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American Friends Service Committee

The American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) is a Religious Society of Friends (Quaker) founded organization working for peace and social justice in the United States and around the world. AFSC was founded in 1917 as a combined effort by American members of the Religious Society of Friends to assist civilian victims of World War I. It continued to engage in relief action in Europe and the Soviet Union after the Armistice of 1918. By the mid-1920s it focused on improving racial relations in the U.S., as well as exploring ways to prevent the outbreak of another conflict before and after World War II. As the Cold War developed, it moved to employ more professionals rather than Quaker volunteers, over time attempting to broaden its appeal and respond more forcefully to racial injustice, women's issues, and demands of sexual minorities for equal treatment. They also work for world peace.

American Friends Service Committee
FoundedApril 30, 1917
Founder17 members of the Religious Society of Friends
Location
OriginsHaverford, Pennsylvania, US
Area served
Worldwide with U.S. emphasis
Key people
Joyce Ajlouny, General Secretary
Revenue
US$37.2 million
Employees
350
Volunteers
thousands
Award(s) Nobel Prize in Peace (1947)
Websiteafsc.org
Designations
Official nameAmerican Friends Service Committee
TypeCity
CriteriaReligion
DesignatedNovember 6, 1999
Location1501 Cherry St., at Friends Ctr., Philadelphia
39°57′20″N 75°09′53″W / 39.95559°N 75.16477°W / 39.95559; -75.16477

Background edit

Quakers traditionally oppose violence in all of its forms and therefore many refuse to serve in the military, including when drafted. AFSC's original mission grew from the need to provide conscientious objectors (COs) with a constructive alternative to military service. In 1947 AFSC received the Nobel Peace Prize along with its British counterpart, the Friends Service Council (now called Quaker Peace and Social Witness) on behalf of all Quakers worldwide.[dead link][1] Although established by Friends, acting individually, AFSC and the Society of Friends have no legal connections, as stated by its long-time Executive Secretary Clarence Pickett in 1945.[2]

History edit

In April 1917—days after the United States joined World War I by declaring war on Germany and its allies—a group of Quakers met in Philadelphia to discuss the pending military draft and how it would affect members of peace churches such as Quakers, Mennonites, Brethren, and the Amish. They developed ideas for alternative services that could be done directly in the battle zones of northern France.[3]

 
A historic AFSC logo

They also developed plans for dealing with the United States Army, since it had been inconsistent in its dealing with religious objectors to previous wars. Although legally members of pacifist churches were exempt from the draft, individual state draft boards interpreted the law in a variety of ways. Many Quakers and other COs were ordered to report to army camps for military service. Some COs, unaware of the significance of reporting for duty, found that this was interpreted by the military as a willingness to fight. One of the AFSC's first tasks was to identify COs, find the camps where they were located, and then visit them to provide spiritual guidance and moral support. In areas where the pacifist churches were more well known (such as Pennsylvania), a number of draft boards were willing to assign COs to AFSC for alternative service.[4]

In addition to conducting alternative service programs for COs, AFSC collected relief in the form of food, clothing, and other supplies for displaced persons in France. Quakers were asked to collect old and make new clothing; grow fruits and vegetables, can them, and send them to AFSC headquarters in Philadelphia. AFSC then shipped the materials to France for distribution. The young men and women were sent to work in France, working with British Quakers, providing relief and medical care to refugees, repairing and rebuilding homes, helping farmers replant fields damaged by the war, and founded a maternity hospital.[5]

After the end of the war in 1918, AFSCs began working in Russia, Serbia, and Poland with orphans and with the victims of famine and disease, and in Germany and Austria, where they set up kitchens to feed hungry children.[5] Eventually AFSC was chartered by President Herbert Hoover to provide the United States sponsored relief to Germans.[6]

During the 1930s and through World War II, AFSC helped refugees escape from Nazi Germany, aiding people who were not being helped by other organizations, primarily non-religious Jews and Jews married to non-Jews.[7] They also provided relief for children on both sides of the Spanish Civil War,[8] and provided relief to refugees in Vichy France.[9] At the same time AFSC operated several Civilian Public Service camps for a new generation of COs. When Japanese Americans were "evacuated" from the West Coast into inland concentration camps, the AFSC headed the effort to help college students transfer to Midwest and East Coast schools to avoid camp, and worked with Japanese Americans resettling in several cities during and after the war.[10] After the war ended, they did relief and reconstruction work in Europe, Japan, India, and China.

In 1947 they worked to resettle refugees during the partition of India.[citation needed] Between 1937 and 1943, the AFSC built the Penn-Craft community for unemployed coal miners in Fayette County, Pennsylvania.[11]

In 1947 the AFSC was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of their war relief efforts.[5] Shortly afterwards the AFSC became one of the first NGOs to be given Consultative Status at the United Nations. The Quaker United Nations Office was established.

