Since 1933, the IRC has provided hope and humanitarian aid to refugees and other victims of oppression and violent conflict around the world.
The IRC on Twitter
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These pix from Mali show the devastating impact of the #drought sweeping across Africa's #Sahel region: t.co/6dO5jkrY
May 21, 2012
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@mmm_dumpling @GPTW_Global @CorConnection @hiltonprize @NataCour @SharonDAgostino Thanks for your support!
May 18, 2012
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On the blog: Uganda after #Kony: Alice Akoko’s story t.co/qpKLefsZ
May 18, 2012
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Women fleeing conflict often face increased risk of rape & domestic violence. Unacceptable? Sign the #WakeUp pledge: t.co/y3reqP3J
May 17, 2012
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Commentary by the IRC's Liz Pender: Rape & domestic violence are all too common for women who fled the Nuba mountains: t.co/vzKfhqbp
May 17, 2012
VOICES FROM THE FIELDTHE IRC BLOG
Rescuing the Nazis’ most-wanted
Varian Fry at his office in Marseilles in the spring of 1941. "I felt obliged to help," he said of his daring rescue operation.
It was 70 years ago this week — August 4, 1940 — that the IRC’s Varian Fry boarded a transatlantic flight from LaGuardia Airport in New York on his way to German-occupied France on a mission to rescue 200 leading artists and intellectuals who were on the Nazis’ most-wanted list. Before the authorities expelled him 13 months later, he and his colleagues in Marseille would help more than 2,000 refugees cross the border into Spain.
Among those spirited out of France were the painters Marc Chagall and Max Ernst, the philosopher Hannah Arendt, and Nobel Prize winning medical researcher Otto Meyerhof.
IRC president George Rupp blogged about Fry's courageous exploits as the IRC observed our 75th anniversary in 2008. Read more here.

Print by Marc Chagall for the portfolio Flight [PDF], a limited edition of 12 original prints by internationally renowned artists that was commissioned by the IRC’s Varian Fry.
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