Amigos de las Américas

Amigos de las Americas
Founder Guy Bevil Jr.
Location
Area served
Latin America
Volunteers
Over 27,000
Mission Amigos de las Americas inspires and builds young leaders through collaborative community development and immersion in cross-cultural experiences
Formerly called
Amigos de Honduras

Amigos de las Américas (or AMIGOS) is a nonprofit organization based in Houston, Texas with 25 chapters across the USA. The Vision of AMIGOS is "A world where each young person becomes a life-long catalyst for social change." AMIGOS works towards this vision by inspiring and building young leaders through collaborative community development and immersion in cross-cultural experiences.

History

AMIGOS was founded in 1965 when 29-year-old Guy Bevil Jr., youth pastor at River Oaks Baptist Church in Houston led a team of 181 teenagers and young adults into Honduras to administer polio vaccinations. The group took donations of supplies, recruited 36 doctors, and learned how to give the vaccines by practicing on themselves. Many participants made the 1,500-mile trip by truck in order to ship the supplies into rural Honduras. The first summer in Honduras, volunteers inoculated over half a million people.

Upon their arrival home, Bevil and his group founded Amigos de Honduras, which grew to be Amigos de las Américas within the next year. Over half of the original participants applied to return the next summer. For the following two decades, AMIGOS focused primarily on administering vaccinations.[1]

AMIGOS has expanded to many different countries including Brazil, Costa Rica, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Uruguay, The Dominican Republic, Mexico, and Peru, though some countries do not currently have active projects.

Other founders recognized by AMIGOS are H. Kirby Atwood, Sr., Searcy Bracewell, Raymond Cook, Ed Frank, Jr., Carlos R. Hamilton, MD, Victor Huvelle, Mariann and John Marshall, Ed Morris, and Wilson J. Pais.

Today

Amigos de las Américas is a non-religious, non-governmental, non-profit organization based out of Houston, Texas. AMIGOS sends high-school and college age volunteers to countries in Latin America where they live for six to eight weeks with a host family in a small community.

Volunteers are partnered with one or two other volunteers in carrying out health, education, and environmental programs, ranging from latrine construction to formation of youth groups to teaching HIV prevention and dental hygiene. AMIGOS offers a range of programs that volunteers can participate in - Healthy Households/Healthy communities, Youth-to-Youth Development, Digital Media/Technology and Community Nutrition/Agriculture. The programs are carried out in partnership with partner agencies, which have included Save the Children, Plan International and the governments of the various countries above. Asset-based community development is at the core of AMIGOS projects.

Each year, over 700 young people take part in AMIGOS' various Latin American programs. The AMIGOS International Office hopes to double that number within the next ten years- by its 50th Anniversary. Over 24,000 people have participated in the program since it began.

Program organization

The international office is still located in Houston and employs a small staff year-round to manage the programs. Sara Nathan is the President and CEO.

AMIGOS encourages returning project volunteers to take leadership roles within the organization. Each project (generally organized geographically and thematically) is led by a Project Director (PD), who is aided by an Associate Project Director (APDs). Senior Project Supervisors (SPSs) and Project Supervisors (P-Sups) oversee individual community projects and act as liaisons between the senior staff and the volunteers. Veteran volunteers can also stay active by joining a local chapter board.

Chapters

State City
Arizona Phoenix
Tucson
California East Bay
Marin
Peninsula
Sacramento
San Diego
Santa Clara
San Francisco
Colorado Denver
DC Washington
Illinois Chicago North
Urban Chicago
Kansas/Missouri Kansas City
Massachusetts Boston
Minnesota Minneapolis/St. Paul
New Mexico Albuquerque
New York New York City
Ohio Kent
Oregon Portland
Texas Austin
Houston
Utah Salt Lake City
Washington Seattle
Wisconsin Madison

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.