On 7 December 1948 the UN Secretary-General Trygve Lie officially invited the AFSC to take part in a 1-year emergency relief program for Palestinians outside the newly established state of Israel. The program had a budget of $32 million, of which $16 million was from the US. The AFSC was given responsibility for the Gaza Strip. Those displaced into Lebanon, Syria and Jordan were allocated to the IFRC and those in what has become the West Bank as well as those remaining in Israel came under the care of the ICRC.[12]

In the Gaza Strip the Egyptian Army had established 8 improvised refugee camps containing at least 200,000 people, mostly in tents, 56% had come from Gaza District, 42% from Lydda District. The AFSC remit was food distribution, public health and education. The program was run by 50 volunteers, not all Quakers but most from pacifist, conscientious objector backgrounds. They had a policy of employing people from the camps and ultimately had over 1000 Palestinians on the payroll.

One of the first tasks was registering the refugees, which was done by village of origin, and establishing a rationing system and baby milk program. The target was that everyone should get 2000 calories per day.[13] This was followed by establishment of clinics distributing medicines, malaria control spraying and water distribution.

By March 30, 1949, rudimentary school places had been created for 16,000 children.[14] In the absence of any political progress in the repatriation of the displaced people they were working with and lacking the resources or willingness to commit to a long-term aid program, in April 1950 the AFSC transferred their entire program to the newly created UNRWA.[15]

As the Cold War escalated, AFSC was involved in relief and service efforts, often supporting civilians on both sides of conflicts around the world including the Korean War, the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, the Algerian War, and the Nigerian-Biafran War.

Beginning in 1966, AFSC developed programs to help children and provided medical supplies and artificial limbs to civilians in both North Vietnam and South Vietnam. Unable to secure U.S. State Department approval to send medical supplies to North Vietnam, the committee dispatched goods through Canada. AFSC also supported draft counseling for young American men throughout the conflict.[16]

In 1955, the committee published Speak Truth to Power: A Quaker Search for an Alternative to Violence, drafted by a group including Stephen G. Cary, A. J. Muste, Robert Pickus, and Bayard Rustin.[17] Focused on the Cold War, the 71-page pamphlet asserted that it sought "to give practical demonstration to the effectiveness of love in human relations".[18] It was widely commented on in the press, both secular and religious, and proved to be a major statement of Christian pacifism.

In the United States, AFSC supported the American Civil Rights Movement, and the rights of African-Americans, Native Americans, Mexican Americans, and Asian Americans. Since the 1970s AFSC has also worked extensively as part of the peace movement, especially work to stop the production and deployment of nuclear weapons.

Budget edit

In fiscal year 2020, AFSC had revenues of US$37.2 million and expenses of US$33.8 million.[19] AFSC had net assets of US$100.6 million.[20]

Programs and projects edit

Today AFSC programs address a wide range of issues, countries, and communities. AFSC describes the programs as united by "the unfaltering belief in the essential worth of every human being, non-violence as the way to resolve conflict, and the power of love to overcome oppression, discrimination, and violence".[21]

AFSC employs more than two hundred staff working in dozens of programs throughout the United States and works in thirteen other nations.[22] AFSC has divided the organization's programs between 8 geographic regions, each of which runs programs related to peace, immigrant rights, restorative justice, economic justice, and other causes.[23] AFSC's international programs often work in conjunction with Quaker Peace and Social Witness (formerly the British Friends Service Council) and other partners.

AFSC also provides administrative support to the Quaker United Nations Office (QUNO) in New York City. This office is the official voice of Quakerism in the United Nations headquarters. There is a second QUNO office in Geneva, Switzerland; support for that office is provided by European Quakers. QUNO is overseen by the Friends World Committee for Consultation.

AFSC carries out many programs around the world. The organization's 2010 annual report[24] describes work in several African countries, Haiti, Indonesia, and the United States. Recently AFSC opened a traveling art exhibit called Windows & Mirrors, examining the impact of the war in Afghanistan on civilians.[25]

Cost of War project edit

Cost of War is real-time cost-estimation exhibits, each featuring a counter/estimator for the Iraq War and the Afghanistan War. These exhibits are maintained by the National Priorities Project.[26] As of June 1, 2010 both wars had a combined estimated cost of over 1 trillion dollars, separately the Iraq War had an estimated cost of 725 billion dollars and the Afghanistan War had an estimated cost of 276 billion dollars. The numbers are based on US Congress appropriation reports and do not include "future medical care for soldiers and veterans wounded in the war".[27]

Exhibits edit

Based on the National Priorities Project Cost of War concept, American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) launched an exhibit title titled "Cost of War" in May 2007, at the close of the National Eyes Wide Open Exhibit. It features ten budget trade-offs displayed on 3x7 foot full-color vinyl banners. AFSC uses to cost of the Iraq War estimated by economists Linda Bilmes and Joseph Stiglitz in the article "Economic Costs of the Iraq War: An Appraisal Three Years After The Beginning Of The Conflict", written in January 2006 that estimates the total daily cost of the Iraq War at $720 million.[28] AFSC uses The National Priorities Project's per unit costs for human needs such as health care and education to make budget comparisons between the U.S. budget for human needs to "One Day of the Iraq War".[29] The ten banners read:[30]

  • One Day of the Iraq War = 720 Million Dollars, How Would You Spend it?
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 84 New Elementary Schools
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 12,478 Elementary School Teachers
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 95,364 Head Start Places for Children
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 1,153,846 Children with Free School Lunches
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 34,904 Four-Year Scholarships for University Students
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 163,525 People with Health Care
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 423,529 Children with Health Care
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 6,482 Families with Homes
  • One Day of the Iraq War = 1,274,336 Homes with Renewable Energy

There are currently 22 Cost of War exhibits located in Northern and Southern California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas/Missouri, Maryland, Massachusetts/Maine, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York/New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia, West Virginia.

