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Sunday 19 February 2012

DVNF Launches Video Sharing Community

By Sanjuana Klickman


The Disabled Veterans National Foundation (DVNF) launched the Disabled Veterans Video Sharing Community on its website, www.DVNF.org. The Disabled Veterans Video Sharing Community, or DVVSC, will allow program recipients to directly "sound off" about their experiences with Disabled Veterans National Foundation, post personal video blogs, as well as deliver news and other organization information by way of video.

"By allowing the people we serve, and those in need of our charitable goods and services, an open forum for sharing their thoughts and ideas about their growing relationship and personal experience with the Disabled Veterans National Foundation we will raise the overall public consciousness about the plight of today's veterans," said Prescilla Wilkewitz, president of DVNF.

Ms. Wilkewitz, a Vietnam veteran and founding member of DVNF, spends a large amount of time visiting with fellow veterans and listening to their concerns. But, she says, there are many more veterans who need to be heard. With this cutting-edge technology, DVNF will now be able to connect with more members of the veterans' community.

"Our new Disabled Veterans Video Sharing Community on www.DVNF.org not only provides us with direct feedback from program beneficiaries; it also allows others to learn about the organization and find another possible resource to help them through tough times," she said.

The new Disabled Veterans Video Sharing Community is completely open and accessible to the general public at www.DVNF.org.

To date DVNF has provided goods and services to over 40,000 veterans.

About the Disabled Veterans National Foundation

DVNF, a nonprofit 501c3, was founded in the fall of 2007 by six women veterans to expand their scope of work within the veteran's community. The Trustees, with over twenty years of combined work focusing on women veteran's issues, realized the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan brought forth a rising need to help returning wounded and disabled veterans.




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