Friday, May 2, 2008

Final reflections

Sawatdee Kah!
This is the final blog entry written during the program. As time passes, further reflections and updates will be added. Please note that this entry was written in three countries: in Thailand, throughout the end of the program; in Japan, in the Tokyo airport on the way home; and, in the U.S. while at the District 5100 Conference in Pendleton, Oregon.
Visit from District 5100, and more
I am the only person in the program able to boast that a group of Rotarians from their district came to class to visit. I knew when I met Sharon Starr of the Lake Oswego Rotary that she was bringing a small group to Thailand to work on a project in the north, and I hoped she’d be able to sit in on a class as she’d requested. In addition to Sharon, the Rotarians who visited class were: Glenn Waller, Leslie Brunker, Charlene Bassine, Burt and Rosalie Czapsyz, David Bussman, and “Boss” Chotchauroj (from Thailand, former exchange student of Glenn Waller). They hosted 6 of us for a wonderful dinner the night before class, and then attended class and went on a small campus tour (including seeing my room). It was great to be able to show the program to people from my sponsoring district and I only wish there had been more time.
The visitors came when we were already deep into “Module Four: Conflict Transformation and Building a Sustainable Peace.” The day they sat in on class, we were discussing “Economic Recovery and Governance and Rule of Law.” This prompted after-class informal discussions about communism, socialism, capitalism, etc. RPCSP did a great job setting up an ideally communistic society of sorts. We all live in the exact same accommodation, the expectations from each of us is the same, we’re all given the same amount of $, during the day we eat together, on trips we do everything together, etc. In class we discussed that an idealized utopian society has never and cannot actually exist; that said, Rotary did an amazing job building this one.
Rayong Field Study
Our final field study was a weekend trip to Rayong, a beach community 4 hours from Bangkok by bus. The purpose of the visit was to see the Camillian Social Center, an amazing, healing, community space for people infected with HIV that was started by Father Giovanni, an Italian who participated in the RPCSP last year. The center is all one would hope it would be: a loving, kind, caring place for people of all ages, with no money or family, at all stages of HIV/AIDS.
It was interesting for me on many fronts; I already knew much of the information about HIV/AIDS presented to us by Father Giovanni and his staff since I’ve taught HIV/AIDS education before, have volunteered for numerous AIDS-Walks around the U.S., have friends who are HIV positive, and was hired to work for the People of Color AIDS Foundation in New Mexico (although I accepted a different job instead). While the information was not new to me, the center was, and the way HIV/AIDS is viewed/handled in Thailand is different (it’s thought of as dirty, carried by sex workers, even though many infected are men who frequent sex workers who in turn infect their loyal wives). Most fascinating was seeing the reactions and hearing input from fellow participants who were not as well versed; to hear the cultural views and learn, often through informal conversation during breaks, about what’s happening with the HIV/AIDS crisis in participants’ home countries. It was also interesting to me to have deeper discussions about homosexuality with people who have no connection to it and no understanding of it. Some of my closest friends, male and female, are gay, so I don’t even think about it anymore; it was interesting to be in the position of educator for the probing questions of people new to the subject.
Undoubtedly the most hilarious thing that happened was when Paski (theatre activist and Ayurvedic doctor) joked with me that he was going to ask Anas (Nigerian Judge and Imam [spiritual leader] and devout, while unbelievably open-minded, Muslim) to put his hands in the “magic box” – a big wooden box with holes for your hands to go in from the front so you can’t see anything; inside were heaps of condoms and a dildo – for practice putting on condoms without being able to see! Anas figured out what was inside at about the same time that Father Giovanni’s large, fun and boisterous personality discovered that a participant was trying out the magic box; to say it became a hilarious public event is an understatement, and Anas was an incredibly good sport, classy to the corps.
Personal Tragedy
On a personal note, I returned from the final Field Study to learn that, most unexpectedly, my cousin Laurel committed suicide. My age, my proclivity to international living and travel (she worked for the CDC – Center for Disease Control – as an international trainer), my way of eating, my physical body immune system issues, my love of nature and hiking and kayaking, my passion for serving others. . .Laurel and I shared it all. In terms of commonalities, she was my closest family member. Having only been in contact for about 3 years after a childhood separation due to divorce, we were amazed by our connection and had already talked about writing a book together, doing trainings together, traveling together. I was, and am, completely devastated. Getting the news was hard enough, but getting it while being across the world threw me into orbit. I thought of leaving the program early, but know that’s not what Laurel would have wanted; rather, I stayed and have done my best to celebrate her life by doing all the things she loved about the developing world.
The people in the program, specifically Paski, stepped up and helped me through the shock of it all. The staff was amazing, the participants were thoughtful each in their own special way, and I felt supported in the community of RPCSP; my host counselor even took me to a Wat to give offerings to and receive blessings from a Monk. Thanks from the bottom of my heart for supporting me through this difficult time.
Final week
The final week of the program was a whirlwind of closing classes (a day of Sri Lanka case study, a day of structured reflection on the course as a whole), rehearsals for our final group course project presentations, packing, etc. As appropriate, we were all fully in the “mourning” stage, with some people wishing they were home already and others not wanting it to end, holding on the every final moment. We laughed at spontaneous impersonations that participants did of one another, people gave out all the little gifts they’d brought from their home countries, people shared/copied photos, and people engaged in final gift shopping frenzies.
We did an oral evaluation of the whole program and people were asked for their ideas on all the different topics. Since international experiential education programs are what I’ve done for 15+ years, I’d been making notes about my suggestions for weeks. Tucker, the Deputy Director, asked me to implement some of my suggestions that very afternoon. I’m proud that I was able to use my experience to make suggestions that could change the course for the better.
