- PRESS RELEASE
- For Immediate Release
- February 22, 2002
- Contact: Niloofar
M. Nouri, 510-848-0264
Persian Center distributes
500 Wheelchairs in Iran
On Valentine's Day, a delegate
of representatives from Persian Center, Wheelchair Foundation,
and City of Berkeley, traveled to Iran to deliver the gift of
love and mobility: 500 wheelchairs for the disabled in Iran.
When Soheyl Modarressi, President of Oxford Development Group,
visited a facility for the disabled in Tehran last year and discovered
that there were 3 wheelchairs for the 700 patients, he was immediately
prompted into action. He brought the Persian Center and Wheelchair
Foundation together, who collectively raised and donated $150,000
toward the purchase of 1000 wheelchairs for Iran. The first shipment
of 500 wheelchairs was made in December 2001, and a tour was
scheduled for their delivery in February of 2002.
The team embarked on their
mission at the Red Crescent where a variety of organizations--such
as Kahrizak Foundation-were invited to collect a portion
of 250 wheelchairs. "We are having a wonderful and amazing
time," reacted Mark Rhoades, Berkeley's Planning Manager;
he and his wife Erin Banks spent most of the first two days assisting
disabled children into their new red wheelchairs, and felt it
was "the most important and rewarding work" they had
done in their life. Everyone felt the joy of one young girl,
who began racing across the room and refused to stop turning
and spinning, once she was set in her wheelchair. Echoing the
general sentiment of the group, Patrick DeTemple, Electronic
Media Manager for City of Berkeley, commented that "the
team's efforts are a very clear response to a very direct need;
there is no confusion that we are doing a good thing."
Haft-e Teer Charity, which houses 90 disabled girls, received
the remaining 250 wheelchairs on the third day. They will be
using 65 of the wheelchairs and distributing the remainder to
Gorouheh Koodak, Mahak Charity, Behnam Daheshpour
Cancer Institute, and Rofideh Organization. "Most
patients would never be able to afford a low quality or used
wheelchair at 1,500,000 Rials (~ $185), let alone a brand new,
high quality one, costing over 3,000,000 Rials!" exclaimed
Mohammad Naimi-Yazdi, President of Haft-e-Teer. "In
many cases, these wheelchairs are the finest possessions they
will ever own." No exact statistics are available regarding
the need for wheelchairs in Iran, but it is estimated to be 6-10%
of the population. Most of the five million disabled people are
a result of inter-family marriages, inaccessibility to medical
facilities at birth, or poor nutrition and care during infancy.
Despite numerous distributions
worldwide, Fred Gerhard, Director of Wheelchair Foundation, was
overcome with emotion when he received a painting completed by
one of the wheelchair recipients who draws with his neck. "We
came to give the people of Iran the gift of mobility," said
Gerhard, "but instead we received a greater gift of love
in their eyes!" The Wheelchair Foundation, founded in 2000
with a grant from the Kenneth E. Behring Foundation, has distributed
over 35,000 wheelchairs in 74 countries.
"It is amazing how one
wheelchair changes someone's life entirely, affects 7-10 people
around them, and moves a community of over 50 people in their
circle," said Shahin Tabrizi, board member of Persian Center,
who had returned to Iran after 25 years. He and Modarressi are
already planning a fundraising event with other goodwill ambassador's
Ahmad Behjati, proprietor of Via Centro, and Mansour Hariri of
Cyrus Travel. Persian Center hopes to continue raising awareness
about this serious need in Iran and partner with the Wheelchair
Foundation in delivering wheelchairs worldwide.
The Persian Center is a non-profit charitable organization, dedicated
to providing an environment for education, cultural celebrations,
and exhibitions to promote an understanding of the Persian culture
and heritage, as well as peace through education and understanding.
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