Monday, December 16, 2013

Road Trip.

November was a hectic month, mainly because I had the distinct pleasure of sharing my life in South Asia with four family members, including an aunt, two cousins, and my mom for the first two weeks. Their time here deserves multiple blog posts, but you will need to ask them for the stories. Anything you think South Asia could throw at you was thrown at my family members during their stay.
One day during her stay, my mom and I needed to separate from the group, leaving a beautiful mountainous area to drive into rural South Asia to meet my coworkers for a Family Retreat. The place we left my aunt and cousins is pictured below:


According to Google Maps, the estimated travel time for my mom and I was 3.5 hours.

A basic premise of Sociology is that the “map is not the territory” meaning that it is ultimately impossible to capture the full reality of a moment in words or pictures, or by any other means. In our situation, the Google Maps travel estimate was definitely not a reflection of reality. We spent almost 10 hours on the road that day. Here are some of the reasons why:
Single lane roads in rural India mean that every time you encounter a large track (which is often) your driver is required to play chicken with oncoming traffic in order to pass them. The owner of this particular truck is aware of this phenomenon and has painted the phrase “Blow Horn” on his rear. At least he will have warning.
 Sometimes big trucks ARE your oncoming traffic. And they always win chicken.

Our driver is one of the many drivers on South Asian roads who suffers from perpetual lethargy brought on by 24-hour work shifts. In order to keep him awake, we needed to periodically stop for chai breaks at roadside rest stops. What else would you do to pass the time at a rest stop other than impersonate the local idols?
 You find yourself playing “Where’s Waldo?” while driving carefully around trucks heavily-laden with furniture, bags, and people. It can be distracting.
This picture was taken at another chai pit stop for the sake of the driver.
Driving in South Asia requires you to share the road with multiple kinds of vehicular and ambulatory things (as discussed in my earlier post on traffic), including the auto rickshaw. It definitely runs faster than its human and bike-pulled counterparts, but it is another vehicle to avoid on the road.
If you can discern through the blurred photo, you will see a cycle rickshaw pulling two people. Drivers of cycle rickshaws have an amazing ability to wind into the crevices of traffic, but their human effort is no matched for impatient vehicles at a young green light. They often set off a lot of impatient honking when the light changes.
It seems that people here can ride everything sidesaddle except horses (they really struggle with horses for some reason). Look at the grace of this man on his friend’s bike.
This picture says a lot, but I think it is best captured in the following haiku:
Overstuffed autos
drifting in lanes, ignoring
cell phone usage laws.
For some reason, this guy was the icing for me. He is riding on a cart pulled by a bull, without a care in the world. The man, not the bull. Or at least that’s what his stance says to me.
With nine hours of stressful, chai-filled driving under his belt, our driver was very reluctant to venture out of the towns and into the real “inside” of South Asian rural countryside in order to get me and my mom safely to the retreat center, especially since the sun had set. We found ourselves driving along a narrow road bordered by tall grasses on either side. Apparently the area where we were driving is famous for bandits, and our driver was not thrilled about carrying us in his vehicle with so little visibility. We emerged from the slender road onto a dirt road, cutting through a village. Using my non-existent sense of direction and vague directional hand gestures from villagers, my mom, our driver, and I found ourselves on the final road leading through an orchard to the relief of the retreat. Relief, right?
Wrong. Earlier in the week, the retreat center decided to begin road “improvements” to their entry road, but they had only gotten so far as moving dirt to the road, which meant that the road we needed to travel was covered in large mounds of soil; completely and totally impassable according to our now-panicked and vehement driver.
With repeated mutterings about “criminals”, our driver turned on the overhead light, got out of the taxi, and walked into the darkness of the night with other villagers, leaving me and my mom alone and highlighted, in the middle of nowhere, rural, “criminal-infested” South Asia. I slid down in my seat, looking over at my mom with bewilderment. Moments later, she turned to gaze out into the blackness and I saw her neck freeze. Very slowly, my mom turned back to me and, with a wide-eyed straight face, muttered, “Alice, there’s a man standing outside our taxi with a rifle”. We hadn’t realized it, but our taxi driver had gotten out of his car to consult with villagers and other retreat center employees, including a plain clothes guard. At this point the absurdity of our situation hit home and both of us had to stifle a stress laugh.
Within minutes, our harried driver returned with even more retreat center staff, including a man on a motor bike. I noticed a patch bearing the retreat center name on the mismatched front pockets of a few of the men, so I figured that we were relatively safe. We were directed to leave our bags (which we instead draped all over ourselves, save one) and take the bike through the dirt piles, into the retreat center. I carry a basic Nokia cell phone (which we all know is the ultimate life-saving weapon) which I was using to contact the retreat staff, so I directed my mom to take the first ride into the retreat center, assuring her that I was fine because “I have a phone”. My mom had not noticed the [un]official retreat center patches, so when she was directed to get on the bike, she tells me that she thought a) that she might never see her big luggage bag again, and that b) she might never see her daughter again. In that order.
I watched my mom ride off into the darkness and found myself alone, with a stressed-out driver, an old man with a big gun, and a crowd of curious villagers, none of whom I could actually see because it was so dark. The driver ordered me to call the retreat center and tell them he would borrow the guard to get him safely back t o a main road, so I attempted to call the center. After nine uncompleted calls, I told the busy signal (and everyone within earshot) exactly what I thought about their phone service and hung up. In the time it took me to pay the driver without revealing my money to the suspected hordes of on-looking criminals hiding out in the bushes, the retreat biker was back, minus my mom. I hobbled onto the back of his bike with my luggage and he drove me along a bumpy road, through an orchard, and into the bright, warm, safe light of the retreat center, where we met my mom at the entrance.
After throwing our bags in a cabin, my mom and I followed the sounds of “Amazing Grace” floating through the air, directly to a campfire surrounded by my IJM family. The significance of the lyrics, “I once was lost but now am found” was not at all lost on us.
That night, mom and I retired to our cabin and let our nervous energy loose with 15 solid minutes of side-splitting laughter after promising each other that we would not “tell Dad” until my mom got home.
There are many prudent lessons to be learned from this story. Lessons about preparation and having a map and patience. Those lessons will continue to sink in, but for now, I marvel in my mom’s ability to take it all in stride.  