Group Course Project Presentation, Graduation, and the Future of RCPSP
Early in the program we were assigned the task of presenting, at the final graduation, an aspect of our learning to the wider Rotary and University community. My group was created organically from the people who wanted to do something different than the typical Power Point Presentation. We 5, coming from DRCongo - Jennifer, Sri Lanka - Paskaran, India (Kashmir) - Assabah, Australia (Philippines) - Joy, and the U.S., initially decided to do something with participatory theatre. We had our similarities and differences, cultural and otherwise, and thoroughly enjoyed most everything about the project and working together. Paski and I took on the role as the process people, knowledgeable about theatrical techniques, and Joy, Jennifer and Assabah determined the topics for the content. The topic chosen was IBB, Interest Based Bargaining, and Paski suggested staging a “boxing match” that, after one round, morphed into the boxers calling on “their communities” – audience members – to join them onstage and give written input of their interests. The topic through which we would present this conflict resolution method, after much internal debate and input from Tucker, was the issue of traditional family owned shops vs. internationally owned hypermarkets and convenience stores.
Our graduation for RPCSP involved the Group Course Project Presentations, numerous speakers, an informal cocktail hour, dinner, and finally, the a formal certificate presentation. In attendance were Bob Scott from Canada (Chair, The Rotary Foundation Trustees International Assembly 2008), K.R. Ravidran from Sri Lanka (Trustee, The Rotary Foundation International Assembly 2008), Rotarians of Bangkok, Host Counselors, and special guests. Our final presentation at graduation was sandwiched between other groups’ Power Point Presentations, so despite their engaging content our interactivity was warmly welcomed. Despite planting our own participants in the audience, numerous non-group audience members volunteered to join even in the first round! We were shocked and happily surprised to get such a wonderful, participatory response. Quick, safe, interactive, physical games that everyone played together while standing began and ended our presentation, and the room was filled with laughter.
I accepted my certificate directly from the President of Chulalongkorn University. Bob Scott (aforementioned) also presented certificates to ½ of the participants. The program itself is currently up for review – we were batch 4 of 6 in the pilot – so Bob Scott and K.R. Ravidran visited us in order to inform their decision of the future of the program; both seemed keen to recommend that the program become a permanent part of the Rotary Education programs. As I type this sitting in the Tokyo airport on my way back to the U.S., meetings in Chicago are underway which will decide the future of the program. I will keep my fingers crossed that they decide to continue it, as I feel it is quite unique and impressive in the world of international adult education. The intercultural classroom, the focus on peace and conflict, the input/direction from worldwide accomplished speakers, the practical basis with academic theory (rather than the opposite), the unbelievable attention to detail, the staff’s service mentality, the generosity of Rotary to build the capacity of global peacemakers. . .truly amazing.
Final Parties
After the official graduation most of us returned to the Business Center, room 1005 of Viddaya Nives, our housing, the same room where I helped Paski type his papers, the same room where a bunch of us gathered to watch The Darjeeling Limited – wonderful flick to watch with people from India to hear their insider chatter, the same room where our group rehearsed the Group Course Project. That night was filled with laughter, often at the impressions done by the ever intelligently humorous Ellis (peace educator from the 7,107 islands of the Philippines – which he stated each time he introduced himself our ever-changing roster of speakers). It was filled with dancing, most notably Trimbak (City Manager from Bombay) teaching me 7 Indian dances complete with his stomping and pounding the floor so hard that the building security guard came to let us know the party needed to be much quieter. It was filled with Jenn Weidman visiting from the Rotary Foundation, finally able to meet everyone she’d been communicating with for almost a year. It was filled with Tucker (Deputy Director) and Pen (Tucker’s girlfriend from Cambodia), finally able to fully relax and be themselves since the program was over (wow do I know that feeling). It was filled with camaraderie, intensive 3-month long friends who weren’t ready to say goodbye to each other, people enjoying each others’ company for one of the last times as a group.
Unfortunately, on the final day of the program, Nancy (from Canada) received news that her father had been in an accident and was on life support; he died later that day. Her airplane ticket was changed to the next day. We supported her as much as we could and as much as she desired, and we did a moment of silence for her and her father at the final party (which took on a whole new feeling/meaning). (I later included her father in my offerings at the Wat and received blessings from a monk for her and him.)
We were responsible for creating our final party and I was one of 5 people on the party committee. Ellis and I co-planned the entertainment portion of the evening and co-emceed the event, my taking the more serious minor role and he being his hilarious self. Somehow I also ended up being responsible for gifts (which, in Thailand, is a big deal since you have to make sure you have the appropriate gift for absolutely everyone). Throughout the three months, Mariangela (from Brazil), Ann (from the U.S.), Nancy (from Canada) and I became friendly with the owner of a shop at the night market (after being introduced by one of the speakers in the program); Porntip ordered 25 white (the color of peace) silk scarves from her women weavers and was so unbelievably wonderful and wanting to support our program that she delivered them to campus just in time for the party. These were a welcome addition to the personal gifts we got for the 5 staff.
At the beginning of the party, I led the group in an informal appreciation closure called “Backwriter.” We all had blank labels/stickers and anonymously wrote compliments and notes of appreciation on them; once written we stuck them to each other’s backs. At the end of the casual writing time, which lasted about ½ hour as we wandered around and ate snacks, talked, and started the karaoke (have I mentioned how big karaoke is in Thailand?!), we got in a circle. Everyone had a blank piece of pretty paper and we all turned to our right so that a back was toward us; we each took the labels off of the backs and put them on the paper. Once completed, we gave the papers to their owners and everyone got to read and keep the sentiments. A few participants approached me later saying how much they appreciated the activity, asking me to read some of their appreciations (Joy, peace educator from Australia/Philippines who conducts workshops around the Asian region, was amazed by one that said “Saint” – and I totally, completely agree).
