Russian Children's Welfare Society | |
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Formation | 1926[1] |
Type | 501(c)(3) nonprofit |
Headquarters | New York, New York |
President and CEO | Vladimir Fekula |
Website | rcws.org |
The Russian Children's Welfare Society is a not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) organization based in New York City with branches in Moscow, Russia, San Francisco and Hollywood, California. It was founded in 1926 to help Russian children whose families had fled to other countries after the onset of the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1992, the Society has refocused all of its efforts solely to Russia. Vladimir Fekula has been the President and C.E.O. of the Russian Children’s Welfare Society for the past 11 years. The RCWS funds scholarship programs, medical procedures, pediatric hospitals, rehabilitation programs, and orphanages throughout Russia.
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This year, the Russian Children's Welfare Society celebrates the 85th anniversary of its founding in 1926. The original organizers announced their commitment to improving the lives of Russian children throughout the world at the 125th Street YMCA in New York City. They embarked on their mission with a modest contribution that was sent to support Russian shelters in Latvia, and their legacy lives on in the Society's many programs today. The direction of the Russian Children's Welfare Society support has been steered by many of the 20th century's tumultuous events. The Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 prompted the emigration of large numbers of Russians to Europe, Asia, North and South America. By the early thirties, the Society had ten branches operating throughout the United States and was sending money and material assistance to schools and organizations assisting Russian children in locales as diverse as Estonia, Poland, Finland, France, Germany, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Harbin, Shanghai and Istanbul. The occupation of many of these countries during World War II suspended much of the Society's work, which was prohibited after American entry to the war in 1941. After the liberation of France in 1944, the Society worked very closely with the American Committee for Assistance to France and managed to send $25,000 in cash, food and clothing. By 1945, RCWS assistance was providing hot breakfasts in French schools, serving approximately 1,100 children. During WWII, the Society's leadership decided to professionalize its operations. RCWS eventually gained recognition by the Presidential War Relief Control Board as an approved charity for work abroad during the war. By 1950, the Society was again sending relief to 14 countries. Among the long-term volunteers of the RCWS was Princess Vera Constantinovna of Russia (1906-2001), a great-granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and the youngest child of Grand Duke Constantine Constantinovich of Russia. Princess Vera was born in Imperial Russia and was a childhood playmate of Nicholas II’s younger children. At the age of twelve she escaped revolutionary Russia and spent the rest of her life in exile, first in Europe and from the 1950s in the United States. Starting November 1952 till 1969, Princess Vera worked at the Russian Children’s Welfare Society, assisting with day to day activities of the organization. She passed away at the Tolstoy Foundation’s elderly care home in Nyack, NY at the age of 94. Princess Vera was the last member of the Romanov dynasty who was born in Russia. With the dawn of the Cold War, it became all but impossible for the Society to send aid to countries that fell behind the "iron curtain." The Society did carry on its work helping Russian children in western European countries, particularly France, as well as the Far East, South America and the United States. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Society shifted its focus and resources to assist impoverished children living in Russia. The Society received a $4.5 million bequest from the estate of Virginia P.and John Engalitcheff, Jr. in 1990. During the 2007–2010, the Society disbursed over $2 million in direct aid to children in Russia through its medical programs, scholarships and by supporting orphanages, homeless shelters, hospitals, rehabilitation centers for disabled children and schools.
The Russian Children’s Welfare Society is currently working with the Russian Aid Foundation on a project entitled “Give Beauty Back to the Children” to raise funds for the Moscow Center for Maxillofacial Surgery to treat children with facial deformities.[2]
In 2007, RCWS started working with the Foundation «Future without HIV/AIDS» and the All Russia Pediatric Aids Center in St. Petersburg, which provides assistance to infected orphans and pregnant women. At the Pediatric AIDS Center there is a community of 40 sick and orphaned children who receive the attention of a dedicated staff of medical and educational professionals who foster their emotional development and integration into society.
Over the last several years, RCWS has purchased specialized arthritis equipment for the Moscow Institute of Rheumatology and Sechenov Medical Academy. The Society has also helped facilitate training for Russian rheumatologists in New York and in Russia.
In the fall of 2000, RCWS partnered with The Smile Train, an American non-profit organization whose mission is to assist children born with cleft lip and palate worldwide. The project involved two of the most prominent Russian hospitals for children's facial reconstructive surgery: The Moscow Medical Stomatological Institute and the Moscow Center for Children’s Maxillofacial Surgery. In December 2002, in order to help raise the standards of cleft care outside of Moscow, RCWS and MMSU hosted its 1st Training Symposium for 250 cleft practitioners, sponsored by The Smile Train and the Russian Ministry of Health.
