Helping Hands
Jamie Oliver, Christina Noble, Magdalena and Hanna Graaf, Nebahat Akkoc, Isidoro Macías, Hannes Urban, Peter Hoeg, Simon Pánek, Dikembe Mutombo
Inspiration
J.K. Rowling, Khaled Abu Ajaima, David Beckham, Stefano Dambruoso, Anna Politkovskaya, James Moulton
Innovators
Barbara and Tomasz Sadowski, Sergei Kostin, Nick Moon and Martin Fisher
Activists
Bono, Zackie Achmat, Natasa Kandic, Caoimhe Butterly, Leonard van Baelen
Alchemists
Roger Daltrey, Albina du Boisrouvray, Carine Russo
Green Team
Josef Krecek, Asbjörn Björgvinsson, Yannis Boutaris
Hate Busters
Iris Berben, Mircea Dinescu, Claude Bébéar, Andrea Riccardi
Online Heroes
The Peoples' Choice, David Beckham, Eva Klonowski, Johann Olav Koss, Svetlana C, Zinedine Zidane

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Julie Denesha for TIME
filling the cracks: Pánek's small organization finds unusual ways to help


International Velvet
print article email TIMEeurope Subscribe

Posted Sunday, April 20, 2003; 14.23 BST
When he arrived in Afghanistan in December 2001, Simon Pánek looked for a niche where the tiny resources of his Czech NGO, the People in Need Foundation, could make a difference. With just $50,000 in hand (and the promise of $200,000 more) there was no point in joining the scrum of aid agencies feeding displaced Afghans. Instead, he decided to help them return to their homes, reasoning that any delay would cause them to miss another planting season. In Mazar-e-Sharif, Pánek's 150-family pilot project proved so successful that he became a coordinator of repatriation efforts for the area, hrlping some 5,000 families return home during the spring.

A former student leader of the Velvet Revolution who chose NGO work over a seat in the Czech legislature, Pánek, 35, learned early that "there is always a niche which the big organizations cannot serve." In Sarajevo, he supplied food to 18,000 small children and pregnant women. In Chechnya, he led an effort to repair more than 5,000 roofs. People in Need supports Cuban dissidents, helps persecuted groups in Belarus and runs One World, an international human-rights documentary film festival. In 2001, Belarus authorities shut down People in Need's center in Minsk and expelled its director. (A minor inconvenience, Pánek says.) Reader's Digest magazine named him European of the Year for 2003, but Pánek says he is "not driven by charity. I am angry with the injustices which keep happening around the world."

Previous: Peter Hoeg Next: Dikembe Mutombo






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On New Year's Eve, the Miseries of Minsk
As Russia hikes up the cost of gas for Belarus, the mood turns gloomy
Mogadishu at 60 Miles an Hour
Arms merchants are once again doing brisk business after a rapid change of power in this tough town, but so far the peace has held
The Year of The Nuke
A rundown of the world's nuclear powerhouses, and what to expect in the coming months

QUICK LINKS: Front | Oliver | Noble | Graafs | Akkoc | Macias | Urban | Hoeg | Pánek | Mutombo | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home
FROM THE APRIL 28, 2003 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2003

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