Eyes Wide Open project edit

In 2004, AFSC started the project Eyes Wide Open in Chicago. Eyes Wide Open is an exhibition on the human cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The exhibit featured boots in a military array representing US deaths in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and shoes representing Iraqi and Afghan civilians. It was exhibited in 48 states and the District of Columbia, drawing national coverage[31][32]

Current key issues edit

Currently, the AFSC has four key issues:[33]

Criticism edit

Throughout much of the group's history the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and other government agencies have monitored the work of this and many other similar organizations.[34][35][36]

Since the 1970s, criticism has also come from liberals within the Society of Friends, who charge that AFSC has drifted from its Quaker roots and has become indistinguishable from other political pressure groups. Quakers expressed concern with AFSC's abolition of their youth work camps during the 1960s and what some saw as a decline of Quaker participation in the organization.

In June 1979, a cover article in The New Republic attacked AFSC for abandoning the tradition of pacifism.[37] The criticisms became prominent after a gathering of Friends General Conference in Richmond, Indiana, in the summer of 1979 when many Friends joined with prominent leaders, such as Kenneth Boulding, to call for a firmer Quaker orientation toward public issues.[38] After the FGC Gathering, a letter listing the points of criticism was signed by 130 Friends and sent to the AFSC Board. In 1988, the book Peace and Revolution[39] by conservative scholar Guenter Lewy repeated charges that AFSC had abandoned pacifism and religion.[37] In response to Lewy's book, Chuck Fager published Quaker Service at the Crossroads[38] in 1988.[40]

In 2010, Fager described that AFSC was "divorced" from Quakers' life as a faith community due to "an increasingly pronounced drift toward a lefty secularism" since the 1970s.[37] It was reported that the Committee in 1975 adopted "a formal decision to make the Middle East its major issue".[41][42]

Some Jewish supporters of Israeli government policies have accused AFSC of having an anti-Jewish bias.[43] In 1993, Jacob Neusner called the Committee "the most militant and aggressive of Christian anti-Israel groups".[44]

