New Definitions for Humanitarian Graduate Studies
There is nothing again today for these children as the sun
rises over the streets of Dhaka, Bangladesh.
I will never forget that child. The sound of his voice and his
image will always remain in my memory. His voice was high like
a child’s but from blocks away you could hear the distress
in his tone. I could hear his voice above the din of the crowded
streets of Dhaka. Riding in a rickshaw, we passed a corpse on
the sidewalk that was hastily covered,waiting for the untouchables
to take him away. From my seat I searched for the child whose
voice I heard but I could not see him. The voice grew nearer
and suddenly I saw him. The sight of him surprised me so that
I grabbed the shoulder of the rickshaw driver peddling in front
of me. He looked back at me startled and stopped the rickshaw.
He was surprised by my reaction, not by what had surprised me.
Before me was an old dilapidated wooden flatbed cart. The flatbed
was covered with a thin straw mat. A boy lay on the mat. He had
no arms and no legs. The voice I had heard above the crowds was
from this small boy. A few passersby threw coins onto the mat
where the boy lay and were quickly snatched up by someone waiting
nearby.
***
The lane marking the edge of the marketplace was lined with large
metal trash bins. As we passed by the marketplace I heard voices
coming from inside the large trash containers filled with garbage.
Days of rain had turned the trash into a muddy, soggy mash
of waste. There were naked children in the bins, picking through
the sodden trash for something worth salvaging. They dove face
deep into the trash to retrieve small pieces of metal and plastic
which they delivered to possibly their mother who waited nearby.
***
We turned from the marketplace back on to the main thoroughfare
where people, a few even clad in suits, walked swiftly by. I
heard the sound of a baby crying. I looked around but could not
see any children nearby. We passed an intersection and there
in the gutter was a baby lying on a newspaper without even a
diaper on. People walked by apparently unaffected by the sight
of a baby lying in the street crying. The baby I believe was
a lure for those passing by to leave a dollar or two.
This is a true story about what I saw on a 20-minute rickshaw
ride through the streets of Dhaka during my first visit to Bangladesh.
It shocked and scared me that first day, but after seeing sights
like this day after day, my sense of shock, horror and sadness
started to disappear. It scared me even more that I could get
used to seeing the human conditions around me. I questioned my
own sense of humanity, but slowly came to realize that reacting
in shock or horror or anger at a society that could condone these
kind of conditions were actually the reactions of a beginner
in Bangladesh. I soon learned that to be an effective humanitarian
activist in this country, I would have to take a step back and
view the overall human social structure without so much emotion.
I was learning that I had to consider the customs, social structure,
and values of the adults in the community to gain a balanced
perspective. If I were to somehow take the boy out of the cart,
or put hundred dollar bills in the trash for the children it
would not cause lasting change in their circumstance. To play “Santa
Claus” for one day without considering all the factors
was not a long-term solution, and might even cause more problems
on the short run.
***
I have been serving meals to the homeless in Denver for the
past 17 years. Friends and associates of mine have sometimes
joined me for the monthly meal service at the Denver Rescue Mission.
Most of my guests are not accustomed to spending time with the
homeless, and react emotionally while serving the usual 300 evening
meals. Sometimes I have seen them cry. I think these friends
of mine shed tears not only out of compassion for those less
fortunate, but also tears of gratitude and appreciation for the
happiness in their own lives.
When I started serving meals to the homeless I too reacted with
many emotions and wrote many articles about how I felt. Now when
I read these old articles I realize that I do not feel the same
anymore, nor do I react the way that new friends do when they
come to the shelter for the first time. Today I have no deep
emotional reaction to the people I meet at the shelter. I see
now with a calmer eye and am able to look at the bigger picture
of the problems and situations that brought these people here.
I think now that it takes getting over the initial emotional
reactions of shock or pity to be able to truly understand their
situation and find a direction towards a possible solution. This
feeling of calm is the feeling I think true martial artists have
before engaging with a partner or an opponent. One needs to step
back emotionally to find a place of calm before reacting with
action. This is the concept of “mu” or a
state of nothingness. It is the same place I have reached at
the homeless shelter.