Songkran
Just after the program finished, I left on an overnight bus headed for Nan, a non-touristy village city in the north of the country near the Laos border to celebrate Songkran. Thailand’s annual Songkran Festival celebrates the Thai New Year, mid-April. Traditionally the festival lasts for 5 days, with each day having a different focus (community, family, elders, etc.). Overall the point of the festival is to cleanse for the New year through water including: receiving water blessings from monks and elders, washing Buddha statues, and, most famous, soaking every person who passes by with water. I’d heard about the Songkran Festival for years, but this was the first time I was in the country and able to participate; it makes sense that the water throwing happens at this time of year – April is the hot, dry season, and temperatures of 100+ with high humidity are the norm. The water on my body, therefore, felt wonderful, and I got used to walking around with wet clothes.
I was lucky enough to celebrate Songkran with a family in Nan. Each day brought different activities and I participated in: multi-hour services at the local community Wat (Buddhist temple), receiving numerous individual wrist string blessings from family elders in different ceremonies in various homes, and dancing on the street at night in front of a Wat with groups of locals who were playing drums to music blasted from a truck. Most fun was driving around town for 4 hours in the back of a pick-up truck with two other adults, 4 young teenagers, and two huge urns of water (100-or-so gallons each). We each had a small bucket used to individually collect water and throw bucketloads at every other passing truck also filled with people and urns of water. But not just at trucks - motorbike and bicycle riders, people walking, and especially groups on the side of the roads with hoses and water guns and their own urns. Our driver, the father of one of the aforementioned teens, and the other adults in the front of the truck in the dry safety behind windows, must have enjoyed hearing our screams after being doused with ice water because at one point we pulled into a driveway and he jumped out to buy two enormous ice-blocks that he then put in our urns so we could inflict the same hilarious discomfort on others. When we were running low on water, we were driven to a fire truck parked by the river whose sole job it was to use it’s hose to refill urns on the back of pick-ups (in addition to spraying us as much as possible).
I loved every minute of the festival and am grateful that I had the chance to participate as a local. Attending the festival gave me a few days to digest that the program had ended, and begin the slow process of reflecting on my experiences and learnings.
Poetic Reflections
It’s all about relationships.
Connections.
This program allowed me to connect with 17 other incredible professionals working around the world to create peace, each in their own way.
It allowed me to connect with 5+ amazing staff who all care deeply about making the world a better place, one tiny detail at a time.
It allowed me to meet and briefly get to know speakers from around the world, each of whom have unique gifts to share and the openness to continue the professional connection well past their one-two-three-or-four days with us.
It allowed me to briefly connect with villagers and NGO workers and government officials and children in four regions of two countries.
It allowed me to go deep within myself and reexamine my values, beliefs, morals, ethics, judgments, worldview, outlook, desires, and feelings of
despair on the state of conflict in the world and
hope for the people who can work toward changing it and
grief for the nonsensical loss of life and
worry for my newfound friends living in areas of conflict and
optimism that we can make a difference and
happiness of being with such amazing people in one of my favorite countries on earth and being surrounded by temporary and strong community, as I have been so many times before, and
luck at my being given the opportunity and
amazement at the little meaningful moments that will forever be planted in my warmest memories.
I am proud to have been part of this program as a participant, and hope in the future, if there is a future for the program, to be a part of it in some professional way – I already submitted a proposal to be a speaker, so we’ll see what happens.
I remain steadfast in my idea that the better people know one another, perhaps the less they’ll be in conflict or, at least, the less easily they’ll feel they can indiscriminately blow each other away. The emphasis on killing and war was intense in this program, as I expected it would be, but the difference is that I was sitting in the room with people who had personal stories of war, some of whom were returning home into the thick of war. I worry, intensely, that something will happen to my new friends, tears springing to my eyes right now simply with the too realistic thought of it. It was even mentioned in class one day, as if Assabah (journalist from Kashmir) had been reading my mind, that someday we’ll open the paper to learn that X person, peacemaker from X country, was killed as s/he attempted to make a better world.
I also remain true to my belief that I am extremely lucky to have been born in a non-global conflict zone, and I wonder if this might change in my lifetime. I struggle with returning to the U.S., where I have lived most of my life and is the place of my birth but, honestly, often does not feel like home. My values and visions and desires and cultural orientation is somewhat Asian, as confirmed for me by many, many Asian people (from different countries) over the last three months. Where did that come from? Why am I returning to the U.S.? Why don’t I yet speak Thai or another Asian language? How can I fit in wherever I live if I don’t feel I completely belong in the U.S. but in Asia I look and sound like I don’t belong? I know I belong in community, the 24/7 type of community similar to many of the programs I’ve participated in / led, but how to do it and where? Do I create the 24/7-experience as a business with different topics all the time? Some longer, some shorter, some for certain people (youth, adults, teachers, healers) with certain foci (peace, conflict resolution, communication, intercultural sensitivity, leadership, service, personal empowerment)? In different places around the world? How do I find the participants?
How could projects get funded? I’ve already started conversations about creating international projects with various participants in the program (peace education for youth of different ethnicities through participatory theatre in Sri Lanka, peace educator and facilitator training in East Timor, adventure teambuilding for peace and conflict workers in Brazil). Perhaps this is where my link to Rotary continues. . .