The AFSC's position on its website is that it "supports the use of boycott and divestment campaigns targeting only companies that support the occupation, settlements, militarism, or any other violations of international humanitarian or human rights law. Our position does not call for a full boycott of Israel or of companies because they are either Israeli or doing business in Israel. Our actions also never focus on individuals."[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Nobel Peace Prize". 2010-04-10. Retrieved 2016-06-28.
  2. ^ H. Larry Ingle (2016). "'Truly Radical, Non-violent, Friendly Approaches': Challenges to the American Friends Service Committee". Quaker History. 105 (Spring): 1–21. doi:10.1353/qkh.2016.0004. S2CID 163984864.
  3. ^ . 2010-03-29. Archived from the original on 2016-04-21. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  4. ^ Origin of AFSC 2010-12-09 at the Wayback Machine by former AFSC Archivist Jack Sutters
  5. ^ a b c "American Friends Service Committee – History". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  6. ^ "The Nobel Peace Prize 1947 – Presentation Speech". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  7. ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. "Quakers". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  8. ^ Maul, Daniel (2016-01-02). "The politics of neutrality: the American Friends Service Committee and the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939". European Review of History: Revue Européenne d'Histoire. 23 (1–2): 82–100. doi:10.1080/13507486.2015.1121972. ISSN 1350-7486.
  9. ^ All in the Same Boat: Non-French Women and Resistance in France, 1940–1944 2012-03-16 at the Wayback Machine, Hillary Mohaupt, Spring 2010.
  10. ^ Austin, Allan W. "American Friends Service Committee" Densho Encyclopedia. Accessed July 10, 2014.
  11. ^ . CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Archived from the original (Searchable database) on 2007-07-21. Retrieved 2012-01-30. Note: This includes Louis Orslene and Susan Shearer (February 1989). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2012-01-29.
  12. ^ Gallagher, Nancy (2007) ‘’Quakers in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: The Dilemmas of NGO Humanitarian Activism’’ The American University in Cairo Press. ISBN 977-416-105-X p. 51
  13. ^ Gallagher pp. 66, 68, 161
  14. ^ Gallagher p. 86
  15. ^ Gallagher p. 110
  16. ^ "Frances Crowe to read from her memoir at First Churches in Northampton on Sunday". 3 January 2015. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-02-18. Retrieved 2011-01-27.
  18. ^ Speak truth to power: a Quaker search for an alternative for violence 2017-08-30 at the Wayback Machine from AFSC's archives
  19. ^ . Tait Weller. 2021-04-21. Archived from the original on 2022-06-28. Retrieved 2021-10-23.
  20. ^ "2020 Annual Audit of AFSC" (PDF). American Friends Service Committee. Retrieved October 23, 2021.
  21. ^ AFSC's Our Work page; afsc.org
  22. ^ AFSC's Where We Work page 2011-07-09 at the Wayback Machine; afsc.org
  23. ^ AFSC's structure page 2011-06-29 at the Wayback Machine; Afsc.org
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2011-07-15.
  25. ^ The official Windows and Mirrors 2011-12-09 at the Wayback Machine information page.
  26. ^ Official Site; National Priorities Project
  27. ^ . Cost of War. National Priorities. Archived from the original on 2003-06-01. Retrieved 2007-02-08.
  28. ^ Bilmes, Linda; Stiglitz, Joseph E. (February 2006). "The Economic Costs of the Iraq War: An Appraisal Three Years after the Beginning of the Conflict" (PDF). National Bureau of Economic Research. doi:10.2139/ssrn.832646. S2CID 154437352. KSG Working Paper No. 06-002. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  29. ^ Street, 351 Pleasant; MA, Suite B. #442 Northampton. "Cost of National Security". National Priorities Project.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ . Wage Peace Campaign. American Friends Service Committee. 2013-02-06. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2013-04-29.
  31. ^ Mehta, Shreema (21 October 2005). "Empty Boots, Ravished Hearts". The Nation. Retrieved 2023-08-06.
  32. ^ . 2010-03-19. Archived from the original on 2022-06-28. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2016-07-02.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-04-02. Retrieved 2011-04-12.
  35. ^ Documents released under the freedom of information act are hosted on the FBI's website Archived 2014-12-05 at the Library of Congress Web Archives
  36. ^ In recent years AFSC has worked with the ACLU on several efforts to end spying by local police, the FBI, the Pentagon 2006-04-26 at the Wayback Machine and the NSA 2006-09-07 at the Wayback Machine targeted at AFSC and other organizations.
  37. ^ a b c "AFSC & Quakers I: The Background of a Concern – A Friendly Letter". 2010-06-19. Retrieved 2016-07-09.
  38. ^ a b Chuck Fager, ed., Quaker Service at the Crossroads: American Friends, The American Friends Service Committee, and Peace and Revolution, Kimo Press, 1988.
  39. ^ Lewy, Guenter (1988-01-01). Peace & revolution: the moral crisis of American pacifism. Grand Rapids, Mich.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. ISBN 978-0802836403. OCLC 17439651.
  40. ^ Fager, Chuck (1988). "Quaker Service at the Crossroads" (PDF). Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  41. ^ Romirowsky, Alexander Joffe and Asaf. "The Quakers, No Friends of Israel". Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  42. ^ Romirowsky, Alexander Joffe And Asaf (2015-11-06). "The Quakers, No Friends of Israel". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  43. ^ Kirk, H. David (1979). The Friendly Perversion: Quakers as Reconciliers: Good People and Dirty Work. Americans for a Safe Israel.
  44. ^ Neusner, Jacob (1993). In the aftermath of the Holocaust. Garland. p. 17.
  45. ^ Allison Kaplan Sommer (January 8, 2018). "How a U.S. Quaker Group That Won the Nobel Peace Prize Ended Up on Israel's BDS Blacklist". Haaretz.

Further reading edit

  • Austin, Allan W. Quaker Brotherhood: Interracial Activism and the American Friends Service Committee, 1917–1950. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 2012.
  • Barnes, Gregory A. A Centennial History of the American Friends Service Committee. Philadelphia: FriendsPress, 2016.
  • H. Larry Ingle, "The American Friends Service Committee, 1947–49: The Cold War's Effect," Peace & Change, 23 (January 1998), 27–48. doi:10.1111/0149-0508.691998035.
  • Mary Hoxie Jones, Swords into ploughshares: an account of the American Friends Service Committee, 1917–1937. New York: Macmillan, 1937.

Archives edit

  • Tyree Scott Papers. 2015-09-20 at the Wayback Machine 1970–1995. 73 cubic feet (73 boxes). Contains records from Scott's service with the American Friends Service Committee, Pacific Northwest Regional Offices in the late 1970s. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • Records of the American Friends Service Committee, Midwest Branch, Advisory Committee for Evacuees. 1942–1963. 10 linear ft. (25 boxes).
  • Emery E. Andrews Papers. 1925–1969. 2.93 cubic ft. Collection materials are in English and Japanese. At the University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • American Friends Service Committee Collection. 1942–1947. .4 linear feet (1 box). Contains materials the American Friends Service Committee produced and collected pertaining to their activities and the experience of Japanese Americans during and after World War II. At the Japanese American National Museum.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • American Friends Service Committee on Nobelprize.org  
  • "American Friends Service Committee Internal Revenue Service filings". ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • American Friends Service Committee's FBI files on the Internet Archive
  • Quaker United Nations Offices
  • Cost of War Official Site