Some of the places I travel to worry my staff. I think I am
able to go places that others might seem dangerous or difficult
because I have been able to step back emotionally when I visit
new places and not react from pure emotion. I am aware of my
responsibilities to my businesses back home and am aware of the
risks of getting sick or having an accident, but I have prepared
myself for emergencies in the most responsible ways possible.
***
If there is a large accident or natural disaster, emergency
relief workers on the scene first organize the victims by degree
of severity of injury using a triage system consisting of four
categories: BlACK, RED, YELLOW and GREEN. The BLACK LEVEL is
reserved for those that have passed away or are beyond assistance;
the GREEN LEVEL on the other end of the spectrum is the level
for those victims with the least traumatic injuries.
AHAN (Nippon Kan’s Aikido Humanitarian Active Network)
has grown since its inception in 2001 and we have all learned
much from our experiences both good and bad around the world.
About a year ago, Nippon Kan General Headquarters decided that
AHAN’s projects needed a similar emergency triage
like system. This system for all upcoming AHAN projects will
be implemented beginning in 2008.
The following explanation of this AHAN triage system might sound
alarming or cold to other humanitarian activists, but I encourage
you to read the entire article and try to understand the underlying
purposes in these systems as a way to be the most effective in
our plans for assisting others around the world in the future.
AHAN is a small organization with limited resources. Effective
organizing can go a long way towards effective results.
At the beginning of this article I described children in Bangladesh
in such dire misery as to bring a tear to one’s eye. This
level of plight falls into the BLACK LEVEL CATEGORY. The people
at the homeless shelter in Denver fall into the GREEN LEVEL CATEGORY.
First I will explain why the homeless in Denver fall into the
GREEN LEVEL CATEGORY. A big reason is because they have A VOICE.
They have the power to appeal to society for solutions to their
problems and there are governmental and social resources available
to assist them. Their situation is a social and political one
that does get attention. On the other end of the spectrum, those
in the BLACK LEVEL CATEGORY have NO VOICE. There is no one that
speaks for these people and they themselves might not even know
that there are others ways to live. Their condition is so bad
that they do not have any hint of the capability of the human
condition. It is very sad to think of those in the BLACK LEVEL
CATEGORY, but if we are thinking of effective assistance, it
is better to focus aid on the people in the RED and YELLOW CATEGORY.
Here is why.
Looking at the problems long term, we can help best by focusing
on the future of the children (and adults) in the RED and YELLOW
CATEGORIES. There is a better chance for these children and adults
to be able to help themselves and in turn possible to help other
in worse conditions.
When we began the AHAN support projects in Bangladesh we received
many emails from other organizations beseeching us for help. “The
conditions in the orphanages you support are good compared to
ours; we need much more help than they…” and “Don’t
give your help to these orphanages, give your funds to me! I
will give them to the most in need…” Both types
of letters were a surprise to us, and we may have just misread
the English wording in some of these requests for aid. AHAN Bangladesh
staff is researching these other operations requesting assistance
just to make sure. I think what some of what these letters were
stating is true; there are other organizations out there in dire
need of help. These organizations however still have the ability
to speak for themselves. They even write emails to the United
States asking for assistance. They have a voice to speak for
them, so in the AHAN triage system they would fall in the YELLOW
LEVEL CATEGORY. In a medical emergency triage system as
well, victims conscious and able to verbalize their injuries
fall into a YELLOW LEVEL CATEGORY. Victims in the GREEN and YELLOW
LEVEL CATEGORIES have the possibility of support by government
and other humanitarian organizations.
AHAN International Project Director, Emily Busch traveled to
Bangladesh in July 2006 and visited the NGO (Non profit organization)
Ministry to get permission to open a small bank account for humanitarian
project distribution in AHAN’s name. The Director of the
Ministry himself asked her how much money she could give to him!
We have discovered that humanitarian and social service organization
in Bangladesh is plagued with corruption and other dysfunction
which adds to the overall problems there like in so many other
countries.
AHAN has projects that involve many category levels, but we
have found that we can best support organizations that are having
an extremely difficult time, and do not have the experience or
understanding of fundraising or procuring assistance to ask for
help from other organizations. In other words, these groups are
in desperate need of assistance, and cannot speak for themselves.
In a medical emergency triage system, victims in full trauma
who cannot speak for themselves fall into the RED LEVEL CATEGORY.
