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Contact:
Dave
Email: dave@pon.net
Polish People-to-People
Partnership Celebrates
American Roots and a 20-Year Run
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(MAY 2010) –
Over 2,600 American volunteers are
credited for helping write a prosperous new chapter for Polish
students through an innovative English teaching program. Working
in service teams of 10 to 15, for two or three weeks at a time,
volunteers from states across the nation lent their
conversational skills to rural classrooms in central and
southern Poland out of friendship. Siedlce Governor Zygmunt
Wielogorski wants the country to know thousands of Polish
children and young adults speak English now because of the
American volunteers, and their futures are secure because of
that.
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In October, 2010,
Polish national and district officials will formally celebrate their
20-year development partnership with the internationally recognized
Global Volunteers, a nonprofit, nonsectarian development assistance
organization in consultative status with the United Nations and UNICEF,
responsible for dispatching these volunteers to Poland.
With an eye toward European Union and NATO membership in 1990, Rural
Solidarity (the rural arm of Lech Walesa's Solidarity Union), asked
Global Volunteers to foster its entry into the west by sending
volunteers to teach conversational English. At that time, Glboal
Volunteers was sustaining development programs in Africa, Asia, the
Carribean and Central America. It was the organization's entry into
European volunteer service and conversational English assistance.
Now, two decades later, a decorous Gala celebration is planned for
October to mark this unprecedented relationship providing more than
200,000 classroom and small group hours enabling an entire generation of
young Polish people to confidently speak conversational English, along
with 10,000 hours served in afterschool programs and working with
disabled children and adults. Fifteen volunteers from six states will
join Global Volunteers President and CEO Bud Philbrook and Vice
President for International Operations Michelle Heerey to represent the
2,600 former volunteers at the Gala. A standard Global Volunteers
service program will complete the three-week celebration.
?The idea of teaching of conversational English came from Poland in 1989
-- a time of changes in our country when Poland became a democracy,?
said Marek Blaszczyk, who hosts the volunteer teams on behalf of the
Siedlce District and Governor Wielogorski. Bud Philbrook, CEO of Global
Volunteers, asked how his organization could help. The answer was - We
have enough hands to work but we need to speak English to work with
Western Europe and the U.S.
Mr. Philbrook said he couldn't promise teachers but he could engage
native English speakers to help. Since that time the service program has
grown and has been very successful in Poland. It also has become a model
service program for other countries that wish to speak English.
During the school year volunteers assist teachers - as classroom
resources, and in the summer months, the teams teach at popular summer
camps in the mornings, prepare lessons in the afternoon and join
students for singing, skits, dancing and games in the evening.
Volunteers stay in Zakopane in southern Poland or at Reymontowka, a
sprawling manor house once owned by the family of Wladyslaw Reymont,
winner of the 1924 Nobel prize for his novel 'Peasants'. Reymontowka,
which is located in the small farming village of Chlewiska in the
peaceful Polish countryside, also serves as an arts and culture center
that hosts several concerts and dancing performances each year.
When the volunteers first came to Poland they taught business and
technology to unemployed people and employees of the police station,
railroad, provincial government and tax office, said Blaszczyk. Global
Volunteers never told us that you have to do something this way or that
way. This was very important to us.
Serving at the invitation and under the direction of host community
leaders, and working one-on-one with local people is Global Volunteers'
singular Philosophy of Service, according to Philbrook. This philosophy
ensures that long-term development needs are addressed in culturally
appropriate ways.
Plans for the 20th Anniversary volunteer team on October 16, 2010
include a visit to the Polish Parliament in Warsaw, a meeting at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a day-long international conference about
the impact of volunteering, and opportunities to meet the Bishop of the Siedlce Diocese, representatives of the University of Podlasie, local
government officials, foreign delegations and students.
The official Gala will take place at Reymontowka with a guest list
including Global Volunteers representatives from several country
programs, the U.S. Ambassador to Poland, and representatives of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, local provincial and county governments,
and schools and district offices served by the program. The Gala's
program will feature a piano recital with the music of Poland's own
Fredrick Chopin.
Pete Smith of Napa, CA, and his grandson Zach of L.A. spent two weeks
last August teaching conversational English to Polish kids at
Reymontowka.
"We taught outside classes for 14-year-olds and they were pretty good at
English, said 16-year-old Zach. It's one of the greatest things I have
ever done in my whole life. I'd definitely do it again."
Pete said he enjoyed the chance to learn more about another culture and
his growing grandson at the same time. "Kids are kids all over the world
really" - and I was really proud of the way Zach conducted himself and
how much the other kids liked him.
"Volunteering is the best way to get into the heart of a country," he
added recalling a weekend train trip to Warsaw, the country's
increasingly cosmopolitan capital city, to tour 'Old Town,' visit
historical WWII sites and eat lots of (ice cream). (A longer
train ride to Krakow and the sobering sights of Auschwitz are alternate
free-time activities.)
Volunteers who come here tell me they leave a small part of their heart
in Poland, said Blaszczyk. "We hope for them to return and new
volunteers to come as well because everybody in the Siedlce District
does not yet fully speak English."
Global Volunteers offers service programs in Poland throughout the year
and in 19 countries worldwide, including the USA. To join a team, please
call 800-487-1074 or visit
www.globalvolunteers.org.
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