Historia

Una persona puede hacer la diferencia. Trabajando juntos hacemos cambios duraderos. Conozca cómo Hermann Gmeiner, un trabajador de bienestar infantil, comenzó Aldeas Infantiles SOS con un presupuesto reducido.
La primera Aldea Infantil SOS fue fundada por Hermann Gmeiner en Tyrol, Austria, en 1949. Como trabajador de bienestar infantil, Gmeiner vio cómo los niños huérfanos como resultado de la Segunda Guerra Mundial sufrieron. Estaba comprometido a ayudarlos construyendo familias amorosas y comunidades de apoyo. Aprenda más sobre la vida y el trabajo de Hermann Gmeiner .

Con el generoso apoyo de donantes, patrocinadores, socios y amigos, la visión de Gmeiner de brindar cuidados amorosos en un entorno familiar para niños sin cuidado parental y de ayudar a las familias a permanecer juntas para que puedan cuidar a sus hijos, ha crecido constantemente durante más de seis décadas .

Hoy, Aldeas Infantiles SOS está activa en 135 países y territorios de todo el mundo, ayudando a cientos de miles de niños cada año a través de cuidados alternativos, fortalecimiento familiar, escuelas, centros de salud y otros trabajos basados ​​en la comunidad.

Aldeas Infantiles SOS a través de los años

1949

SOS Children's Villages is founded in Austria by Hermann Gmeiner, with the first SOS Children's Village based in Imst, Austria.


1955

The first SOS Youth Facility is established in Innsbruck, Austria. SOS Children’s Villages associations are founded in France, Germany and Italy.


1960s

SOS Children's Villages International is established as the umbrella organisation for all SOS Children's Villages associations; SOS Children's Villages begins working in Latin America, starting with Uruguay.


1963

The first SOS Children’s Villages in Asia are established in South Korea and India.


1970s

The first African SOS Children's Village is built in Côte d'Ivoire; the first programmes are started in Ghana, Kenya and Sierra Leone.


1985

Helmut Kutin succeeds Hermann Gmeiner as President of SOS Children's Villages International.


1986

Hermann Gmeiner dies on 26 April 1986, having established around 230 SOS Children's Villages all over the world. Both SOS Children's Villages and Hermann Gmeiner himself have been nominated several times for the Nobel Peace Prize.


1991

SOS Children’s Villages reopens in Czechoslovakia, and the first SOS Children’s Villages in Poland and the Soviet Union are started; SOS Children's Villages programmes are started in Bulgaria and Romania; the first SOS Children’s Village in the USA is founded.


1995

SOS Children's Villages International achieves UN status, becoming an "NGO in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations".


2002

SOS Children's Villages International receives the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize for extraordinary contributions towards alleviating human suffering.


2003

SOS Children's Villages family strengthening programmes are established.


2005

Following the tsunami disaster in Asia, SOS Children's Villages starts the largest emergency relief and reconstruction programme in the organisation's history, with programmes in India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Thailand.


2007

SOS Children's Villages helps victims of natural disasters in Bolivia, Indonesia, Peru and Uruguay, as well as those displaced in the crisis-torn regions of Sudan, Chad and Somalia. SOS family strengthening programmes now reach 80,000 children.


2009

The 500th SOS Children's Village is opened and the organisation turns 60. The Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children, to which SOS Children's Villages significantly contributed, are officially welcomed by the UN General Assembly.


2010

Following the devastating earthquake in Haiti, over 500 unaccompanied children are given a temporary home in the SOS Children’s Villages in Santo and Cap Haitien. Thousands of Haitian children are fed through the SOS Children's Villages emergency nutrition programme.


2012

In June, SOS Children’s Villages International holds its 19th General Assembly and elects Siddhartha Kaul to succeed Helmut Kutin as president.


2013

Over 82,000 children and young people are being raised and cared for in 554 SOS Children's Villages and over 600 SOS youth facilities worldwide. Another 328,000 children and adults benefit from SOS family strengthening.


2014

SOS Children's Villages associations from 11 countries share good practices in creating community-integrated family strengthening and family-like care programmes in urban settings; SOS Children's Villages Madagascar is awarded a UNESCO-Hamdan Prize for outstanding teacher training; and international football start Vincent Kompany becomes International Ambassador.


2015

In response to the refugee crisis, SOS Children's Villages provides on-the-ground aid to refugees, internally displaced families and unaccompanied children in at least 12 countries.


2016

In June, Siddhartha Kaul is reelected President of SOS Children's Villages International at its 20th General Assembly. In September, SOS Children's Villages receives the Princess of Asturias Award for Concord from the Royal Family in Spain.