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Joblessness is still on the rise, retirement funds
are still declining, and the economy is still uncertain.
At times like these, it helps to put things into
perspective. In 2007, the per-capita gross domestic
product in Haiti was $612, compared to $45,047 in
the United States. In Sudan, it was $1,442. Nepal?
Only $419. When you look at it like that, the United
States economy is cushy indeed.
Counting their blessings isn’t what motivates
most travelers; many Coloradans volunteer abroad
from the sheer goodness of heart and with a deep
desire to make life better for those in true dire
straits. The University of Colorado is number two
among institutions providing Peace Corps volunteers
for 2009, and sister city organizations in Colorado
now number three dozen—and that doesn’t
count sister schools, sister hospitals, and sister
what-have-yous. Even high schools are sending their
students abroad to do good works; Vail Mountain
School’s program, “Ethically
Engaged Youth,” hopes to teach and inspire
students while they’re serving—and because
EEY has pre- and post-trip components, it offers
depth of experience.
If you’ve never traveled abroad to volunteer,
be assured that it’s a rich and rewarding
experience, but not without its complexities and
nuances. Volunteers aren’t always welcomed
with open arms; often, they’re greeted with
skepticism or resentment, regarded with suspicion,
even hostility. Dangers are real. But so is the
warm, glowing feeling at the end of the day, when
you watch a group of cheering villagers gather around
the well you’ve helped build. If you’re
considering volunteering abroad, here’s what
you need to know.
Making a better world
Volunteer tourism can create a lasting shift for
host communities abroad. Clean water flows, new
schools open, and specialty medical services save
lives. There are intangible benefits; a mother visiting
a health clinic in a refugee camp in Soroti, Uganda,
told volunteer Beverly Lyne, “Just seeing
you here makes us know that we’ve not been
forgotten.” Lyne, a community health nurse,
helped establish the clinic, which is now run through
an in-country group with backing from International
Midwife Assistance, headquartered in Boulder.
The volunteers benefit just as much. There’s
nothing like living elsewhere to become a truer
believer that it’s a small world after all.
Attitudes toward materialism, resource allocation,
human rights, and much more can change—and
global citizens are made through that alchemy.
Susan Skog, a Fort Collins author, just released
The Give-Back Solution: Create A Better
World With Your Time, Talents, and Travel (Whether
You Have $10 or $10,000) (2009, Sourcebooks).
“I’m hearing from people every week
who are remaking their lives around service,”
she says. “There’s such a surge in people
wanting to give back, especially young people. Teenagers
are totally on fire with the idea that they can
make the world a better place.”
She and her 14-year-old son traveled to Thailand
for a service trip. For teens, she says, an opportunity
to offer help to those in obvious need may be the
first time that they feel powerful. “They
see themselves as change agents,” she says.
“They are then ready to make a difference.”
Volunteering internationally also gives you the
chance to meet people from around the globe—not
only the natives of your destination, but also other
volunteers. How often do we work side by side with
Swedes, Cubans, and Scotsmen? And you’ll probably
start using resources more wisely. Skog, for instance,
recently downsized her family home, halving their
original 3500 square feet of living space.
Joe Barrera, head of a Colorado Springs’ sister
city – its “sister” is Nuevas
Casas Grandes, in Chihuahua, Mexico – points
out the importance and satisfaction of building
relationships with people, not institutions. He
has visited his “sister” several times,
and its representatives have come to Colorado Springs
as well.
When Barrera travels to Nueva Casas Grandes, it’s
usually behind the wheel of a fire truck or a school
bus; they’ve sent eight large vehicles over
the years. “We saw what they had for firefighting,
and it was almost nothing,” he says. Gifts
of art have flowed the other way, but it’s
the exchange of friendship, not goods, that matters,
says Barrera.
Exchange seems to be the key word in all volunteer
endeavors, even though the economic disparity between
the volunteers and their hosts can be extreme. In
exchange for service, volunteers learn about resourcefulness
and ingenuity—and experience new cultures
and global friendships.
Possible pitfalls – and how to avoid
them.
Rewarding though it can be, international altruism
can be a tricky endeavor, one that’s especially
fraught with the danger of unwittingly offending
hosts. If volunteers act out of paternalism; if
they consume scarce resources in the host community;
or if they carry a negative message--“Your
school isn't nice enough, your park isn't clean
enough, your diet isn't nutritious enough,
your traditions aren’t good enough; adopt
mine instead"--they can cause harm.
That potential for harm may be hard to see as a
volunteer, but anthropologists are studying it,
and are developing a train of thought called “Critical
Development Theory” that questions the value
of many forms of foreign aid. Much of the literature
is about broad-based international aid, the kind
that filters through large organizations such as
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
or the Children’s Fund, for instance. These
programs are faulted as forms of neo-colonialism,
or for poor program design or fraud.
In Dead Aid: Why Aid is Not Working and How
There is a Better Way for Africa (Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 2009) author Dambisa Moyo points out
that 30 years of aid to independent African countries
has hindered development—not helped it. The
aid is an inherently lopsided power relationship,
and is based on giving, more giving, and still more
giving.
Lyne, the community health nurse from Boulder who
has worked extensively in Nicaragua and now in Uganda,
says that even on the person-to-person scale of
volunteer tourism, “We are sometimes part
of developing a beggar culture. It gets bigger and
bigger and bigger: buy me a cow, send my child to
school, build me an oven.” It’s not
always easy to avoid looking like a walking ATM.
Conversely, some local communities are offended
that outsiders think they need help. Paula Palmer,
now a Colorado resident, lived in Puerto Viejo,
Costa Rica, for 20 years. She recalls a time, years
ago, when a group of well-meaning visitors to Puerto
Viejo called a meeting and essentially told the
community “Now we’re going to show you
how to start doing ecotourism.” The community
already hosted visitors on organic farms, took them
out in the Atlantic Ocean, and showed them how cacao
is grown and chocolate is made.
