To the Congress of the United States:
I recommend to the Congress
the establishment of a permanent Peace Corps - a pool of trained American
men and women sent overseas by the U. S. Government or through private
organizations and institutions to help foreign countries meet their urgent
needs for skilled manpower.
I have today signed an Executive
Order establishing a Peace Corps on a temporary pilot basis.
The temporary Peace Corps will
be a source of information and experience to aid us in formulating more
effective plans for a permanent organization. In addition, by starting
the Peace Corps now we will be able to begin training young men and women
for overseas duty this summer with the objective of placing them in overseas
positions by late fall. This temporary Peace Corps is being established
under existing authority in the Mutual Security Act and will be located
in the Department of State. Its initial expenses will be paid from appropriations
currently available for our foreign aid program.
Throughout the world the people
of the newly developing nations are struggling for economic and social
progress which reflects their deepest desires. Our own freedom, and the
future of freedom around the world, depend, in a very real sense, on their
ability to build growing and independent nations where men can live in
dignity, liberated from the bonds of hunger, ignorance and poverty.
One of the greatest obstacles
to the achievement of this goal is the lack of trained men and women with
the skill to teach the young and assist in the operation of development
projects - men and women with the capacity to cope with the demands of
swiftly evolving economies, and with the dedication to put that capacity
to work in the villages, the mountains, the towns and the factories of
dozens of struggling nations.
The vast task of economic development
urgently requires skilled people to do the work of the society - to help
teach in the schools, construct development projects, demonstrate modern
methods of sanitation in the villages, and perform a hundred other tasks
calling for training and advanced knowledge.
To meet this urgent need for
skilled manpower we are proposing the establishment of a Peace Corps -
an organization which will recruit and train American volunteers, sending
them abroad to work with the people of other nations.
This organization will differ
from existing assistance programs in that its members will supplement technical
advisers by offering the specific skills needed by developing nations if
they are to put technical advice to work. They will help provide the skilled
manpower necessary to carry out the development projects planned by the
host governments, acting at a working level and serving at great personal
sacrifice. There is little doubt that the number of those who wish to serve
will be far greater than our capacity to absorb them.
The Peace Corps or some similar
approach has been strongly advocated by Senator Humphrey, Representative
Reuss and others in the Congress. It has received strong support from universities,
voluntary agencies, student groups, labor unions and business and professional
organizations.
Last session, the Congress authorized
a study of these possibilities. Preliminary reports of this study show
that the Peace Corps is feasible, needed, and wanted by many foreign countries.
Most heartening of all, the
initial reaction to this proposal has been an enthusiastic response by
student groups, professional organizations and private citizens everywhere
- a convincing demonstration that we have in this country an immense reservoir
of dedicated men and women willing to devote their energies and time and
toil to the cause of world peace and human progress.
Among the specific programs
to which Peace Corps members can contribute are: teaching in primary and
secondary schools, especially as part of national English language teaching
programs; participation in the worldwide program of malaria eradication;
instruction and operation of public health and sanitation projects; aiding
in village development through school construction and other programs;
increasing rural agricultural productivity by assisting local farmers to
use modern implements and techniques. The initial emphasis of these programs
will be on teaching. Thus the Peace Corps members will be an effective
means of implementing the development programs of the host countries -
programs which our technical assistance operations have helped to formulate.
The Peace Corps will not be
limited to the young, or to college graduates. All Americans who are qualified
will be welcome to join this effort. But undoubtedly the Corps will be
made up primarily of young people as they complete their formal education.
Because one of the greatest
resources of a free society is the strength and diversity of its private
organizations and institutions much of the Peace Corps program will be
carried out by these groups, financially assisted by the Federal Government.
Peace Corps personnel will be
made available to developing nations in the following ways:
1. Through private voluntary
agencies carrying on international assistance programs.
2. Through overseas programs
of colleges and universities.
3. Through assistance programs
of international agencies.
4. Through assistance programs
of the United States government.
5. Through new programs which
the Peace Corps itself directly administers.
In the majority of cases the
Peace Corps will assume the entire responsibility for recruitment, training
and the development of overseas projects. In other cases it will make available
a pool of trained applicants to private groups who are carrying out projects
approved by the Peace Corps.
In the case of Peace Corps programs
conducted through voluntary agencies and universities, these private institutions
will have the option of using the national recruitment system - the central
pool of trained manpower - or developing recruitment systems of their own.
In all cases men and women recruited
as a result of Federal assistance will be members of the Peace Corps and
enrolled in the central organization. All private recruitment and training
programs will adhere to Peace Corps standards as a condition of Federal
assistance.
In all instances the men and
women of the Peace Corps will go only to those countries where their services
and skills are genuinely needed and desired. U.S. Operations Missions,
supplemented where necessary by special Peace Corps teams, will consult
with leaders in foreign countries in order to determine where Peace Corpsmen
are needed, the types of job they can best fill, and the number of people
who can be usefully employed. The Peace Corps will not supply personnel
for marginal undertakings without a sound economic or social justification.
In furnishing assistance through the Peace Corps careful regard will be
given to the particular country's developmental priorities.
Membership in the Peace Corps
will be open to all Americans, and applications will be available shortly.
Where application is made directly to the Peace Corps - the vast majority
of cases - they will be carefully screened to make sure that those who
are selected can contribute to Peace Corps programs, and have the personal
qualities which will enable them to represent the United States abroad
with honor and dignity. In those cases where application is made directly
to a private group, the same basic standards will be maintained. Each new
recruit will receive a training and orientation period varying from six
weeks to six months. This training will include courses in the culture
and language of the country to which they are being sent and specialized
training designed to increase the work skills of recruits. In some cases
training will be conducted by participant agencies and universities in
approved training programs. Other training programs will be conducted by
the Peace Corps staff.
Length of service in the Corps
will vary depending on the kind of project and the country, generally ranging
from two to three years. Peace Corps members will often serve under conditions
of physical hardship, living under primitive conditions among the people
of developing nations. For every Peace Corps member service will mean a
great financial sacrifice. They will receive no salary. Instead they will
be given an allowance which will only be sufficient to meet their basic
needs and maintain health. It is essential that Peace Corpsmen and women
live simply and unostentatiously among the people they have come to assist.
At the conclusion of their tours, members of the Peace Corps will receive
a small sum in the form of severance pay based on length of service abroad,
to assist them during their first weeks back in the United States. Service
with the Peace Corps will not exempt volunteers from Selective Service.
The United States will assume
responsibility for supplying medical services to Peace Corps members and
ensuring supplies and drugs necessary to good health.
I have asked the temporary Peace
Corps to begin plans and make arrangements for pilot programs. A minimum
of several hundred volunteers could be selected, trained and at work abroad
by the end of this calendar year. It is hoped that within a few years several
thousand Peace Corps members will be working in foreign lands.
It is important to remember
that this program must, in its early stages, be experimental in nature.
This is a new dimension in our overseas program and only the most careful
planning and negotiation can ensure its success.
The benefits of the Peace Corps
will not be limited to the countries in which it serves. Our own young
men and women will be enriched by the experience of living and working
in foreign lands. They will have acquired new skills and experience which
will aid them in their future careers and add to our own country's supply
of trained personnel and teachers. They will return better able to assume
the responsibilities of American citizenship and with greater understanding
of our global responsibilities.
Although this is an American
Peace Corps, the problem of world development is not just an American problem.
Let us hope that other nations will mobilize the spirit and energies and
skill of their people in some form of Peace Corps - making our own effort
only one step in a major international effort to increase the welfare of
all men and improve understanding among nations.