Monday, November 03, 2008
Sunday, November 02, 2008
Ending Orphanages Globally
For kids who are completely rejected by their own communities their will be group homes such as in the U.S., much like OI (or SOS) small homes today.
I personally have an adopted son who joined me when he was ten months old - now a teenager out on his own for Halloween (now THAT is scary!). Adoption -- domestic or international -- can be a wonderful thing. It is not what OI is involved with. There are many outstanding adoption agencies. I personally feel they are too expensive, and would like to see at least one operate at cost.
In these difficult economic times, I may soon add a paying job to my busy roster with a NYC-based children's agency. My domestic perspective may broaden shortly! Thank you so much for commenting. - Jim
About Poverty
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
Sunday, September 21, 2008
Waking Up to Bright Sunshine at OI Haiti
Conditions here are rough following the hurricanes, with no water, no electricity – even no school as it was flooded out. I went to bed by candlelight – dark here by 6 p.m. – and I am about to take a bucket bath with water carried from the public well about 200 yards away. With two toilets, twelve children and four staff, water is consumed just for flushing.
Breakfast is delicious: fresh avocado, white rice, bananas, raw onions, toast with butter and jam, and hot coffee. The children spend the morning with no school, helping to clean the house, prepare lunch, and play with their many toys.
As I try to write a report, I am amazed at the number of small hands touching my ‘strange’ body – combing my funny hair, rubbing my arms. In the sweltering heat my patience finally wanes and I use the one word I am training our kids to know while I struggle to remember words in Creole or French. But they get me every time when pressed I yell, “Stop!”
Of course they howl in laughter, as they do for almost anything I try to say or do. I admit I exaggerate my abilities to dance ad sing, but I sadly do no exaggerate my insufficiencies with their native languages. Part of me yearns to stay for six months, being tutored daily in French and Creole.
But there is too much development work to be done in New York – raising money to pay for it all – I must return shortly to take charge. So at the moment I have no time to really learn their language and my English “Stop!” must suffice. It works – they stop eating my peanuts, using my deodorant, and not shaving their heads with my electric razor!
Parenthood is amazing when you put your foot down and draw the line. My “Stop!” achieves this. But I secretly glow with happiness to have these twelve Haitian orphaned children trust me enough after four years to play “bad” with me.
I am waking up at OI Haiti where we have helped to change the entire universe for our kids and it is a sensation that trumps almost any other feeling I have ever had. The noisy roosters outside mirror the shouting in my heart of pure joy. Rough conditions or not, we have twelve incredibly wonderful children.
- Jim Luce, Sept. 10, Cyvadier Village, Jacmel, South East Province, Haiti
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Child Sponsors Need to Renew!
Located adjacent to both tram and “F” line, this new Roosevelt Island building features a party penthouse which holds 80 people.
The party will last from 6 to 9pm, but you can stay until 11pm and watch the stars come out!
Please check your schedule and RSVP today (door security requires us to have guests listed).
We want to acknowledge our local CHILD SPONSORS, who form the backbone of our charitable work. Invite your friends to join us by sponsoring a child at www.oiww.org.
IT'S EASY! Donors can now receive regular e-mail updates about their child and our children can respond to messages from their sponsors.
On July 24th we will be sharing stories about the children and our intrepid staff “in country.”
Please join us and become better acquainted with our beautiful kids and dedicated staff.
Invite your friends to join us. We’ll have picnic food prepared by our volunteers, and you can Bring Your Own Bottle (B.Y.O.B.).
Board members, summer interns and other volunteers will also be there.
Chat with Don Hoskins, President of our Board of Directors, Linda Stanley, our Executive Director, and all the other unpaid people who make Orphans International possible.
Please RSVP as soon as possible to reserve your spot! Thanks to you, we are Raising Global Citizens!
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Haiti: World Bank Echoes Food Cost Alarm
According to the BBC today, the rapid rise in food prices could push 100 million people in poor countries deeper into poverty, the head of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, has said.
His warning follows that from the leader of the International Monetary Fund, who said hundreds of thousands of people are at risk of starvation. Mr. Zoellick proposed an action plan to boost long-run agricultural production.
There have been food riots recently in a number of countries, including Haiti, the Philippines and Egypt, the BBC reports.
The World Bank and its sister organization, the IMF have held a weekend of meetings that addressed rising food and energy prices as well as the credit crisis upsetting global financial markets.
Food prices have risen sharply in recent months, the BBC reports, driven by increased demand, poor weather in some countries that has ruined crops, and an increase in the use of land to grow crops for transport fuels.
