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Jimmy
Carter Work Project 2007 Habitat
for Humanity of Greater Los Angeles is proud to
be the host of the Jimmy Carter Work Project
2007. Click
here for the official press release.
Online
application is now available!
Registration
for Habitat for Humanity's Jimmy Carter Work
Project 2007 in
Los Angeles
is now open. Please join us for this exciting,
energizing and innovative project. This year’s
project will give Habitat for Humanity
volunteers a firsthand experience of how
affordable housing is built in densely populated
urban areas.
Through the Jimmy Carter Work Project, Habitat
for Humanity International and Habitat for
Humanity Greater Los Angeles has set a goal to
have a major impact on the communities where we
build. The high cost of land creates the need
for a multi-family model which still helps
low-income families become homeowners. During
the week of JCWP, Habitat will work with 30
low-income partner families to complete their
new homes.
This year's JCWP also will launch Habitat for
Humanity's A Brush with Kindness program to
improve the current housing by helping existing
low-income homeowners who cannot physically or
financially afford to maintain their homes.
Habitat will work alongside 70 homeowners to
improve their current housing conditions. A
Brush with Kindness is a great opportunity to be
a part of a program that benefits the entire
community.
Please join us from Oct. 28 to Nov. 2 and
challenge yourself with a new experience! More
info
rmation and the application are available now at
http://www.habitat.org/jcwp/2007/app_front_page.aspx
About
President Jimmy Carter and the JCWP
As
president of the United States, Jimmy Carter was
deeply committed to social justice and basic
human rights. He and his wife Rosalynn left the
White House in search of meaningful ways to
contribute in these areas. In addition to
promoting peace and human rights through the
nonprofit Carter
Center in Atlanta, they lead the
Jimmy Carter Work Project (JCWP) for Habitat for
Humanity International one week each year.
Please click
here to visit the Habitat for Humanity
International website for details on other JCWP
projects.
Jimmy
Carter's involvement with Habitat for Humanity
International began in 1984 when the former
president led a work group to New York City to
help renovate a six-story building with 19
families in need of decent, affordable shelter.
That experience planted the seed, and the Jimmy
Carter Work Project has been an internationally
recognized event of HFHI ever since.
Each year, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter give a week
of their time—along with their construction
skills—to build homes and raise awareness of
the critical need for affordable housing. The
JCWP is held at a different location each year,
and attracts volunteers from around the world.
The Carters and more than 4,000 volunteers built
92 houses in Anniston, Ala., and LaGrange and
Valdosta, Ga., during JCWP
2003. The 2002
JCWP took place in Africa. One
thousand houses were built in 18 countries, with
the final 100 houses constructed in a five-day
build in Durban, South Africa. In 2001,
JCWP built 136 houses at six sites across South
Korea with more than 9,000 volunteers
participating from around the world. Other
recent JCWP builds have taken place in New
York-Florida-Georgia (2000,
157 houses), the Philippines (1999,
293 houses) and Houston, Texas (1998,
100 houses). JCWP
2004 took place on two sites in
Mexico—Puebla and Veracruz—Oct. 24-29, 2004,
and JCWP
2005 was
held in Detroit and Benton Harbor, Mich. The 2006
Jimmy Carter Work Project will take place
Oct. 29 through Nov. 3 in Lonavala, India. More
than 2,000 volunteers from India and abroad will
join President and Mrs. Carter in the
construction of 100 homes.
"We
have become small players in an exciting global
effort to alleviate the curse of
homelessness," Carter said. "With our
many new friends, we have worked to raise funds,
to publicize the good work of Habitat, to
recruit other volunteers, to visit overseas
projects and even build a few houses."
Since leaving office, Carter has gained a
reputation as a tireless champion for social
justice. "Habitat has successfully removed
the stigma of charity by substituting it with a
sense of partnership," Carter said.
"The people who will live in the homes work
side by side with the volunteers, so they feel
very much that they are on an equal level."
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For
more information on Jimmy Carter and Habitat,
click
here.
-
For
more information on the Jimmy Carter Work
Project, click
here.
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