"As surely as there is a voyage away, there is a journey home."
-Jack Kornfield

23 April 2008

Off

And I'm Off.





"
Be alert for any sign of beauty or grace. Offer up every joy, be awake at all moments, to the news that is always arriving out of silence."

"At the heart of all religions is the certainty that there is a fundamental truth, and that this life is a sacred opportunity to evolve and realize it. We often have brief glimpses of this nature of mind-a wonderful piece of music, the serene happiness brought by nature, seeing the sun rising behind a mountain, watching snow slowly drifting down."


-Sogyal Rimpoche

"The absurdity of a life that may well end before one understands it does not relieve one of the duty to live it through as bravely and as generously as possible."

-Peter Mattheisson

The Road To Hell


An article found online this morning, written from the perspective of the Sudanese government, calling aid groups in Darfur profit mongers who were only there to serve selfish economic needs, initially repulsed me. ""For some (NGOs) the saddest day would be when the conflict is over because they are benefiting from it,' he (Sudanese Ambassador to the UN Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad) said."

I have also just finished reading Michael Maren's The Road to Hell: The Ravaging Effects of Foreign Aid and International Charity. Maren is a former Peace Corps volunteer who spent many years working in aid relief in the Horn of Africa; he paints an extremely unflattering picture of the aid industry. It is important to see both sides of every story, as every story does indeed have more than on angle for viewing, more than one facet for inspection; the world is rarely black and white. And this area is very gray. Many aid agencies do exist for the purpose of existence; they are self-perpetuating monsters who benefit none on the ground, implementing white elephant projects only to draw more funding from naive donors. And often, it is worse than this-the aid money or food aid that is brought in is often the fuel for violent conflict and corrupt regimes. Michael Maren used the case study of Somalia for this fascinating book; this is certainly not the only case of NGO and UN incompetence leading to the net worsening of a civil society after years of experts and billions of dollars. All we need to do is look at the state of Somalia today; a failed state, through and through. One can hope that we have learned from the past; that present and future operations have better oversight, better implementation, and more transparent donor relations; it is hard to believe that the situation is perfect.
One clip from The Road to Hell, a letter written by Maren to USAID administration in Somalia:
At the risk of being labeled politically naive, I submit the following. I cannot in good conscious leave Somalia without expressing these opinions to the US government in writing.
My experience in Beledweyne during the last few months has confirmed my growing suspicion that the Somali government is deliberately taking part in the diversion of refugee food, has deliberately inflated refugee figures in order to facilitate these diversions, and is now simply humoring donors by submitting itself to the impotent inspection and monitoring of these donors.
Our involvement in the refugee relief operation is a participation in a political ploy to gain support for an unpopular military government. I do not presume to influence the policy of the American government in this regard, however I believe that the situation should be recognized for what it is.
Our continued support for the refugees makes possible continued activity of the WSLF in the Ogaden, which in turn results in more refugees...
There is a festering resentment among the general population towards the expatriates and the refugees. An old man stopped me on the streets of Beledweyne and demanded to know why he was not entitled to the rations and health care just because he had decided to settle in town instead of the refugee camp.
A man with four children working in Beledweyne for 800 shillings a month (an extraordinarily high salary) could not supply his family with the amount of food the refugees receive for free.
The future for refugees in the camps holds only years of relief. The efforts of the international community should be aimed at solving the problem-getting the refugees out of the camps. "


Might Magazine Interview with Michael Maren:
http://www.netnomad.com/might.html

22 April 2008

The Greatest Silence


Thank you, HBO, for airing a powerful and shocking documentary on the plight of rape in the Democratic Republic of Congo-The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo. A testament to the power of human destructiveness, as well as the monumental strength of human survival and perseverance in the face of terror and oppression. This is a story of hopelessness and hope; of darkness and light; it is a story of awareness, bringing the tales of the untold to the public.
Awareness is paramount; awareness brings action. Action brings change.


"In the 1880's King Leopold of Belgium created the Congo to be his own personal slave colony, plundering ivory and timber, and killing half the native population...
The DRC has over 80% of the world's reserves of Coltan, a key ingredient of cell phones and laptops; it is estimated that over $1 million worth of Coltan is stolen out of the country each day...it's an economic war...It has been the deadliest conflict since WWII; in 10 years, over 4 million people have died; some estimates put the number of raped women and girls at over 200,000. Rape is a weapon used to create instability in the region."

Historical patterns repeating themselves in one of the world's most forgotten regions, the former Belgian Congo, today, the Democratic Republic of Congo. The plunder of materials and of human rights and dignity started with Leopold in the 1800's; they continue today with the mass killings and rapings at the hands of the rebel armies of Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda. Rape is a weapon, which has been employed with deadly and silencing efficiency. This film is a testimonial to the women of the Congo, the women who have suffered and endured so, endlessly, over the years.




In other news, I leave on Thursday for Ethiopia; a journey that will be both internal and external; new experiences, and the challenge to live and remain in the present moment, in a totally new environment, however fleeting the time will be. A journey that will be of mind and body, intellect and emotion, the inevitable reflection and anticipation. My goal is to enter every new space as impartial as possible, in order to remain open to everything I can absorb, while not influencing things with my mind that I do not fully understand. Allowing experiences to unwind without partiality, an observer in a grand game of life. Arriving without preconception, bias, and fear.
I have been fascinated by the African continent for some time; however much I have read, studied, absorbed, and lectured on will not prepare me for the first step on African soil, my first breath of African air, the first smile of an African face, the first frown of an African soul.

