UNICEF 60th anniversary 1946-1959: the agency for children
UNICEF was never meant to be here today, in the first decade of the 21st century.
Yet today, a world without UNICEF is unimaginable.
Brought to life by unanimous vote at the first-ever session of the United Nations General Assembly - the United
Nation's International Children's Emergency Fund was to provide short-term relief - food, medicine and clothing - to
children in a Europe ravished by war.
It was the first international organization for children ever.
The organization quickly became known as UNICEF, and its first executive director, Maurice Pate, declared "There
are no enemy children," and put children's needs above politics in the post-war world.
At the peak of its activity in Europe, over 6 million children received daily meals and milk, earning UNICEF the
nickname 'milkman to the world'.
UNICEF was - and still is today - funded entirely by voluntary contributions, and the first National Committee to
support the organization was established, in the United States.
The idea to sell greeting cards to help children was born, and rapidly began raising funds, and UNICEF's global
profile.
Of course, children around the globe were affected by the World War, and soon the relief effort spread to China and
Palestine, then Latin America.
Within five years, UNICEF was active in almost 100 countries, and began expanding the scope of its mission, bringing
health campaigns to tackle leprosy, trachoma and tuberculosis.
There was considerable resistance to the idea of continuing the UNICEF experiment beyond post-war relief, but it
was apparent that children faced an ongoing 'silent emergency' every day, a spiral of poverty, disease and hunger
that kills thousands, and stifles global development.
But UNICEF did become a permanent part of the United Nations, and began providing community-based, basic
health services, training midwives, providing birth kits, building cold chain networks and developing the idea of mass
campaigns to eradicate yaws and battle malaria.
Today, it's commonplace to see celebrities speaking out on humanitarian issues, but in fact, UNICEF pioneered the
idea, when Danny Kaye became an 'Ambassador at Large', the world's first celebrity spokesperson for a goodwill
cause
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