Reflections on 60 Years  

President Kutin on the occasion of 60 years of SOS Children's Villages 

A boy and a girl in an SOS Children's Village

Celebrating an anniversary at times when the financial crisis seems omnipresent is a challenge. However, I am sure that today it is more important than ever to have a look at what SOS Children's Villages has achieved during the past six decades, to focus on what we can do at present and to bear in mind what will be required for the future.

In 1949, the year of foundation, the economic situation wasn't any better. In fact, the opposite is true. Misery, material and moral destruction as well as the number of needy and abandoned children were huge, especially in Europe. In view of these dismal conditions, Hermann Gmeiner attempted to offer an answer through the SOS Children's Villages. What happened was amazing. People who sometimes had little to live on themselves made the destiny of the children their personal mission -- little donations had an enormous impact. While struggling to survive, people took on responsibility for society's weakest. Today's crisis has once again drawn attention to fact that it isn't a gain in material wealth but growth in humanity and empathy that we should be striving for in the end.

Hermann Gmeiner and those who helped him at that time were guided by a personal inner need to create peace and make sense of a life badly affected by the destruction of World War II. And what made sense then still makes sense today: to work together for a world of peace and justice and to continue believing in change without, however, whitewashing the alarming and insupportable conditions under which millions of children continue to struggle. We need to concentrate our efforts on what we can change! That's the lesson we learned from the past six decades.

SOS Children's Villages has grown from year to year -- from one SOS Children's Village in 1949 to 500 SOS Children's Villages in 2009. From a handful of children who found a new home in the SOS Children's Village of Imst to hundreds of thousands of children and families whom we are supporting through our facilities and programs today. From a few hundred donations and sponsorships to six million SOS friends who are supporting the SOS Children's Village idea financially and emotionally. This is a huge success we enjoy together with our children, our SOS mothers and co-workers and with our friends and donors.

The work of SOS Children's Villages has also become more complex and sophisticated over the years. The growth in numbers went hand in hand with an "inner" growth in order to better respond to the needs of the children. Today, SOS Children's Villages no longer reserves its resources exclusively to orphans. The same importance is now given to the work with children who continue to live with their natural families but, due to adverse living conditions, are in severe danger of being abandoned. Both family based care and family strengthening programs are closely interlinked and aimed at providing children a loving home.

We would be more than happy to see a decrease in the need for our support. Unfortunately, the need is as great as ever. This is why we should never stop trying to do our best for the well-being of the children. It is unacceptable that children keep being abandoned, mistreated and abused; it is unacceptable that they have no possibility to develop in a healthy manner or to go to school; and it is unacceptable that there are children who have no one to turn or talk to.

For 60 years, the mission of Hermann Gmeiner's SOS Children's Villages has always been: to identify what children need, to listen to them, to create a safe environment in which they can recover and develop, to take action where necessary and to enjoy the big and small miracles we are able to perform with our help. In this spirit, let's celebrate the past six decades within our big SOS family and continue to strive to fulfil our vision which is: a loving home for every child.