american, friends, service, committee, afsc, religious, society, friends, quaker, founded, organization, working, peace, social, justice, united, states, around, world, afsc, founded, 1917, combined, effort, american, members, religious, society, friends, assi. The American Friends Service Committee AFSC is a Religious Society of Friends Quaker founded organization working for peace and social justice in the United States and around the world AFSC was founded in 1917 as a combined effort by American members of the Religious Society of Friends to assist civilian victims of World War I It continued to engage in relief action in Europe and the Soviet Union after the Armistice of 1918 By the mid 1920s it focused on improving racial relations in the U S as well as exploring ways to prevent the outbreak of another conflict before and after World War II As the Cold War developed it moved to employ more professionals rather than Quaker volunteers over time attempting to broaden its appeal and respond more forcefully to racial injustice women s issues and demands of sexual minorities for equal treatment They also work for world peace American Friends Service CommitteeFoundedApril 30 1917Founder17 members of the Religious Society of FriendsLocationPhiladelphia Pennsylvania USOriginsHaverford Pennsylvania USArea servedWorldwide with U S emphasisKey peopleJoyce Ajlouny General SecretaryRevenueUS 37 2 millionEmployees350VolunteersthousandsAward s Nobel Prize in Peace 1947 Websiteafsc wbr orgDesignationsPennsylvania Historical MarkerOfficial nameAmerican Friends Service CommitteeTypeCityCriteriaReligionDesignatedNovember 6 1999Location1501 Cherry St at Friends Ctr Philadelphia39 57 20 N 75 09 53 W 39 95559 N 75 16477 W 39 95559 75 16477 Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Budget 4 Programs and projects 4 1 Cost of War project 4 1 1 Exhibits 4 2 Eyes Wide Open project 4 3 Current key issues 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Archives 9 External linksBackground editQuakers traditionally oppose violence in all of its forms and therefore many refuse to serve in the military including when drafted AFSC s original mission grew from the need to provide conscientious objectors COs with a constructive alternative to military service In 1947 AFSC received the Nobel Peace Prize along with its British counterpart the Friends Service Council now called Quaker Peace and Social Witness on behalf of all Quakers worldwide dead link 1 Although established by Friends acting individually AFSC and the Society of Friends have no legal connections as stated by its long time Executive Secretary Clarence Pickett in 1945 2 History editIn April 1917 days after the United States joined World War I by declaring war on Germany and its allies a group of Quakers met in Philadelphia to discuss the pending military draft and how it would affect members of peace churches such as Quakers Mennonites Brethren and the Amish They developed ideas for alternative services that could be done directly in the battle zones of northern France 3 nbsp A historic AFSC logoThey also developed plans for dealing with the United States Army since it had been inconsistent in its dealing with religious objectors to previous wars Although legally members of pacifist churches were exempt from the draft individual state draft boards interpreted the law in a variety of ways Many Quakers and other COs were ordered to report to army camps for military service Some COs unaware of the significance of reporting for duty found that this was interpreted by the military as a willingness to fight One of the AFSC s first tasks was to identify COs find the camps where they were located and then visit them to provide spiritual guidance and moral support In areas where the pacifist churches were more well known such as Pennsylvania a number of draft boards were willing to assign COs to AFSC for alternative service 4 In addition to conducting alternative service programs for COs AFSC collected relief in the form of food clothing and other supplies for displaced persons in France Quakers were asked to collect old and make new clothing grow fruits and vegetables can them and send them to AFSC headquarters in Philadelphia AFSC then shipped the materials to France for distribution The young men and women were sent to work in France working with British Quakers providing relief and medical care to refugees repairing and rebuilding homes helping farmers replant fields damaged by the war and founded a maternity hospital 5 After the end of the war in 1918 AFSCs began working in Russia Serbia and Poland with orphans and with the victims of famine and disease and in Germany and Austria where they set up kitchens to feed hungry children 5 Eventually AFSC was chartered by President Herbert Hoover to provide the United States sponsored relief to Germans 6 During the 1930s and through World War II AFSC helped refugees escape from Nazi Germany aiding people who were not being helped by other organizations primarily non religious Jews and Jews married to non Jews 7 They also provided relief for children on both sides of the Spanish Civil War 8 and provided relief to refugees in Vichy France 9 At the same time AFSC operated several Civilian Public Service camps for a new generation of COs When Japanese Americans were evacuated from the West Coast into inland concentration camps the AFSC headed the effort to help college students transfer to Midwest and East Coast schools to avoid camp and worked with Japanese Americans resettling in several cities during and after the war 10 After the war ended they did relief and reconstruction work in Europe Japan India and China In 1947 they worked to resettle refugees during the partition of India citation needed Between 1937 and 1943 the AFSC built the Penn Craft community for unemployed coal miners in Fayette County Pennsylvania 11 In 1947 the AFSC was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of their war relief