About Connecticut Quest for Peace
Connecticut Quest for Peace is a nonprofit organization founded in 1987 by a group of dedicated individuals whose mission is to help the poorest people of Nicaragua. Our employer identification number is 26-4439286 and all donations are tax deductible. We have a variety of abundant goals, which include feeding the poor, increasing access to potable water, improving housing conditions, engaging in micro-financing for women, supporting health clinics, providing supplies and medicine, and lastly, supporting schools to aid in educating youth.
Nicaragua is the second poorest country in the western hemisphere, and 78% of the population earns less than $2.00/day.
CT Quest for Peace has no paid staff and less than three percent of the total budget is spent on fundraising, which means that 97% of donated dollars go directly to programs in Nicaragua. All CT Quest for Peace humanitarian aid programs are provided free of charge to needy Nicaraguans regardless of race, religion or tribal origin.
As of December 2008 Randy and Linda Klein, members of the board of directors, permanently moved to Managua, Nicaragua in order to oversee all 22 of our programs and to determine where the greatest need lies. Ultimately the goal is to give the people of Nicaragua the tools they need to create sustainable communities that will flourish in the future.
CT Quest for Peace is funded independently of the national organization Quest for Peace, which is an arm of the Quixote Center in Washington DC. We work in partnership with John XXIII Center, University of Central America, Managua, Nicaragua.
Quest for Peace beginnings: Sending open arms not military arms to Nicaragua

As the U.S. Reagan administration escalated military aid to Nicaragua’s Contra rebels in the 1980’s, national Quest organizer, Bill Callahan, decided to take action. He vowed to match U.S. military spending—dollar-for-dollar—with humanitarian aid to Nicaragua’s poorest citizens.
When President Reagan declared an embargo on Nicaragua, Callahan put out an urgent call to peace and justice to organizations across the country.
In Connecticut, Rose Marie Gorman, chair of the Peace and Justice Commission of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut, spread word to leaders in her community about the plight of the Nicaraguan people.
Kathleen Deignan and Gina Sader-Rubenstein responded immediately, collecting and shipping clothes, dried food, seeds, tools, school supplies and other essential aid to Nicaragua.
Soon after, two couples—Randy and Linda Klein and Gail Faithfull and her husband Leo McDonnell—took over organizational responsibility for an independent Connecticut-based Quest initiative.
They dubbed the organization Connecticut Quest for Peace (CT Quest) to differentiate the program from its Washington-based sister.
In 1995 the Bridie Fund enabled CT Quest to begin sustained funding to a number of community-based educational, food and healthcare programs in Nicaragua.
Since then, CT Quest has diversified and expanded its aid programs to Nicaraguan families and shipped more than $8 million in humanitarian aid to needy Nicaraguan communities.
All-volunteer staff manages Quest programs and administration
In order to maximize your donated dollars and deliver as much aid as possible directly to Nicaragua’s neediest, CT Quest runs a very lean operation.
All administration, fundraising, communications and marketing are managed by our board and an extended network of skilled, talented and unpaid volunteers. This frugality lets us funnel 97% of donated dollars directly to programs in Nicaragua.
Please think about joining our team. Learn more about volunteering with CT Quest.
Help us cut postage costs and spend more of our budget on aid to Nicaragua’s poor: Add your name to our online mailing list.


