Introduction:
World Vision is a non-profit organization, founded in the early 1950’s by Dr. Bob Pierce. Pierce’s main goal was to help orphaned children from the Korean War; having travelled extensively through China in 1947. It was then and there that he began his missionary work, providing monthly donations for one little girl in particular and ‘planting the seeds’ for the future of World Vision itself.
World Vision’s first children’s sponsorship program was launched in Korea in 1953, soon expanding throughout Asia, Latin America, Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East. In the 60’s and 70’s, World Vision’s global relief efforts continued to grow, helping communities who were suffering from disaster.
Being able to provide food, clothing and medical supplies has always been possible by way of contributions and donations from individuals and businesses wanting to help.
Sixty years later, World Vision continues to address global issues of poverty and disaster, not just focusing on the needs of the individual, but the needs of communities and countries as a whole (Ethiopia: famine of the 80’s, Uganda: children orphaned by AID’s epidemic in the 90’s).
World Vision is considered by many to be ‘a voice for the poor’; offering support for those without a voice where there may be political and social unrest. Conflict diamonds, child soldiers and civil war in Africa are only a small example of some of the extreme issues spanning the globe today that World Vision is a part of.
Through continued sponsorship efforts, World Vision’s relief now reaches close to 100 countries and offers a change in life for millions; drilling wells for clean water, training programs in agriculture allowing families and communities to b...
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...ld-vision-statement-regarding-the-bangladesh-tragedy http://www.huffingtonpost.com/valerie-tarico/many-dont-know-world-visi_b_308362.html http://saskatoon.ctvnews.ca/world-vision-1.1122856 http://www.christianpost.com/news/world-vision-works-to-end-global-water-crisis-with-innovative-manual-pump-92440/ Educational Institutes: https://www.ulife.utoronto.ca/organizations/view/id/2702 YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Vp6wp2zwkmM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc2L2DkIK-w&NR=1&feature=fvwp http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f2ne3QvLtrk Online Job banks: http://ca.indeed.com/World-Vision-Canada-jobs-in-Toronto,-ON http://www.wowjobs.ca/jobs-world+vision+canada-jobs
Blogs: http://goodreasonblog.blogspot.ca/2011/03/i-dumped-my-world-vision-kid.html http://blog.worldvision.org/ http://worldvisionnews.wordpress.com/ http://wvindia.blogspot.ca/
The proliferation of crises around the world has led to a prominent increase in the amount of humanitarian aid needed. Humanitarian aid work represents not only compassion, but commitment to support innocent populations that have experienced sudden or on-going tragedies. Some of these tragedies include: malnutrition, genocide, diseases, torture, poverty, war, natural disasters, government negligence, and unfortunately much more. There is no doubt that these tragedies are some of the world’s toughest problems to solve as they are often complex, multifaceted and require diligence and patience. For this reason, being a humanitarian aid worker is more than a profession, it is a lifestyle that requires a sharp distinction between one’s work and
Peter Singer’s article, “The Singer Solution to World Poverty”, highlights the need to prevent absolute poverty in developing countries. An estimate of one billion people live in “a condition of life characterized with malnutrition, illiteracy, disease, squalid surroundings, high infant mortality and low life expectancy” according to Wesley Bagby (pp. 29). As a victim of Sudan’s civil war and a former refugee, I totally understand what it means to be homeless and street child. The hardship endured by homeless and street children on a daily basis is unbelievable; a day without food to eat, a day without clean water to drink, a day without shelter, a day without cloth, a day without medical care, and a day without security. There is no doubt that a
Christian Response to Third World Poverty and Injustice b) Every disciple, every authentic Christian, must be on the road: not yet arrived or perfect, but moving, striving, falling and restarting in hope, and this ethos applies to the tackling of Third World poverty and injustice. Over one billion people are living in poverty today. The gap between rich and poor is getting wider. All over the world, disparities between rich and poor, even in the wealthiest of nations is rising sharply.
There are many areas of the world where the most basic needs like clean drinking water, proper sanitation and medical care are just not available. When disaster strikes, the people living in these already disadvantaged areas are thrust into situations where death is almost always imminent. Reach Out WorldWide (“ROWW”) was started by a group of 6 men in California. They flew to Haiti and volunteered to help in whatever way they could after a massive earthquake devastated the country on January 12, 2010. While working in Haiti as medical aid volunteers, the group recognized the need for skilled people, supplies and urgency for a faster response when natural disasters strike.
Smith, Stephen C. Ending Global Poverty: A Guide to What Works. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. Print.
