
History of Amigos
by
dan
—
last modified
Tuesday, June 03, 2008, 04:01 PM
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In 1965, a youth group, recruited by a Houston youth minister named Guy
Bevil, agreed to spend part of their summer in rural parts of Honduras,
fighting a growing epidemic of polio. Although Jonas Salk had
discovered a vaccine against this disease several years before, very
little effort was being made to immunize the less fortunate in Latin
America.
- A miracle happened that summer. Thousands of lives were protected
from the suffering of a crippling disease and a group of young people
discovered the personal value of helping those in need. They returned
to Houston more mature, more confident, secure in the newfound
knowledge that "teenagers" could make a dramatic difference in the
world.
- Thus was the beginning of Amigos de las Américas (AMIGOS). For more
than 35 years, this voluntary, not-for-profit organization has
continued the tradition of selfless service and youth leadership. Over
19,000 volunteers have spent their summers in Latin America working on
public health projects such as community sanitation, human
immunization, animal rabies vaccination, oral rehydration and dental
hygiene education, smoke free stove and teacher housing construction,
reforestation and environmental gardening. They have provided millions
of health services throughout fifteen countries in Latin America.
- As the number of interested young people grew, so did AMIGOS,
enabling it to respond to a wider range of health needs in more
countries in Latin America. A nationwide system of chapters developed
to provide training and support for volunteers across the country. For
those who did not live in an area served by a chapter, a correspondent
program was designed.
- Today, AMIGOS offers a four-rung leadership ladder, which allows
volunteers to progressively increase their leadership skills and level
of responsibility by developing and managing public health projects in
Latin America.
- Each year AMIGOS sends approximately 700 volunteers, representing
all four leadership levels, to live and work with people in Latin
American communities. Life-long friendships have been forged between
AMIGOS volunteers and their adopted communities. Thousands of young
people have learned invaluable lessons about themselves, community
service, and the true meaning of leadership. Most importantly, they
learn that the greatest gift you can give yourself is the smile of
someone you have helped.
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