Lauren Everitt

  1. Q&A with CARE’s Steve Hollingworth

    May 4, 2011 by Lauren Everitt

    From flooding in Pakistan to earthquakes in Haiti and upheaval in the Middle East, there isn’t much in the evening news to fill folks with hope for the future.  But Steve Hollingworth isn’t afraid to roll up his sleeves and get to work on a solution.  As COO of CARE, an international humanitarian organization, Hollingworth organizes CARE’s fight against poverty in 87 countries—tackling everything from microfinance initiatives to HIV/AIDS education.  The Elgin, Illinois native visited CARE’s Chicago office yesterday and shared his insights from more than 26 years with CARE.

    What sparked your interest in humanitarian work?

    As an undergrad at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois, I studied abroad in South America—it was the first time I’d flown in a plane or gone south of Champagne.  It had a big impact on me. I was shocked to experience abject poverty, but also as a younger person I was kind of angry that I wasn’t as knowledgeable or involved as I wanted to be.  My mom said when I came back from South America, she knew I had changed because I didn’t want to take showers—I didn’t want to waste water. At that point, I became very interested in issues of global poverty.

    What is CARE’s strategy for organizing relief efforts?

    There are three things that guide CARE’s work.  The first is to address human condition problems, such as health, education, income and asset formation. In the life of a very poor person there’s a deficit of some area, and everything we do has to address that.

    The second critical thing is addressing the underlying causes of poverty—basically the social or political constraints that very marginalized groups face. People are poor because of social, cultural and political reasons, as well as economic or educational ones. So we really have to address a combination of concrete problems and do so in ways that give marginalized groups an opportunity for leadership and personal growth.

    The third area is influencing the enabling environment, or making sure governments, institutions and financial markets are supporting the needs of the poor. We have a very active constituency and advocacy group here in the US to lobby Congress and businesses about those issues, and we also work closely with a wide range of partners in the developing world on government and business action to make sure the voice of the poor is heard.

    How does CARE operate in challenging environments, such as the Middle East?

    Community support is our biggest guarantor of safety when we’re working in unstable environments where there’s a lot of political unrest and the threat of tourism.  It also gives us much greater reach and the ability to sustain the work for longer.  If the communities value what we bring in, they become our biggest advocates.

    Of CARE’s 11,000 employees, 98 percent are nationals of the countries that we work in, and they understand the cultural contexts very well. No one in CARE travels with arms or security—it’s really the goodwill of communities that allows us to continue to operate safely.

    How can young people get involved in humanitarian efforts?

    There are tremendous opportunities right now for folks to get involved.  I would encourage people to try study abroad.  That really changed my worldview. Many universities also offer courses that deal with international development, international affairs and public policy. Peace Corps is another major opportunity—it’s probably the most common way folks get their foot in the door at CARE. Another approach is to do a little crystal ball gazing about frontier issues, such as the impacts of climate change, water issues and social enterprise (addressing problems of the poor in a sustainable way). If people are thinking about future trends in the world, they can develop a skill set to address them.

    Other resources include:

    Ideaslist.org – a directory of volunteer opportunities

    The Rotary Foundation- a foundation that offers scholarships to study abroad

    One Campaign- grassroots advocacy and campaigning organization

    Care Action Network-  an advocacy group of CARE supporters

    Young Professionals for CARE- group of young people dedicated to supporting CARE’s mission

     

    What are the biggest risks to global health?

    There are two areas of poor performance, and they both don’t get a lot of attention.  Maternal mortality is a particularly difficult problem to solve.  It’s basically an acute problem on top of a chronic one. Mothers need good medical care at the time of delivery, and then there’s the long-term problem of women’s status in the community–often they have little control over the timing and number of childbirths. Maternal mortality in many countries is 60 to 80 times greater than it is here.

    The other one is sanitation. There’s a relationship between poor sanitation and malnutrition.  Poor nutritional status is really at the core of any health issue—particularly children’s health.  They’re more vulnerable to any kind of infectious disease because of poor nutrition and adding poor sanitation just compounds the issue and leads to high levels of child death.

    Any final words?

    Foreign aid is insignificant in the US budget—much less than 1 percent.  But oftentimes it’s the first target in budget reduction. The upside of it is huge, and it’s a bad signal if we disengage from solving the problem of world poverty.

    There has been a lot of soul searching in the US about the responsible posture we should take as a country toward humanitarian aid.  And I sense there’s growing sentiment that we have to be more engaged in world issues, such as climate change and poverty.  Our national values tell us to be engaged.

