Late Night Thoughts about Poverty in Africa
Hello friends,
So I have been back in Canada for many months and many of you (the 5 family and 3 friends) that read this site have given up checking for updates. But I will continue to Blog for my own sanity and my own purposes.
The issue of poverty in some/ most countries within
I spent a good chunk of my childhood in
I spent the first weeks of my trip to
The thing about African people is despite their troubles, and despite their woes they are resilient. This is an image that should be represented. I really think this might help compassion fatigue. As well as starting a new way of thinking about the continent.
Sometimes I wonder if NGO’s should be saying please offer your help in partnership with African communities aiding them to reach their goals, instead of please save them. Maybe this is less 'sexy'. But already innate to that statement is an issue of empowerment. I think the biggest failure of western aid funds (as widely mismanaged as they may have been) is the fact that it lead to the continued disempowerment of the African people. I have think, unfortunately, that the majority of aid regimes are administered in such a way that they are effectually a continuation of imperialism. This isn’t a novel concept, but it is under discussed. I have seen first hand the submissive attitudes of some very capable Malawian leaders to foreigners and their “aid,” so much so that they would go against their own better judgment to accommodate the wishes of said aid organizations. So if an old lady at a bus stop near a stop light is mistaken for someone who wanted to cross the street and is escorted fasly to the other side of the road. What if in this senario, once you walked her across the street, you asked the old lady what she wanted and she only replied that she was fine and politely smiled at you. How would you even know that she was worse off? You wouldn’t, not until you found her there hours later, fatigued and you asked her again if a she was ok...then perhaps she would tell you that she was missing her bus. Now what can you do in this situation?
If Africans continue to see the Muzugu “or foreigner” as their “saviours” then we’ve truly failed, I think, because I believe that they will continue to look beyond their borders for effective solutions instead of driving their own from within. This idea of waiting for change and praying for a solution is frustrating and I think there needs to be more mobilization for peaceful well planned internal change. Internal expertise and will-power is a key part of effective development, and it is, in my opinion, a vital ingredient that drove the success of development projects in places like
The potential for great leaders within African communities exists, without a doubt, so why aren’t we investing in it? Large aid organizations such as Oxfam and World Vision should be moved to devote at least 50% of their monies to long-term aid solutions that empower communities; be it political lobbying, irrigation development, community education, leadership training, etc. It is these projects that are important, which in fact we work towards here in North America with our poverty stricken population, that we fail to fund properly in African communities that are most vulnerable and in need of such things.
This idea of curing and saving has to be dropped. We cant hope for that. When you are helping a friend in need, it is better to be supportive and nurturing than over-bearing. You cant expect to solve thier problems. It is better to equip them with the tools to solve their own problems than to tell them what to do.
3 Comments:
Ann
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Keep up the good work - I'm looking forward to following it in the future.
JB
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Well-written and thought provoking post!
THank you for writing what you did. I am going to Africa for the first time this summer and I have had similar thoughts about poverty. I do not wish to perpetuate the savior mentality and was inspired to read others thinking the same way.
I am going to visit a friend who has been going graduating from college in the US this year and is returning to live in her homeland of Malawi. She wants to develop micro-finance there and other empowering strategies. She has told me many inspiring stories about people there, and I really am excited to go see what life is like so i can share my experience with others.
Thanks again and keep sharing your thoughts.
-Shane
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