Danish Red Cross Explained

Danish Red Cross
Native Name:Dansk Røde Kors
Native Name Lang:de
Type:NGO
Status:charity
Purpose:Humanitarian aid
Headquarters:Copenhagen
Language:Danish
Website:Official Website

The Danish Red Cross is a humanitarian aid organization comprising 220 local branches in Denmark, each with its own board.

History

The mother organization of the Danish Red Cross was active in Denmark during the Second Schleswig War in 1864, the first war in which the organization took part.

The current Danish Red Cross dates back to the association's establishment for the care of the sick and wounded under war conditions, established on 26 April 1876. The foundation for the first local branches and the nationwide network of volunteers was laid in 1917. The Red Cross in Denmark today consists of more than 25,000 volunteers.

In addition to the work with the asylum centres, the association's many volunteers also work as visiting friends, Samaritans and give first aid courses. It is also volunteers who ring doorbells during national collections.

Red Cross Hospital Ship in the Korean War

See main article: article and MS Jutlandia. From March 1951 to August 1953. Danish Red Cross operated Hospital ShipMS Jutlandia to provided the medical service in South Korea during Korean War.[1]

Organisation

The Danish Red Cross is headquartered at Blegdamsvej 27. Anders Ladekarl succeeded Jørgen Poulsen as Secretary-General in 2008.

Secretaries-General

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/2020/10/25/national/diplomacy/heroes-from-afar-Korean-War-70th-anniversary/20201025163100571.html Denmark's medics, hospital ship saved countless lives