The Catholic Kolping Society has branches in over thirty countries. Each country has a National Office and is relatively independent in its operation. Local groups are known as Kolping Families. Individual chapters follow Kolping's dictum: "The needs of the times will tell you what to do." The International Headquarters is located in Cologne across the street from the
Minoritenkirche, where the founder is buried. Kolping International is represented at the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in New York and at the
International Labour Organization (ILO) in Geneva. The General Secretariat in Cologne coordinates, supports and monitors development projects in more than forty countries. Their work focuses on vocational education and training, microfinance programs, and access to clean drinking water.
United States The Kolping Society in the United States operates thirteen facilities; the national headquarters is located in the
Yorkville section of
Manhattan, once a distinctly German neighborhood and still the site of the annual
Steuben Day Parade. The first meeting of Kolping New York was held at the Church of St. Mary Magdalen, East 17th Street on October 14, 1888. "Its purpose was to provide a Kolping Society for young journeyman who arrived from Europe without friends or family." It subsequently acquired Kolping House, a short-term men's residence on 88th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. As of 2021 Kolping New York also operates: the Kolping-on-Concourse residence for mature men and women. It is located on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx. In the United States, the Society's activities are directed more toward families rather than providing residences for single people. The Kolping Society of Detroit was founded in 1926. In 1929. the society acquired a parcel of abandoned farmland and created
Kolping Park which included a neo-Gothic chapel constructed from stones and shells sent from Kolping societies around the world. The chapel is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. The chapel was subsequently donated to the Chesterfield Township Historical Society and relocated to the Chesterfield Historical Village.
Canada The Kolping Society of Canada has branches in Edmonton, Hamilton, Kelowna, Toronto, Vancouver and Winnipeg. Many of these organizations were founded in German parishes to assist young European immigrants find work and housing. It sought to maintain group cohesion through social activities. The Kolping Society of Ontario aided Catholic German tradesmen such as stonemasons and welders. Initially a men's organization, Kolping evolved into a family association.
Africa The Kolping Society of South Africa (KSA) was established in
Johannesburg by German immigrants in 1952. KSA supports four early-childhood development centres in South Africa, and runs an employment opportunity program providing vocational skills training for youth from marginalised and disadvantaged areas.
India Kolping established a presence in India in 1962; the National Kolping Society of India was formed about twenty years later. With support from Kolping Augsburg it runs nine children's after-school programs in
Bangalore and
Udhagamandalam. It also provided emergency assistance to migrant workers and pavement dwellers during the COVID-19 lockdown, to persons affected by
Cyclone Nivar, and to the homeless facing a cold winter.
Lithuania With the re-establishment of Lithuanian independence in 1990, pre-war Catholic societies were revived. The Lithuanian Kolping Society was established in 1993 as a public non-profit, charitable organization involved in educational activity. It runs Kolping College in
Kaunas, a private non-university higher education institution, granting Professional bachelor's degrees; and Kolping Educational Centre to assist individuals with professional qualification and re-qualification. == References ==