Tuesday, March 9, 2010

ABOUT US

The Agape African Senior Center, Inc. was established in 2000 by refugees and immigrant volunteers from Liberia, West Africa led by the Reverend John K. Jallah. The Center is a Christian Faith-Based, grassroot community based, charitable non-profit 501(c)3 Organization.

Mission:
The Agape Africa Senior Center, Inc. is established to help, in a culturally sensitive manner, low-income, disadvantaged, grossly under served seniors, especially elderly African and Caribbean refugees and immigrant to combat the acute isolation they encounter linguistically, economically, culturally, and socially, thereby hences their independent living and promote their self-esteem in this their new country, the USA.

Activities:
The Center achieves it Mission through various self-developmental activities to include but not limited to the followings:
  • Facilitation of peer support groups
  • Spiritual enrichment and counselling
  • Provision of instruction in English as a Second Language (ESL), Adult Literacy, Health Literacy, Financial and other literacy program.
  • Training in Citizenship, dissemination of immigration information, and conduct citizenship test preparatory classes.
  • Training in survival skills to include use of the telephone, travel by SEPTA, safety and how to obtain help in emergencies.
  • Job preparation, job search, job placement and facilitation of self-employment.
  • Community out-reach, information dissemination, advocacy, and referral services i.e. Health care, to include clients without health insurance, immigration, not only to connect clients to community services and resources, but also, to ensure that they access services to which they may be entitled and for which they may be qualified like any other aging Americans.

Needs Being Addressed:

The last two decades, especially, has witnessed the influx of West African refugees into the United States of America due to arm conflicts, political prosecutions, and economic hardship that has engulfed that area of the world. A large percentage of these new Americans estimated (2000) to be about 50 thousand have resettled in the Metropolitan Philadelphia and nearby suburbs.

Among these new Americans are their youths and the elderly. The Youths though also challenged, are immediately absorbed in Schools, relatively easily learn English and some basic American self-assertive lifestyle and move on. The Adults are overly occupied working around the clock to keep roof over their family heads, Educate their children and improve themselves. African and Caribbean senior citizens on the other hand, most of whom are challenged linguistically, socially, culturally, and economically, are usually left idle at homes behind closed doors, usually unable to relate to anything like fish out of water!

Inability to speak American Standard English, they are unable to communicate or relate to neighbors or the wider community even communicating to health providers are awkward at best. They are unable to travel on SEPTA independently, unacquainted with safety procedures or how to seek emergency help. Unable to to understand or be understood in English, inability to live independently, or advocate on their own behalf, unaware of the numerous aging programs, resources, and benefits, they are unable to independently access benefits to which they may be entitled and for which they may be qualified. They depend on their adult children or relatives who are overwhelming occupied by putting food on the table, for everything!

Their heavy accents, and/or native Caribbean and African tongues, lifestyle, dress code, and skin color set them apart and may make them believe that they are being discriminated against.

The Agape African Senior Center is uniquely and strategically designed to intervene in a culturally appropriately manner. Our program and activities revolve around the needs and desires of the aging clients themselves thereby in some way experiencing the empowerment and prestige they enjoy in their native countries as the fabric of society.

Agape is not attempting to reinvent the wheels. In fact , it is lubricating the gears for the smooth turning of the wheels by providing preparatory activities for thees new Americas to be able to independently access services and resources to which they may be entitled and for which they may be qualified thereby ensures that they are accorded equal treatment like any other aging Americans.

This self-developmental initiative by African and Caribbean refugees and immigrants ourselves, deserves yours and the support of all well meaning people.

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