|
Our History
"These children don't need a cup,
they need a cow."
How Heifer Started
During the Spanish civil war, Heifer
International founder Dan West served as a relief worker handing
out cups of powdered milk from America to children on both sides
of the conflict. When the supply ran out but the line of hungry
children didn't, he reasoned, "If families had a dairy cow
they could be spared the indignity of depending on others to feed
their children."
In 1944, the first shipment of 18 heifers (young
cows) was sent to Puerto Rico. In 1947, China received its first
shipment of 550 dairy cows through the UN. Since then, Heifer International
has provided food- and income-producing animals and training to
more than four million resource-poor families in over 125 countries.
From then on
Headquartered in the U.S., Heifer International
has over 350 current projects in 48 countries in Asia and the South
Pacific, Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, North America, and
South America and the Caribbean.
Heifer has spent more 50 years alleviating hunger,
poverty and environmental degradation by helping communities become
self-reliant for food and income. Providing livestock and training
to hungry families is Heifer International's unique approach that
originated with one simple idea - "Not a cup, but a cow."
Heifer has helped more than four million impoverished families in
over 125 countries become self-reliant through the gift of livestock
and training in their care.
Heifer provides more than 20 types of food- and
income-producing animals, as well as intensive training in animal
husbandry, ecologically-sound, sustainable farming and community
development. Heifer works closely with local partners including
community groups, government agencies, and other grassroots organizations.
|