we are proudly giving back with i=change.
bon label donates $1 from every sale and you get to choose which of our three charities benefits from your purchase.
the three charities we have chosen to support are doing good for women, girls and our land; including -
the asylum seeker resource centre
women & children who have fled violence and persecution in their own countries are especially vulnerable upon arrival into australia.
the asylum seeker resource centre has supported and empowered over 3000 refugees seeking asylum every year, helping to provide a warm bed, food, education, employment support and much more.
the asrc gives these women & children hope for a safer, brighter future. they are truly good for womankind.
$15 gives a person seeking asylum in australia a night of safe housing
greening australia has embarked upon one of the world's largest & most ambitious ecological & restoration projects - to restore 330,000 hectares of native trees across australia by 2030.
working with traditional owners, scientists & local land managers, 500 million trees & shrubs will be planted to store carbon, create quality habitat for native wildlife & restore degraded farmland.
the urgency & scale of this project has been escalated in the wake of the 2019/2020 summer bushfires, and we especially feel the need to support this vital project.
girls in the slums of calcutta face a bleak future - rarely sent to school and too often forced into child marriage, child labour or sex trafficking.
by providing a quality education & academic tutoring, her future coalition ensures that girls have a chance of breaking the cycle of poverty & exploitation.
the commitment to these girls is long term. many who began her future programs as children have gone on to college and are now empowered to transform their families and communities from within.
empowering women & girls is proven to be one of the greatest drivers of economic growth & social stability worldwide and we are particularly proud to play a part.
$1.50 pays for a day of high quality education for a girl in a calcutta slum