Editors Note: The last
post I wrote was my personal experience as a tourist-volunteer (aka "voluntourist"). While I know my
experience is decidedly not universal, the topic is far too big to be covered
in one post. Beyond my personal experience, here is a more general discussion
of volunteering abroad.
“We need to help the poor people in [insert developing
country here]!” is a refrain in our media and our culture. It is the mission of
church groups, NGOs, and private citizens. With even the most rudimentary of an
education, we are informed of our privilege in the west. We are shown photos of
starving (always brown, but that's another topic) children and huts made of mud without electricity.
People feel some need to help abroad, especially in places like India, where
poverty, both total and abject, is shocking and openly displayed.
While this is not to disparage those who wish to do good in
the world, the issues go beyond simply being poor and in need of rescue. They
include access to healthcare, sanitation issues, education, and gender issues.
Poverty is far more complex and deeply rooted than an outsider can realize, and
some practices are so deeply engrained in a culture that even to the locals
cannot understand them.
It is the fact that: there
are some things we will never understand, that becomes the problem with
short-term stints volunteering abroad. In one to four weeks, we are supposed
to, without speaking the language, practicing the religion, or being citizens
of a country, are supposed to come in a “save” people from their conditions? We
think we know all the answers, that someone from the west can come and fix a
community. But to say that we, who have been born into our privileges, have all
the answers is at best naive and at worst downright harmful.
One of my hosts in the village poses with her 6 month old son. |
Yes, there are ways to help – as a doctor, an English
teacher, or a tradesperson, there are skills we in the west can contribute to a
foreign society. But when our “program fees” go to line the pocket of other
westerners, we are not contributing to a community. When we take on jobs (think
construction work or ditch-digging) that are not in our skillset, and could
probably be finished twice as quickly using local labor, we are not helping. Instead, we are take a tour into someone
else’s life and using a self-righteousness as a band-aid for our
privilege-induced guilt. We are showing that our “profile picture will never be the same” –never mind the impact we
have on that place.
Working in development is not a lark, or a way to show how
‘selfless’ we are. As a long-term career it is difficult, frustrating, a
draining. As a short-term stint, it is often just a way to validate a stay, and
go home satisfied with yourself for ‘doing something.’
But without the understanding
that the needs of a community are complex, diverse, and sometimes nearly impossible
to meet, the key ingredient to successful and sustainable development is
absent.
My challenge those well meaning vagabonders so award of
their (our) privilege, is to keep the guilt in check, and ask hard questions
about the impact you have in a community you intend to “serve.” A few to
start:
·
How will my time make an impact?
·
Is what I'm doing what a community needs? How do I know that?
·
If I’m paying for this experience, where is that
money going?
·
How is my stay impacting the local people (am I
a drain on their resources)?
·
How will I be supported during this experience
(translators, guides, fellow volunteers)?
·
Who are the major funders of this organization?
What are their interests?
·
What skills do I have that are truly beneficial
to this community?
This is certainly a complex issue--and its hard when people are well-intentioned. But, you know what they say about good intentions.... I find it rather loathsome how often we can think of these "poor" people needing us westerners to "save" them. I think we both have a lot to learn from each other. See those kids smiling with that buffalo--we could learn from their simple joys. Kids don't need ipads to be rich--they need safety and love, food and education. I don't mean to downplay poverty. All people need clean water and widespread literacy. It just bothers me how one-sided it is. Like we're here to give them everything and they have little to nothing to teach us. Its a two-way street that should lead to a greater middleground.
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