A century ago, a pioneering effort in global philanthropy whose legacy lives on.
PLEASE ALSO READ ABOUT HOOVER’S EFFORTS TO RESCUE EUROPEAN JEWS….
EX-PRESIDENTS AND THE JEWS: CARTER VS. HOOVER by Rafael Medoff
http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2014/10/16/ex-presidents-and-the-jews-carter-vs-hoover-by-rafael-medoff
The world has grown accustomed to international organizations devoted to saving civilians in the midst of armed strife and social upheaval. Groups including Doctors Without Borders, World Vision and CARE are well-known and world-renowned. Almost forgotten is the American whose achievements a century ago set an example for these and many other philanthropic efforts: Herbert Hoover, the 31st president of the United States.
In August 1914 Hoover was living in London. He was a highly successful mining engineer with business interests on every continent except Antarctica—but he was also restless, confiding to a friend that he wished to “get in the big game” of public life. He had his opportunity when, just days before his 40th birthday, Great Britain declared war on imperial Germany. “If my judgment of the situation is right,” Hoover wrote to a friend, “we are on the verge of seven years of considerable privation.”
In the early weeks of World War I, Hoover and other leading Americans in London organized emergency relief assistance for more than 100,000 American travelers fleeing the continent of Europe for England and safe passage home. His efficient leadership impressed the U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, Walter Hines Page. Page, along with others, soon tapped him for a far greater mission of mercy.