This thought directs me to the words of a sage, Peter Mattheisson, describing Buddha Nature.
"To practice Zen means to realize one's existence moment after moment, rather than letting life unravel in regret of the past and daydreaming of the future...as the clutter of ideas and emotions fall away and body and mind return to the natural harmony with all creation. Out of this emptiness can come a true insight into the nature of existence, which is no different from one's Buddha nature."




Official Trailer for The Greatest Silence:

21 April 2008

The Future Of Oil


Excellent article in the Times about the current oil crisis, which has sent prices spiraling to over $116 a barrel. It is amazing to see the immediate correlation between world crude prices and the prices at the pump; are these station owners that cued into the global supply chain, or is there some aggressiveness with price rises and reluctance with price decreases occurring at the local level? I think there is a simple answer for this, an answer that can be tagged to the local owners, the middlemen, and the Majors: greed. For whatever it is, I am feeling quite fortunate that I do not own a car; for the first time, I have absolutely no desire to drive and have that kind of "tax" burden in my daily life. I see the Humvees and Suburbans drive past and wince and cringe for their unfortunate owners, who could not have forseen $4 a gallon gas when they took that plunge. Thankfully, I am in one of the few places in America with a progressive public transportation system (NYC) that allows for an alternative. The U.S. is so far behind even the poorest of developing countries in terms of public transport, this fact, in reality, is shocking. I have traveled extensively in India, a country where 2/3 of the population lives on less that $1 a day, and yet their bus and rail network is far superior to ours. the "richest country in the world." We are a car nation; and now we are paying for this shortsightedness and "me me me me" mentality, of both consumers and auto makers and policy makers. Some interesting and alarming foresight from the article, written by Jad Mouawad.

Today’s tensions are only likely to get worse in coming years. Consider a few numbers: The planet’s population is expected to grow by 50 percent to nine billion by sometime in the middle of the century. The number of cars and trucks is projected to double in 30 years— to more than two billion — as developing nations rapidly modernize. And twice as many passenger jetliners, more than 36,000, will in all likelihood be crisscrossing the skies in 20 years. William Chandler, an energy expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, estimates that if the Chinese were using energy like Americans, global energy use would double overnight and five more Saudi Arabias would be needed just to meet oil demand. India isn’t far behind. By 2030, the two counties will import as much oil as the United States and Japan do today.

19 April 2008

Billary

Though I do care about the election, I also care that it is 10 months away, and there are other stories that need to be covered in the national press that are disregarded for Hillary downing shots of Crown Royal, and McCain erroneously labeling sides of armed conflicts. My thoughts at this juncture: we have had the same two families preside over the executive branch for the last 16years; in a nation of 300 million and growing, I would hope that we have the open mindedness to allow some fresh bloodlines into the office. We need serious change; our country is in dire straights in all aspects, economically, politically, and socially. We need to be united, not further divided. We need someone who can present a progressive face to the outside world, where our influence has been so undermined over the last 8 years. We need a uniter, who can get beyond the sound bites and petty bickering that seem to plague the Clinton campaign. Obama simply has more class than Hillary; this has shown again and again; he refuses to stoop to her barroom level of politics; he refuses to rake the same muck, to take the bait. While this alone is not the indicator of a good President, it is a quality that I look for in a leader. The quality to transcend, to look forward, to see the big picture. Obama gets it. Hillary does not. Get out of the way, please.
Nicholas Kristof puts its best, as always, in his op-ed piece for the NYTimes:


The Post Poll
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
In Thursday’s column, I mention The Washington Post poll published Wednesday, and it must be pretty depressing reading. For starters, Barack Obama now seems to have a growing national lead of about 10 points, and Bill Clinton’s negatives are now higher than his positives. Secondly, while Hillary Clinton’s attacks on Obama have dented him a bit, at least against John McCain, they’ve boomeranged and hurt her even more. Nearly 60 percent in the latest poll say that she is not “honest and trustworthy.”

So I just don’t see why she stays in the race. She’s too far behind in states and pledged delegates to catch up, and if she could get ahead in popular votes she could make an argument to the superdelegates. But when you’re behind in every category, including 700,000 popular votes behind right now, you don’t even have an argument. And it seems to me that she undermines her ability to come back in four years, if Obama loses, the longer she continues the campaign. It’s certainly not in Obama’s interest for her to remain in the race — continued internecine battles reduce his chances against McCain — but I don’t see how she benefits, either.



"There is nothing heavier than compassion. Not even one's own pain weighs so heavy as the pain one feels with someone, for someone, a pain intensified by the imagination and prolonged by a hundred echoes."
-Milan Kundera

17 April 2008

Your Definition of Sovereignty?

Wherever we see situations of international turmoil, and observe efforts to put out the fires that burn within so many failing states, China plays its heavy hand of "not interfering with internal affairs of sovereign states." Over and over, in the UN Security Council, motions are blocked, motions that could save thousands of lives if implemented, motions to stop genocide, motions to remove forces of evil from positions of prominence. Quick glances reveal close relations between Beijing and some of the most consistently repressive governments in the world, governments that take no issue with the mass slaughter of their own citizens. So it was interesting to come across a small article on Reuters International this mornings (and subsequently, AllAfrica.com), reporting the delivery of an arms shipment, through the port of Durban, South Africa, from Beijing to the beleaguered forces of Robert Mugabe. What timing! What audacity! What complete disregard for international standards at a crucial moment in time for Zimbabweans, hoping the pry back the blanket of darkness that has been laid down so heavily by the disastrous Mugabe regime.

