Friendship Force International

- 03.16

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Friendship Force International is a non-profit international cultural exchange organization focused on promoting understanding, cultural education and citizen diplomacy through homestay travel and personal friendships. The organization is based in more than 60 countries and in six continents, with 15,000 active members and over 300 programs, called Journeys, taking place each year.

Friendship Force International, or FFI, was founded in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, by Rev. Wayne Smith and unveiled on March 1, 1977, by President Jimmy Carter at a White House gathering of state governors. First Lady Rosalynn Carter served as Honorary Chairperson until 2002.

In 1992, Friendship Force International was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for its work building understanding between the people of the United States and the Soviet Union amidst a tense international climate.


Friendship Home Thanks Lincoln Orthopaedic Center
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History

Establishment

The first seed for the idea of an international citizens' international cultural exchange program in which travelers from around the world could learn about other countries and cultures through reciprocal home stays was envisioned in 1973 by Presbyterian minister Wayne Smith (1934-2004), a former Christian missionary to Brazil. The Georgia minister met for the first time Jimmy Carter, then Governor of Georgia and his wife Rosalynn Carter and related to them his idea for a citizens' exchange, bringing Americans to Brazil and Brazilians to America with all staying in the private homes of hosts so that each could better learn about the other.

A first exchange was organized, with a charter jet taking 200 Georgians to Brazil -- including in the group the state's first lady, Rosalynn Carter -- with 200 Brazilians making the alternate trip, with the Governor putting up visitors in the Governor's mansion. The program was regarded as a success by its participants and Smith slowly began to envision a permanent non-governmental organization for the coordination of similar trips between citizens from various nations of the world.

Smith's idea saw fruition in 1977 with the formal establishment of Friendship Force International (FFI), with headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, with the group introduced to the world on March 1, 1977, by then President Carter at a White House gathering of state governors.

Owing to his early and hearty support of the concept and the broad publicity he generated, Jimmy Carter has been recognized by some as a co-founder of the organization. Accentuating this connection, First Lady Rosalynn Carter served as the group's Honorary Chairperson until 2002.

Development

For the first five years, FFI used chartered airplanes to shuttle delegations of 150 to 400 visitors between partner cities. The first exchange involved 762 travelers from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England, and Atlanta.

In 1982, the plan was changed from large simultaneous exchanges to smaller one-way visits using scheduled airlines, but retaining the basic homestay theme, supported by local clubs in the host countries. Expanding from a few large simultaneous exchanges annually in the early years, Friendship Force now organizes approximately 300 smaller programs, called Journeys, of 20 to 25 visitors each year. In 2016, 4708 participants, called "ambassadors," traveled on over 300 Journeys, with thousands of club members hosting visitors in their homes.

In recognition of its work to build understanding between the peoples of the United States and the Soviet Union during the last years of the Cold War, Friendship Force International was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 1992.

Friendship Force today

Today, Friendship Force International conducts almost 300 programs, called Journeys, every year, in over 350 communities in 60 countries.

Since late 2015 the current President and CEO is Jeremi Snook, a former Chief Operating Officer of Spaulding Youth Center, a leading community-based provider of educational services for children with neurological or behavioral challenges.


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Footnotes

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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