Near East Foundation

Near East Foundation
Typesnonprofit organization Edit this on Wikidata
Legal status501(c)(3) organization Edit this on Wikidata
CountryUnited States Edit this on Wikidata
Revenue16,129,078 United States dollar (2018) Edit this on Wikidata
Logo of the Near East Foundation

The Near East Foundation (NEF) had its genesis in a number of earlier organizations. As the scope of relief expanded from aid to Greek, Armenian and Assyrian victims of the Ottoman Empire to post-World War I relief in the region, the names and mission changed. The inception was as the American Committee on Armenian Atrocities,[1] followed by American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief (ACASR), then American Committee for Relief in the Near East (ACRNE), before becoming Near East Relief in August 1919.[2][3] In 1930 as the relief work diminished and development work expanded, the organization reorganized as the Near East Foundation.

Today the NEF is a Syracuse, New York–based American international social and economic development organization.

The NEF is the United States' oldest nonsectarian international development organization and the second American humanitarian organization to be chartered by an act of Congress. Near East Relief organized the world's first large-scale, modern humanitarian project in response to the unfolding Armenian and Assyrian genocides.

Known as the Near East Foundation since 1930, NEF pioneered many of the strategies employed by the world's leading development organizations. In the past 100 years NEF has worked with partner communities in more than 40 countries.

  1. ^ This citation is from a description of the book The Burning Tigris : The Armenian genocide and America's awakening to international human rights by Peter Balakian. "Publisher description for Library of Congress control number 2003044986". catdir.loc.gov. Retrieved 6 March 2024. We really need to refer to congressional sources for validation of this and subsequent committee names.
  2. ^ Nov. 1918. "Records of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Near East Relief, 1917-1928". dlir.org. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  3. ^ See also: "The Story of Near East Relief". genocide-museum.am. Retrieved 6 March 2024. We really need to refer to congressional sources for validation of this and subsequent committee names.