World Vision International Explained

World Vision International
Status:501(c)(3)[1]
Type:Religious nonprofit organization[2] [3]
Founded Date:1950
Formerly:World Vision Inc.
Tax Id:95-3202116
Founder:Rev. Bob Pierce
Leader Name:Andrew Morley[4]
Leader Title:President, Chief Executive Officer
Leader Name2:Donna Shepherd
Leader Title2:Board Chair, Australia
Leader Name3:Maria Consuelo Campos
Leader Title3:Board Chair, Colombia
Leader Name4:Soriba Joseph Camara
Leader Title4:Board Chair, Mali
Location:
  • Monrovia, California, U.S. (administrative center, World Vision International board)
  • London, U.K. (executive office and international headquarters)
Area Served:100 countries
Focus:Well-being of all people, especially children.
Method:Transformational Development through emergency relief, community development and policy and advocacy
Revenue:USD $3.14 billion
Employees:33,000
Purpose:Our vision for every child, life in all its fullness; our prayer for every heart, the will to make it so.

World Vision International is an ecumenical[5] [6] Christian humanitarian aid, development, and advocacy organization. It was founded in 1950 by Robert Pierce as a service organization to provide care for children in Korea. In 1975, emergency and advocacy work was added to World Vision's objectives. It is active in over 100 countries with a total revenue including grants, product and foreign donations of USD $3.14 billion.

History

The charity was founded in 1950 as World Vision Inc. by Robert Pierce, Kyung-Chik Han and Frank Phillips.[7] [8] It was founded after Pierce was invited to Korea by Han to speak at Young Nak Church, followed by another speech in Seoul. After the breakout of the Korean War weeks later, Pierce and Han continued to collaborate on relief efforts in the region. The first World Vision office opened later that year in Portland, Oregon,[9] [7] with a second office following in 1954 in Korea.[10] During the early years, the charity operated as a missionary service organization meeting emergency needs in crisis areas in East Asia. World Vision operated as a missionary service organisation meeting emergency needs of children in crisis areas in East Asia following the Korean War.

In 1967, the Mission Advanced Research and Communication Center (MARC) was founded by Ed Dayton as a division of World Vision. It became the organizational backbone of the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization, collected and published data about "unreached people" and also published the "Mission Handbook: North American Protestant Ministries Overseas".[11]

During the 1970s, World Vision began training families in the agricultural skills necessary to build small farms, with the aim of promoting long term improvement and self-reliance in the communities.[12] The organization also began installing water pumps for clean water, which caused infant mortality rates to drop. Volunteers now use the fresh water to teach gardening and irrigation and promote good health.

In order to restructure, the organization World Vision International was founded in 1977 by Walter Stanley Mooneyham the then president of World Vision.[13] [14] [15] In 1979, World Vision also co-founded the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability with the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.[16] [17]

During the 1990s, World Vision International began focusing on the needs of children who had been orphaned in Uganda, Romania, and Somalia in response to AIDS, neglect, and civil war, respectively. World Vision began working with communities, health providers, faith-based organisations and people living with HIV and AIDS to encourage an end to stigmatisation, better understanding of HIV prevention and community care for those living with AIDS, and orphans left behind by the pandemic. They also joined the United Nations peacekeeping efforts to help those affected by civil war. World Vision also started to openly promote the international ban on land mines.[12] In 1994 World Vision US moved to Washington State.[18] In 2004, the political weekly Tehelka newspaper in India criticised World Vision India for its involvement with AD2000.[19]

In 2022, WVI operated in more than 100 countries and had over 33,000 employees.[20]

Organizational structure

The World Vision Partnership operates as a federation of interdependent national offices governed by a commitment to common standards and values on fundamental issues. World Vision International provides the global oversight and sets global standards, and is the operating entity in some countries. In other countries, World Vision operates through a locally incorporated NGO, with a local board of directors. Most of the workforce in each country are citizens of that given territory.World Vision International’s board of directors oversees the World Vision partnership. The full board meets twice a year to appoint senior officers, approve strategic plans and budgets, and determine international policy. The current chairperson of the international board is Ivan Satyavrata.[21] The international president is Andrew Morley.[22] [23] From 2021 onwards, Morley served as Chair of the Steering Committee for Humanitarian Response (SCHR), and is a member of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC).

Partners

World Vision partners include governments, civil society organisations, faith communities, faith-based organisations, businesses, academia, and others. The organization has thousands of partners located around the world.