RCWS launched a scholarship program to help orphans transition to independent adult life and attain higher education. Since then, the number of participants has grown from 3 in the 2003-2004 academic year to 42 students in 2010-2011. To date, 18 scholarship recipients have completed their schooling and found employment. Currently, RCWS is supporting 42 students in the Pskov, Yaroslavl, Moscow and Velikiy Novgorod regions of Russia. According to the Russian government statistics 1 in 3 orphanage graduates will become homeless, 1 in 5 unemployed, 1 in 7 will commit a crime, and 1 in 10 will attempt suicide. To date, the RCWS's scholarship program has been enormously successful in helping its' students avoid these pitfalls by providing a complete support structure to students as they transition from living in an orphanage to attending a university on their own.[3]
RCWS is committed to giving orphans a sense of care and love once absent in their lives while also preparing them for the future. Many of the estimated 700,000 orphans in Russia are currently unprepared to take care of themselves or find a job, factors greatly contribute to the high rate of homelessness, prostitution,crime, drugs and even suicide amongst former orphans. RCWS helps orphanages meet basic needs as well as promote comprehensive programs that help children develop into healthy and independent adults.[4][5]
One of the RCWS partners, Solba, is an orphanage for girls near the picturesque Nikolo-Solbinsky Convent in Russia that currently supports 30 talented young girls.In 2009–2010, RCWS transferred $85,070 to cover the roof and other renovation expenses at the Solba Orphanage building, as well as support the theatre program.
Seven years ago, RCWS initiated the "Granny Program" to aid grandmothers who lacked financial resources to care for their orphaned grandchildren. After its initial run, the program expanded to include any broken families in strained circumstances, struggling to care for orphaned children. The "Granny Program" currently supports 11 families.
Every year, the Russian Children’s Welfare Society hosts a New Year’s celebration known as “Yelka” for over 1000 orphaned and sick children. In addition to the party, RCWS sends out festively clad volunteers and Ded Moroz (Russian Santa Claus) to distribute gifts at various children’s hospitals.
In old Russia, one of the most popular puppet theatre characters was Petroushka. No matter his misfortune, he always bounced back to entertain the crowd. Igor Stavinsky, Michael Fokine and Alexandre Benois created a masterpiece ballet “Petroushka”, featuring the luckless but undefeated Petroushka who had fallen in love with a graceful ballerina.The Petroushka Ball, a traditional Russian ball held annually in New York City, is the primary fundraising event for the Russian Children's Welfare Society (RCWS). The Ball was started in 1965 as a expansion of a small tea dance, by a group of members of the Society (Mr. and Mrs. Serge C. Bouteneff, Mrs. Ivan P.Obolensky, Mrs. Diane Eristavi, Princess Sergei Belosselsky-Belozersky) with a Junior Committee that was formed including Helen Basilevsky, Mafalda Chanler, Amy Gristede, Andre Kotchoubey, and Beatrice and Vladimir Fekula, the current President of the RCWS. To this day, the latter two still debate which one gets the credit for coming up with the name "Petroushka" during that first meeting. The late Helen Basilevsky, (grand daughter of White Guards General Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel), designed the "Petroushka" emblem which is still used on all of its invitations and programs. The first Ball was held at the now defunct Delmonico Hotel; it sold out and was an overwhelming success. It has become one of New York most vibrant and anticipated annual events, attracting upwards of 700 dinner and dancing guests. Past Petroushka Ball events were held at the Pierre, Plaza (for over 30 years) and Waldorf=Astoria hotels. Since 2002, the Ball has featured Opera greats such as Anna Netrebko, Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Rolando Villazon, Elina Garanca, Elena Obraztsova, Matthew Polenzani, Maria Guleghina, Diana Damrau. Kate Lindsey, Piotr Beczala and Paul Groves, as well as soloists from the American Ballet Theatre, Bolshoi Theater, Novaya Opera and the Spivakov Foundation. The 47th consecutive Petroushka Ball is scheduled for February, 10, 2012 and will be held at the Waldorf =Astoria Hotel. Featured guest performers include Olga Borodina and Ildar Abdrazakov with the kind permission of the Metropolitan Opera.[6][7][8][9][10]
Over the years, the Russian Children’s Welfare Society has hosted a long and varied list of events and maintains contact with some of the world’s best classical performers, from American Ballet Theater Principal Dancers to stars of the Metropolitan Opera. In 2007 ,RCWS participated in a fundraiser at Carnegie Hall. The sold out concert featured two of the leading opera singers in the world, Anna Netrebko, Soprano, making her Carnegie Hall debut, and Dmitri Hvorostovsky, Baritone, accompanied by the Orchestra of St. Luke's.[10] Both Anna and Dmitri are Honorary Directors of RCWS. RCWS also hosted a fashion event with supermodel Sasha Pivovarova and designer Randi Rahm to raise funds for children with facial deformities. In 2010, the Society partnered with Bonhams Auction house for a sports gala that featured a number of Olympians, among which was champion figure skater Johnny Weir.
Through the Society’s prudent investments and frugal financial practices, they are able to channel 100% of their donations to help sick and needy children with overhead being met in its entirety through internal sources. RCWS has put in place a thorough system of checks and balances to make sure grants are used for their intended purpose: Organizations must provide a complete application detailing the project for which they are seeking support as well as a budget. The Society annually prepares audited financial statements which carry and unqualified opinion in conformity with Generally Accepted Acounting Principles. RCWS issues an official agreement stating the dollar amount of the grant and how it is to be spent Russian banks will not authorize release of funds without such an agreement and require invoices from grantee organizations that match items and services designated in the agreement The Director of our Moscow office visits grantee organizations to check up on the society's projects RCWS representatives in Russia, as well as RCWS Board members make periodic visits Organizations are required to submit midyear and final reports detail expenditures and overall achievements.
Honorary Directors