"The vessel An Yue Jiang, owned by the parastatal Chinese Ocean Shipping Company, was the subject of intense speculation as it spent the day marooned in the far reaches of Durban's outer anchorage. News reports suggested it had been denied permission to dock.

The Democratic Alliance 's spokesperson on defence, Rafeek Shah, said the vessel was alleged to be carrying several container-loads of weapons for the Zimbabwe Defence Force, including mortars, more than 3000 mortar bombs and 1500 rocket-propelled grenades."

So, this brings me back to the point of the unwavering respect for sovereignty, when it serves the goals of Beijing (and these goals usually point towards securing natural resources, no questions asked). Why is the respect for sovereignty suddenly not applied to Zimbabwe? What is the rationale for this double-standard, caught in the spotlight of the international press? Several container loads of weapons can quell a lot of democracy. Several container loads of weapons can keep an aging dictator in power for just a little while longer. Several container loads of weapons can buy a little more time for the world to divert its attention away from another crisis spot in the heart of Africa. Several container loads of weapons can completely dissolve an argument by a budding superpower for the respect of sovereignty around the world. There is nothing respectful about shipping arms into a conflict zone at an absolutely critical moment in time, a moment when democracy has a chance to peel back the layers of oppression bestowed so generously by Mugabe on his beleaguered countrymen. China, please practice what you preach. At the very least, attempt to see past the singular focus of natural resource procurement and show some basic respect for human rights in Africa.

“Shah's information is that the ship is carrying 3800 cases of weaponry and ammunition in six containers, that the delivery address is the Zimbabwe Defence Force, Causeway, Harare, and the point of origin on the cargo manifest is Beijing.”

15 April 2008

Sand and Sorrow


We live in a time of unparalleled abundance, and exceptional deprivation; a time of breakneck advancement and terrible stagnation. How these modern worlds, both 21st century worlds, continue on parallel tracks is insightfully troubling. An insight into personal insulation, a bubble of self, the simple refusal to acknowledge tragedy unfolding on this very day, in this very minute.
Fortunately, awareness has been instigated through the tireless work of a few; a few who feel it is their duty to spend their lives bettering the lot of complete strangers, living worlds away, in this 21st century. Such visionaries as Nicholas Kristof, Samantha Power, and John Pendergras, to name a few, who have been drawing attention to the world's largest humanitarian disaster, in Darfur, West Sudan.


This shocking film parallels their stories and tireless calls to action, with the stories of the countless victims, faced with repetitive cycles of inaction.
Paul Freedman's Sand and Sorrow, playing on HBO now. Please watch it. Awareness breeds action. Action can save lives. Write to your Congressmen and Senators!! Tell them that YOU, THEIR constituent, demands action in Darfur.



More Information:
http://pol.moveon.org/darfur/
http://www.ajws.org/emergencies/darfur/
http://www.africaaction.org/campaign_new/darfur.php
http://action.savedarfur.org/campaign/savedarfurcoalition

"The evil in the world always comes out of ignorance, and good intentions may do as much harm as malevolence, if they lack understanding."
-Albert Camus, The Plague

14 April 2008

Africa's Ragged Edge


Listening to my daily podcasts last week, I was introduced to author Paul Salopek, who was detailing his ordeal as a captive of Sudanese rebels. Salopek, along with two others, was captured by young rebels as they made their way across the Sudan-Chad border, an ambiguous zone deep in the heart of the Sahel (shore, in Arabic). He was sold to the Sudanese Army for a box of uniforms, and kept captive in a walled compound for over 30 days; later being freed through diplomatic initiatives. Remarkably, after being freed and flying to the states with Bill Richardson and the Editor-In-Chief of National Geographic, he then returned to the Sahel to finish his story. He wanted to capture the strength and capacity of the people living in this barren land; not the stereotypical weakness and helplessness. He wanted to see how people can adapt to live in hardship; how their stories can parallel ours. How the differences in landscape mirror the differences in perspective and reality. His prose is beautiful.
Salopek describes the Sahel as, "...a belt of semi-arid grassland that separates (or joins) Arabs and Blacks, Muslims and Christians, nomads and farmers, a landscape of greens and a world of tans. Some 50 million of the world's poorest, most dis empowered, most forgotten people hang fiercely onto power there...it is a crack in the heart; a tightrope, a brink, a ledge...The Sahel is a bullet's trajectory. It is the track of rains that fall but never touch the sand. It is a call to prayer and a call for your blood, and for me a desert road without end."

