Poverty- what’s God got to do with it

Saint Clare and sisters of her order, San Dami...

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It is Day 11 of the 30 day blog challenge and I must say I have failed in today’s post! My challenge was to find a guest to write today’s task but found no takers..so I have to write today’s post myself

Note to self- must correct this

On day 4 I told you about a workshop I attended in London that explored gender equality at the same workshop we discussed the role of the new UN agency for women and in this post my thoughts turn to the delegates. As we networked with each other and learned about each others overseas projects I observed a common ground amongst some of the delegates. GOD. I recall asking myself a question that i don’t have an answer to

DOES RELIGION HAVE A ROLE IN INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT?

There were several leaflets handed out on the day, one had to do with a project  that calls itself  PRAYER FOR FOR CONGO  but the one that really caught my attention was from  WOMEN CHANGING THE WORLD who were founded by the ORDER OF POOR LADIES known as Poor Clares after St Clare of Assisi

 

I have reproduced here elements of the leaflet that I found interesting and which according to the leaflet are an extract and adaptation form LIVING A SPIRITUALITY OF ACTION (A WOMAN’S PERSPECTIVE by Joan Muller

A SPIRITUALITY OF EFFECTIVE ACTION

  1. Honestly assess what is needed in a community- this assessment attends to what the poor really need and not what I want to give them. An honest assessment means that I put my agenda aside and see life from the  perspective of disadvantaged
  2. Honestly assess my ability to address the need- what are my training passions, my connection, and my financial resources? Who might work with me to address the issue and what resources are available? What partnerships are available
  3. Be willing to devote time and effort to the project. Making a difference in the lives of the vulnerable  requires dedication . this doesn’t mean that I can’t take my vacation or long deserved time off but it does mean that I am willing to stick with a project until it is complete
  4. Plan carefully- to effect social change, planning is needed. Planning gives order to an effort
  5. Understand that failure is part of the process. Everyone who has tried to make a difference has made mistakes. If this happens to you, you are in a well-populated  club. Get up, reflect on what wnet wrong, rework the plan and begin again
  6. Work against grumpiness, becoming worried and upset helps no one. If needed take a break. Put yourself back together again. Go to a Spa, eat a chocolate bar, buy yourself a new pair of shoes and then to back refreshed. Grumpiness is a sing that one needs to step back and sit out for a while
  7. Get out there- while women together can change the world, you alone probably will not. Juts do something, join others involved in service and offer your small effort to God
  8. Watch for the hundredfold. If we avoid grumpiness and give God our best, the hundredfold is guaranteed by God. God is not a miser. For every pound we give wisely . God will invest one hundred. For every ounce of sweat, God will labour harder. For every word of cheer God will give happiness. For every word of forgiveness, God will offer peace. In the end, we are ordinary men and women with talents and gifts who wish to give what we can to those in need. We bring our few loaves and fish and believe that by lovingly offering our small gifts, God will take them, multiply them and make a difference in our world. Our gifts are as many and varied as the world’s needs. May  God abundantly   bless our efforts to better the lives of the poor and needy in our world

I was intrigued by most of what is contained in those 8 points. It is mostly a common sense approach to development but I am not quite sure about the parts that I have highlighted not that I am not spiritual, instead that my interpretation of it is one of making others guilty. I believe that folk should reach out others in need but only if that is a core value to their value system and because they feel guilty.

That is my interpretation and I would love to hear yours, so please join the discussion by leaving a response. Do you believe Religion has a role to play in International development if so and if not why not?

 

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Villages in Action

Today we welcome Guest blogger Teddy Ruge of Project Diaspora. Teddy is a mobile technology enthusiast and blogs frequently about the African ICT sectors and it’s effects on development. He has served on several panel discussions related to Africa, the role of the African Diaspora and Africa’s emerging technology space.

The Genesis of TEDxPoor that led to a much bigger idea

The idea of TEDxPoor was born out of a Twitter discussion during UN week in September. The ongoing review of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) left a lot to be desired. For starters, the voices of those that could best benefit from this conversation were left unheard. Too often entire conferences and summits are held on the subject of “the poor” All too often they are discussed as faceless, voiceless individuals who never get an opportunity to participate in the global discussion about them. The discussions on Twitter were that something was decidedly missing from the dialog. Laura Seay, assistant professor of political science at Morehouse College, attended several of the conferences that week and had this to say:

“While there is a lot of discussion of the need to capture human capital in developing countries, we didn’t hear from anyone who had actually lived the experience of escaping poverty. We didn’t learn how families survive on $1 a day from people who have no choice but to make it work.”

In the spirit of the moment and the discussion, I offered to take the microphone to these so-called “poor,” so the world could get a chance to hear their voices and opinions; many of whom have never heard of the MDGs.

TEDx’s online registration application has been offline nearly the whole time. This has provided ample time for me to rethink this whole idea and wether or not a TEDx-branded event in the village was what I was trying to accomplish. Leveraging the TEDx brand absolutely has its advantages. The TED Talks video library is probably the most inspiring online catalog of moving images. The TED conferences have made strides to include voices from the African perspective into its talks. Various African visionaries have shared their inspiring ideas; George Ayitteh, Andrew Mwenda, William Kamkwamba, Chimamanda Adichie, Ory Okolloh and Ngozi Okonjo-Ideal to name but a few. A TED conference was held in Arusha, Tanzania in 2007. I also had the opportunity to speak at TEDxKigali this summer. The TED community even announced a partnership with Nokia to bring bundled TED talks to Africa on Nokia N8 all-in-one phones. These are all great and welcome initiatives, but I am sure you know what I am about to say. We’ve seen this model before. Many times. Successful initiatives imported onto the continent, turning us ever more into consumers and passengers as opposed to mechanics and drivers; spectators to the shaping of our own collective destinies.

