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The American Red Cross
has received a 4-star rating
from Charity Navigator,
America’s largest independent evaluator of charities.
(click here for more info)
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Our Services
Our
Chapter offers services and programs that touch people
both locally and globally.
When war, civil unrest or disaster
cause families to separate, an inability to communicate
with each other or even know if a loved one is still
alive only deepens the mental and emotional anguish
caused by their separation.
To address this, Congress chartered
the American Red Cross to provide tracing, message
delivery and other international services.
We do this by working with the American
National Red Cross in Washington, D.C., to exchange
messages and tracing requests with other Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies, and with the International
Committee of the Red Cross.
Select
an area to learn more:
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The
American Red Cross works with other members of the
Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement around the world
and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
to locate missing loved ones during or after war,
civil unrest, or a disaster in another country.
Not only do we accept tracing requests
from residents who lost contact with family members
overseas, but we also search locally for people whose
overseas relatives believe last resided in our county.
Our national headquarters in Washington,
D.C., acts as the conduit to and from other Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies and the ICRC. As with all
international services, this tracing service is provided
free of charge.

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Holocaust
Tracing Program
As
Holocaust survivors and their families continue to
age, the importance of making our tracing services
accessible to them becomes increasingly urgent.
With the former Soviet Union's 1990
release of Nazi-era documents to the Red Cross, we
can now determine the fate of more victims and survivors
of Nazi persecution. For many, sadly, no information
is available even with access to these records. For
others, a search can bring closure in the confirmation
of a loved one's death, or even the miracle of a reunion.
A search begins with a call or letter
to the American Red Cross office nearest you. For
residents of Norwalk, Westport, Wilton and Weston,
the Mid-Fairfield County Chapter is your local Red
Cross office.
For more information on the American
Red Cross Holocaust Tracing Program, visit the web
site for our Holocaust and War Victims Tracing
Center in Baltimore, Maryland.

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Worldwide
Message Delivery Services
In times
of war and disaster, many people are unable to contact
relatives because of disrupted or unreliable postal
and telephone systems.
Through an international network of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies and the ICRC, we can attempt
to send a message with a current address to a family
member in another country, and through the same means
deliver a reply message to the inquirer.
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International
Disaster Welfare Inquires
When an
earthquake, typhoon, or other natural disaster strikes,
normal ways that families keep in touch with each
other may be unavailable for some time.
People
in the United States who are anxious about the welfare
of their relatives in a disaster-stricken area can
call on the Red Cross.
When the national Red Cross or Red Crescent society
of the affected country is able to accept inquiries,
that society will look for family members and forward
any information about their welfare through Red Cross
channels to the originating chapter.
Note: If your family member is an American citizen
living or traveling abroad in non-U.S. territories,
please call American Citizen Services, U.S. Department
of State, Washington, D.C., at (888) 407-4747.

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Connecting
Relatives During Iraq Conflict
Area
residents now have an opportunity to connect with
relatives in Iraq and to send a Red Cross message
through a website offered by the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
Relatives living in the United States may register
themselves on the ICRC Arabic/English language "Restoring
Family Links" website at www.familylinks.icrc.org.
This will allow family members in Iraq to know how
to make contact with them. Individuals in Iraq may
also register to let family members in Norwalk, Westport,
Weston and Wilton and around the world know of their
whereabouts.
This services is needed as many telephone lines are
overloaded or are no longer working in Iraq, and relatives
may have taken refuge in areas where telephone services
is unavailable.
The ICRC is not accepting messages for prisoners
of war at this time. The ICRC initiates contact with
family members once communication is made with individual
prisoners of war. Additional information is available
at www.redcross.org
regarding humanitarian services for family members
of the displaced and the military through the ICRC
in the 'Conflict with Iraq' column on the home page.

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