The photos accompanying this story were some of the best I have seen in a long time. The photographer, Pascal Maitre, accompanies the written poetry with visual poetry. Unfortunately, NGM does not allow cutting and pasting of their photos, so nothing to show here. But this is the link for the story:

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/featurehub

13 April 2008

Sunday Times

Sundays and Thursdays are extra special days. On these mornings, I can wake, flip on my laptop, tune into the NYTimes online for my daily dose, and see Nicholas Kristof's op-ed pieces. Today's was, as usual, insightful and excellent. I fear for his inevitable book leave, but by then, Thomas Friedman should be back from his seemingly-never-ending hiatus.
Kristof delves into climate change and the trickle down effect. As usual, it is not those spewing the emmissions that are most severly effected, (though I have heard horrendous accounts of the air quality in industrial China), it is the poorest, the most voiceless citizens of the planet. I have recently read his book on the topic, and Paul Collier is also cited by Kristof for the role of climate change and the increased risk of civil war and coups. This is one of the traps of poverty-the conflict trap. To be blunt, it is much easier to fall into the trap than to get out; and once in the trap, it is exceedingly difficult, fragile, and costly to work your way into a situation of stable governance. Kristof cites:

'Paul Collier, an Oxford University expert on global poverty, found that economic stagnation in poor countries leads to a rising risk of civil war. Professor Collier warns that climate change is likely to reduce rainfall in southern Africa enough that corn will no longer be a viable crop there. Since corn is a major form of sustenance in that region, the result may be catastrophic food shortages — and civil conflict.

His research suggests that a drought one year increases by 50 percent the risk that an African country will slip into civil war the next year. '

FIFTY PERCENT INCREASE! Factor in the destabalizing effects on an entire region when one country slips into civil war; the collateral damage is usually as bad as the actual conflict; refugees are thrust, fragile economies destroyed, barely laid infrastructure ruined, and trust in positive government, something so rare and fragile, demolished. As usual, its the poorest, the ones with no voice (or the smallest delegations at the WTO conferences) who are the most affected by the policies of the rich, industrial nations. Some of my thoughts (in beta):

1. Action on climate change from the United States, China, and India.
2. Forward-looking crop diversification and agricultural investments to steer soon-to-be-affected countries and regions away from maize and water intensive crops
3. Economic investment in social sectors of these same countries needs to be massively ramped up; intellectual diversification from subsistence farming is critical

12 April 2008

Randy Pausch





I came across the story of Randy Pausch in Time Magazine last week, where he was the subject of 10 Questions. Pausch is a Carnegie Mellon professor with terminal cancer, who delivered a sententious speech entitled "Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams."
He is brilliant, emotional, and capricious, preferring to talk rather than sulk, laugh rather than cry. I don't know why, in so many cases, in so many lives, it takes death to make so many realize what is important. I suppose, when on one's deathbed, regardless of age or circumstance, one will not wish they worked harder, or had more money.
Here is the "Last Lecture" courtesy of Youtube.



11 April 2008

Desert Blues Part 2

Check out the synchronized dancing by Habib Koite and Bamada....so very cool. What a wonderful kaleidescope of both sound and sight this clip presents. The Tuareg women chant at the end is chilling in its repetition. Truly a slice of musical heaven.


Mobilizing Change in Aid-Paul Collier


I had the pleasure of recently reading Paul Collier's excellent work of non-fiction,
"The Bottom Billion: Why The Poorest Countries are Failing and What Can Be Done About It"
which has recently been awarded the Lionel Gelber Prize, a prestigious prize for the non-fiction genre. Collier is a professor at the Oxford School of Economics and a preeminent scholar in African economies. The Bottom Billion is a phenomenal effort in describing the traps of poverty, and what can be done to alleviate these traps. The trap concept is one that is not unique to Collier's work; his approach at systematically targeting the traps through a combination of trade laws, military intervention, and proper international financial accountability is. Collier's explation of the paradox of anti-globalization activism and the damage this misguided view plays on the poorest economies was also unique and well-targeted. Fairness and equity must play a role, but the closing of markets will not foster economic growth and increased prosperity. Collier also played close attention to the so-called "Natural Resource Curse," that is, the damaging effects of high value commodity exportation on most developing countries around the world. It is indeed a fact that the discovery of oil will completely wreck the economy of any developing country in the current globalized world; more on this to come, as I am currently reading "Untapped: The Scramble for Africa's Oil," by John Ghazvinian.
With regards to Collier, I wish to focus on his summation of the role of aid in breaking these traps that keep the "Bottom Billion" mired in hopeless poverty. There is a large role to be played by international aid and the agencies that are the facilitators; however, the approach needs to be modified to fit the changing face of a global crisis. As with Jeffrey Sachs, Collier is an optimist, a man of ideas and of action-here is his strategy for reforming the field... Collier writes:
"The key obstacle to reforming aid is public opinion...using aid strategically to promote growth in the bottom billion is not high on the agendas of politicians. Public opinion drives them into the 'I care' photo opportunities that dominate aid...Aid agencies should become increasingly concentrated in the most difficult environments. That means they will have to accept more risk, and so a higher rate of failure. They should compensate by increasing their project supervision, which means higher administrative overheads. They should become swift-footed, seizing reform opportunities at an early stage. They should intervene strategically, financing big-push strategies for export diversification. They should introduce governance conditionality..."
----(Agencies are naturally risk averse-they also have strict accountability to their donors, and are increasingly cutting back on overhead expenses; if you visit the website of any major organization, they will have a prominent pie chart detailing their costs, with an obvious emphasis on minimizing administrative and managerial expenses...it is rather intriguing to hear Collier's point of view on a topic most people take as a cut and dry. The constant drive for low overhead can very well be inhibiting the agencies' basic effectiveness, and thus be totally counterproductive. The costs of continuing with "more of the same" in this field is tragedy; tragedy can be averted by following the wise ideas of a few wise men. In a related note, (wise men, that is) check out the Presidential contender's plans for international development. Barack Obama is truly progressive in his outlook and plans in this critical arena. Vote Obama! )
Collier concludes...
"Within the societies of the bottom billion there is an immense struggle between brave people who are trying to achieve change and powerful groups who oppose them. The politics of the bottom billion...is a dangerous contest between moral extremes. The struggle for the future of the bottom billion is not a contest between an evil rich world and a noble poor world (sorry, Che). It is within the societies of the bottom billion, and to date we have largely been bystanders...we do not have to be bystanders. Our support for change can be decisive. But we will need trade policies, security strategies, changes in our laws, and new international charters. In short, we need to narrow the target and broaden the instruments."
Well said, indeed.