GLOBAL FOOD PRICE RISES
· Wheat: 130%
· Soya: 87%
· Rice: 74%
· Corn: 31%
Time: Year to March 2008 (Source: Bloomberg)
The BBC reports that the price of staple crops such as wheat, rice and corn have all risen, leading to an increase in overall food prices of 83% in the last three years.
The sharp rises have led to protests and unrest in many countries, including Egypt, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, the Philippines and Indonesia. In Haiti, protests last week turned violent, leading to the deaths of five people and the fall of the government. In the capital, Port-au-Prince, a U.N. peacekeeper from Nigeria was fatally shot on Saturday.
On Saturday, the head of the IMF, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, warned of mass starvation and other dire consequences if food prices continue to rise sharply. “As we know, learning from the past, those kinds of questions sometimes end in war,” he said.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
A Guide to Giving Your All, Literally
How Much Is Too Much?
A Guide to Giving Your All, Literally
In Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree, children are presented with a kindly tree who gives of its fruit, give of its branches, and eventually even gives of its trunk until there is nothing left except a stump. The children then have a place to sit, and the tree is happy and continues to give.
Reading this tale, I first thought it was a travesty. How stupid that a tree would be reduced to a stump and still feel worthy?
Still in my own life, building an international organization to help orphans around the world, I have had to make similar judgments at every step of the way.
Use frequent flier miles to take my mom on vacation, or to visit children living in a garbage dump in Bali? Leave Wall Street? Cash out my 401-K? Max out my credit cards? Pay my rent pay teachers for children in Haiti? There is no guide. So I will try to write one.
“Mathew’s Rule” is the foundation of Orphans International Worldwide, the organization that I founded in 1999. It states simply that each child in our care be treated the way we would treat our own children.
I now offer “Jim’s Rule”- how to know how much to give back to society.
As humans we have basic and secondary needs that are vital to our life and happiness. Primarily, we must eat, sleep, have housing and clothing, and maintain our health. Secondarily, we need to share love – with parents, children, and life partners.
Desires such as better food, nicer housing, more expensive clothes, going to the gym are on a third plane.
“Jim’s Rule” states that as long as our primary and secondary needs are met, sacrifices may be made on the third level to better our world.
As a result of my choices, unexpectedly I meet regularly with heads of state and royalty, sip champagne and eat caviar. I also celebrate family birthdays at White Castle, own few clothes, and allow my friends to treat me to Broadway plays and buy me books for my birthday. The socks-and-underwear under the tree at Christmas that annoyed me in my youth now delight me.
It has been difficult for me to be comfortable being treated to dinner and theater – I’m used to treating. The feeling might be similar to being able to accept care one day from my own child.
Christians discuss being good stewards of one’s resources to better the world and to live with sacrifices, like Lent. Jews debate the best way to repair the world. Muslims sacrifice and fast for the month of Ramadan to experience an austere life, so they can better understand and respond to those who have less. Buddhists and Hindus give to the less fortunate, mindful of karma.
Priests and nuns, like Buddhist monks or members of a kibbutz, give their all to the greater good, trusting in the institution of the church, temple, or collective to care for them. “Jim’s Rule” applies when one without or with little institutional support thinks about how far they can go without a safety net.
Globally, there is a safety net for do-gooders in family, neighbors, and one’s house of faith. But these often have limits that can be exhausted early.
Time is another precious asset. How much time to work? To relax? To love? To sleep? Our bodies’ needs vary greatly. I can go on five hours sleep per night for a month but then crash for a whole day. To remain focused, I try to limit myself with Orphans International to twelve hours a day, six days a week. To flourish in a relationship and be a good father, is how I use the other 12 hours.
To be an asset to society, one must maintain one’s base. Without a base, you are a liability to everyone. You can only help others if you are not in need of help yourself. Like adults who must receive oxygen in an airplane emergency first, our children benefit when we are stable.
So how much is too much when it comes to giving your all? Learning from our children’s book, The Giving Tree, I propose Jim’s Rule: Give of your fruit, your extra money and time. Perhaps give your branches, even more of your resources. But your trunk is your essence. A stump helps humanity only in fairy tales. – Jim Luce, New York
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Repairing The World
Next Chapter Can Begin with You
As founder of OI, I have spent six years building homes and programs for orphaned children in far off places.
Beginning this summer, twelve young leaders – from schools like Harvard, Princeton, and Yale – will be Global Volunteers for Orphans International Worldwide, following in my footsteps.
Each project sustains twelve children. In Haiti, they were orphaned by Hurricane Jeanne. In Sri Lanka their lives were uprooted by the Tsunami. In Indonesia, they were cast adrift by abject poverty and disease.
Our mission is Raising Global Citizens. Our Global volunteers will teach English, French, Spanish, the arts, and computer skills. In every project, we set up classrooms, computer centers, and health clinics.