Some of those who work with World Vision globally include the European Union,[24] Unicef, Global Partnership to End Violence, Joining Forces, World Bank, World Health Organization,[25] World Food Programme, Inter Agency Standing Committee, International Food Policy Research Institute, and Joining Forces[26] for Last Mile Nutrition.

Beliefs

World Vision's staff comes from a range of Christian denominations. Its staff includes followers of Protestantism, Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy. Around the world its staff includes followers of different religions or none.[27] Some staff participate in religious services provided by WVI. They stress that one can be a Christian in any culture. However, World Vision also respects other religions that it encounters, stating that "to promote a secular approach to life would be an insult to them".[28] Richard Stearns, president of World Vision US, stated that World Vision has a strict policy against proselytizing, which he describes as "using any kind of coercion or inducement to listen to a religious message before helping someone".[29]

The World Vision Partnership and all of its national members are committed to the concept of transformational development, which is cast in a biblical framework and which is seen as a witness to the love of God for all humanity.[30]

Programs

Activities include: emergency relief, education, health care, economic development, advocacy, water/sanitation, food distribution and promotion of justice.[31] The organization has consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council and partnerships with UN agencies like UNICEF, WHO, UNHCR and ILO.[32]

It also addresses factors that perpetuate poverty by what it describes as promoting justice. It supports community awareness of the collective ability to address unjust practices and begin working for change. It claims to speak out on issues such as child labor, debt relief for poor nations,[33] and the use of children as combatants in armed conflict. World Vision International has endorsed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. It claims to foster opportunities to help reduce conflict levels and to contribute to the peaceful resolution of hostilities and reconciliation of disputes.[34]

World Vision encourages public awareness about the needs of others, the causes of poverty, and the nature of compassionate response.[35] These efforts include collaboration with media and community participation in fundraising.[36] In areas of the world that are considered too dangerous for news organizations to send their crews, World Vision's own videographers supply newscasters with footage of events from these areas. In its communications, the organization claims to uphold the dignity of children and families in presenting explanations of the causes and consequences of poverty, neglect, abuse and war.[37]

World Vision operates in Rwanda since 1994, following the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. In 2023, through 24 programs it helps 1.9 Million people all over the country.[38] Between 2010 and 2017, World Vision Rwanda was averaging nearly US$35 million budget annually, said George Gitau, former country director. [39]

In 2015, World Vision took part in operations to bring earthquake relief to Nepal.[40] It was also involved in running a child sponsorship program bringing aid to needy children in the wake of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.[41] [42]

Criticism

After his resignation from the post of president, its founder Robert Pierce criticized the organization for its professionalization at the expense of its evangelical faith and founded Samaritan's Purse in 1970.[43]

Accusations of misrepresentation

Some donors to World Vision's Sponsor a Child-type fundraising have reported feeling misled by the group's use of such funding for community rather than individual-specific projects.[44] In a 2008 report on famine in Ethiopia, reporter Andrew Geoghegan, from Australian TV programme Foreign Correspondent, visited his 14-year-old sponsor child. The girl has "been part of a World Vision program all her life" yet says (in translated subtitle) "Until recently, I didn't know I had a sponsor." And when asked about her knowledge of World Vision sponsorship says, "Last time they gave me this jacket and a pen." Geoghegan was disconcerted to find that despite being "told by World Vision that [the girl] was learning English at school, and was improving ... she speaks no English at all".[45]

In response, World Vision stated that "it unapologetically takes a community-based approach to development", in which the money is not directly provided to the family of the sponsored child. The organization argued that the "direct benefit" approach would result in jealousy among other community members without children and would not work.[46] Foreign Correspondent replied to World Vision concerning child sponsorship, showing contradictions between the organization's literature that creates the impression that donated money goes directly to the sponsor child and evidence of cases where supposedly sponsored children received little if any benefit.[47]

Israel and Palestine

In 1982, after World Vision publicly criticized Israel's actions in Palestinian refugee camps near Sidon and Tyre, it came under attack from conservative evangelicals and the government of Israel. In spite of this pressure, World Vision president Mooneyham presented to the eight hundred thousand readers of World Vision Magazine a report "showing 255 bodies and ankle-deep body fluids left in a school basement by an Israeli bomb."[48] In the September 1982 issue of World Vision Magazine President Stanley Mooneyham was quoted describing Israeli actions with the behavior of Hitler's army, "reminiscent of Warsaw".[49] In the same month Mooneyham was forced to resign when, according to former World Vision employee Ken Waters, his leadership style was criticized; he was replaced as President by Ted Engstrom.[50]

