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WARSAW: Polish Volunteer Aid To Help The World's Most Needy

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  • WARSAW: Polish Volunteer Aid To Help The World's Most Needy

    POLISH VOLUNTEER AID TO HELP THE WORLD'S MOST NEEDY

    Polish Radio External Service
    http://www.polskieradio.pl/zagranica/news/ artykul85218_Polish_Volunteer_Aid_to_help_the_worl d_s_most_needy.html
    June 20 2008
    Poland

    The Polish Foreign Ministry has just launched a new programme for
    volunteers who provide help to people from the most impoverished
    regions of the world. The government-led scheme is geared to cover
    health and travel expenses for Polish volunteers - ambassadors of
    good will.

    Bogdan Zaryn reports.

    Judyta is just one of 31 Polish volunteers who has traded a vacation
    of fun in the sun on the Baltic, for a lesson of true reality in
    poverty-stricken Armenia under the Foreign Ministry scheme Polish
    Volunteer Aid 2008: 'I am going to Armenia to help doctors set up a
    hospice for the fatally ill.'

    Under the scheme travel expenses, accommodations, vaccines and
    medical check ups are all covered by the Foreign Ministry. In the
    past, NGOs had to fend for themselves in raising revenues for such
    endeavors. Dorota Gadzinowska, from the NGO Polish Humanitarian
    Organization, says that the new scheme will definitely make a
    difference in providing help abroad: 'For the organizations it means
    it's a lot easier to get funds. Now we have a programme and before we
    had to search for it somewhere else. 'For the volunteers I think it is
    important because there is Ministry support, no longer do we have to
    hang on the fringes of society. No longer are volunteers considered
    "weird" people going or "crazy" people, that they have support and
    some recognition hopefully.'

    The Polish Humanitarian Organization has an estimated 200
    volunteers. Collecting funding, providing Trainer workshops and going
    abroad to assist civil societies are just some of the activities on
    a long roster. Minorities expert Marek Szopski thinks that Polish
    volunteers can be crucial in cultivating future good Samaritans: 'In
    the past there really wasn't that much official support for volunteer
    action. Unusually that was supported or funded from other sources. I
    see the change as a very positive one because it will certainly use
    the energy and the talent of a lot of particularly young people. That
    is something that actually considering their commitment and usually
    pretty good understanding and intellectual capacities, I think that
    Poland can contribute quite a lot. There are young people who find
    their individual responsibilities much more shouldered. They can
    display their imitative and their talent which often is curbed in
    the local conditions.'

    The Foreign Ministry Polish Volunteer Aid 2008 plans to send Polish
    relief to Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe.
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