     

     

     

     

  2. Haitian ensemble Boukman Eksperyans energizes Northwestern’s Pick Staiger Concert Hall

    April 5, 2011 by Lauren Everitt

    Haitian ensemble Boukman Eksperyans energized Northwestern’s Pick
    Staiger Concert Hall earlier this month with their Grammy-nominated
    blend of Haitian, Caribbean, rock and reggae rhythms. The audience
    waved Haitian flags donated by the island’s embassy, a vivid reminder
    of the concert’s international focus as part of Passport: A Musical
    Expedition, Northwestern’s 11-day tribute to sounds from around the
    world.

  3. Strength in what remains

    February 10, 2011 by Lauren Everitt

    Tracy Kidder

    Big events are best told through small stories. At least that’s the approach author Tracy Kidder took for his latest book, Strength is What Remains, which details the journey of a genocide survivor from Burundi, Africa to Columbia University medical school.

    Kidder has been called a “purposive write,” one who analyzes and exposes larger issues and proposes solutions, but he says his focus is more modest—the individual. “I have a hard time bending my own mind around generalizations. Often all I can think of are the exceptions,” he said to a crowd of nearly 100 at Northwestern University Wednesday as part of the One Book One Northwestern initiative. “Stories can be windows into enormity,” he added.

    Kidder met Deogratias by chance and was struck by the Burundian man’s remarkable story of survival and perseverance. Deogratias narrowly escaped death by leaving his door open—his would-be killers assumed he had fled—and through a mix of luck and sheer tenacity he arrived at JFK airport with $200 and a Visa under false pretenses. After eking out an existence delivering groceries and sleeping on benches in Central Park, he encountered an ex-nun who found a home for him. Less than two years after his perilous escape from Africa, Deogratias enrolled at Columbia University. He was later accepted into medical school and eventually returned to Burundi to open a clinic and Village Health Works, a collaborative health organization of Kigutu villagers and Americans.

    Kidder said Deogratias’ story stirred a sense of wonder in him about the people he encountered. “I hoped that I could never again look at anonymous faces in quite the same way, particularly the faces of people with foreign accents,” he said. “Who are they really? What memories and dreams do they carry? ”

    Although Kidder is hesitant to define what the book is, he’s very clear on what it’s not. It’s not simply another story about Africa, nor does it intend to cast Burundi in an exotic light; instead, he wanted to humanize the country.

    The book touches on many topics: civil war and genocide; courage and endurance; the generosity of strangers; and memory. However, the truths about these subjects are widely known and Kidder wanted his readers to explore these elements, not as truisms, but as experiences through Deogratias, he said.

    And for Kidder stories are more than words on a page. He believes they have the power to move people to empathy, a necessary first step in spurring people to action to ameliorate suffering.

    Although Kidder prefers to keep a temporal separation between his writing and activism, he was moved by what he observed when he accompanied Deogratias to the future clinic site in 2006. While speaking to a crowd of Kigutu villagers, he promised to do everything possible to get the clinic built. He eventually donated some of his own money to help speed the project along.

    However, Kidder modestly downplays any suggestion that his writing has inspired others to take action. After a woman in the audience credited his book with determining her daughter’s career path, he replied: “I’m first of all a writer, and I don’t set out to tell these stories to do a good deed. If they do, in fact, do a good deed, then I can’t take credit for it.”

    But Kidder is willing to acknowledge that his writing aims for a higher purpose.

    “What I aspire to is art,” he said. “And art has the great power to transform the experience of suffering and injustice into something beautiful.”

  4. Good manners and common sense: Charity founder addresses Feinberg students at benefit for Pakistani flood victims

    January 15, 2011 by Lauren Everitt

    Neal Ball, Founder and Honorary Chair, American Refugee Committee and Terry Long, Department of Family and Community Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine

    Neal Ball, founder and honorary chair of the American Refugee Committee, spoke to more than 30 students and faculty at the Feinberg School of Medicine as part of a benefit to raise funds for Pakistani flood victims Friday.

    Twenty million Pakistanis were directly affected by the flooding last summer, and large swaths of farmland are still under water, according to event coordinator Paul Battone, a Feinberg medical student.  The 24-year-old president of the Student Senate said lingering floodwater would affect next year’s harvest and exacerbate the disaster.

    Ball’s charity emerged from another disaster in the Eastern hemisphere more than thirty years ago.

    After sponsoring a Vietnam War refugee from Laos, Ball set about trying to find the boy’s family.  The search took Ball on a tour of refugee camps in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Thailand.

    The poor conditions in the camps motivated Ball to address the plight of refugees—an effort that culminated in the present-day American Refugee Committee.

    Ball pulled from his experiences with the charity to explain how humanitarian outreach can make a difference and to point out obstacles along the way.

    “Good manners and common sense. That’s what I think humanitarianism is,” Ball said when asked to define the term.

