVID travel restrictions, the Show Me Your Pitties Vintage Shirt in addition I really love this program’s first class—women from different backgrounds, including a horse physiologist and a TV producer—was predominantly comprised of eager students from France who ranged in age from 25 to 49, and who were united by their collective passion for bees. “When I learned that bees are able to communicate with each other about where to find food, and that we as humans have studied bees long enough to be able to crack that code, to understand what bees are talking about, this is when I first fell in love with them,” says Aggelina Kanellopoulou, founder and director of The Bee Camp, an Athens-based NGO that works on the protection of bees in Greece through activities that raise awareness around conservation. “For me, it’s like interspecies communication which is deep,” the 30-year-old says, her ivory cargo pants and navy blue OFA logo polo shirt baking in the hot July sun. “The life of a beekeeper is not easy,” Kanellopoulou explains of one of the major takeaways from her experience in the program, which saw her rise at 6:30 a.m. and travel up to four hours to inspect the health of some of OFA’s 2,000 hives. “These people work super hard, and what you put in is not necessarily what you’re going to get out of it,” she continues of the extremely physical labor that is often impacted by circumstances outside of your control. But the work is crucial to the survival of the planet, and of our species.
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