On June 15, 2016, Mohammad El Halabi, manager of World Vision in Gaza, was arrested at the Erez border crossing and charged by Israeli prosecutors with channeling funds to Hamas.[51] [52] [53] Halabi's lawyer said his client had nothing to do with Hamas and that the fact that the investigation had lasted 55 days proved that there was a problem with evidence. The charity stood by Halabi, stating that he was a humanitarian.[54]

Notable affiliated persons

See also

Notes and References

  1. "World Vision International Inc. " Tax Exempt Organization Search. Internal Revenue Service. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  2. see entry "World Vision International" in California Secretary of State Business Database
  3. Web site: Group exempt letters from IRS to World Vision International and World Vision, Inc. Feb. 13, 2009, (accessed on Aug. 11, 2011). https://web.archive.org/web/20120330195457/http://www.worldvision.planyourlegacy.org/advisors/pdf/tax-exempt.pdf. dead. March 30, 2012.
  4. "Our Leadership ". World Vision International. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  5. Web site: Swartz . David R. . World Vision's Forgotten Founder . . March 16, 2020.
  6. Web site: Time to review law for foreign funding of NGOs . . June 22, 2019.
  7. Dissertation . Hamilton . John Robert . An Historical Study of Bob Pierce and World Vision's Development of the Evangelical Social Action Film . University of Southern California . 1980.
  8. Mehmet Odekon, W. George Scarlett, Encyclopedia of World Poverty, SAGE Publications, USA, 2006, p. 1198
  9. Brian Steensland, Philip Goff, The New Evangelical Social Engagement, Oxford University Press USA, USA, 2014, p. 243
  10. Graeme Irvine: "Best Things in the Worst Times: An Insiders View of World Vision" BookPartners, Inc. (1996) p. 77
  11. S.W. Haas: "MARC to Make Transition, Retain Its Mission" MARC Newsletter 03-4, World Vision Publications, Nov. 2003
  12. http://www.worldvision.org/content.nsf/about/history World Vision History
  13. Web site: World Vision Annual Review 2012 . World Vision International.
  14. Web site: World Vision International : Company Content Page. Manta.com. September 1, 2013.
  15. http://www.wvi.org/wvi/wviweb.nsf/maindocs/39F905AE21E265C1882573750075074B?opendocument
  16. Timothy J. Demy Ph.D., Paul R. Shockley Ph.D., Evangelical America: An Encyclopedia of Contemporary American Religious Culture, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2017, p. 135
  17. Web site: Fund-Raising Oversight Agency Begun by Evanzelical Christians . . March 3, 1979.
  18. Web site: MONROVIA : World Vision Picks Seattle as Relocation Site. June 30, 1994. Los Angeles Times.
  19. Web site: VK Shashikumar '"Preparing for the harvest ..."' Tehelka, Vol 1, Issue 1, Feb 07, 2004. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304024001/http://archive.tehelka.com/story_main.asp?filename=ts013004shashi.asp&id=1. March 4, 2016.
  20. Web site: Our Structure. World Vision. World Vision International. 2023-08-14.
  21. Web site: Board of Directors. December 7, 2012. wvi.org. March 19, 2018.
  22. Web site: World Vision International announces new President and CEO. November 13, 2018.
  23. Web site: February 19, 2019. Andrew J Morley President & CEO, World Vision International. February 19, 2019.
  24. Web site: European Union and World Vision launch project for socio-economic support . Daily FT . April 5, 2023.
  25. Web site: Statement by Principals of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee on Afghanistan: Women's participation in aid delivery must continue . World Health Organization.
  26. Web site: Joining Forces partnership calls for urgent actions to be taken to protect children and their families in Ukraine . ReliefWeb . April 2022.
  27. Michael Barnett, Janice Gross Stein, Sacred Aid: Faith and Humanitarianism, Oxford University Press, UK, 2012, p. 46
  28. Tripp, Linda. "Gender and development from a Christian perspective: Experience from World Vision." Gender and Development 7.1 (1999): 62–64. Print.
  29. Stearns, Richard. "World Vision CEO Richard Stearns Charts Course, Spirit For Nonprofit Sector ." Huffington Post March 3, 2011: 1–2. Print.