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Sawatdee Kah again from Bangkok!

Sawatdee Kah again from Bangkok!
We've been back from Cambodia for a week and it's taken me this long to digest the experience enough to write to you about it. Overall it was a fabulous trip, well planned and filled with meetings with amazing organizations. It was also heartwrenchingly dreadful
and disturbing on many levels.


I'm the only participant who had actually been to Cambodia before; I traveled in Phnom Penh (the capitol) and Siem Riep (site of Angkor Wat) while backpacking in early 1997. To say that the country is different after 11 years of development is an enormous understatement. My memory is of unpaved roads, bicycles, nighttime curfews resulting in darkness and quiet (with an underlying unsafe feeling), and a mere smattering of tourists. I remember finding the one
English Language bookstore and internet cafe in Phnom Penh and wandering around the temples of Angkor Wat in vague solitude. Now it's a completely different scene. In 1997 there
were 2 hotels in Siem Riep; now there are 90 hotels with 30 more being built, and there are restaurants, internet shops, and cars/busses/motorcycles everywhere on the paved roads. In 1994 (the only statistics I could find) there were 8,000 visitors to Angkor Wat; in 2007 there were 1 or 2 million (the number is in question due to corruption in ticket sales; crazier
still, Angkor Wat is managed by a foreign company, so the country doesn't even get the $.) To say that I was blown away by the development is an understatement; I
hesitate to believe I was in the same country.


The first few days of our studies focused on the Khmer Rouge years of power 1975-1979. We visited The Killing Fields (too disturbing to be human), S21 torture center (former school), and even had dinner with one of the three remaining survivors of S21. We visited a rural village created to resettle former Khmer Rouge soldiers. We visited the ECCC (Extraordinary Chamber
in the Court of Cambodia), the court being built by the international community to try the top 5 living Khmer Rouge commanders (to the tune of $170 million in a country where it's considered good if people earn $1/day). We spent a lot of time in a complete daze as the realities of why 70% of the current Cambodian population is under the age of 30 crept in; our daze matched theirs, but for different reasons. Their historical trauma is mindblowing; while there are amazing NGOs trying to help, there's a long road ahead. (Note: There are only two trained psychologists in the entire country.)