AHAN has limited resources, but we have found that the small
support we can offer really benefits organizations that have
meager facilities but cannot appeal for help from other organizations.
These are the organizations that are others can’t reach,
yet with a little help can provide food, shelter and education
for those in their care. Successful assistance at the RED CATEGORY
LEVEL requires us to have trusted local staff members on the
scene to supervise aid delivery, constant communications and
visits from AHAN Headquarters. It is most important not only
to learn to pick up broken glass underfoot, but to educate not
to break glass bottles in the first place. If we focus on educating the
next generations of social leaders in the YELLOW AND RED LEVEL
CATEGORIES, they can in turn help the children who make their
existence picking through the trash in dumpsters. Finally, it
is our hope that a small gift of aid will benefit all levels,
not just one. Making new leaders from those in the YELLOW and
RED LEVEL CATEGORIES is beneficial because these young people
have a real-life understanding of the problems of those in severe
need. Children in the orphanages we are currently assisting will
make the best future leaders with the education and guidance
they are now receiving; they will have the best chance to change
their conditions in the future.
A successful example of AHAN’s triage system philosophy
is evident in my most recent visit to Bangladesh. I came to Bangladesh,
October 1st, 2007 for the second time this year to supervise
the ordering of emergency flood relief supplies for the Madrasah
Orphanage for girls. On this visit I stopped at the Dharmarajika
Orphanage for boys to check on how the 40 used computers delivered
earlier this summer were being put to use.
AUG-OCT ACTIVITY REPORT BANGLADESH SECTION
AUG-OCT
ACTIVITY REPORT BANGLADESH FLOOD RELIEF SEMINAR
The Dharmarajik Orphanage is part of a large Buddhist Temple
complex that operates a private school and a denim factory; therefore
they do have their own sources of income and assistance. As a
fairly independent facility they are a GREEN LEVEL CATEGORY facility
in the AHAN triage system.
AHAN supports this GREEN LEVEL CATEGORY facility because the
Dharmarajika Orphanage cares for over 500 boys under their religious
guidelines. Even though they are GREEN LEVEL and there are others
less fortunate, these children are very important to the future
of Bangladesh. We are supporting their care and education to
promote not only their own futures but the future of all other
levels of care in Bangladesh. We cannot reach out to everyone
today, but by reaching out to the Dharmarajika Orphanage, others
will have a chance in the future. We offer our support to this
GREEN LEVEL facility in support of ALL levels in the future.
The Dharmarajika Orphanage has a medical staff made up of doctors,
nurses and assistants that are Hindu, Muslim, Buddhist and Christian.
The leaders of the Dharmarajika Orphanage have looked beyond
the barriers of caste or religion to unite in care for these
orphans. Learning this was a deciding factor in my personal decision
to support this organization.
Last summer, Nippon Kan AHAN Headquarters in Denver, assembled
50 used computers and raised the funds needed to have them shipped
to Bangladesh. Finally after many delays the computers were delivered
last June, and 40 of them were sent to the Dharmarajika Orphanage.
A few of the computers were in need of hard drives and other
supplies which I brought with me on this trip. The orphanage
staff invited me to see what they had done with the computers,
and what they showed me did bring a tear to my eye. To see what
had been done with what started as the kindness and generosity
of students in Denver was indeed a sight to behold.
Computer classroom.
AHAN support message stickers on the computers.
Computer repair study lab.
Computer textbook study class.
The orphanage built a computer lab consisting of three classrooms
for study. 1. Basic computer studies from textbooks. 2. Hands-on
training with the donated computers. 3. A classroom for computer
hardware repair and rebuilding. Each classroom I visited was
filled with young men, women and young Buddhist priests in training
studying very seriously on the computers. I watched the making
of future leaders with my own eyes, and each computer in use
carried an AHAN sticker with messages of support from students
at Nippon Kan Headquarters in Denver. The few computers that
did not survive the trip from the United States to Bangladesh
had been stripped and every part used for lab study, repairs
of other computers or recycled. If these computers had been sent
to a facility with worse conditions I do not believe that the
computers would have been put to as productive of a use.
Sometimes support activities are not only for the most miserable.