Collier's Homepage at the Oxford School of Economics:
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~econpco/

Barack Obama's foreign policy plans, including a doubling in non-military assistance:
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4901

08 April 2008

Nepal Faces the Future




Nepal is holding its first elections this week since 1999, for a constituent assembly that will create a new Constitution for the small landlocked country. The people have endured years of war and struggle, at the hands of the Maoist rebels, an often misguided and brutal communist group. I have encountered these rebels on my multiple trips to the country, and have found them extremely ideologically and morally vague. The root of their struggle seemed to stem from more a lack of viable options rather than true belief of the communist path (which I am sure is not an isolated event in history). In such an remote land, they also lacked current news about armed communist struggle, about how they were a a living vestige of the past, about fighting for an idea that was discredited decades before. I have also encountered the people in the middle; some of the warmest and irrepressible I have encountered in all my travels. I have listened to their horrific stories, brutality at the hands of both the government and the Maoists, both sides showing little regard for basic human rights and dignity. Fathers burned alive in homes; sons tied to trees and mutilated before the innocent eyes of their children; the explanations for such savagery continue to elude me. As in any armed struggle, it is these people, stuck in the middle, who are the true casualties of war; the many impoverished rural peasants in the country, affected most gravely by the Maoist rebellion and general instability. Lets hope these elections can give the country a fresh start to break the chains of both the feudal and Maoist past.

06 April 2008

Flashback

from my old travel journal, 3rd week into life in the Peace Corps, a nice moment in time, looking back, and forward.


I sit around the sakau stone, watching the village men pound the pepper root into a mash with circular boulders in a rhythmic, beating mood that both puts me on edge, and settles my mind. Waiting while the mash is strained through the stripped bark of the hibiscus tree, and fills up the bottom half of a coconut shell. Observing while the village chief takes the first sip, with his eyes closed, of course, or else he would go blind. Taking note of the village hierarchy as the cups passes from the lips of one man to another. Not being able to understand the local language, I sit and smile, trying to be cordial, yet attempting to hide the nervousness that bubbles under the pale surface of my skin. Sit, smile, dont make eye contact (this is frowned upon). The cup is passed to me. I close my eyes, and take a strong pull of the muddy, snotty concoction. My lips and mouth go numb. The narcotic effect of the sakau takes hold. Sitting and smiling will work for only so much longer. The chief, who is also my uncle who lives in my compound, has a surprise for me. Though I have no spoken more than a word to him, and my hand gestures have has limited success in conveying complex thoughts, he has chosen to mark this gathering my giving me a title. "Maron Pe Lille," he announces to the silent gathering in his old, gravelly manner. And points at a surprised, startled, and overwhelmed me. The men pat me on the back, and countless more bowls of sakau are consumed well into the darkened night.

I am now a Pohnpein man, with a village title. This is a sign of respect, and a sign that I am ready to take a Pohnpein wife, as the men in the village seem intent on making happen. They cannot seem to fathom that a 26 year old man does not have at least 5 children. That is not the way of things here in Kitti (Kee-Chee). The most rural of rural towns, on the backside of a beautiful, lush, tropical, island, carpeted with the greenest plush rug you have ever seen, that spills over mist-enshrouded mountains, feeding countless waterfalls that tumble into the turquoise sea. It is truly a wonderous place.

I bath in a river that runs past our house with the village children, who splash around with an innocence that you would not think still exists in todays fast paced world. Kids who still play outside all day, who climb coconut trees and hack the ground with machetes for fun. Kids who are all part of my new, extended, wonderful family. It has only been 3 weeks in Royi (pronounced Roy, as in Rogers, as in mmm that would be good right now...)but this place has mesmerized my heart, mind, and senses. The pace of life is so slow that it is almost nonexistant. However, the days are always full. When your mind and senses slow, you can start to appreciate the smaller things that we usually miss.

And there is plenty to admire.

"As his pace slowed down, his heart quieted. He was wholeheartedly immersing himself, and this was his path. He turned around for one last glimpse of the only land and people he knew, and he saw them as distant specks merging with the shadows."

-Thich Nhat Hanh

Don't Be Bothered By Your Thinking


Bodhidharma, First Patriarch of the Zen Buddhist Lineage

The mind paints dragons, makes stories, and we get totally caught up in this world of story making...not being so reactive to everything in our lives can lead to a greater clarity, a greater intrinsic understanding and wisdom.