efforts 5 Shortly afterwards the AFSC became one of the first NGOs to be given Consultative Status at the United Nations The Quaker United Nations Office was established On 7 December 1948 the UN Secretary General Trygve Lie officially invited the AFSC to take part in a 1 year emergency relief program for Palestinians outside the newly established state of Israel The program had a budget of 32 million of which 16 million was from the US The AFSC was given responsibility for the Gaza Strip Those displaced into Lebanon Syria and Jordan were allocated to the IFRC and those in what has become the West Bank as well as those remaining in Israel came under the care of the ICRC 12 In the Gaza Strip the Egyptian Army had established 8 improvised refugee camps containing at least 200 000 people mostly in tents 56 had come from Gaza District 42 from Lydda District The AFSC remit was food distribution public health and education The program was run by 50 volunteers not all Quakers but most from pacifist conscientious objector backgrounds They had a policy of employing people from the camps and ultimately had over 1000 Palestinians on the payroll One of the first tasks was registering the refugees which was done by village of origin and establishing a rationing system and baby milk program The target was that everyone should get 2000 calories per day 13 This was followed by establishment of clinics distributing medicines malaria control spraying and water distribution By March 30 1949 rudimentary school places had been created for 16 000 children 14 In the absence of any political progress in the repatriation of the displaced people they were working with and lacking the resources or willingness to commit to a long term aid program in April 1950 the AFSC transferred their entire program to the newly created UNRWA 15 As the Cold War escalated AFSC was involved in relief and service efforts often supporting civilians on both sides of conflicts around the world including the Korean War the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 the Algerian War and the Nigerian Biafran War Beginning in 1966 AFSC developed programs to help children and provided medical supplies and artificial limbs to civilians in both North Vietnam and South Vietnam Unable to secure U S State Department approval to send medical supplies to North Vietnam the committee dispatched goods through Canada AFSC also supported draft counseling for young American men throughout the conflict 16 In 1955 the committee published Speak Truth to Power A Quaker Search for an Alternative to Violence drafted by a group including Stephen G Cary A J Muste Robert Pickus and Bayard Rustin 17 Focused on the Cold War the 71 page pamphlet asserted that it sought to give practical demonstration to the effectiveness of love in human relations 18 It was widely commented on in the press both secular and religious and proved to be a major statement of Christian pacifism In the United States AFSC supported the American Civil Rights Movement and the rights of African Americans Native Americans Mexican Americans and Asian Americans Since the 1970s AFSC has also worked extensively as part of the peace movement especially work to stop the production and deployment of nuclear weapons Budget editIn fiscal year 2020 AFSC had revenues of US 37 2 million and expenses of US 33 8 million 19 AFSC had net assets of US 100 6 million 20 Programs and projects editToday AFSC programs address a wide range of issues countries and communities AFSC describes the programs as united by the unfaltering belief in the essential worth of every human being non violence as the way to resolve conflict and the power of love to overcome oppression discrimination and violence 21 AFSC employs more than two hundred staff working in dozens of programs throughout the United States and works in thirteen other nations 22 AFSC has divided the organization s programs between 8 geographic regions each of which runs programs related to peace immigrant rights restorative justice economic justice and other causes 23 AFSC s international programs often work in conjunction with Quaker Peace and Social Witness formerly the British Friends Service Council and other partners AFSC also provides administrative support to the Quaker United Nations Office QUNO in New York City This office is the official voice of Quakerism in the United Nations headquarters There is a second QUNO office in Geneva Switzerland support for that office is provided by European Quakers QUNO is overseen by the Friends World Committee for Consultation AFSC carries out many programs around the world The organization s 2010 annual report 24 describes work in several African countries Haiti Indonesia and the United States Recently AFSC opened a traveling art exhibit called Windows amp Mirrors examining the impact of the war in Afghanistan on civilians 25 Cost of War project edit Cost of War is real time cost estimation exhibits each featuring a counter estimator for the Iraq War and the Afghanistan War These exhibits are maintained by the National Priorities Project 26 As of June 1 2010 both wars had a combined estimated cost of over 1 trillion dollars separately the Iraq War had an estimated cost of 725 billion dollars and the Afghanistan War had an estimated cost of 276 billion dollars The numbers are based on US Congress appropriation reports and do not include future medical care for soldiers and veterans wounded in the war 27 Exhibits edit Based on the National Priorities Project Cost of War concept American Friends Service Committee AFSC launched an exhibit title titled Cost of War in May 2007 at the close of the National Eyes Wide Open Exhibit It features ten budget trade offs displayed on 3x7 foot full color vinyl banners AFSC uses to cost of the Iraq War estimated by economists Linda Bilmes and Joseph Stiglitz in the article Economic Costs of the Iraq War An Appraisal Three Years After The Beginning Of The Conflict written in