Press Releases

For Immediate Release
3/24/2003
Contact: Sloan C. Wiesen
(202) 387-9177
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PHILANTHROPIC WATCHDOG ISSUES CRITIQUE ON IRAQ WAR
NCRP's Board of Directors Questions U.S. Preemptive War in Iraq and Its Impact on Charity and Philanthropy at Home and Abroad

WASHINGTON ­­­­- The board of directors of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, the nation's foremost philanthropic watchdog organization promoting social justice in U.S. grantmaking, has overwhelmingly approved a statement expressing strong concern about the preemptive war launched by the United States on Iraq and the impacts of the war on charity and philanthropy.

At the organization's spring board meeting in Los Angeles on Saturday, March 22, the NCRP board approved the statement on the war in Iraq, emphasizing the human and economic cost of the war and the conflict's potential impact on the U.S. nonprofit sector and the disadvantaged Americans it serves.  At the same time, the statement called on support for U.S. troops and their families, recognizing the hardships that they face by being called up for prolonged service in this overseas war.

"The U.S. philanthropic sector and many of the sector's nonprofit leadership organizations have been unusually quiet about this preemptive war and the wartime budget impacts on the disadvantaged Americans served by charities and philanthropies, " said NCRP Executive Director Rick Cohen.  "The NCRP board of directors felt that it had to speak out and express its deep concern about this war and its potentially devastating impacts at home and abroad."

The statement of the NCRP board called on philanthropy to provide more resources and more support for social justice efforts around the globe, to work toward securing human rights, and to support nonprofits that encourage and promote fundamental debates about the civic climate and threatened civil liberties that this war has exacerbated.

"The U.S. invasion of Iraq should make every philanthropic institution think deeply about the challenges to charity and philanthropy in responding to the economic hardships that an exorbitantly costly war will add to an already troubled economy and about their responsibilities in promoting a vigorous and critically needed public discourse about the national and international priorities and policies that this nation's preemptive war reveals," Cohen said.

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