Fondation Chirac


The Fondation Chirac was launched by former French President Jacques Chirac, after having served two terms in office between 1995 and 2007.
Since 2008, this foundation strives for peace through five advocacy programmes:
It supports field projects involving local people with innovative solutions. The Fondation Chirac has also awarded the Prize for Conflict Prevention every year since 2009.
The foundation's stated priorities include combating falsified medicines, deforestation and desertification, and helping to preserve endangered languages and cultures. The "Sorosoro programme" took its name from an Araki word for "breath, speech, language". The endangered Araki language, in Vanuatu, was spoken by then by only eight people, and the programme's stated objective was to "participate actively in the struggle for the preservation and revitalisation of these endangered languages".

History

The Foundation was officially launched on June 9, 2008 at the Quai Branly Museum in Paris, with the attendance of most of its Honour Committee's members, such as:

Board of the Fondation Chirac