January 2006 that estimates the total daily cost of the Iraq War at 720 million 28 AFSC uses The National Priorities Project s per unit costs for human needs such as health care and education to make budget comparisons between the U S budget for human needs to One Day of the Iraq War 29 The ten banners read 30 One Day of the Iraq War 720 Million Dollars How Would You Spend it One Day of the Iraq War 84 New Elementary Schools One Day of the Iraq War 12 478 Elementary School Teachers One Day of the Iraq War 95 364 Head Start Places for Children One Day of the Iraq War 1 153 846 Children with Free School Lunches One Day of the Iraq War 34 904 Four Year Scholarships for University Students One Day of the Iraq War 163 525 People with Health Care One Day of the Iraq War 423 529 Children with Health Care One Day of the Iraq War 6 482 Families with Homes One Day of the Iraq War 1 274 336 Homes with Renewable EnergyThere are currently 22 Cost of War exhibits located in Northern and Southern California Colorado Florida Georgia Illinois Iowa Kansas Missouri Maryland Massachusetts Maine Michigan New Hampshire New York New Jersey North Carolina Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island Virginia West Virginia Eyes Wide Open project edit In 2004 AFSC started the project Eyes Wide Open in Chicago Eyes Wide Open is an exhibition on the human cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan The exhibit featured boots in a military array representing US deaths in both Iraq and Afghanistan and shoes representing Iraqi and Afghan civilians It was exhibited in 48 states and the District of Columbia drawing national coverage 31 32 Current key issues edit Currently the AFSC has four key issues 33 Advancing Peacebuilding Humane Migration Responses Healing not punitive justice Just economiesCriticism editThroughout much of the group s history the US Federal Bureau of Investigation and other government agencies have monitored the work of this and many other similar organizations 34 35 36 Since the 1970s criticism has also come from liberals within the Society of Friends who charge that AFSC has drifted from its Quaker roots and has become indistinguishable from other political pressure groups Quakers expressed concern with AFSC s abolition of their youth work camps during the 1960s and what some saw as a decline of Quaker participation in the organization In June 1979 a cover article in The New Republic attacked AFSC for abandoning the tradition of pacifism 37 The criticisms became prominent after a gathering of Friends General Conference in Richmond Indiana in the summer of 1979 when many Friends joined with prominent leaders such as Kenneth Boulding to call for a firmer Quaker orientation toward public issues 38 After the FGC Gathering a letter listing the points of criticism was signed by 130 Friends and sent to the AFSC Board In 1988 the book Peace and Revolution 39 by conservative scholar Guenter Lewy repeated charges that AFSC had abandoned pacifism and religion 37 In response to Lewy s book Chuck Fager published Quaker Service at the Crossroads 38 in 1988 40 In 2010 Fager described that AFSC was divorced from Quakers life as a faith community due to an increasingly pronounced drift toward a lefty secularism since the 1970s 37 It was reported that the Committee in 1975 adopted a formal decision to make the Middle East its major issue 41 42 Some Jewish supporters of Israeli government policies have accused AFSC of having an anti Jewish bias 43 In 1993 Jacob Neusner called the Committee the most militant and aggressive of Christian anti Israel groups 44 The AFSC s position on its website is that it supports the use of boycott and divestment campaigns targeting only companies that support the occupation settlements militarism or any other violations of international humanitarian or human rights law Our position does not call for a full boycott of Israel or of companies because they are either Israeli or doing business in Israel Our actions also never focus on individuals 45 See also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Philadelphia portalFriends Committee on National Legislation FCNL Peace Testimony about the Quaker peace testimony Pacifism in the United States List of anti war organizationsReferences edit Nobel Peace Prize 2010 04 10 Retrieved 2016 06 28 H Larry Ingle 2016 Truly Radical Non violent Friendly Approaches Challenges to the American Friends Service Committee Quaker History 105 Spring 1 21 doi 10 1353 qkh 2016 0004 S2CID 163984864 Origin of the American Friends Service Committee 2010 03 29 Archived from the original on 2016 04 21 Retrieved 2016 07 01 Origin of AFSC Archived 2010 12 09 at the Wayback Machine by former AFSC Archivist Jack Sutters a b c American Friends Service Committee History www nobelprize org Retrieved 2016 07 01 The Nobel Peace Prize 1947 Presentation Speech www nobelprize org Retrieved 2016 07 01 United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Quakers Holocaust Encyclopedia United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 10 December 2017 Maul Daniel 2016 01 02 The politics of neutrality the American Friends Service Committee and the Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 European Review of History Revue Europeenne d Histoire 23 1 2 82 100 doi 10 1080 13507486 2015 1121972 ISSN 1350 7486 All in the Same Boat Non French Women and Resistance in France 1940 1944 Archived 2012 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Hillary Mohaupt Spring 2010 Austin Allan W American Friends Service Committee Densho Encyclopedia Accessed July 10 2014 National Historic Landmarks amp National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania CRGIS Cultural Resources Geographic Information System Archived from the original Searchable database on 2007 07 21 Retrieved 2012 01 30 Note This includes Louis Orslene and Susan Shearer February 1989 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Penn Craft Historic District PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2012 01 29 Gallagher Nancy 2007 Quakers in the Israeli Palestinian Conflict The Dilemmas of NGO Humanitarian Activism The American University in Cairo Press ISBN 977 416 105 X p 51 Gallagher pp 66 68 161 Gallagher p 86 Gallagher p 110 Frances Crowe to read from her memoir at First Churches in Northampton on Sunday 3 January 2015 Retrieved 2016 07 01 Wendy Chmielewski Speak Truth to Power Religion Race and Sexuality and Politics During the Cold War Archived from the original on 2011 02 18 Retrieved 2011 01 27 Speak truth to power a Quaker search for an alternative for violence Archived 2017 08 30 at the Wayback Machine from AFSC s archives Financial Information Tait Weller 2021 04 21 Archived from the original on 2022 06 28 Retrieved 2021 10 23 2020 Annual Audit of AFSC PDF American Friends Service Committee Retrieved October 23 2021 AFSC s Our Work page afsc org AFSC s Where We Work page Archived 2011 07 09 at the Wayback Machine afsc org AFSC s structure page Archived 2011 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Afsc org Building Peace One Community at a Time Annual Report 2010 Archived from the original on 2011 10 01 Retrieved 2011 07 15 The official Windows and Mirrors Archived 2011 12 09 at the Wayback Machine information page Official Site National Priorities Project How we got the numbers Cost of War National Priorities Archived from the original on 2003 06 01 Retrieved 2007 02 08 Bilmes Linda Stiglitz Joseph E February 2006 The Economic Costs of the Iraq War An Appraisal Three Years after the Beginning of the Conflict PDF National Bureau of Economic Research doi 10 2139 ssrn 832646 S2CID 154437352 KSG Working Paper No 06 002 Retrieved 2023 08 06 Street 351 Pleasant MA Suite B 442 Northampton Cost of National Security National Priorities Project a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link How would you spend it Wage Peace Campaign American Friends Service Committee 2013 02 06 Archived from the original on 2007 08 14 Retrieved 2013 04 29 Mehta Shreema 21 October 2005 Empty Boots Ravished Hearts The Nation Retrieved 2023 08 06 Eyes Wide Open 2010 03 19 Archived from the original on 2022 06 28 Retrieved 2016 07 17 Key issues Archived from the original on 2016 06 29 Retrieved 2016 07 02 Washington Post article Monitoring America Archived from the original on 2011 04 02 Retrieved 2011 04 12 Documents released under the freedom of information act are hosted on the FBI s website Archived 2014 12 05 at the Library of Congress Web Archives In recent years AFSC has worked with the ACLU on several efforts to end spying by local police the FBI the Pentagon Archived 2006 04 26 at the Wayback Machine and the NSA Archived 2006 09 07 at the Wayback Machine targeted at AFSC and other organizations a b c AFSC amp Quakers I The Background of a Concern A Friendly Letter 2010 06 19 Retrieved 2016 07 09 a b Chuck Fager ed Quaker Service at the Crossroads American Friends The American Friends Service Committee and Peace and Revolution Kimo Press 1988 Lewy Guenter 1988 01 01 Peace amp revolution the moral crisis of American pacifism Grand Rapids Mich W B Eerdmans Pub Co ISBN 978 0802836403 OCLC 17439651 Fager Chuck 1988 Quaker Service at the Crossroads PDF Retrieved 2016 07 17 Romirowsky Alexander Joffe and Asaf The Quakers No Friends of Israel Retrieved 2016 07 17 Romirowsky Alexander Joffe And Asaf 2015 11 06 The Quakers No Friends of Israel Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2016 07 17 Kirk H David 1979 The Friendly Perversion Quakers as Reconciliers Good People and Dirty Work Americans for a Safe Israel Neusner Jacob 1993 In the aftermath of the Holocaust Garland p 17 Allison Kaplan Sommer January 8 2018 How a U S Quaker Group That Won the Nobel Peace Prize Ended Up on Israel s BDS Blacklist Haaretz Further reading editAustin Allan W Quaker Brotherhood Interracial Activism and the American Friends Service Committee 1917 1950 Urbana IL University of Illinois Press 2012 Barnes Gregory A A Centennial History of the American Friends Service Committee Philadelphia FriendsPress 2016 H Larry Ingle The American Friends Service Committee 1947 49 The Cold War s Effect Peace amp Change 23 January 1998 27 48 doi 10 1111 0149 0508 691998035 Mary Hoxie Jones Swords into ploughshares an account of the American Friends Service Committee 1917 1937 New York Macmillan 1937 Archives edit Tyree Scott Papers Archived 2015 09 20 at the Wayback Machine 1970 1995 73 cubic feet 73 boxes Contains records from Scott s service with the American Friends Service Committee Pacific Northwest Regional Offices in the late 1970s At the Labor Archives of Washington University of Washington Libraries Special Collections Records of the American Friends Service Committee Midwest Branch Advisory Committee for Evacuees 1942 1963 10 linear ft 25 boxes Emery E Andrews Papers 1925 1969 2 93 cubic ft Collection materials are in English and Japanese At the University of Washington Libraries Special Collections American Friends Service Committee Collection 1942 1947 4 linear feet 1 box Contains materials the American Friends Service Committee produced and collected pertaining to their activities and the experience of Japanese Americans during and after World War II At the Japanese American National Museum External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to American Friends Service Committee Official website nbsp American Friends Service Committee on Nobelprize org nbsp American Friends Service Committee Internal Revenue Service filings ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer Appearances on C SPAN American Friends Service Committee s FBI files on the Internet Archive Quaker United Nations Offices Cost of War Official Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Friends Service Committee amp oldid 1184281676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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