Miami Herald (Sunday)

On its 60th anniversar­y, we need the Peace Corps more than ever

- BY ANA ALEJANDRE CIERESZKO @aciereszko

Sept. 22 marks the 60th anniversar­y of the Peace

Corps. That was the date, in 1961, on which President John F. Kennedy signed into law legislatio­n creating the agency. With the stroke of a pen, Kennedy deepened our nation’s ability to live out key values — like service, peace, sacrifice, commitment and learning from those we hope to serve.

I am proud to be one of almost 8,600 people from Florida who have served in the Peace Corps, joining more than 240,000 nationwide during these past six decades.

I entered the Peace Corps as a fresh University of Miami graduate, hoping to bring my skills and commitment to communitie­s around the world. During that time, the late 1960s, my brother, Armando Alejandre, Jr., also was serving his country — as a Marine in Vietnam. We had left Cuba, escaping the communist dictatorsh­ip, only a few years earlier.

We both were grateful for the opportunit­y, and it instilled in us a lifelong commitment to service. My brother became an activist against the Cuban dictatorsh­ip until the regime ended his life in the Brothers to the Rescue shoot-down on Feb. 26, 1996.

The community of Returned Peace Corps

Volunteers envisions an agency that advances global peace and understand­ing, seeks innovative solutions to shared global problems and responds to shifting expectatio­ns in the developing world.

But returned volunteers who participat­ed last year in a series of town halls and listening sessions also want an agency that joins other serious institutio­ns in addressing systemic racism, gender-based discrimina­tion and climate change — and they want an agency that genuinely listens to global partners so that the institutio­n can provide the best that America has to offer.

Over the past 60 years, nearly a quarter of a million Peace Corps volunteers have made a tremendous contributi­on to the individual­s and communitie­s in which they served — and to our planet.

Celebratin­g the Peace Corps’ 60th anniversar­y and ensure its resurgence after the pandemic by urging your member of Congress to co-sponsor the Peace Corps Reauthoriz­ation Act (HR 1456) and help deepen our nation’s commitment to service, peace, sacrifice, commitment and, yes, humility — learning from others whom we hope to serve.

Peace Corps service is needed now more than ever.

Ana Alejandre Ciereszko served in the Peace Corps in St. Vincent and the Grenadines from

1969-1971 and is a resident of Miami. She taught chemistry at the Kendall Campus of Miami Dade College for 35 years until her retirement in 2010.

 ?? U.S. National Archives and Records Administra­tion ?? President John F. Kennedy greets Peace Corps volunteers on the South Lawn of the White House in 1962. Kennedy created the agency through an executive order the previous year.
U.S. National Archives and Records Administra­tion President John F. Kennedy greets Peace Corps volunteers on the South Lawn of the White House in 1962. Kennedy created the agency through an executive order the previous year.
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