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“We’re building societies through community organizations, and diverse groups of people in the communities are coming together to overcome differences. We bring people out to talk about child protection rights, gender equality, and health issues like clean water. The program inherently has a convening power.”

Johann Olav Koss, Founder and CEO of Right To Play

About Johann Olav Koss

In late 1993, just a few months before the opening ceremonies of the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics, a young speed skater by the name of Johann Olav Koss led a humanitarian trip to the small African country of Eritrea. Working as an ambassador of the organization Olympic Aid (later to become Right To Play), the Norwegian athlete found himself face-to-face with the realities of life in a country emerging from decades of war.

Seven years later, Koss, a four-time Olympic gold medalist and social entrepreneur, founded Right To Play. Through sports and games, the nonprofit helps children build essential life skills and better futures, while driving social change in their communities with lasting impact. Right To Play works in the most disadvantaged areas of the world, engaging with girls, persons with disabilities, children affected by HIV/AIDS, street children, former child combatants, and refugees. Right To Play’s mission is to improve the lives of children in the most disadvantages areas of the world by using the power of sport and play for development, health, and peace.

After his initial trip to Eritrea, Norwegian speed-skating legend Johann Olav Koss made world headlines when he won three Gold Medals at the 1994 Lillehammer Olympic Games, breaking a total of 10 world records over the course of his career. Koss has gone to win numerous accolades, including honorary doctorates from the University of Calgary and Brock University, and was named “One of 100 Future Leaders of Tomorrow” by TIME Magazine, and a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2006. Johann completed his undergraduate medical training at the University of Queensland, and completed his Executive MBA at the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto.

Current Operations of Right To Play

Working in both the humanitarian and development context, Right To Play is a global organization, training local community leaders as coaches to deliver its programs in more than 20 countries affected by war, poverty, and disease. Right To Play reaches 1 million children and youth through weekly activities, and has trained nearly 12,000 volunteer coaches and 5,000 Junior Leaders to help run its weekly programs.

Approach and Distinguishing Features

Right To Play’s global impact benefits one million children weekly, with play and sports programs that improve life skills, health knowledge, behavior, and classroom engagement, to name a few.  Nearly 50 percent of the children and half of the volunteer coaches, teachers, and leaders are female. Right To Play involves entire communities by working with local agencies, parents, teachers, and community volunteers to implement their programs. By training community leaders as coaches that deliver its programs through its coach-teacher model, local volunteers build leadership skills and meaningful connections between youth and adults.

Right To Play also involves more than 300 Athlete Ambassadors, who are professional and Olympic athletes from more than 40 countries, and who serve as role models to the children, as well as fundraise and promote awareness.

Koss has leveraged his experience and organizational capacity by working with the United Nations to include sports in the Millennium Development Goals, and by helping national governments include sports in their social development policies.

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2013 Kravis Prize


Celebrity support for mothers2mothers and Pratham events

2012 Kravis Prize recipient organization mothers2mothers and 2010 Kravis Prize recipient organization Pratham have recently gained significant support from celebrities in the U.K. in raising attention for two upcoming charity events that will benefit their organizations. In honor of Mother’s Day, mothers2mothers will auction off designer clothing and other items donated by celebrities in order to support the organization’s work to improve the quality of life for thousands of HIV-infected women around the world. Celebrity donors include Annie Lennox, Colin Firth, and former Spice Girl Emma Bunton. “I’m delighted to support mothers2mothers by offering this autographed package of ‘King’s Speech’ memorabilia,” Firth said. “I have enormous respect for the work mothers2mothers is doing to protect babies from HIV, and hope this auction is a great success.” Pratham UK also announced an April 24 Fashion Event in London in order to raise money for the organization’s efforts to boost literacy and arithmetic skills among children in rural and urban India. Numerous Bollywood and local celebrities are expected to attend the event, which will also showcase clothing and jewelry by famous Indian designers (including designer Payal Jain) and feature a performance by the “Got To Dance” TV stars known as “Pulse Collective.” RELATED: “Pratham USA receives Times of India award” “m2m: Mentor Mothers”...

Where’s Right To Play headed next? The United States

Right To Play,  founded in 2000 by Olympian Johann Olav Koss (this year’s recipient of the Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership), has spent the last decade empowering children through play in more than 20 countries all over the world. But the Canadian-based organization has never established a foothold in its neighbor to the South. Until now. In January, Koss and his organization announced the development of Play at the Core:  The Right to Play New York City Play-based Early Learning Program.  This partnership with the New York City Department of Education is Right To Play’s first domestic program in the United States. Soon the program will be addressing the achievement gap among low-income families in the Bronx. Currently, educators are being trained to bring Right To Play’s message of  of building life skills to urban youth through the power of play. Work and play might be treated as mutually exclusive areas for adults, but current research from the child development arena demonstrates how the two are interconnected. Play is crucial to learning and identity development in young children: This offers a channel through which they receive early impressions of teamwork and other people’s responses to them. For Sophia Pappas, executive director of the Office of Early Childhood Education in New York City’s Department of Education, that means that the new partnership with Right 2 Play is nothing less than a golden opportunity to help local children. The partnership will support “strengthening problem-solving skills of young learners,” Pappas says, “so that children at the pre-kindergarten age level are positioned to be successful learners in later years.” According to the organization, Play...

A garden makes a difference: Seattle Times spotlights Landesa’s work with young Indian women

A garden grows more than vegetables. It also grows opportunities for women in impoverished Indian villages – that’s the message behind a pilot program developed by Landesa that’s the focus of a recent special report in the pages of the Sunday Seattle Times. That special report – titled “Seeds of Hope” – appears on the front-page of the newspaper’s March 16 edition and is devoted to Landesa’s program in West Bengal as well as to profiling Roy Prosterman, founder of the Seattle-based organization devoted to land access for the poor in India, China, Africa and other parts of the world. The Seattle Times visited the region and interviewed families whose lives have been affected by Landesa and Prosterman, the inaugural recipient of the Henry R. Kravis Prize in Leadership in 2006. In particular, the special coverage examines the impact of teaching young women to garden and how this program’s goal transcends simply providing a useful skill. “The idea,” the article explains, “is that if [young women] are considered assets rather than extra mouths to feed, the girls might complete their educations and break out of the poverty cycle. Even if they do not, they will know how to grow food on even small plots of land, improving their nutrition and that of their future children.” An accompanying profile of Prosterman describes his many years of work as an advocate for land rights, from Central America and Africa to Asia and the Philippines. A law professor at the University of Washington, Prosterman told the Seattle Times reporter that he long ago realized that land ownership was the key to eradicating...