How Can I Help?

Your tax deductable financial gift is the most important single action you can take to help the vulnerable children and elderly in Georgia. U.S. dollars have great purchasing power in Georgia. This fact, when combined with AFG’s hands-on-project monitoring of our Georgian partners, means that your gift is multiplied many times over. Donate Now Learn More

Newsletter

AFG News provides the most current information about our exciting work giving assistance and encouragement to children and elderly in need of help. Join Now Read Current

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Spread the word by forwarding AFG News and our website address to those who share your feelings about providing help to the needy. Tell A Friend

AFG: Projects

American Friends of Georgia, Inc. (AFG) is helping our Georgian partners to establish and maintain care-giving programs to alleviate the suffering of their most vulnerable citizens.  These include orphaned, homeless and disabled children, children with tuberculosis and cancer, homeless single mothers, and the ill and homeless elderly.  Our innovative and groundbreaking projects provide medical care, education, sanctuary, rehabilitation, art therapy, surrogate parenting as well as support for Georgian artists’ efforts to preserve and promote their art and culture.  Over the past ten years, AFG’s executive director Marusya Chavchavadze, has visited Georgia meeting with our Georgian partners and learning about their needs.  Since 2002, Lena Kiladze, architect and volunteer art teacher to the Dzegvi Orphanage children, has been AFG’s representative in Georgia. She monitors our projects and assists our Georgian partners with finding additional support.

Mother Mariam, Lena Kildaze, Marusya Chavchavadze

When the Soviet Union collapsed, Georgia fell into darkness.  There was little electricity or gas for heat and light in the cities.  Some parts of the countryside have now been in the dark for a decade. The economy was in ruins and the social safety net disappeared.  Teachers and physicians were not paid.  Parents who could not feed their children were forced to let them beg on the streets or to put them in state orphanages.

Since 1994, AFG’s goal has been to provide real help to our Georgian partners who are attempting to create their own social safety net.  Our relationship with our partners is based on mutual trust and respect.

Rather than AFG telling them what we think they should do, our partners have the creativity and freedom to tell us what they need and when they need it.  We stay with them until both sides are confident that the project has become self-sustaining.

The new Georgian Government under President Mikheil Saakashvili, who was elected in January 2004 following the bloodless Rose Revolution, is endeavoring to restore the Georgian economy and renew the hopes of the Georgian people.

 

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