Mission:
Amizade empowers individuals and communities through worldwide service and learning.


Amizade’s VALUES are present and interconnected on any program:
  • Community-driven service
    • Amizade has a 12-year record of cooperating with communities on service that local individuals and organizations define and direct. We not only cooperate with communities on issue identification, we also work collaboratively on project implementation, continuous evaluation, and regular improvements.
  • Deliberate learning
    • One of Amizade’s core assumptions is that context matters. We cooperate with community members and organizations to educate Amizade participants about local culture, local concerns, and local assets.
  • Intercultural immersion and exchange
    • Amizade encourages connections across cultures. Through cooperative service efforts, deliberate local learning, and in some cases, homestays, Amizade experiences ensure deep learning about cultural assumptions, worldviews, and of course the concerns and happiness that we all hold in common.
  • Consideration of Global Citizenship
    • Amizade invites all participants to reflect on fundamental human equality and how we might each work to build a world where human life is treated more equally across traditional cleavages of ethnicity, nation, class, or gender. Consideration of personal, political, and economic opportunities for enacting global citizenship provides Amizade participants with the opportunity to extend their global civic service beyond their Amizade program.
  • Reflective Inquiry
    • All of the preceding themes are woven together through a final core Amizade value, which is reflective inquiry. The questions we face when engaged in intercultural service around the world are often difficult. And it can be challenging to stay connected to global civic engagement after a short-term experience. But Amizade believes strongly that it is important to continue asking: What is service? How have I learned from others’ cultures? What do I understand better about my own? How can I value others around the world, even from my home? What are the ways I can be a good global citizen right here? These are just a few examples, but Amizade encourages reflective inquiry throughout experiences and afterward.


Tel. 304-293-6049 volunteer@amizade.org



Amizade News

VIDEO: Watch a video on the meaning of Obama's candidacy
in the context of the US Civil Rights Movement. The video was produced by Amizade Course Instructor Jen Saffron in cooperation with her students and course facilitator Monica Cwynar. The video would not have been possible without the inspiration, leadership, and community connections provided by Louretta Wimberly of the Alabama Historical Commission Black Heritage Council Emeritus along with many other informative and gracious hosts featured in the short film, "Democracy: A Steady, Loving Confrontation."

Amizade's Director Spending part of the summer with a class in Tanzania helped Amizade's director, Eric Hartman, focus on the work with water systems and women’s rights Amizade does in Tanzania.

Students Filming DocumentaryFilm to be Screened at the Democratic National Convention
Amizade Course through West Virginia University Demonstrates Importance of Intercultural Service and Learning in the US; Leads to Development of Film to be Screened at the Democratic National Convention.
View Story

Read an article by a student on this Amizade program through the US South or view the Press Release (pdf) from the Denver Office of Cultural Affairs and Denver Film Society.

Summer 2009 Global Service-Learning Course Opportunities will be Announced by September 15!

Groups are reserving opportunities for 2009 service and learning experiences now. Email volunteer@amizade.org for more information or to make your reservation

More Recent News...

 


Tel. 304-293-6049   volunteer@amizade.org
Amizade is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization.      © 2008 Amizade Global Service-Learning and Volunteer Programs        site by WebVaastu