Founded | 1952 Sacramento, California |
---|---|
Type | Educational |
Focus | International language, communication |
Location | |
Area served
|
United States of America |
Website | www.esperanto-usa.org |
The Esperanto League for North America, Inc., doing business as Esperanto-USA (Esperanto: Esperanto-Ligo por Norda Ameriko), is the main organization of speakers and supporters of the international language Esperanto in the United States. It was founded in 1952 in Sacramento, California. Headquartered in Emeryville, California, Esperanto-USA is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization and is the US section of the Universala Esperanto-Asocio. The current president of E-USA is Orlando Raola. Phil Dorcas is the vice-president.
Esperanto-USA administers the largest Esperanto-language book service in the Americas. It publishes a bimonthly bulletin Usona Esperantisto. It also publishes reference works about Esperanto. The organization's leadership consists of a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and nine directors; it also has many commissioners responsible for Esperanto-USA's activity in various connections (e.g. audio-visual service; cooperation with libraries; relations with local Esperanto clubs; etc.) Membership is about 650.
The youth section of E-USA is USEJ (Usona Esperantista Junularo).
During the first half of the 20th century, the chief Esperanto organization for the US was the Esperanto Association of North America (EANA). In the early 1950s, the early days of the Cold War, EANA's president, George Allen Connor, a fierce anti-Communist, had begun his own McCarthyist attacks against leaders of the Esperanto movement in Europe and Asia.
The Universal Esperanto Association (UEA) began debating whether to expel Connor, who also held a position in UEA's leadership, and also to break off relations with EANA, which was UEA's US national association. In protest against EANA, American Esperantists founded the Esperanto League for North America. Three years later, UEA recognized ELNA as its American section, and subsequently severed ties with EANA. By then, most EANA members had gone over to ELNA. EANA was quickly rendered insignificant, and had disappeared by the 1970s.