Evaluation depends on what results can be achieved and which
group can reap the most benefit for all in the future. All AHAN
triage decisions have to be multidimensional and based on long
term thinking. We can’t judge by the triage category levels
by color alone.
Donated goods and services benefit those who receive, but we
can’t forget the benefits to those who give as well. In
November 2006, Nippon Kan Headquarters in Denver received a large
donation of 70 computers from a company in Denver. Fifty of them
were salvaged and prepared to send to Bangladesh. (Forty were
to be sent to the Dharmarajika Orphanage and 10 to the Paris
International School in Dhaka). We soon discovered that shipping
the computers was not going to be an easy or an inexpensive task,
and the ADOPT A COMPUTER fundraising campaign drive to raise
shipping funds was born.
In the ADOPT A COMPUTER drive, any person could “adopt” a
computer for $20.00 or more. Some students “adopted” more
than one computer, some students went in together to “adopt” just
one. Finally enough funds were raised to box, shrink-wrap and
ship all of the computers to their destination in Bangladesh.
AHAN has shipped over 150 computers to other parts of the world,
but this shipment turned out to be the most challenging. The
trip was a long one by cargo ship to Bangladesh.
During the journey, the United Nations passed new regulations
for shipping computers to Third World countries, requiring that
any computers shipped outside of the United States must be a
Pentium IV computer or newer. The reason for these new regulations
is a bit complicated but understandable.
In the United States to dispose of a used computer properly
through recycling companies costs about $7-$10. To dispose of
old monitors can cost closer to $15. It became known at the United
Nations that recycling companies were selling the discarded computers
to salvage companies for shipment to Third World countries. It
was discovered however that some of these salvage companies (only
a few but enough to make for a negative global impact) were receiving
money from the recycling companies for discarded computers and
shipping the computer salvage only far enough to dump in oceans
or in unprocessed landfills in other unregulated countries. For
this reason the United Nation passed the new legislation banning
the shipment of old computers outside of the US.
Our AHAN refurbished computers were held up because of this
new legislation. That there was a political coup in early 2007
in Bangladesh didn’t help. The computers were held
up in customs for four months before they were finally released
and delivered. There is still a bit of a mystery as to how Federal
Express managed to get the computers through customs and delivered
to their destination, but we are very glad they did. Our hats
off to Federal Express World Wide Shipping for all of their assistance!
We also worried that the computers might be stolen or damaged
sitting so long on the docks, but they arrived in working
condition. The students and friends at Nippon Kan Headquarters
in Denver worked so hard to raise the funds needed to ship the
computers, that we were ecstatic and relieved when the project
finally came to a successful conclusion.
Electronics and other goods are discarded in the United States
in such large quantities that they form a problem just trying
to get rid of them. It was good to find a way to take these discarded
computers and have them find a new life in another land; giving
new students a chance at an education and a hope for a new generation
of leaders. This is a good example of creating a good solution
for all sides; a recycling of life’s resources. Even computers
that are no longer in working order can be broken down into metal
and plastic parts and reused. I have seen computer and machine
parts sold in junk shops in other parts of the world that have
been put to very creative uses. I once saw a computer monitor
used as picture frame on the family altar! What we think of as
junk is the stuff of dreams for other, and in the small ways
we can help, we support this effort.
Because of the bad actions of a few salvage companies, our computer
recycling projects have hit an obstacle. Many of our refurbished
computers are in good working order but are older than Pentium
IV so they do not meet the new requirements for shipping outside
of the United States. We currently are working to see if we can
obtain special permission from the United States Government and
the United Nations to continue this successful project.
***
On my most recent visit to Bangladesh I also visited the Madrasah
Orphange for girls, a Muslim organization in what AHAN considers
to be a RED LEVEL facility. This facility receives no funding
from the Bangladesh government or from any other humanitarian
organization. The leaders of the Madrasah Orphanage would love
to receive funds from the government or other NPO organizations
but literally they do not know how to ask for the support; it
is not part of their belief system to ask for support outside
their own religious community. The Madrasah Orphanage has managed
to feed, clothe and educate more than 300 girls at a time for
decades with the donations of a few kindred followers and in
their view, the will of Allah. The staff of the Madrasah Orphanage
has not received any formal facility management training, basing
the facility’s operations on generations of tradition and
their religious faith.
