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    February 07

    We will miss you Great Millard Fuller

    Just wanted to share this with everyone who had the pleasure of working with Mr. Fuller and his wife Linda in the Chattahooche Valley in March of 07. 
    We were doing volunteer jobs together with him. I was so lucky having chance with him to make the TV-SHOW  What a wonderful, inspiring and humbling man he is. He will truly be missed.

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    Millard Fuller, the founder of Habitat for Humanity and The Fuller Center for Housing, died early Tuesday morning after a brief illness. Preliminary autopsy results suggest congestive heart failure. He was 74. Family and friends are mourning the tragic loss of a true servant leader and a genuine heart.

    Millard was buried humbly on Picnic Hill at Koinonia Farm on February 4 at 11 a.m. Millard wished to be buried in the same manner as his spiritual mentor and friend Clarence Jordan, Koinonia’s founder. Like Clarence, Millard was laid to rest in a simple box and has no headstone on his grave.

    Please check back later in the week for further stories and photos of the gathering at the funeral.

    Memorial services have been held at Fuller Center covenant partners and Habitat affiliates around the world. No plans have been confirmed for a general memorial service yet, however the Fuller family and Fuller Center staff encourage supporters to attend the Fuller Center’s 4th annual Blitz Build, to be held in August in Millard’s hometown of Lanett, Alabama.

    Linda Fuller, Millard’s wife of 49 years and the co-founder of Habitat and The Fuller Center, said that great strides have been made toward fulfilling Millard’s vision of eliminating poverty housing around the world, but that there is still tremendous work to be done.

    “Millard would not want people to mourn his death,” Linda said. “He would be more interested in having people put on a tool belt and build a house for people in need.”

    Former President Jimmy Carter issued a statement in which he called Fuller “one of the most extraordinary people I have ever known.

    “He used his remarkable gifts as an entrepreneur for the benefit of millions of needy people around the world by providing them with decent housing,” Carter said in the statement. “As the founder of Habitat for Humanity and later the Fuller Center, he was an inspiration to me, other members of our family and an untold number of volunteers who worked side-by-side under his leadership.”

    After pausing on Wednesday to honor the leader who inspired us all, Fuller Center staff in 25 states and 15 countries are back at work, raising funds and awareness and building and repairing houses, as we have done since 2005. The family and staff kindly request that donations be made to The Fuller Center in lieu of flowers to help us continue the great work that is Millard’s legacy.

    For more on Millard’s life and work, click on the “Who We Are” link above to read Millard’s biography, or visit MillardFuller.com.