Africa: Peace Corps Celebrates Global Volunteerism

Washington — On International Volunteer Day, the Peace Corps recognizes and applauds volunteers' commitment to making a difference around the world.

In Mongolia, Paraguay, Burkina Faso and many other countries, Peace Corps volunteers are increasing awareness of the importance of giving back and encouraging the people in their communities to volunteer.

MONGOLIA

In Mongolia, Peace Corps volunteers Daniel Cherry of Science Hill, Kentucky, and Katie Bowen-Williams of Annapolis, Maryland, are working together to promote a partnership between two local nongovernmental organizations focused on volunteerism and mentorship among Mongolian youth.

Cherry has teamed up with an organization that prepares young Mongolian students to study abroad, and Bowen-Williams is collaborating with a community youth center. By bringing their individual projects together, they implemented a volunteering program that gives young adults the opportunity to mentor children and lead activities at the youth center.

"Mentors build leadership skills, confidence, and gain volunteer experience," Bowen-Williams said. "The young students are able to ask questions of peers and build positive relationships."

PARAGUAY

In Paraguay, Peace Corps volunteer Casey Cutler of Westwood, Massachusetts, helped a local community center secure funding to remodel its soup kitchen after water damage, rodents and poor ventilation forced it to close. The kitchen served approximately 400 hungry children and was staffed by a group of 12 Paraguayan women who volunteered their time to prepare and serve lunch.

Cutler received a USAID-Peace Corps Small Project Assistance grant for the project, and community members held a bake sale to cover additional costs. A local nongovernmental organization donated pots, pans, plates, cups and tables for the new kitchen.

"This small group of women [is] the driving force behind the community and are an inspiration to their neighbors, families, and the hundreds of children that are at the soup kitchen every day witnessing the kindness and selflessness that these women embody," Cutler said.

BURKINA FASO

Peace Corps volunteer Eric Lacey of Yakima, Washington, challenged a group of 56 high school students in Burkina Faso to do 50 hours of community service by the end of the school year to learn firsthand the value of volunteering. By the end of the school year, 28 volunteers reached the goal, and the group totaled more than 2,765 hours of community service.

"We started with several motivated, impressive students and put them in charge of real development activities under the supervision of local experts," Lacey said. "For the first time, the students were tutoring, leading clubs with younger children, learning about HIV and meeting with HIV patients, doing radio shows, translating documents, planting trees, writing a school newspaper, organizing a career fair, teaching literacy to women's groups and more. Some students are even changing their career choice based on what they learned."

President John F. Kennedy established the Peace Corps in 1961 to foster a better understanding among Americans and people of other countries. Since then, more than 215,000 Americans of all ages have served in 139 countries worldwide.

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