I love to think. To think of the positive ramifications of thought and discussion, the positive waves that can evolve from brilliant ripples. I also love to not think. To
pause. To observe the mind in its natural state, unblemished by the constant movements and perpetual dialogue. Countless generations and countless minds have have been devoted to nothing but the development of the thoughts of non-thought; from centuries before the birth of the Buddha Shakyamuni, the ancient Hindu texts, the Vedas, had mindfulness and still mind meditation as a central premise to reaching nirvana.
The ability to observe the workings of your own mind, from an "outside" perspective, is a critical perspective to have. As we observe, comment on, and discuss the thoughts, words, and actions of others in our world, so should be observe our own internal dialogue. Seeing things in new ways, whether physically or mentally, traveling on a plane or sitting on a cushion, is vital for the human condition.

"The mind produces thoughts. The thoughts are like boats floating down a long river, boats of all different shapes and sizes, from poor rafts to flashy riverboats to battleships and armadas. It is possible to stay on the riverbank, dry and safe and relaxed and at ease, and simply watch the boats go by. And, its possible to get onto the boats, and get carried along, possibly for a long time. Most people, most of the time, are on their boats. However, there is a whole world to live in besides the boat. Some people identify their thinking mind with who they are...if they don't think, than they don't exist. Its possible to be sitting on the riverbank, resting under the oak tree, without evaluating yourself in comparison to anything or anybody, without telling the story of who you are, to just be there, watching the boats float by, without getting on."
-Zen Master Gil Fronsdale


"Thinking is both an amazing blessing and an amazing curse."
-Fronsdal


"How pathetically scanty my self-knowledge is compared with, say, my knowledge of my room. There is no such thing as observation of the inner world, as there is of the outer world."
-Kafka

04 April 2008

the death of a visionary

An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.

-Martin Luther King Jr.

03 April 2008

Showcasing Social Businesses



I would really like to take the time and energy to showcase different social businesses that are making a difference in the world; the stories and cases are as individualized and unique as can be, spread throughout different sectors in disparate arenas of the global marketplace; however, they all share a common bond-their desire to benefit people, to enact positive social change, through reinvesting their profits into communities and social action.
The social business model has been around in one form or another for years; it was first brought to my attention through the words of Muhammad Yunus, founder of Grameen Bank, who remarked that, "...making money is important for human beings, but it doesn't encompass the whole of human beings...we are addressing concerns in a different way than charity-charity money is not reusable (once obtained from donors and expended, it is gone; more needs to be donated to continue on the path) social business dollars are recyclable."
The point that this can create value for a consumer and also create a reusable benefit for the organization adds to the multidimensional benefit of modern social businesses.
This movement has grown in leaps and bounds; organizations like Ashoka are identifying social entrepreneurs, and supporting them through the complete knowledge and growth cycles of their ventures. Recognizing that change can be brought not only through charity, but also through the power of capitalism, is a powerful idea moving forward.

Bill Drayton, founder and CEO of Ashoka, puts it better than I can..."A social entrepreneur identifies and solves social problems on a large scale, acting as a change agent for sociaty , seizing opportunities others miss, inventing and disseminating new approaches and advancing sustainable solutions that create social value."

I've been listening to the story of Pura Vida coffee on my Stanford Podcasts (excellent source of great information), admiring the story of John Sage, the birth and growth of a social business, the successes and failures; but overall, the optimism and innovation, setting a path that can be followed freely by other social entrepreneurs, is the brightest spot. There is so much room for growth in this field; all it takes is awareness.
Sage's inspiration came from a strong base of faith, in addition to the desire to..."bring together the rigor, discipline, and scrutiny of the capitalist system, married to the social purpose and vision found in the best social organizations you can find."
His biggest goal: to connect the buyer and the producer. Simple and vital. Once the buyer is aware , once they can catch a GLIMPSE of how their purchase decisions can literally change someone's life, the demand for the product will soar, and the business will have the chance at sustainability. Creating this emotional connection between the producer and consumer, this is the challenge of all social businesses.
No longer can I go to the coffee shop and ask for a coffee; it must be 100% fair trade. After seeing the stories of the Ethiopian farmers, who lives could and are changed drastically by such a minor act, it has become impossible to do otherwise.
Check it out, its a great social business.

www.puravidacoffee.com

Frontiers of Humanitarianism

(From Columbia University's Frontiers of Humanitarianism Lecture Series 4/2/08)

"This conference is meant to examine the limits of humanitarian action, and in particular how political paralysis after conflict perpetuates human suffering. Many violent crisis of the past have left a legacy of humanitarian needs that no longer make the headlines, and that defy a solution. Is humanitarianism no more than a fig leaf to mask political cowardice? Or has the time come for a political approach to humanitarian action, exploring new frontiers?"

The principles endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly in the 2005 World Summit Outcome:
1. The primary responsibility to protect populations from human-made catastrophe lies within the state itself
2. When a state fails to meet that responsibility, either through incapacity or ill-will, then the responsibility to protect shifts to the international community
3. This responsibility must be exercised by diplomatic, legal, and other peaceful measures and, as a last resort, through military force

First, we need to cite the three imperatives of humanitarian actions, or at least initial imperatives: impartiality, neutrality, and independence. These imperatives are not always taken into account, and when they are taken into account, focus can shift as a result of the on-the-ground realities; however, they are always good to keep in mind when thinking in terms of humanitarian work and action. In addition, the fact that emergencies, by definition, are sudden, unpredictable, and short term; yet, many humanitarian actions have a long term component, which the media often looses a focus on after the initial event.

