Volunteering with the United Nations

UN Volunteer Retreat

Image source: Wakhi.wordpress.com

The United Nations is an international organization of countries established in 1945 as a successor to the League of Nations. Its purpose: to promote international peace, security, and cooperation. Because it includes politically powerful delegates from 193 member states and has political power vested in its founding charter, the UN can take wide-ranging action on a variety of issues. Regardless of your political leanings, it’s difficult to criticize the overarching mission of the UN. Their relief agencies “provide aid and protection to over 36 million refugees and others fleeing war, famine or persecution.” The United Nations and its specialized agencies, funds, and programs make the world a safer, more just place to live. The UN works on projects related to conflict resolution, human rights, counter terrorism, disaster relief, refugee protection, sustainable development, disarmament and non-proliferation, the protection of children, gender equality, clearing landmines, economic and social development, and expanding food production. If our world is ever going to be peaceful, it’s organizations like the UN that will make it happen.

Global Water

A Young Girl Fetching Water in a Bucket

Image source: Champoli.com

I’m noticing a trend: our last three articles have been about organizations that use the word “global” in their titles. It’s the perfect word. It embodies what these organizations represent: the universality of human experience, change on a planetary scale. Distance doesn’t separate our natures. We are all citizens of one world. We have to take care of each other. I’m reminded again of our humanness by the subject of today’s article: Global Water.