OI projects are required to adhere to the Orphans International Worldwide Global Standards. This lengthy list of Do’s and Don’t’s is captured simply as “Mathew’s Rule”: each of our kids is treated as we treat our own.
In Indonesia our home is on a hill overlooking Manado Bay in North Sulawesi. It is a minority Christian area, sitting next to the neighborhood mosque.
Many children in this region have been orphaned by sectarian violence -- angry Muslims burning down a church, then the angry Christians chasing them literally into the ocean.
Despite sectarian violence, Indonesia is a fantastic and beautiful nation, formed in 1949 from over 17,000 islands with more than 300 dialects, and five religions. This vast area has one national language to unite it all. In essence, Indonesia is the United States of the Pacific.
Haiti, the size of Connecticut, is a proud nation that quickly becomes a part of you. The strength and dignity of its people, the first slaves to form a free state, continues to barely overcome the centuries of exploitation by French and Americans, as well as its own often corrupt leadership. Haitians live in widely divergent realities.
- The slums of Cite de Soleil saw the bridge where women overwhelmed by poverty are said to squat, giving birth into the sludge below.
- The city of Gonaives, ravished by Hurricane Jeanne. More died there than in the Twin Towers. I witnessed both. In New York, the safety net held. In Haiti, it has never existed.
- Jacmel, where our project is re-locating to. Here is the artistic center of Haiti. With beautiful beaches, an infrastructure built by the same French architects responsible for New Orleans, Jacmel seems paradise – far from the hells of Cite de Soleil and Gonaives.
Galle, south of Sri Lanka, is another colonial gem, complete with massive fort on the sea. It is surrounded by quaint and friendly villages, such as Unawatuna and Kathaluwa.
I confess that I am madly in love with all three cities, Manado, Jacmel, and Galle, and hope to retire one day to each of them. The people. The mountains. The bays and beaches. Most of all, the incredibly beautiful children who depend on us.
“Om Jim!” they shout in Indonesian. “Frè James!” in Creole. I am beginning to know our kids in Sri Lanka, “Ayyaa” is “Older Brother” in Singhalese.
Colonialism has deep roots. The imprint of the Dutch lies across the Indonesian archipelago, the French throughout Port-au-Prince and Jacmel, and the British -- from tea time to cricket -- across verdant Sri Lanka.
They overlay the Islamic traditions of Sulawesi, the Buddhist culture in Sri Lanka, the mostly misunderstood practices of West Africa known in Haiti as vodou. These cultural mosaics make my returns -- and our projects -- endlessly adventurous as well as deeply satisfying.
Violence and disease are more commonplace throughout the developing world than most Americans are comfortable with. Malaria, hepatitis A and B, typhoid, rabies, Japanese encephalitis, and polio exist in parts of the developing world. In Haiti, political violence led to the overthrow of once-golden Aristide, with many dying in the process. In Sri Lanka, the conflict in the north continues to spill into the south, with frequent innocent victims. In Indonesia, extremists have bombed from Bali to Jakarta.
Life at our projects is not life in New York. We don’t drink the local water. We don’t have hot showers. We don’t have air conditioning. But we do have incredible fresh fruits, unimaginable beaches, and often astonishing arts. Of course, we go to children who need nurturing. Our Global Volunteers must bring lots of love. Are volunteers are often surprised at how very much more they get back than they give.
What does it take to be an OI Global Volunteer? The same qualities, it turns out, I have needed to build an international development agency from scratch: extreme patience, back-bending tolerance and flexibility, tenaciousness beyond reason, inventiveness in coping, and a rock solid belief that one person can change the world in spite of daily obstacles.
This year, in addition to our in-house, full care of twelve kids at each project, OI is expanding our vision to support orphaned children living with their own extended families. With OI Family Care, we hope to create a replicable model to lift all the boats in the harbor, not just our own.
As we expand, we look to Tanzania and the Dominican Republic. Our connections to both -- there and here -- are vast. Such connections make a solid bridge possible, uniting those who need with those who have.
Our Global Ambassadors are Global Volunteers Plus. Our ambassadors agree to sponsor a child and speak when they return to community groups about their experiences abroad.
I left Wall Street to do this, kicking in my mom’s estate and my own 401 K, rewarding decisions for me. Repairing the world is not cheap. Likewise, our Global Volunteers pay their own way and contribute about $100 a week just to help for however long they can stay – a week, a month, or sometimes even longer.
If you would like to join us, write me personally. We need you. I will share your dreams and desires with my dedicated team, and together we will begin to realize them. Today we have almost 150 people working with us across five continents. It all began with one person, me. The next chapter can begin with you. - Jim Luce, New York