Champion of The Poor Awarded
$1 Million Humanitarian “Opus Prize”
Opus Foundation Announces 2005 Awards
Released:
Sept. 6, 2005
Milwaukee, Wis. – A champion of
literacy and educational opportunity for India’s poorest
children is the 2005 winner of the $1 million Opus Prize,
officials of the Opus Prize Foundation and Marquette University
announced today. Marquette was the Catholic university
chosen by the Opus Prize Foundation to administer this year’s
prize.
Reach Education Action
Programme (REAP), founded by Rev. Trevor Miranda, S.J.
in Mumbai, India, one of the world’s most populous
cities previously known as Bombay, becomes the second recipient
of the annual prize. The million-dollar cash award
will be used to further REAP’s mission of “empowering
the underprivileged through literacy for a new world of
freedom, justice, dignity and self-respect.”
Under Rev. Miranda’s leadership, REAP in just six
years has opened more than 450 literacy centers to bring
books and teachers to the desperately poor. Wherever
the children may be – on the streets, in the hills,
on the highways or in tribal areas – REAP’s mission
is to reach them, and to set them on a more hopeful path
in the mainstream of society. REAP has also launched
an adult literacy program that focuses on giving women the
education, training and skills they need to take on dignified
jobs and escape from the streets.
“Rev. Miranda’s years of service to the poor
and marginalized,” said Don Neureuther, of the Opus
Prize Foundation, “have shown an innovative approach
to addressing old injustices and persistent social problems. Our
hope is that this award not only furthers the work of the
winner, but inspires others to give of themselves to those
in need.”
Marquette University Honored to Participate
The Opus Prize is a humanitarian award conferred on individuals
or organizations of any religious background, anywhere in
the world. The recipient must demonstrate innovative
strategies to solving deeply rooted problems in their community – poverty,
hunger, illiteracy or disease – and do so in ways that
foster personal responsibility and independence. Nominations
for the prize are considered by a panel of members from select
Catholic universities around the country.
"It was a privilege for us to have a part in awarding
this year's Opus Prize," said Marquette President Rev.
Robert A. Wild, S.J. "All three award recipients
are living examples of key values that Marquette as a Catholic,
Jesuit university seeks to promote. Our participation
in the Opus Prize this year is, in fact, a catalyst for our
students and faculty to engage further in the work of promoting
human rights and human dignity around the world."
Marquette will use the momentum created by its participation
in the Opus Prize selection to explore issues of human dignity
and human rights and the response of individuals and institutions
to such issues. As part of the year-long “Human
Dignity, Human Rights: A Call to Service,” the
university will present faculty lectures across academic
disciplines, a film series, performing arts productions,
and presentations by university guests on issues of human
rights in the context of Marquette’s Catholic, Jesuit
mission.
The prize is conferred as an encouragement to the work of
humanitarian entrepreneurs around the world – men and
women whose resourcefulness, moral vision, and unshakable
determination are transforming their communities for the
better. It honors men and women who, in their own daily
lives, show the power of one person to make a difference
in the lives of others.
The nondenominational Opus Prize honors faith in action,
singling out the good works, fidelity, and exemplary character
of recipients. The first winner of the Opus Prize was Helping
Hands for the Poor, Inc., in honor of Monsignor Richard Albert,
a New York City native who has devoted thirty years to serving
the poor in the shantytowns of Jamaica. The Opus Prize
Foundation is a philanthropy established by the Opus Corporation,
a Minnesota company providing architectural, construction
and real estate development services in 40 markets nationwide.
The REAP centers offer a low-budget, out-of-school learning
system for children and young adults who live on the margins
of Indian society – many of them child laborers who
have been given no formal education at all. The program
is open to all needy children, regardless of caste, creed
or religion. REAP aims, as Rev. Miranda
puts it, at “a literacy movement, covering every street,
pavement, slum, hilltop, [and] tribal village to bring about
social transformation.”
Additional Prizes Honor Wasson, Otieno
This year, a prize of $100,000 was also awarded by the Opus
Prize Foundation to Nuestros
Pequenos Hermanos (“Our Little Brothers and Sisters”)
a charitable organization serving orphaned and abandoned
children in Latin America and the Caribbean
founded by Rev.
William Wasson. The centers began in 1954 when
Father Wasson rescued a boy from a harsh prison sentence
in a Mexican jail who had been caught stealing money from
the church poor box to buy food. After gaining custody
of the boy and eight other children in his jail cell, Father
Wasson started Our Little Brothers and Sisters. In
the half-century since then, the orphanages have cared for
more than 15,000 homeless or abandoned boys and girls.
Another award of $100,000 was conferred on Dr.
Juliana Akinyi Otieno for her service as a pediatrician
in eastern Kenya, where two in every ten children still
die before the age of five. In addition to working
a 12-hour shift as a pediatrician at New Nyanza General
Hospital, Dr. Otieno opens her home as an after-hours clinic
for the care of children, whose parents often walk for
days to reach her. In a part of the world often oppressive
and degrading to women, Dr. Otieno overcame many obstacles,
and has devoted her life to saving and uplifting the lives
of others.
The Opus Prize Foundation is a philanthropy established
by The Opus Group, an award-winning, $1.4 billion commercial
real estate development company headquartered in a suburb
of Minneapolis with 1,400 employees in 28 offices across
the United States and Canada. Community stewardship has been
at the core of Opus since it was founded in 1953. The company
contributes 10 percent of its pretax profits to community
and religion organizations. Faith-based entrepreneurship
has been a key focus; so establishing The Opus Prize was
a tangible way to support the people and the organizations
that are dedicated to making a significant difference in
the lives of people who need help the most.
November Awards Ceremony
All three recipients will be on campus at Marquette University
on November 7, 2005 for the conferral of their awards. They
will also participate in a week long series of events on
campus dedicated to the cause of human rights around the
world.
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