    But life often complicates simple and sound advice.

    Ronak Vashi, a Feinberg medical student, said people are often consumed by their everyday lives at the expense of what’s happening in the world around them. But she’s optimistic that small acts can have an impact.

    “People think that you have to do a lot to make a difference, but there’s more to be said for a larger number of people each doing a smaller part to help a bigger cause,” she added.

    It was this same lack of attention that prompted Battone to coordinate the benefit with first-year medical students Matthew Hire and Alex Sidlak.

    “Truthfully I’d heard of the disaster in Pakistan, but I didn’t know too much about it,” he said.

    Battone wasn’t alone. After researching the issue for the Feinberg Student Senate at the request of a professor, he noticed knowledge about the flood was limited.

    Pakistani student Hira Bai said she was also surprised at the limited US outreach, especially in light of American support for the country in other areas.

    ”We should all just be more aware of our international community,” she said.

    Battone partnered with Northwestern’s Center for Global Health and the South Asian Medical Student Association to host Friday’s benefit to raise awareness and funds for flood victims.  He also contacted local Pakistani restaurants to contribute food for the occasion.  Through donations the benefit raised $550 for Pakistani flood victims.

    While some might argue that a small gathering in Chicago might not make a difference in a region ravaged by flood waters, Ball would disagree.

    “No matter how big the problem is or how far away, don’t be shy about it,” Ball said.  “It’s never too big or too distant to give help.”

    Not all charities are created equal.  Make your donations count with Neal Ball’s suggestions:

    • Look for transparency and accountability. Find a charity willing to share information about their work.
    • Find the shortest line between need and aid. Middlemen can complicate things.
    • Put your charity to the test with Charity Navigator, an independent, online evaluator.
  5. Kidneys for sale? Sherine Hamdy discusses her new book on Egypt’s ethical debate over organ transplantation

    January 12, 2011 by Lauren Everitt

    How much is a kidney worth? According to Sherine Hamdy, a Brown University anthropologist, the going rate in Egypt circa 2006 was approximately $5000.

    It might not sound like much, but in a country where poverty is high, organ traffickers are persuasive and poor preventative care raises demand—the choice is complicated.

    Enter Islam into the equation and you’ve got what amounts to a series of puzzles, according to Hamdy.

    Sherine Hamdy, Assistant Professor of Anthropoloy, Brown University

    Hamdy set about tackling these in her new book, “Our Bodies Belong to God: Bioethics, Islam and Organ Transplants in Egypt.”

    More than thirty Northwestern students and faculty trudged through several inches of snow Tuesday evening to hear about Hamdy’s research in a land known for its broiling sunshine, magnificent  pyramids and a growing underground industry—organ transplantation.

    Egyptians are ambivalent on the subject of organ transplantation, Hamdy explained.

    While Islamic leaders wield substantial influence, Egyptians also rely on their personal experiences to guide their religious conclusions on the subject.

    Hamdy illustrated this through the experience of Dr. Kotb, a successful transplant surgeon who later renounced his profession as haraam, or forbidden, by his Islamic beliefs.

    She speculated Kobt’s change of heart wasn’t a sudden religious epiphany, but a broadening of Kobt’s perspective.  As a doctor he was compelled to end his patients’ suffering.  Later he started to ask the larger questions.

    The answers he found were disturbing.  He saw the sometimes devastating effects of organ transplant on living donors and the potential for exploitation of the poor—factors which likely influenced his views on the subject, Hamdy said.

    But many Westerners and upper-class Egyptians continue to fault Islam as the road block to open dialogue on organ transplantation.

    “It’s not about a religious constraint to potential benefits of the biotechnology, it’s about whether there actually are benefits to the biotechnology that outweigh the costs,” she said.

    The situation worsened in 2006 when the World Health Organization flagged Egypt as having one of the highest rates of organ trafficking in the world, Hamdy said.

    This led to a government crackdown on organ transplantations, pushing the practice further underground and stilting conversations of creating a commercial market.

    “Talk of regulating the market is so taboo that the dialogue is closed,” Hamdy said.

    Although initially uncomfortable with commercializing organ transplantation, Hamdy said she advocates acknowledging the market to make it less hostile.

    Hamdy’s words resonated with Northwestern anthropology and global health student Tamon Oshimo, 22.

    “She mentioned something that most people agree with, that you can’t have an absolutist stance, but I like that she had a compelling argument for it as well.”

    Hamdy was also hopeful.  She turned attention to Mansoura, a devout Muslim city 77 miles north of Cairo, which boasts the most effective kidney center in the nation and completes 80 transplants each year.

    “If the medical rates get better, then the market might change,” she said.