The International Rescue Committee (IRC) was founded as the New York branch of the International Relief Association (which later combined with another relief organization) in 1931, at the suggestion of Albert Einstein. As of 1933, the IRC was initially an organization that helped those who were fleeing
Nazi Germany and as need arose it expanded its clientele.
Founding The International Relief Association (IRA) was founded in 1931 in Germany by two left-wing factions, the
Communist Party Opposition (KPO) and the
Socialist Workers Party (SAP). Its purpose was to aid victims of state oppression and persecution. After the Nazis took power in 1933, the organization moved its headquarters to Paris. The KPO consisted of the "right opposition" – communists who had been purged by Stalin in 1929 because of their support for
Nikolai Bukharin. Among those purged was
Jay Lovestone, the erstwhile head of the American Communist Party. It was Lovestone who formed an American section of the International Relief Association in 1933. Among those who joined him was
Albert Einstein. Its purpose was to assist Germans suffering under
Adolf Hitler's government – particularly supporters of the "right opposition". Later, refugees from
Mussolini's Italy and
Franco's Spain were assisted. In 1940, European exiles and American liberals close to First Lady
Eleanor Roosevelt, founded the
Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC) to aid European refugees trapped in
Vichy France. ERC founding member
Varian Fry arrived in
Marseille within a few weeks of the
fall of France, where he pulled together a small team that was instrumental in helping many individuals escape Vichy and the Nazis to safety in the U.S. and elsewhere. Over 2,000 political, cultural, union and academic leaders were rescued in just 13 months, ending when Fry was expelled by the Vichy French. Fry also worked closely with British intelligence, helping to establish escape routes for British servicemen. Fry also took a map showing the distribution of mines in the Mediterranean that he received from a refugee and gave it to an agent of British intelligence. In 1942, after the US entered the Second World War, IRA and ERC joined forces under the name International Relief and Rescue Committee, which was later shortened to the International Rescue Committee. The organization was financed largely by the
National War Fund. While historian
Eric Thomas Chester writes that by the 1950s the IRC had evolved into a global operation functioning as an integral link in the CIA's covert network, became deeply involved in the volatile confrontations between the two superpowers, and participated in an array of sensitive clandestine operations, many other historians have taken a less polemical tone about the IRC during this period, arguing that the ‘relationship’, where one existed, was of cooperative collaboration only where goals aligned - as opposed to one of cooptation by any intelligence services.
Timeline 1940s In the 1940s, IRC fed people during the Soviet blockade of West Berlin. In 1945, at the end of
World War II, the IRC initiated emergency relief programs, established hospitals and children's centers, and started refugee resettlement efforts in Europe. With the descent of the
Iron Curtain in 1946, the IRC initiated a resettlement program for East European refugees, which continued until the end of the
Cold War. In 1949, the IRC took a significant step toward a greater integration into the covert network. The IRC distributed a confidential memorandum that it was prepared to take part in sensitive covert operations at the behest of the U.S. government. Only a select few within the committee would be told of these operations. From this point onward, the IRC would function on a two-pronged basis. There would be programs to assist refugees that would be transparent and, at the same time, there would be parallel operations known to only a few.
1950s In 1950, the IRC intensified its aid in Europe with Project Berlin, which provided food to the people of East Berlin amid increased Soviet oppression. After the war, the committee's European representatives focused on rebuilding the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) as a bulwark against the Communists. The IRC conducted operations across Iraq from April 2003 through December 2004. The organization resumed operations there in 2007 and launched expanded programs throughout the country. In addition to aiding displaced Iraqis within the country, the IRC also provided assistance to Iraqi refugees in
Jordan and
Syria, as well as to those granted refuge in the United States. In 2003, IRC programs in
West Africa expanded to serve the growing populations of refugees and displaced persons uprooted by civil conflict. In 2005, around two decades after Burmese refugees first began crossing into Thailand, poverty and violent conflict in Myanmar's ethnic minority areas continue to drive people into camps along the border. Since its opening in 2005, by 2012 the Resettlement Support Center (formerly known as the Overseas Processing Entity) in the Thai capital
Bangkok had helped 90,000 people seek admission to the United States as refugees. The Resettlement Support Center primarily assists refugees in Thailand but also assists asylum seekers in Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and other countries in Southeast Asia. The activities of the center are funded by the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration. The IRC worked closely with local aid organizations to respond to various disasters, including in
Pakistan after the 2005 earthquake; and in
Indonesia after the South Asian tsunami; and in Myanmar after the 2008 cyclone. In 2008, the IRC released the fifth in a series of surveys demonstrating the excess loss of life in the
Democratic Republic of Congo caused by the nation's long-running civil war. The fifth survey put the excess-death toll between August 1998 and April 2007 at 5.4 million. The IRC affiliate Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children became the Women's Refugee Commission in 2009. IRC experts in emergency health, shelter and children's welfare worked with local aid groups to assist survivors.
David Miliband, former
British Foreign Secretary, became the IRC president and CEO in 2013. In 2015, according to IRC it trained 15,000 farmers, gave 440,000 babies measles vaccinations, job training to 27,000 people and resettled 10,000 refugees in the United States. In 2016 the IRC published the "Outcomes and Evidence Framework," an interactive tool that aims to create a framework for guiding humanitarian decision-making using theories of change and research evidence. The same year, they publicly committed to using this tool to ensure that all of their programs are evidence-based or evidence-generating by 2020 as part of the "Grand Bargain" commitments. In July 2018, IRC was behind the Welcome Home initiative to give tours and activities for refugees in New York City and Northern California. In 2019, the IRC in San Diego began hosting a "Refugee Film Festival" that presents documentaries about the refugee experience.
2020s On March 13, 2020, the second annual IRC's Refugee Film Festival in San Diego was postponed until June due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. After the
Russian invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, the IRC provided support for Ukrainian refugees and civilians, both abroad and within Ukraine. The IRC provided mobile health teams and equipment capable of quickly deploying to crisis locations, supplied civilians with heating equipment such as gas stoves to keep homes warm during winter, and conducted many other efforts amid the large-scale humanitarian crisis. As of 2024, these efforts are still ongoing. After a report published in December 2023 the IRC has warned that humanitarian crises will worsen in 2024 due to several key factors, including climate change, worsening armed conflicts, and less international support. Africa is expected to be the region most adversely effected. == Current work ==