Broadly speaking, we need to question the issue of our obligation to others, and how to go about implementing this obligation through non-self-serving means; means that are geared towards maximum benefit in the field. However, this often strikes against the very model of organization that is set up to benefit those in need. How to synchronize the merits of organization and necessity of organizational blueprint, with idealism and reality on the ground. These multiple considerations must be taken into account to find a comfortable and productive matrix, which is results-focused, not inwardly-looking and organizationally self-perpetuating.
We also need to have a wholistic view of the situation at hand; compartmentalizing is not a valid strategy. We need to understand the outcomes and possible consequences of any actions, before actions are taken, and we need to understand and be willing to accept negative outcomes of altruistic goals and methods. Who is really being served? Are these actions self serving, or are the intended beneficiaries actually gaining a positive benefit? The truth belongs to the victims and survivors in these situations; the truth is in their voices; this is the voice that needs to be answered with action.

"Things are seldom what they seem; skim milk often masquerades as creme."
W.S. Gilbert, HMS Pinafore

"Deconstructing realities to service selfish needs..."
-Roy Williams

"Life at its best is a creative synthesis of opposites living together in fruitful harmony."
MLK

02 April 2008

critique, the alternative?




I had the true pleasure and honor of seeing Dr. Jeffrey Sachs give a speech at the Earth Institute of Columbia University. Broadly, it was the Institute’s vision and efforts to reduce poverty in the developing world, seen through the microcosm of the Millennium Development Villages, a pioneering project spearheaded by Dr. Sachs in the poorest countries in the world. I state again and again, awareness is key; Dr. Sachs is at the forefront of the awareness (and implementation) movement, bridging social and commercial gaps to bring awareness of critical issues affecting so many of the world’s poor. He has been called a “rock star economist” for his relations with Bono and Bob Geldorf. He has been seen on MTV with Angelina Jolie (which I admit made me a bit squeamish, but hell, to get to that kind of market with such a message, brilliant, empowering, inspiring); and has written marvelous and thorough books on the topic, including The End of Poverty and his new Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet.
What really attracts me to his message is the pragmatic and optimistic approach to solving some of the most daunting issues of our day. “These are problems that we have the ability to solve! We need to be optimistic about the problems in Africa, and also see that there is no mystery on how to overcome these problems; the solutions, for the most part, already exist!” Sachs beams at the opening of his presentation. Optimism like his is hard to find in many under funded social fields; his insights are often attacked as unpractical, too costly, or too optimistic; but his solutions, though surely not perfect, remain the best chance for changing the lives of millions. Perfection is close to impossible when dealing in difficult, real life situations, which, by definition, are fluid situations. His solutions are ones which many of his critics can, and do, critique, but seldom attempt to improve upon; his focus on the human level, the micro, as well as the macro, putting a human face on every single unnecessary death due to a preventable illness or lack of nutrition, is striking for a person in his level. “Why is Africa stuck?” Sachs asks…”Africa is a puzzle-it is the poorest place in the world, for sure. Why is it stuck in this cycle of poverty?”
In true Sachs’ style, he lays out in detail WHY. And then lays out WHAT TO DO to help it. Something so simple, yet profound, in an arena of many experts and little result. We can look at colonialism. Colonialism did not cause this poverty trap, according to Sachs. It delayed progress, to be sure, but did not cause poverty. Adam Smith, in 1776, in his masterpiece A Wealth of Nations, states that, “The lack of navigable rivers is a huge burden to the development of Africa.” This is 1776! Before colonialization. We need to look elsewhere, to geographic positioning, lack of a green agricultural revolution, and disease burden to help to explain the current situation. These situations have led to the current poverty trap in Africa; yet each has an identifiable solution, which is critical to keep in mind, and which I will get into after. Sachs lists the special challenges facing the continent as:

1. Low Food Productivity-African countries have the lowest food yields in the world, due to a lack of modern agriculture and lack of investments for such basics as fertilizers; this has created a situation where there is simply not enough food on the continent; Africa is a “hungry planet” as Sachs states
2. High Disease Burden-due to its tropical setting and historical roles, no other place in the world has the burden of tropical disease as Africa, from Sickle Cell Anemia to Malaria; the most important thing is that this disease issue is simply not the fault of Africans (as Western blamologists like to say)-the malaria rates are a tragic result of genetic mutations of the strain over the centuries, which has created a super-strain, which only attacks humans (as a result of most other malaria strains in the world which prefer cattle or other animals for its transmission); Sachs has been all over the world, and never, he said, had he seen the prevalence of predominance of disease affecting people like in Africa. Its impact is profound and startling.
3. Economic Isolation-unfortunately, most countries on the continent are land locked (by far the most of any continent-think about South America for comparison)-land locked countries do not have access to global trade and ports; this is compounded by the “bad neighbor” situation detailed by Collier in The Bottom Billion-the negative impact on trade and growth of neighbors who are in conflict, or simply do not promote, regional trading blocs. Uniquely, most live well inland on the continent, in the fertile regions, such as Rwanda and Uganda, where agriculture can be sustained; much of East Africa is simply too arid to sustain life; however, it is extremely difficult to promote international trade, with no infrastructure, when you are thousands of miles from the coast and from trade routes. This is compounded by the colonial powers not investing at all in rail or sea links during their rule, as they did in, say India, which has a marvelous rail system (which I’ve ridden many times and can testify to!)
4. Rapid Population Growth-unlike the rest of the world, the population growth in Africa is astounding; the population, by a conservative estimate, will double by 2050; this will lead to 1.8 Billion on the continent, further stressing agriculture and fragile states. The growth rate is huge because of many reasons, but the most important is lack of access to health care and family planning; people simply do not have access to modern information on family planning; they are also continually subject to disease and death; having more children will ensure a safety net for parents; however, this often works in reverse, as agricultural plots decrease in size, and families increase, there is simply not enough food at current productivity levels to sustain growing families.