Here's an excerpt from an email I sent from Phnom Penh:
In the past 2 days we've visited The Killing Fields, S21, and a recently created village 4 hours from the city of former Khmer Rouge soldiers. I'm incredibly impressed with the program that they're showing us all sides. Stepping into the main memorial at The Killing
Fields, with the 11 (I think) levels of the tower of skulls, I immediately felt the pain of the 8,985
people who died there; it was unbearable, and I cried and prayed for the remainder of the tour, trying (unsuccessfully) to bring in light and love, stepping over the clothes continually being unearthed coming up onto the surface of the ground in between the mass graves. At S21 I took about 1/2 of the tour and then opted out, having seen and felt enough of the horrendous torture that happened to the victims there. I crossed the street to spend time at an NGO that
exists to give handicraft training to people handicapped by polio and landmines.



Sigh.


The middle few days we split into three issue groups with different NGO and government visits: Labor Movement (the group I chose due to my continued teaching at the National Labor College in D.C.), Land Conflict, and Anticorruption / Good Governance. The question we all resonated with at the end was "Is the system corrupt or is corruption the system?" We all
agreed it's the latter.


Two days at Angkor Wat finished the Field Study. We even got 1/2 day free (the first time!). We returned to Bangkok with one day off before starting classes again. With a full week of daytime classes and nighttime films then moving immediately into 10 days of 7:30am - 9pm most days, one day off was like heaven(especially for all of our laundry).


Since returning from Cambodia, classes have been on: Truth Commissions and Social Justice, Capacity Building in Peace Studies and Conflict Resolution, and Disarmament Demobilization and Reintegration. As previously mentioned, some classes/speakers prove better and more useful than others.

Topics coming up in the next two weeks are: Economic Recovery, Governance and Rule of Law, Moral Component of Peace Building, Convergence and Divergence of Faith, Building Peace Zones in Post Conflict Situations, Case Study: Sri Lanka (which will be
fascinating since my closest friend here is Sri Lankan), and Building Networks and Alliances.
This weekend we're off on a Field Study again, this time 3 hours out of Bangkok to the Camillian Social Center to learn about the HIV/AIDS situation and Sex
Industry in Thailand.

On a more personal note, I've become quite close with a few people on the program and am already collaborating on brainstorming ideas for future work together. Notably is Paskaran, previously mentioned Sri Lankan friend who also does Theatre of the Oppressed work, who is helping me heal (he's the Ayurvedic Doctor). Anas, the Nigerian judge/Immam says
I'm Paski's interpreter - Paski's accent isn't the easiest to understand but he and I speak theatrical body language with each other so I can almost always understand him. We laugh together constantly and are planning an Invisible Theatre outing in a local market
on campus for our Peer Learning session on Friday of this week. The more I learn about his home situation, which I have because I typed his Individual Conflict Analysis paper for him, the more blown away I am by his awesomeness and ability to create change. Have you read about the recent increase in violence in Sri Lanka? 85 people killed this past weekend alone. While we were in Cambodia, two of his friends - a reporter and a photographer - were arrested.
I've also spent more time with my Rotary Host Counselor Krich, visiting and meditating at a
beautiful Wat (temple), wandering the largest outdoor market in SE Asia (on perhaps the hottest day of the year - around 100 degrees with 85% humidity), and sharing an amazing meal. I've also enjoyed seeing Heng, my Australian-Cambodian friend who still works
for The Scholar Ship, whenever our schedules mesh.

The program is starting to wind down and I'm not ready for it to end. I'll have much assimilating of information/experiences and brainstorming to do once it's all over, and plan to spend a lot of time writing and creating ideas for future education/training programs upon my return. The coursework and field studies have kept us so busy that internal reflection
has only just begun. Graduation is on April 10, complete with presentations
from our small groups on our learning. I'm the leader of a group of 5 (Paski from Sri Lanka, Jennifer from DR Congo, Assabah from Kashmir, and Joy from Australia/Philippines) who are using theatrical techniques to show IBB (interest based bargaining) amongst other topics. On April 11 we'll have a 6 hour evening just for us to eat, drink, celebrate, and get closure; I was the first to sign up for the small committee to plan it.

Tomorrow night I will have the pleasure of having dinner with Sharon Starr and 5 other members of Rotary District 5100 as they are here to visit a project they work on in Northern Thailand. I’m trying to gather some of my fellow classmates to join us so their time in our class on Thursday morning is more personal and meaningful.

Peace,
-Stephanie

Monday, March 3, 2008


Friday, February 29, 2008

Reflections from a Peace Scholar


It appears that the Peace and Conflict Studies program had a “field trip" to Northern Thailand. The following is the objectives of the "field trip", and then a somewhat personal reflection of the trip and the challenges that Stephanie faced.



