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Africare is a United States based non-profit organization specialized in development aid for Africa. Africare was founded in 1970 as a private non profit organization by former Peace Corps members who had worked in eastern Niger. Since that time, communities in 35 nations Africa-wide have benefited from direct Africare assistance. During the fiscal year of 2004, Africare supported more than 150 programs in 26 African countries.
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Africare is a leading U.S. non-profit organization specializing in development and aid to Africa. It is also the oldest and largest Africa-American led organization in that field. Since its founding in 1970, Africare has delivered more than $710 million in assistance and support through over 2,500 projects to 36 countries Africa-wide. The organization employs over 1,000 people,largely indigenous to the countries and to the areas where it works.
Africare's programs address needs in the principal areas of food security and agriculture; health and HIV/AIDS; water and sanitation; and emergency and humanitarian aid. Africare also supports water resource development, environmental management, basic education, microenterprise development, governance initiatives and women's empowerment.
Africare works to improve the quality of life for the people of Africa.
Africare works in partnership with African communities to achieve healthy and productive societies. For Africare, communities are the core of all development activities. Africare believes that strong communities are the foundation for the people of Africa to achieve sustainable development.
Africare is guided by three basic principals:
As of 2008, Africare operates programs in the following countries:
Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Uganda, Angola, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, Niger, Rwanda, Senegal
Countries assisted in prior years:
Burundi, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Cote d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, Egypt, Eritrea, The Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Mauritania, Namibia, Somalia, Sudan
Africare is the oldest and largest African American organization in the field. And Africa is Africare's specialty. In 1970, when Africare was founded, West Africa was in the midst of one of the most severe droughts in its history. Among those providing help -- medical aid to the Maine-Soroa town Hospital in Diffa, Niger -- were 17 American volunteers, led by William O. Kirker, M.D., and Barbara Jean A. Kirker, who named their group "Africare". The Kirkers themselves had been working in Africa, to improve African health care, since 1966, but eventually, they needed more support. Diori Hamani, then president of the Republic of Niger, appealed to the United States on the effort's behalf, asking : "Why don't black Americans, whose ancestors came from the continent, respond to the needs in Africa?"[citation needed]
C. Payne Lucas, then the director of the Peace Corps Office of Returned Volunteers in Washington DC had served previously in Niger and knew the president from that time. In dialogue there emerged was a concept for an assistance organization that was progressive, culturally respectful, and uniquely, multiracial in origin as well as Africa wide in scope.
In 1970, Africare was incorporated in Hawaii, with Kirker as its founder and first president. In 1971, Africare was permanently re-incorporated in Washington, D.C.; Lucas became the executive director (later, that title changed to "president"), and Kirker joined the Board. In addition to Kirker and Lucas, other incorporators were Oumarou G. Youssoufou, a Nigerien diplomat, and Joseph C. Kennedy, Ph.D., then at Peace Corps. It had a $39,550 budget, a U.S. headquarters in the basement of Lucas's home and one project in Niger.
Africare concentrated on helping to alleviate the effects of severe drought in West Africa. By the mid 1970s, Africare had shifted its emphasis to development programs in the areas of food, water, the environment and health--expanding in the late 1980s to include microenterprise development, governance, basic education and, tragically, HIV/AIDS response. Africare provides emergency humanitarian aid as well.
In mid June 2002, C. Payne Lucas retired after 31 years as president and Africare welcomed as its third president, Julius E. Coles, a 28 year veteran of the U.S. Agency for International Development, the first director of the Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center at Howard University and, most recently, director of the Andrew Young Center for International Affairs at Morehouse College.
By 1997, Africare had expanded to the point where President Nelson Mandela of South Africa stated,
"I regard Africare as one of America's greatest gifts to Africa. Your work, in every corner of our great continent, has sustained our own commitment to building a strong and free Africa."
To date, Africare has delivered more than $710 million in assistance—representing over (2,000 projects need to update) and millions of beneficiaries—to 36 countries Africa wide. Today, Africare’s 150 plus programs reach families and communities in 26 nations in every region of Sub-Saharan Africa.
In the area of health, special achievements have been in child survival, river blindness control, malaria prevention, national level pharmaceutical management and HIV/AIDS response at the grassroots. Africare has constructed thousands of wells and irrigation systems. Food production, food monetization and food security continue to represent major focal points of Africare’s work, as does assistance to small scale entrepreneurs, from edible oil producers throughout Southern Africa to women farmers and women owned co ops Africa wide.
In Zambia, where it has worked since 1978, Africare has worked in several hundred communities. It has been especially active in helping rural groups, particularly women and youth, to generate income and to support community needs. These initiatives have encouraged the cultivation and processing of sunflower seed into edible oil, renewable use of forest resources and marketing of honey and furniture, support for orphans and vulnerable children, mobilization of adolescents to educate peers about HIV/AIDS and development of community schools.
Africare has worked in the Sahelian drought of the 1970s; the Somalia refugee crisis and the Africa wide drought of the 1980s; since the 1990s, crises brought on by warfare in Angola, Somalia, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Rwanda, Burundi and elsewhere; and since 2002, the resurgence of widespread famine in Southern Africa and the Horn of Africa.
Throughout Sierra Leone's ten-year civil war (1991-2001) as much as one-fifth of the population were internally displaced. Africare's intervention began with addressing the immediate food and medical needs of the IDP population, and subsequently promoting self-reliance and self-sufficiency of that population. Activities have included farmer self-help assistance, child immunization, and health care for pregnant women. Work towards the restoration of human dignity and the independence of those who were physically, psychologically, and economically affected by the war was a direct result of Africare's intervention. Africare continues working through its USAID-funded CORAD project, to improve health conditions and re-establish livelihood's through agricultural activities for vulnerable women and children. Africare has used the inclusive model of organizing and empowering village-level groups that include members who represent every segment of the community.
Before Africare came into being, African Americans donated relatively little to Africa (except through the church) because there was no single agency that truly sought to create a bridge to "the motherland".[citation needed] Africare set out to create that bridge, and it has had noteworthy success. Among Africare's most loyal donors have been African-American churches, community groups, social clubs, sororities and fraternities, and more. Sums donated by African Americans have ranged from annual individual gifts of $10 or $25 to the African-American Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority's total giving, over 15 years, of $1.4 million. Through numerous Africare-sponsored events, African Americans have had the chance to learn about Africa and to get to know African people. From the other side, through its African Diplomatic Outreach Program, Africare has arranged monthly discussions between the African diplomatic corps in Washington, D.C., and top-level American experts in fields of concern to Africa. The meetings have facilitated working relationships between African ambassadors and their U.S. counterparts, in turn advancing Africa's cause.
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