Western academics wax poetic about their research methodologies and theories into how or if we (the poor) can achieve the MDGs, even going so far as to engage in intellectual sparring over each other’s development methodologies. Why is our development the rightful occupation of Western academics and armchair development pundits, and the rich and famous? I think they all really miss the point. Albert Einstein once said, “if we knew what we were doing, it wouldn’t be called research.” I am not an academic, nor do I think that I was ever cut out for such a vocation. I am happy being drunk with can-do idealism that things can work much better for those affected, that things could be much simpler; one does not need 15 years or (50 years for that matter) of research figuring out how. Let’s just do it already.

This is a call to action for the creation of a completely new platform. A departure from the norm. Let’s build our own podium; where the world can meet us, the faceless “poor.” While we may not consider ourselves poor, the world, does. I include myself because this is my community, my village, my family. This is a chance for us to contribute our not only our voices to the discussion, but to also showcase what we are already doing to advance our own communities. I think too often the world forgets that there are real people behind the stats, research goals and projections; people with opinions, ideas and smarts. As Seay said, people who, against the odds, thrive earning $1 per day. I think it is time for us to share our ideas on what, (if anything) we can do to participate in our own economic emancipation. Above all, there has to be some value in sharing how we survive averaging $1 per day. If you can do that, are you really poor or an efficient minimalist? While the label of “poor” is generally attached to the those living under the $1 per day economic threshold, is it necessarily a bad thing if you can feed, house, clothe and educate you children? Is it easy to do? Not in the least. Could we stand to rise above that in pursuit of a better quality of life? Absolutely! The state of Poor is relative.

I’ve espoused many times the need for us Africans to politely take over the reigns of our own development. No longer do we need the steadying hand the West has had on our shoulders for half a century. The journey to equilibrium requires that we experience both failure and success to appreciate what balance is. Eventually, we must become the architects of our own development. We must become our own advocates.

Introducing the first Villages in Action Conference
Twenty minutes outside the small town of Masindi, Uganda is a village called Kikuube. There are over 260 homesteads with a population just over 1000. The local council member representing the village is none other than my Mum, whom I am sure you have met. In talking to her about this conference, I was surprised that she—as a village leader—had never heard of the MDGs. Yet she goes about her day fulfilling tasks meant to improve the welfare of her community; from educating her community about the use of bed nets, to regular home inspections enforcing sanitation codes, to empowering women with micro-loan programs. What does it say about the MDGs when the very people that are supposed to be beneficiaries don’t even know about them?

On Saturday, November 27, the microphone will be mounted stage center in this little quaint village. We welcome the world to join us in a frank discussion on the state of poor. We’ll discuss the MDGs and what our role is in achieving them by 2015 (and what we were already doing). Let’s talk about how we survive. How big a role does commercial farming and the various small-scale entrepreneurial activities contribute to our development. I want to challenge the notion that the sustainability of our communities depends on intervention from the West and that we are willing to take up the responsibility of developing and managing ourselves. I’d like the world instead to come to my village (and hopefully soon enough, to other villages) to see how we “manage.” Not in the sense of “poverty tourism,” but in a genuine exercise of actually listening to and engaging with us.

“How can I help,” you ask?
Good question. With such a short throw window, we’ll need all the help we can get. From volunteers, to sponsors, to live tweeters and bloggers. The word needs to get out about this conference, so if you can space a few column inches about this new platform, please do support us with a paragraph or two. A live stream of the summit would be fantastic, so we’ll obviously need tech assistance pulling that off from a remote village. This is not entirely impossible with the right partners in place. So if this is your field, please do get in touch. If you would like to lend us some financial assistance instead, you can do do so at various levels below. We’ll give as much credit as deserved to everyone who contributes to pulling this off. So thanks in advance and do check back in the coming days as more details are released. As expected, we welcome as much Diaspora participation as possible!

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A Question from the World Bank: What would you fund to address Poverty?

A few weeks ago I came across the World Bank Africa on Twitter and I followed them. they followed me back and promptly sent me a Direct Message

Submit your video today! What would you fund in Africa to fight poverty? http://bit.ly/aOIjWf

I followed the link and was interested to find that the World Bank is genuinely seeking our opinions

World leaders will be gathering next month to discuss the replenishment of the International Development Association (IDA) fund, the World Bank’s fund for the poorest countries that helps fight poverty in Africa. We want you to join this conversation by submitting your video today! In a 2-minute video, answer the following question: If you were asked to advise the Bank on what to fund in your village, your town, your province, your state or your country to reduce poverty, what would you recommend and why?

Videos must be submitted by Monday, November 22nd. (11:59pm GMT).

For all inquiries, email afrex@worldbank.org

I duly recorded my 2 minute video and emailed it

I must add that I was still skeptical at this stage as to whether this was a genuine request and that there is a real person at the end of the line(email) who is going through those videos and to my surprise someone called Nicole responded saying “Great Video”. Here is my 2 minute so go on and submit your own idea

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