Field Study Northern Thailand
February 7th – 15th, 2008


Field Visit Objectives
The Field Visit aims to provide Rotary Peace and Conflict Studies’ Participant with chances to:
• To understand and analyze the stakeholders involved in the natural resource
conflict of the lower Salween river basin;
• To learn more about political and military oppression within Burma, the
conflict between the state and minorities, and the effects on migration and
refugees in Thailand;
• To understand the conditions of refugees and migrant workers and to analyze
their interests and conflicts with other actors
• To apply the knowledge of conflict resolution theory from module 1 and the
tools of conflict analysis acquired in module 2 to produce a concrete map of
the various conflicts witnessed.






Stephanie Pollack
Rotary Peace and Conflict Studies Program Jan – Apr 2008
Field Study Reflection: Northern Thailand




Reflections on clowning in the refugee camp
Most of my life I’ve been a performer. I loved to play and make people smile. Then six years ago I got sick and turned inward, unable to expend energy playing but rather needing to save it for survival. Since then I’ve developed new ways to play, expending less energy while still receiving the pleasure of spreading smiles.
Preparing for the meetings within the refugee camp with Group B was wonderful since my colleagues and I agreed both on process and content. The day arrived and my excitement for being back in a village grew; I have much experience in villages in the Asian developing world, but this would be one of my first as part of a group on such serious business as gathering information from NGOs.
And then Susan asked me to go clowning with her.
I declined, thinking of my commitment to my group, thinking of the organization that went into splitting us into groups and finding interpreters, thinking of students on my past programs who wanted to stray and what a pain in the #*! it was for me as their leader. Throughout the morning all-group session of presentations by NGOs I ruminated. My group is going to visit NGOs, talk with people, be transported on a motorized vehicle, stay together. Susan is going to run around the camp all afternoon and make people happy. The former would be the easier choice for my body, the latter the obvious choice for my spirit. Upon further reflection, it really wasn’t much of a contest.
The joy of the afternoon reminded me of how I used to be before getting ill – constantly physically active, silly, theatrical, expressive, spreading laughter and ridiculousness to people who really need it (in this case, it had been 2 years since the last outsider performed in the camp). After 3 hours of intense activity we rested and I equally felt exhaustion and peace. The memories of performing on the stage at the school for 500 people, playing ball games in front of the hospital with 30 participants and another 50 onlookers, doing follow-the-leader with heaps of kids across the cleared land (ready for building housing) onto the outdoor stage walking exaggeratedly, not faking not knowing how to juggle in front of another 100 people, discovering and becoming connected to a special boy helper, being hugged and held by a mentally ill woman, and the ultimate videotape routine which ended with me being chased by about 40 laughing kids up a hilly path with people peering out of their houses smiling – these memories will be with me always. I brought a bit of joy to people who needed it; they brought intense joy to me.
The connection I felt reminded me of my past life, my younger healthy backpacking days throughout Asia. The experience brought me back to a place I’ve missed desperately. While I was ill I thought I’d never experience the feelings from those days again. And now I have, even if I now know I have to do it in a different and shorter way, even if I had to pay for it with a decrease in my health for a few days. Still, I learned that I can do it, and that knowledge means the world to me.
Witnessing conflict as scarcity hits home: Boys fighting over a plastic dakro ball
While in the camp, running around with groups of children, one boy emerged as our special helper – he was wonderful, led us to places we wouldn’t have found on our own, took care of our belongings as we performed, volunteered to perform with us, extremely theatrically talented, and generally made sure we were okay. Later in the afternoon, as we were squeezing through a tight corner around a fence, I noticed two larger boys tackling him; one bully emerged with the dakro ball Susan had given our helper as a thank you and our helper was crying. I immediately took the ball out of the bully’s hands, gave it back to our helper, and used body language charades to let the two boys know of my disapproval of their assertion of power. While I remained with them long enough for them to register their understanding of my opinion of the situation, without being able to work with them as an educator (teaching bullying as I have in the past) I’m sure they have not changed their inner bully tendencies and I wonder what happened after we left . . . I shall always wonder. Stories like this are not new; boys will be boys and fight over toys. The difference is that the scarcity in the camp gives it a whole new meaning.




