[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 29 (Wednesday, March 3, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1014-S1015]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
49TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE PEACE CORPS
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, today I rise to celebrate service--
specifically the dedication of Americans volunteering in the Peace
Corps, which this week marks its 49th year of connecting committed
volunteers with meaningful work around the globe.
There are a lot of ways to give of ourselves. We donate food. We
donate money. We donate time. But the Peace Corps takes community
service--global service, really to another level, with volunteers
committing 27 months to improve the quality of life in developing
countries.
Some projects focus on agriculture; others business. Some improve
health, while others emphasize education or the environment, but all
programs build a unique international relationship with a spirit of
volunteer service at its core.
As Chairman of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, I recently saw one
program up close during a congressional delegation I led to Morocco,
which is an active Mediterranean partner country in the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Meetings with local government officials there were informative. And
the briefings from the embassy staff were important. But the time we
spent with a Peace Corps volunteer in rural Aitourir was nothing short
of inspiring.
The Youth Development Program there run by Peace Corps volunteer Kate
Tsunoda, with help from local community volunteers, is giving children
from kindergarten through high school critical education, language, and
art skills.
Inside a small community center, below a library still in need of
dictionaries and elementary schoolbooks, we sat down with a group of
young men, some in college, some recently graduated. In a part of the
world where unemployment tops 15 percent, these are the people one may
see as most susceptible to recruitment by extremists, but not these
men. They spoke of dreams that included higher education, better jobs,
and a transforming of their local towns.
These men credit the Peace Corps program for empowering them and
building their language skills. I credit the Peace Corps for something
even greater--forging international understanding, something the Peace
Corps
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has excelled at now for 49 years in 139 countries through 7,671
volunteers.
On the other side of town, several members of our delegation visited
a start-up small business, the brainchild of retiree and Peace Corps
volunteer Barbara Eberhart, whose second career is dedicated to
empowering the women of Morocco.
The group visited a fabric and embroidery shop developed by a
community of Berber women aided by a microcredit loan and Barbara's
guidance and unbounded energy. These women, unable to read or write and
essentially marginalized in Moroccan society, have formed a cooperative
where they create fine embroidered goods and sell them in local
markets. Their small business not only provides desperately needed
income, but gives these women a stronger sense of themselves, their
community and hope for their future and that of their children.
With Peace Corps volunteers coming from all backgrounds, ages and
various stages of life, this program is as diverse as our country. The
local citizen collaboration inherent in all Peace Corps work helps
build enduring relationships between the United States and Peace Corps
partner countries.
The Peace Corps invests time and talent in other countries, but it
pays dividends back here in the United States as well. Those who are
taught or helped by Peace Corps volunteers are likely to have more
favorable opinions of the United States. More than that, many of the
volunteers themselves are inspired to public service upon their return
to this country, some becoming Governors and Members of Congress,
including our own colleague and fellow Helsinki Commissioner, Senator
Dodd of Connecticut.
I left Aitourir thinking Kate was the exemplary Peace Corps volunteer
with her welcoming smile, passion for service and genuine love for the
Moroccan people. But aware of the success of so many other Peace Corps
programs around the world, I know Kate is one of many volunteers--all
of whom would have left as great an impression.
The Peace Corps is a program that works. Volunteers year in and year
out continue to fulfill the Peace Corps mission of bringing training
and education to interested countries and strengthening understanding
between Americans and our neighbors in the global community.
Congratulations to the Peace Corps for 49 remarkable years. I look
forward to its continued success.
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