Ok, ok, enough with the problems-many identify these in various forms, with little result. Lets look at the solutions with Dr. Sachs:
1. Agriculture-Africa needs a Green Revolution! The same revolution that swept most of the developing world, such as in India, decades ago, supported by such visionaries as the Rockefeller Foundation, and increased food yields by many multiples. However, this revolution never made it to Africa, and the continent is suffering as a result. Sharp increases in food production are urgently needed; as I read BBC News last night, there is talks of rioting and civil unrest due to high commodity prices in many weak African states; if food needs to be imported to support populations, and food prices are subject to wild swings due to crazy policies by US lawmakers (who have decided to put 1/3 of this years corn crop into our oil tanks and drive up global commodity prices!!!) domestic production needs to be built to the level of self-sufficiency. This Green Revolution, Sachs states, leads to a “healthy rural-urban migration.” It automates processes, and increases yields, so the many who flood into urban centers looking for work and a better life can be fed by the few in the rural areas, as is the case with most of the world. This simply does not occur in the current state; urban centers continue to grow, and food continues to be scarce. Africa is the only region of the world with declining food production, Imagine that. In 2008, with all the technology at our fingertips, this continent is actually decreasing in its yields!! This boggles my mind. Answer-Africa needs HIGHER FOOD PRODUCTION. The need fertilizer. They need new strategies and inputs which exist elsewhere, but simply haven’t been introduced, to increase their yields three and fourfold, or more. This will solve the most pressing problem rather easily.
2. Health- “Malaria is almost uniquely African, and also very solvable, in Africa,” Sachs notes; “…when Malaria became a people-disease in Africa, there were almost no cattle present, as a result of the tsetse fly; it evolved to be a people biter, as opposed to most other regions of the world which are primarily cattle biters.” This unfortunate historical twist has created lasting and devastating results. However, blaming PEOPLE for this is ridiculous; it is simply not their fault that they are in this situation. “Most of what we blame on the victims-the poor people, is simply not true-this is a historical and ecological burden and tragedy, aided by poverty…poverty and disease cause a naturally devastating trap, that needs outside help.” And the help is easy-anti-malarial bed nets, distributed and low or no cost; a health revolution, to accompany the green revolution, to both educate and serve the people dying needlessly. Giving access to needed medications and bed nets, through staffed community health centers, would make a critical difference in millions of lives. Access to health care is simply lacking in many areas; people are dying needlessly from illnesses which we have already cured. This is insanity.
3. Infrastructure-an economy and a country can simply not grow without adequate infrastructure; this is not in place, and many of the countries do not have access to internal funding to cover such projects; however, once in place, their benefits can multiply the levels of life, and also bring many countries into the global economic marketplace. Granted, this takes a lot of time and a lot of money. But, it needs to be done. Roads, rails, electricity. Development cannot occur without these. For years, critical infrastructure improvements have been neglected by development groups such as the World Bank; this was a mistake (admitted by the World Bank, unbelievably, in a 150 page report!) We need to move forward, rectify these mistakes, invest in the critical links to the outside world, install the plumbing to bring these countries into the fold; if not, they will simply coexist in our modern world as failed and failing states, withering away in misery; in the 21st century, we cannot allow huge swaths of the world to live a parallel existence of suffering and misery, when we have the techniques to improve at our current disposal.

I applaud Sachs’ bold, far reaching goals of poverty eradication, his relentless drive to constantly improve upon these goals, and his systematic method of implementation. His work crosses many disciplines, from economics to biology to sustainable building design to education, or as he calls it, “looking at the biophysics of life, and designing solutions in a realistic way.” Breaking unfortunate trends, he has not shied away from areas in which he is not expert; instead, he has gotten the best minds in the field, to come and work with him, building an incomparable team, with the goal of ending poverty on this planet, in our lifetimes. He has also not wasted time on unwinnable arguments, such as good the democracy debates and good governance debates that have drained to much foreign aid and attention unnecessarily; Sachs’ said, “You can lecture on good governance, but lectures will not solve the basic issues of infrastructure, health, and agriculture-these are physical problems that need to be seen in a physical reality-these are the underlying factors behind bad governance.” This is a view that is shared by Paul Collier, in his book The Bottom Billion, which I am currently reading; understanding the poverty traps is important for a historical perspective, but we need to focus on the basics, focus on improving lives at the basic levels….and there is NO correlation between democracy and development (sorry, America).
I won’t spend any more time fawning; the speech was great, and so is the man’s work. Thought, I will add, we need more great minds like his working on important social issues in this country and around the world. Imagine, if all the great brains coming out of Harvard and Yale and Stamford, instead of jumping right onto Wall Street or K Street, were given a two year reprieve on loans, to go to work in non-partisan, scientific or policy minded government think tanks, battling social issues affecting us all; its just a wild idea, but imagine the impact of a refocused society with refocused goals, even for two years. Imagine the waves of progress that could rush out in all direction from those walls. I felt one of those waves today and it was invigorating.