Finally, an indigenous leader stood and offered
a gentle rebuke: “We’re happy to bring
tourists into our community. We think they come
because they are interested in learning about our
people, our rainforest, our ocean, and we’re
happy to show them. We have been doing it naturally,
and we are the teachers of ecotourism. And, we don’t
know how you can help us, other than improving our
English.”
Which brings up a key question: when does volunteerism
become slum tourism, or voyeurism? Since the movie,
Slumdog Millionaire became this year’s
Academy Awards best picture winner, slum tours in
Mumbai have become a land-office business. Half-day
“reality tours” are available in Rio
de Janeiro, Johannesburg, all over the world. The
tours may mean nothing to the slumdweller, if there
is no cooperative plan that benefits the community.
Or the tours may have a net negative impact in terms
of eroding community values and personal self-worth,
as camera-laden outsiders gawk.
Volunteering: doing it right
Visiting a foreign country to volunteer is much
like visiting anyone’s home. Essentially,
you’ll follow the same rules as any good houseguest:
wait to be invited, behave graciously, be polite,
and leave when you’re asked.
Waiting to be invited is key. Palmer recalls getting
a letter from a young North American woman who wanted
to come to Puerto Viejo to volunteer. For three
months. With no knowledge of the Spanish language.
And no vocation. Paula’s organization wrote
back, politely declining; the woman showed up anyway.
She was a burden, not a help.
The same goes for organizations. For that reason,
Engineers
Without Borders (EWB)--a Longmont-based non-profit
organization that sends engineers and engineering
students abroad to assist on appropriate technology
projects--operates only by invitation. “We
don’t recruit for projects,” say Cathy
Leslie, executive director. “Rather, they
approach us. “
After being invited, and before taking any action,
EWB also does a “needs assessment,”
a critical step in volunteering. In needs assessment,
the goal is to learn what the community feels it
needs, what resources are at hand, including skills,
time and relationships, and ways volunteers and
community members can work together to fill those
needs. The assessment is systematic, community-wide,
and begun with open-ended questions such as “Tell
us what it’s like to live here.”
Trust is also key. “The greatest responsibility
lies in the middle-man organizations, the bridges,”
says Palmer. “They must make sure that trusting
relationships are in place before volunteers, bright-eyed
and bushy-tailed, arrive on the scene.” An
in-country counterpart is essential as well: a non-profit
organization, a government agency, a sponsoring
church.
A very clear understanding of expectations for both
sides must also be articulated; things can go wrong
otherwise. As just one example, if the hosts are
expecting goods, and the volunteers have been instructed
not to make gifts to individuals—a very common
trip norm—then feelings can be hurt, and misunderstanding
can put a pall over future exchanges.
In fact, if there’s one piece of advice that
all international travelers, whether volunteers
or not, must hear and heed, it is to be respectful
of local customs and cultures. That includes learning
at least a few phrases in the community’s
language, dressing appropriately, and knowing what’s
polite and what’s not. Don’t think you
can rely on common sense to navigate cultural nuances;
in Yemen, for instance, showing any irritation with
details or bureaucracy is considered a major insult,
and can lead to a lawsuit. It’s crucial to
learn about cultural specifics; a good place to
start is at the U.S. State Department’s website
on country-specific information (travel.state.gov/travel).
Finally, remember that corruption is commonplace
the world over; it is the sending organization’s
job to minimize it. Lyne’s Ugandan clinic,
when under previous management, experienced employee
theft more than once and threats to the safety of
whistleblowers. So, checks and balances are essential.
It helps to remember that workplace theft by North
Americans is not unheard of either; Bernie Madoff
comes to mind.
Individual differences.
For the volunteer, consistency and commitment are
key. We can’t all be Paul Farmer, the doctor
from the U.S. who has lived and worked in Haiti
for many years, and is the subject of Mountains
Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder (Random House,
2003). But spending an afternoon bringing games
and songs to an orphanage won’t have a lasting
effect on the orphans, fun as it may be.
A volunteer’s impact increases with the length
of the stay, the strength of his or her language
skills (French works in parts of Africa, Spanish
in most of Latin America, and English will get you
through much of Asia), and the nature of other skills
that can be tapped. Do you know anything about raising
chickens, making solar stoves, or teaching literacy?
If not, expect to dig trenches and make adobe bricks.
And, even if you do know how to raise chickens,
be prepared to find out that yours is not the only
way to do it.
The most important advance work a volunteer can
do is to find the right sponsoring organization.
This takes due diligence; some questions to ask:
– How long has the organization had a relationship
with the host community, and what is its substance?
– Will there be someone on site who knows
the community intimately and is available to the
volunteers?
– Do the group’s policies reflect the
host community’s input?
– What training is required for volunteers?
– How does the group avoid the Santa Claus
syndrome, or disrespectful behavior?
– How does the host community benefit from
the volunteer tourism?
– How are the benefits distributed throughout
the community?
– Are former volunteers willing to talk?
Even with the best organization, and the best intentions,
volunteers must still expect some gaffs, or at least
some surprises. Lyne, who had more than 20 years
of international work to her credit, says that when
it came time to move the clinic in Soroti from one
building to another, “Getting people organized
was one of those cultural a-hahs. These guys have
no idea how to load a truck, and it was unbelievably
hard.” Call it a cultural misunderstanding.
No harm done, though. After the move was complete,
the community gathered for a ceremony to offer blessings
and promote healing. That was a moment when cross-cultural
understanding truly worked.
Freelance writer Wendy Underhill
also pens the “Enlightened Tourist”
column for Nexus.
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