I understand that for those in the Muslim faith it is written
that the rich must take care of those less fortunate. I saw this
myself during the religious celebration of Ramadan in Bangladesh.
Ramadan is a time for fasting, and food during Ramadan is donated
to the poor. This is a time that the Madrasah Orphanage receives
a lot of food donations. The Madrasah staff never thinks about
asking for donations as gifts of food and other supplies by those
more fortunate is a common part of their religious cycle.
I found this to be very different with Buddhist organizations
that are very familiar with asking for donations. Begging for
alms is part of Buddhist tradition and training and manifests
itself in the conditions of their facilities. The Dharmarajika
Buddhist Orphanage is in a lot better condition than its counterpart
the Madrasah Orphanage for girls and I believe the conditions
can be compared based on this basic principle of asking for assistance.
With a little advice on how to obtain more assistance, the living
conditions at the Madrasah Orphanage could be improved to a GREEN
LEVEL CATEGORY in no time. The conditions at the Madrasah Orphanage
are in no way a reflection of the earnest and caring hearts of
its leaders.
During this last visit, the badly needed reconstruction of the
Madrasah facility had stopped, and I asked them why. “We
have run out of cement and do not have money for more. We are
waiting for someone to donate cement to us,” was the reply.
I looked at them thoughtfully as I realized it did not occur
to them to ask…
All the children study seriously.
An over-flow of humanity.
Living old traditions. Modernization is slow in Bangladesh.
I truly believe that if the Madrasah Orphanage received a little
more help in changing its building conditions and food preparation
systems, and if they had more tools for management and education
at their disposal, that this facility could raise its level from
RED to GREEN. The Madrasah Orphanage serves those near the lowest
levels of their social system, so improvements to
its facility would help more children in the BLACK LEVEL CATEGORY
as well.
This is why AHAN supports RED LEVEL CATEGORY facilities like
the Madrasah Orphanage. It is not that we shun or ignore those
in BLACK LEVEL CATEGORY. It is the belief that improving the
care provided by RED LEVEL facilities will benefit more of those
underneath. This is my idea and the philosophy behind the Nippon
Kan AHAN triage system.
One of my goals for 2008 and beyond is to focus on the training
of leaders in their own communities who can recognize the differences
in these triage levels and have the skills and training to assimilate
the resources to deal with their problems in the most effective
way possible. I dream of Nippon Kan Headquarters becoming more
of a place where future leaders can come to learn the skills
they need to help their own communities. It is becoming more
and more difficult for foreign students to obtain visas to come
to the United States and we are working on ways to facilitate
this process. It may be however that this dream for a world leadership
training center may not be feasible on American soil.
Nippon Kan is originally a martial art dojo that teaches the
art of Aikido, but for over 20 years, Nippon Kan has been involved
in a multitude of public service activities both here and abroad.
In 2001, AHAN was established officially as the international
branch of Nippon Kan’s humanitarian assistance network
and has grown substantially since its inception. We did not begin
AHAN with a “How To” manual on how to build such
an organization, nor have we ever have a great deal of outside
funding. We have made mistakes and learned from them, noting
the right turns as well as the wrong. As is always true in life,
I think we have learned most from our mistakes and consider them
to be valuable lessons. There are lessons you cannot find in
a textbook, these are the lessons learned through making dreams,
and the actions taken with our minds, bodies and spirits to try
to achieve them.
I hope you have been able to understand my positions and the
meaning of the title of this article. Social and humanitarian
studies are taught at the university level and I think this kind
of approach toward humanitarian studies could be an interesting
and valuable supplement to the study of world languages, cultural
anthropology, economics and technical skill support.
I think we need more independent volunteer organizations that
are willing to assist in countries no matter what the needs or
conditions are. This new generation of volunteers I think could
benefit from the training I have outlined in this article. This
is what I have learned from experiences with AHAN.
My hope for the future is to assist volunteers in being as skilled
as possible in identifying the needs and implementing the most
effective remedies possible.
Written November 10th, 2007, on an airplane headed for East
Timor
Gaku Homma, Nippon Kan Kancho
Nippon Kan General Headquarters
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