- Home
- History
History

The Welfare Association for the Development of Afghanistan was founded in August 2002. It is an Afghan-based nonprofit organization that is nongovernmental and has accreditation from the Ministry of Economy, the Afghan NGOs Coordination Bureau (ANCB), and the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief (ACBAR). The organization’s objectives include drug control, civic education, and community and institutional development.
SBOrganizations exists primarily to build the capacity of Afghan citizens toward the establishment of a healthy, functional Afghan community. SBOrganizations envisions a peaceful, drug-free, and developed Afghanistan. It respects the laws of the Afghan government as well as the customs and culture of Afghanistan’s communities. Our goal is to increase the adoption of social justice, sustainable development, human rights, and prosperity ideals in Afghanistan.
By empowering and energizing communities, SBOrganization seeks to promote human rights, peace and stability, national unity, and drug control. We are committed to serving the needs and goals of Afghans, regardless of their ethnicity or language, and we understand the crucial role that community plays in the framework of society. Through our initiatives, we propose novel approaches to raise the standard of living across local, national, and global communities.
As an Afghan non-governmental organization with vast experience working with the grassroots community and an organization well-versed in civic education initiatives, SBOrganization has a special grasp of the methodology that would support citizens’ wishes for Afghanistan to move past its early setbacks and cultivate a citizenry that respects the rule of law and the necessity of and encouragement of education in Afghanistan. We are aware that Afghan governing bodies are still learning how to create and implement strong governance and service delivery systems at all levels, especially when it comes to offering civilians access to healthcare and education.
SBOrganizations create people; we think that education is just as important in these situations as survival is, and that progress among a distant, mainly illiterate, and unskilled population still impacted by the psychological, psychological, and political ramifications of protracted conflict will be gradual. Successful nation-building also requires the growth of traditional local leaders, such as Mullahs and maliks. Women must be included at every stage of nation-building initiatives in order to meet a country’s demands in the twenty-first century. Long-term, targeted initiatives are therefore required.