Reflections from an independent American pseudo-collectivist realizing individualistic tendencies
As someone who has led numerous intensive 24/7 experiential education programs like this one, someone who usually thrives in group atmospheres, who wants to be at the center of community, and as someone with advanced training in intercultural theories, I surprised myself in my individualistic tendencies. Early on in the trip, literally in the Bangkok airport upon our departure, I noticed a rising tension within myself, a heightening stress and annoyance; digging deeper I was surprised to recognize it as an urgency to be alone. Knowing this was the first moment of a long trip I knew I needed to change my perspective – and fast. I left the group in order to made the personal mental changes needed to enjoy the program as it was designed. Upon further reflection, I wonder how others from individualistic cultures felt. Colleagues from collectivistic cultures made their social needs known consistently throughout the trip, and I obliged as often as possible without tipping me over the edge. Conclusion: something’s changed within me and I’m more individualistic than I thought. This is an incredibly important learning for me to know for the future.
Reflections on being ill, heart longing to be with the group and mind craving intellectualism yet body rebelling
Being immuno-compromised living in the regular world means that I sometimes miss things, like whole days of field study when my eyes catch an infection and the infection spreads through soft membranes into my brain (as explained to me by my eye doctor after returning to Bangkok) causing not just an eye infection but also a brain infection (no wonder I felt so scarily awful). I am deeply saddened to have missed two days of such quality programming. I feel as if I’ve lost something I can never get back. While I’m still recovering, eyes sore/foggy and brain slow, I shall continue to attempt to fold myself back into the group socially and to uncover knowledge gained during missed visits. And yet, I’ll always feel a loss, and have to learn how to live with it.




Intuition on Natural Healing
I sauntered into the market at the Thai/Burma border. Feeling pretty crappy with my eyes hurting and burning and my head pounding, I found myself being drawn to goji berries and local raw honey (both of which I consume at home). With sunglasses on (as had become the norm), I inspected a small baggie of berries. Through charades I inquired to the shopkeeper if they were for eating or making tea/soup. He indicated eating, then pointed at the honey as if they were supposed to be eaten together, and then pointed at his eyes and gave a thumbs up. I was shocked. Lifting my sunglasses to reveal my red/swollen eyes, he gave a bigger thumbs up. Apparently honey and goji berries are good for the eyes and I instinctively knew it; it’s important to me to be reminded that at least some of my medical intuition remains intact. I returned to the drivers hanging out near the van who were curious about my purchases; they thought the berries were spicy chilies and I was able to convince two of them otherwise by sharing – they did not enjoy the taste (which is more like medicine than yummy) and threw the remainder on the ground. Sweethearts they are, they found a straw so I could suck honey out of the huge bottle and be able to begin self-medication. Not surprisingly, I starting feeling better almost immediately; all I needed was a little goji, a little honey, and the thoughtfulness and care of our wonderful drivers.




Reflections on the Rotary staff concerning the above
I’m used to going through illness alone, and I am incredibly thankful for the personal care I received from all of the Rotary staff, including but not limited to being taken to a doctor, being taken to a pharmacy twice, having special food ordered for me, and generally feeling deep care from everyone at all hierarchical levels. While this is the type of care I’ve bestowed on many a student throughout my career, it’s quite the switcheroo to experience it myself. I am grateful. It’s good to be reminded that karma really exists.




Reflections on an inner conflict:
This is a reflection for which I have no answer. It remains an important question, one that I hope I’ll get some insight from my colleagues on as I’ve grappled with it for years. How is it possible to witness such poverty (as we did) and return to a business hotel with a hot shower, swimming pool and good meal (as we did) and be able to live with oneself? Each time I am in economically poor areas, my heart breaks and I want to give up all earthly belongings to work for the cause of poverty. Why do I have this fortunate developed-country life and they don’t? Why me? How can I enjoy this (insert luxury here that many people take for granted) knowing what I just witnessed?
Am I alone in these thoughts? What do others do to press on?