During the fourteenth century, the facilitation of trade and communication throughout Eurasia caused the Mongols to unintentionally expedite the spread of the bubonic plague in South- western China causing the disappearance of Christianity. However, in the sixteenth century, when the world economy began to stabilize, Roman Catholic missionaries made their way throughout Asia to win converts and set up churches, monasteries, and Christian communities by using European science, technology, and mechanics to piqué Chinese and Japanese curiosity. Without any adaptations of Proselytism “off limits”, it ensured the rise of Christianity in Asia after the demographic recovery of Europe. Missions conducted by notable Jesuits, such as, Matteo Ricci made Christianity both accessible and more appealing to the culturally and ethnically diverse population of Asia through language and technology while St. Francis Xavier, another missionary, took a similar approach but focused more on the arguments placed against Christianity. Matteo Ricci, an Italian Jesuit priest, traveled from Portugal in trying to persuade China into adopting the Christian doctrine. Ricci and his cohorts were the first missionaries to make significant progress in China during the seventeenth century. Although he failed to evangelize all of China, his method of introducing Christianity created a significant cultural impact. These impacts required him to learn and be familiar with the Chinese language. Upon arrival to China, Ricci learned “to speak the native language and to read their books,” (Ricci, 271) which helped him to communicate with the locals about European science, technology, and mechanics. The document entitled, “A Discourse of the Kingdom of China” by Matteo Ricci...
In response to the recent failure of the international community to prevent the famine crisis in the Horn of Africa since July 2011, Suzanne Dvorak the chief executive of Save the Children wrote that, “We need to provide help now. But we cannot forget that these children are wasting away in a disaster that we could - and should - have prevented” she added, “The UN estimates that every $1 spent in prevention saves $7 in emergency spending.” (Dvorak, 2011).
...nd usually the institutions and churches do not have the resources to provide a safety net for starving people. What we have found when working with the World Bank is that the poor man's safety net, the best investment, is school feeding. And if you fill the cup with local agriculture from small farmers, you have a transformative effect. Many kids in the world can't go to school because they have to go beg and find a meal. But when that food is there, it's transformative. It costs less than 25 cents a day to change a kid's life.” (Sheeran)
Philosophy Public Affairs 32, no. 2 (1995). 4 (2004): 357-383. Singer, Peter; Miller, Richard "“What Duties Do People in Rich Countries Have to Relieve World Poverty”."
With me as her inspiration, my sister, KeAbnesh Girma Zewdie, established the New Vision Children Foundation (NVCF), a New York based non-for-profit, which focuses on bringing medical attention to disadvantaged children with severe visual impairments. As a result, I also became the spokesperson of the foundatio.
Poverty has conquered nations around the world, striking the populations down through disease and starvation. Small children with sunken eyes are displayed on national television to remind those sitting in warm, luxiourious houses that living conditions are less than tolerable around the world. Though it is easy to empathize for the poor, it is sometimes harder to reach into our pocketbooks and support them. No one desires people to suffer, but do wealthy nations have a moral obligation to aid poor nations who are unable to help themselves? Garrett Hardin in, "Lifeboat Ethics: The Case Against Helping The Poor," uses a lifeboat analogy to expose the global negative consequences that could accompany the support of poor nations. Hardin stresses problems including population increase and environmental overuse as downfalls that are necessary to consider for the survival of wealthy nations. In contrast, Peter Singer's piece, "Rich and Poor," remarks on the large differences between living conditions of those in absolute poverty with the wealthy, concluding that the rich nations possess a moral obligation to the poor that surpasses the risks involved. Theodore Sumberg's book, "Foreign Aid As Moral Obligation," documents religious and political views that encourage foreign aid. Kevin M. Morrison and David Weiner, a research analyst and senior fellow respectively at the Overseas Development Council, note the positive impact of foreign aid to America, a wealthy nation. Following the examination of these texts, it seems that not only do we have a moral obligation to the poor, but aiding poor nations is in the best interest of wealthy nations.
Nearly 50,000 people, including 30,000 children, die each day due to poverty-related problems and preventable disease in underdeveloped Countries. That doesn’t include the other millions of people who are infected with AIDS and other incurable diseases. Especially those living in Sub-Saharan Africa (70%), or “the Third-World,” and while we fight to finish our homework, children in Africa fight to survive without food, or clean water. During the next few paragraphs I will give proof that poverty and disease are the two greatest challenges facing under developed countries.
. World Vision was founded by Reverend Robert Pierce and is funded by grants and donations made by individuals and or families sponsoring a child who lives in high-poverty environments across the world. Because World Vision International is mainly based on child sponsorship, donations, and volunteers, the only important policy they focus on is the Privacy Policy. They are committed to keeping the privacy of their donors and sponsors but warns that they may share some information history to a third party in order to efficiently find other
About UNICEF, I expected that it was just responsible for focusing on the needs and rights of the child over the world. In fact, its aim was more than that it was also to promote the equal rights of women and girls and to support their full participation in the political, social, and economic development of their communities. In instance, celebrating annually the International Day of the Girl Child on October 11 to highlight issues concerning the gender inequality facing young girls. In addition, the organization 's extent is much wider than I anticipated. For example:
The World View is a global concept. It defines our standard of how things are or should be in the world we live in. It makes up our rules of how we and others should act and our values and morals to behave in the world. For most of the people, the world view is a vague set of rules that we have unconsciously adopted from the society. Generally our family, religious groups and society seldom allow us for making creating our own. Through our intellect, we can create aspects of our world view. In short the World View is a filter through which we make judgments of others and ourselves.