PHNX goes CADUS … but why?
Published on 29. August 2015
from CADUS-PR

phnx-goes-cadus-but-why-feature-cadus_distel_foto_homepage-8f28a589
18 months ago, when we first started, everything happened very quickly. The kid needed a name. We didn't waste a lot of time and thought, too much had to be done… events went head over heels. Anyway, content was more important than the cover. Who cares about the wrapping?We still put content over cover, of course. However, it didn't take long until we hit those limits that a young humanitarian aid organisation hits, when it doesn't have a clear concept about its public presence. With the only positive reference to your own name being the overworked “risen from the ashes”-mythology – apart from the fact that MacGyver too worked for the Phoenix Foundation – it was difficult to work longterm. And eventually we recognized that while content indeed prevails over cover, it is definitely the cover that assists when it comes to conveying the content.
At least if you want to leave an enduring impression. CADUS. Derived from thistle (lat. Carduus), also to be found growing in Rojava. Like its botanical role model, CADUS stands for resiliency, perseverence and the ability to bloom where war and destruction have become the center of human survival.Whether we can live up to that standard… remains to be seen. We already love our new name and design… even without MacGyver.
Published
Author: by Jan Kout
Three weeks as a medic in Mosul, three weeks in a warzone.
"[...], despite the many dead and the impression that my own work would be nothing but a drop in the ocean. Even though you can always discuss the political impact of humanitarian missions, their meaningfulness to me is justified and indisputable. It is a sign of solidarity, of not looking the other way. If you think a …
Between lust for life and war
"People are celebrating in order to forget and enjoying life because many know that these moments are fleeting. Perhaps they also try to push away the fact that, with all the security and quality of life there is now, Erbil would almost have suffered the same fate as Mosul in 2014." Kris, Head of Mission in Erbil, is …
Our personal Easter present: we finally arrived
We have been fairly quiet since the “Mobile Hospital” left for northern Iraq even though a lot has happened. But the most important news is that we have successfully arrived.