Thursday, February 21, 2008

First Report, First Impressions

Sawadee kah!
Greetings from Bangkok! As I sit in my room and sip
lychee juice, I figured it was about time that my first Rotary District 5100 blog entry was written to let you know about my experiences thus far.
It's wonderful to be back in Asia in general and
Thailand in specific. The kindness of the people, the beauty of the land, the chaos of the big city, the absolutely fantastic food, the pace of life, the wats (Buddhist temples), the beautiful offerings that abound
everywhere, the Thai smiles and laughter. . .I just
love it.
The Rotary Peace and Conflict Studies Program (RPCSP) is an incredible experience. The most interesting aspect so far for me is the mixture of people participating; it's an intercultural classroom, just like the one I helped to create on the international education program The Scholar Ship but on a different scale.
There are 18 participants in RPCSP, ages 27 - 60s from
all career backgrounds. To mention a few:
Paskaran (an Ayurvedic Doctor) from Sri Lanka, like me, does participatory theatre for social change. We share hilarity about the fact that no one can understand him when he talks (thank goodness he laughs a lot) and he's recruited me to help him type.
Pavao from Brazil is a firefighter/policeman who competed in the EcoChallenge on the Brazilian team in Borneo. Like me, he also does teambuilding interactive/outdoorsy-style.
Assabah from Kashmir is one of the most outspoken
reporters on the conflict in the region, and one of the biggest sweethearts.
Kishu, the law professor from Bombay, keeps us
laughing.
Gina from Ecuador has an amazing career ahead of
her on the world stage representing peace/conflict
issues in Latin America.
Anas is an Islamic judge from Nigeria who told me his friends would be flabbergasted that he was friends with an American female of Jewish descent.
Fernando, a very tall teddy-bear of a peacekeeper from East Timor.
Trivini is a thrice published author on issues of conflict and peace from Assam, India.
Susan is a self-proclaimed Peace Clown from Australia whose desire is to spread love.
Jennifer from DR Congo works for the UN in peacekeeping missions.
I could go on and on talking about everyone, but I'll
stop there.
The greatest impact for me has been hearing stories of
my colleagues' lives. I am constantly reminded of how lucky I am that I come from a country without continual obvious armed violence. Some of the photos shared from the DR Congo will never leave my consciousness, as much as I wish they could. The stories of unspeakable violence in East Timor and Kashmir and India and Brazil and Colombia have instantaneously taken me deep within myself, sending out love to everyone in the room, protecting us and our families and our countries and the planet hopefully enough for us to see another day of sunshine.
In terms of the academics, we’ve completed two course modules so far:
Module 1: The Concepts and Values of Peace and Conflict Studies including sessions on: Conflict Prevention; the Nature, Types and Root Causes of Conflict; a Global Overview of Conflict Situations, and; Gender Perspectives.
Module 2: The Diagnosis and Analysis of Conflict including sessions on Conflict Mapping and Conflict Impact Assessment.
The next few weeks is Module 3, the one I'm most looking forward to. The sections include Negotiation, Mediation, Cross Cultural Conflict Resolution, Cultural Issues in Peace and Conflict, Using Communication for Conflict Management, Intercultural Communication in Conflict Settings, Problem Solving, and Media as Communication Tools.
The program itself, still in the pilot phase, is
impressive and will be more so with a little tweaking.
Luckily the administrators are open to and desirous of
feedback, as well as open to assistance throughout the
program to meet needs. I've already been tapped to
lead some group ice-breaker activities, co-dramatize a poem on gender, introduce the Stages of a Group's Life theory, etc. As you may know, it's quite a switch for me to be a participant in a program like this since I’m used to developing and leading them - and I'm loving every second of it! I'm not responsible for everything; how freeing!
We all live in a 14-story dormitory building on the
campus of Chulalongkorn University, the best university in the country. The rooms are simple and fine, with our
own basic bathrooms, control of AC, tiny fridge, hard
bed, closet, balcony, and internet. I'm on floor 3 and
overlook the parking lot (complete with beautiful
flowering trees) so I get to watch the parking
attendants push the cars, which are left in neutral,
in and out of spots to accommodate. We can walk 10
minutes to class or take the campus bus (I usually walk). Our classes are in one room in the Faculty of Political Science building, and for lunch we dine across the road in the large faculty lunchroom.
On the third day we did an exercise where we paired up
and interviewed each other about ourselves, our
histories with conflict and peace, our life stories,
and then we introduced each other to the class. I
figured that was a good time to share my health story
and Pavao did a wonderful job giving it the right
flavor. I added an apology to the group in advance that I was going to have to constantly ask about ingredients in food (msg, soy/oyster sauce due to wheat) because I didn't want to have a reaction that could potentially affect anyone else in the group. The very next day at lunch, I was presented with a plate of the same food that was on the buffet but was made especially for me - with no MSG or soy/oyster sauce - and they have done so every day since. It's so incredibly thoughtful and I relish in the fact that I can just relax at lunch and know I'll be able to fully participate and be alert in the afternoon. Dinner on our own is a different story, but I've only had one experience that sent me to bed rather than out with my new friends (and I knew from bite one that it would happen) so that's pretty good. I’m truly blown away by the personal care and consideration by the staff in the program, and am incredibly thankful.
We are each paired up with a Host Counselor, and mine
is Krich, a 47-year old woman who looks 25 and lived
in the U.S. for a few years. She's fun and wonderful,
picked me up from the airport and promptly took me for
fishball soup on the street (yum!) and I recently
joined her and one of her friends for a fantastic
informal dinner, a foot massage, and some shopping in
the night bazaar.
During my second week here I made a brief presentation at Krich’s Rotary Club. After the dinner meeting was over, the club President and I did what all good Thai people do at events - we sang karaoke! John Lennon's Imagine, quite appropriate. I will certainly return to attend more meetings, as the schedule allows. We have our first writing assignments due in the next week so I’ll be a bit busy for a while.
In the next blog entry I’ll write about our first field experience up north near Chiang Mai (where I used to live), in villages and cities along the Thai/Burmese border, and in a refugee camp.
I am thrilled to be here, excited by all of the things I’ve already learned and can bring back to better our community, am greatly appreciative to Rotary for the opportunity, and am happily anticipating more to come.
Peace,
-Stephanie