  30. "World Vision Mission Statement." In: Graeme Irvine: "Best Things in the Worst Times: An Insiders View of World Vision", BookPartners, Inc. (1996), Appendix C.
  31. Child Sponsorship, Evangelism, and Belonging in the Work of World Vision Zimbabwe. 10.1525/ae.2001.28.3.595. 2001. Bornstein. Erica. American Ethnologist. 28. 3. 595–622.
  32. Web site: The People's Paper . Tehelka . September 1, 2013 . dead . https://archive.today/20130205041504/http://archive.tehelka.com/story_main.asp?filename=ts013004shashi.asp&id=6 . February 5, 2013 .
  33. https://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/feature-stories/g20-leaders-urged-protect-poor-20090402 – Amnesty International News – Apr 2, 2009
  34. https://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/feature-stories/uganda-former-child-soldiers-excluded-adulthood-20051014 Amnesty International News – Oct 14, 2005
  35. http://www.worldvision.org/content.nsf/learn/globalissues-action?Open&lpos=ctr_txt_AdvocacyActionCenter Advocacy action center
  36. https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/org10/012/2008/en/ – Amnesty International Press Center
  37. http://www.worldvision.org/content.nsf/learn/world-vision-somalia?Open&lpos=lft_txt_Somalia World Vision News
  38. Web site: Reporter . Times . 2015-04-09 . World Vision; partnering to build a better world for children . 2023-12-22 . The New Times . en.
  39. Web site: Rwanda: Minister Commends World Vision's Education Initiatives . 2023-12-21 . www.wvi.org . en.
  40. Web site: Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid orders aid flight to Nepal - The National. April 28, 2015 .
  41. Web site: $67K offering will go to fight Ebola outbreak. Jonathan Phelps Daily News. Staff.
  42. Web site: Eekhoff Zylstra . Sarah . What Current, Past, and 'Never' Child Sponsors Think . . December 19, 2017.
  43. David P. King, God's Internationalists: World Vision and the Age of Evangelical Humanitarianism, University of Pennsylvania Press, USA, 2019, p. 159-160
  44. Web site: A World Vision Donor Sponsored a Boy. The Outcome Was a Mystery to Both.. August 3, 2016. Diaa Hadid. The New York Times. August 2, 2016.
  45. http://www.abc.net.au/foreign/people/geoghegan_andrew.htm Geoghegan, Andrew
  46. Costello, Tim (2008). "World Vision response to Foreign Correspondent story from Ethiopia broadcast on 25 November 2008". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on December 8, 2008.
  47. ABC Material's Foreign Correspondent, Foreign Correspondent story from Ethiopia broadcast, broadcast on November 25, 2010, Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  48. David Stoll, Is Latin America Turning Protestant? The Politics of Evangelical Growth, University of California Press, Oxford 1990, p. 285. .
  49. News: Moon. Luke. World Vision's Decades-Long Hate Campaign Against Israel. December 8, 2016. The Tower Magazine. December 2016.
  50. Ken Waters: "How World Vision Rose From Obscurity To Prominence: Television Fundraising 1972-1982" American Journalism, 15, Nr. 4, 69-93 (1998)
  51. News: Kershner. Isabel. Israel Charges Palestinian Employee of Aid Group With Funneling Funds to Hamas. August 4, 2016. The New York Times. August 4, 2016.
  52. News: Israel: World Vision Gaza boss diverted cash to Hamas. August 4, 2016. BBC. August 4, 2016.
  53. News: Top Official in Christian Aid Group Charged With Funnelling Funds to Hamas . August 9, 2016.
  54. News: Israel accuses World Vision's Gaza director of diverting cash to Hamas . August 9, 2016.
  55. Web site: An interview with Hugh Jackman, World Vision ambassador. Christianity Today. 2023-10-01.
  56. Web site: Kris Allen comes to Sacramento. Edgar Alejandro. Hilbert. 2013-02-17. Sacramento Press. 2023-10-01.
  57. Web site: 2008-09-13 . Paul Brandt: Guided by family and faith . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160324104006/http://www.canada.com/story.html?id=98176f4f-86a5-4a2e-be94-2d5593baa3c1 . 2016-03-24 . Canada.com.
  58. Web site: Liam Cunningham World Vision Ireland. www.worldvision.ie. 2019-04-16. dead. April 16, 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190416182020/https://www.worldvision.ie/liamcunningham.
  59. News: Bart. Barnes. R.C. Halverson dies. 1995-12-01. The Washington Post. 2023-10-01.