June 23, 2005: Headlines: Awards: Minorities: COS - Somalia: Staff: Deputy Director: Peace Corps: Somalia RPCV Charles Baquet III to be recognized with Peace Corps' 2005 Franklin H. Williams Award
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June 23, 2005: Headlines: Awards: Minorities: COS - Somalia: Staff: Deputy Director: Peace Corps: Somalia RPCV Charles Baquet III to be recognized with Peace Corps' 2005 Franklin H. Williams Award
Somalia RPCV Charles Baquet III to be recognized with Peace Corps' 2005 Franklin H. Williams Award
Somalia RPCV Charles Baquet III to be recognized with Peace Corps' 2005 Franklin H. Williams Award
Peace Corps' 2005 Franklin H. Williams Awards Ceremony Will Honor Community Leaders
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 23, 2005 – Eleven former Peace Corps volunteers from across the nation, now contributing domestically as community leaders, will be recognized for their service with the Franklin H. Williams Award tonight at the Paul D. Coverdell Peace Corps Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Established in 1999, the Franklin H. Williams Award pays tribute to returned Peace Corps volunteers of color who continue the Peace Corps mission through their commitment to community service, and who support the agency’s third goal of promoting a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans. The award assumes the name of former Peace Corps Regional Director for Africa and U.S. Ambassador to Ghana, Franklin H. Williams. Ambassador Williams was instrumental in assisting the first Peace Corps Director, Sargent Shriver, in advancing the agency’s mission across the globe.
This year’s keynote speaker will be Wilbert Bryant, Counselor to the Secretary for the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). In this role, Bryant is responsible for advising the Secretary of Education on ways to strengthen the nation’s HBCUs, and on ways to advance the opportunities for HBCUs to participate in federally supported programs. Bryant also serves as deputy assistant secretary for higher education programs for the Department of Education.
Peace Corps Deputy Director Jody Olsen will present the 11 Franklin H. Williams Awards, in addition to the Director’s Award, which recognizes an individual who has served the Peace Corps’ mission through a commitment to international development and cross-cultural understanding. Finalists for the Franklin H. Williams Award were selected by the 11 Peace Corps regional recruiting offices across the United States. The 2005 winners include:
Ambassador Charles Baquet III
Former Peace Corps Deputy Director Charles Baquet started in the Peace Corps as an English and social studies instructor in Somalia from 1965 to 1967. “Teaching with few materials and living with no conveniences left little time for introspection,” he said of the experience.
Although living conditions as a Peace Corps volunteer were primitive, Ambassador Baquet has been continuously involved with the agency and civil service since his return to the United States. After his Peace Corps tour in Somalia, he became a Foreign Service officer and was posted in Africa as U.S. Consul General in Cape Town, South Africa. He later served as U.S. Ambassador to Djibouti from 1991 to 1994. In 1994 he was nominated by President William Clinton for the position of Peace Corps Deputy Director. As deputy director, Ambassador Baquet promoted the Peace Corps at many top colleges and universities, including Xavier University in New Orleans, where he now serves as Director of International Programs. “The Peace Corps is a people-to-people agency,” he often tells his students, “That's what real diplomacy is all about.”
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This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Awards; Minorities; COS - Somalia; Staff; Deputy Director
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