From typewriters to AI—the bold return of a UNDP retiree

Working as a volunteer is what keeps me healthy,” says Peter Luhanga, a 64-year-old UN Volunteer from Tanzania. Volunteering isn’t just good—it’s enriching. Older adults who give their time often enjoy sharper minds, stronger bodies, and brighter moods. It’s a powerful antidote to loneliness and depression, boosting mental health and emotional well-being while creating a sense of purpose and connection. As we approach Mental Health Day, we bring you Peter’s story—one of joy, meaning, and staying active through service.

Peter is busy in his office handling multiple sheets of paper with graphs and tables. A hand-sized calculator is placed at an angle, making it easy to guess its frequent usage. Peter, with a lifetime UN career behind him, has embarked on a new chapter. 

October marks his fourth month as a UN Volunteer Finance Associate with the United Nations Development Programme in Dar es Salaam. In fact, he is back in the same office where his journey began over three decades ago.

A global mirror of Gaza’s mental anguish

Two years into the war in Gaza, where tens of thousands have been killed and nearly the entire population displaced, the world has grown weary. But not the volunteers. 

They remain.

Since the war started on 7 October 2023, 65 UN Volunteers and 75 Online Volunteers have served with the Gaza emergency response. As World Mental Health Day approaches, we reflect not only on the profound toll of these past two years on civilians, but also on the volunteers who have stood steadfast in their service. 

Wesal Abu Hamad, a UN Volunteer Humanitarian Field Support Assistant with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), was in Gaza when the war erupted. 

Together is the only way: Voices from Sudan’s forgotten war

It was a Saturday morning, the 15th of April 2023. A day that began like any other in Khartoum. My son along with his cousins went to university. Soon after, my phone rang. My son’s voice was shaking: “Mama, RSF is coming to the university parking lot. Students are running, they’re terrified. Should I go back and take the car?” In that instant, my heart froze. I told him, “No. Leave the car. Stay with your cousins. Just get to safety.” That was the moment the war began for me and for millions of Sudanese families. None of us expected it to last this long. Many thought it was just another coup. But it became something far darker, displacing millions and devastating a country already on its knees.

We had more than 200 volunteers spread across the country—many right where the fighting began. We had plans to scale up to 1,000 volunteers to support health services. In a matter of days, those plans collapsed. Suddenly, it wasn’t about growth. It was about survival.

Care that goes both ways

Clearing the way for Gaza’s recovery

The war in Gaza sees a breakthrough: a ceasefire after two years. But the streets still tell a different story—blocked by debris, weighed down by loss. From February to August, a team of five UN Volunteers stepped in alongside the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)’s Programme of Assistance to the Palestinian People to work on the ground in Gaza. Joined by 61 Online Volunteers from 35 countries, they were part of debris management with a mission to clear rubble—each stone lifted, a step towards Gaza's recovery.

UN Volunteer with UNDP, Ahmed Al-Mdalal is on the ground in Gaza. He is an engineer and monitors the distribution of fuel making sure debris removal machines keep operating and the blocked roads for ambulances and aid remain open. While another counterpart, Maysaa Al-Ajrami, an architect, gathers detailed data from four debris removal projects, documenting rubble volumes, machinery, fuel consumption, and workforce numbers, which she then uploads to the project’s dashboards.

Is translation an art worth protecting?

On International Translation Day, we look at the role of translators and editors who shape volunteer stories—from Africa to Asia to Europe and Latin America. Beyond linguistic accuracy, they are entrusted with preserving the soul of a story. When acts of service are rooted in cultural values, literal translation can dilute meaning. Word-for-word translation is rarely effective. Grammar, expressions, and sentence structures vary, so translators must reshape language while preserving the original’s authenticity. This work demands sensitivity, cultural understanding, and ethical responsibility. 

At every step, we must ask: Does this translation honour the intent and emotion of the original thought? 

Voices from the UNV editorial team in 12 languages—Arabic, English, French, Luo, Nepali, Portuguese, Quechua, Russian, Spanish, Swahili, Ukrainian, and Urdu—in this video celebrate the cultural richness of each region.

 

When volunteers lead the way, change becomes possible

Northwest Nigeria is experiencing intersecting challenges including violence, climate-related disruptions, and economic instability. These factors have affected family structures and reduced confidence in local institutions. Armed groups have interfered with daily activities, contributing to a humanitarian crisis. Yet amidst these challenges, volunteers are stepping up—not as outsiders, but as insiders—to make change possible. Dennis Bwala and Adamu Garba share how they are helping rebuild trust and strengthen the communities they call home.

“Peacebuilding here is about patience.” In Katsina, Dennis Bwala is a UN Volunteer with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Northwest Prevention Facility, and spends his days connecting local authorities, security forces, and communities that often don’t trust each other.

My role is to facilitate dialogue, strengthen partnerships, and ensure that our interventions are inclusive and neutral, so communities feel ownership over the solutions."