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Big Infinities

In his novel, “The Fault in Our Stars”, John Green writes, “Some infinities are bigger than other infinities”. Between 0 and 1, there is an infinite set of numbers including .1, .01, .001, etc. In a sense, the infinity between, say, 0 and 5 may seem staggering in comparison.

It’s a bit abstract, but the concept of varying infinities is changing the way I see life in South Asia.

Our days are brimming with various infinities of all shapes and sizes, for us to perceive and to celebrate. I challenge myself to look at an orange as a piece of infinity (stick with me) and it is transformed before my eyes. What is a simple piece of fruit, is also a symbol of friendship between me and the orange-seller; it carries memories of my childhood home and of Will telling me that every piece of pulp contains enough energy to power all of New York City’s lights for a millisecond; its skin reminds me of the pores on my mom’s cheek (sorry Mom); this orange is something to be explored using every sense. And I, of all people, I get to savor it.

In this light, the beauty and awesomeness of a single piece of citrus absolutely pales in comparison to the recent activity of the IJM office where I get to work. In an earlier post, I mention a show that aired on India’s CNN-IBN, featuring released bonded laborers as they told their stories on national television. As a result, a government body called the National Rural Livelihoods Mission approached our office and asked to become a formal partner in the Bandhua 1947 Campaign, and join us to help eradicate bonded labor in specific areas of South Asia. When I came to IJM, my colleagues could have never dreamed that we would be working officially and formally with a South Asian government to combat bonded labor. These are days of learning, planning, and traveling for my colleagues, as they prepare to undertake another year of work with a new partner.

The Bonded Labour (Abolition) Act is a law that hasn’t been taken very seriously in South Asia for about thirty years. Among others, the act states that released bonded laborers are eligible to receive 20,000 INR ($?) from the government to help them rebuild their lives. Historically, no one has received full benefits. Last month, two released bonded laborers made history, receiving 20,000 from their government under the Bonded Labour (Abolition) Act to enable the beginnings of rehabilitation in these peoples’ lives.  

Release stories coming out every month (like this one), new partnerships with the government, and actual enforcement of the Bonded Labour (Abolition) Act convince me that bonded labor will end in South Asia. I watch people whom history will forget, setting the stage for a significant shift in the exploitive systems of labor in South Asia, and I see [only a fraction of] the infinite implications that the shift means for our world. And I am overwhelmed by hope.

I find myself frozen in shock, at various times throughout the week when thinking about the generosity and encouragement of you, the people who have chosen to partner with me this year. Your support has enabled me to get a glimpse of some of the tangible ways that massive work happens in the world. You have made it possible for me to be strrrrrreched in a new work environment; you have enabled me to rent an apartment and buy food at the market; you have enabled me to afford life for a year in one of the more expensive parts of South Asia.  

I look back on the past 11 months, and I am thankful.

I look forward to my final 6 months serving with IJM with hopeful anticipation. The building pressure in South Asia convinces me that there will be much to report and it will be an absolute pleasure to share those months with you.

In order to continue this work, I will need some financial support. If you are at a place to provide, and if you want to do something tangible to contribute to the work of IJM, then please choose to partner (or continue partnering) with me. The actual process is quite straightforward. Click here and press "Support an Intern/Fellow". Then select my name from the drop down menu and IJM’s giving site will direct you from there. For the sake of transparency, here is a breakdown of the cost of basic living in my corner of South Asia:

Airfare (round trip)
$1000
Rent
$195/month
Electricity, Water, Wifi
$57/month
Food
$160/month
Daily Travel
$50/month
Misc (toiletries, household cleaner, etc)
$30/month
Trash collector/ stair cleaner
$7/month

I love interning with International Justice Mission because it gives me the chance to see varying types of infinite work going on against bonded labor in South Asia. If you’re able join me, financially and prayerfully in these next 6 months as we watch bonded labor lose in South Asia. It’s going to be a good ride.

Sincerely,

Alice

Monday, October 14, 2013

Word.


I am struck by the power of words. Their power is the reason that bloggers spend hours tweaking one sentence; it’s the reason that sex traffickers use words as a tool of deception on vulnerable girls; it’s the reason that certain countries outlaw some authors; it’s the reason that Presidents have speech-writers and it’s the reason that hopeful students agonize during application seasons; it’s the reason that many refuse to say “I love you”. Words carry immense weight and the words we choose to read/listen to/think about/say, change the very way we [I] think about ourselves, about the world, and about our God[s].

There is a huge-hearted person in my office named Albert. He serves tea and maintains the building, in addition to speaking to me in Hindi every time he passes my desk. As I slowly pick up his words and string them together, I see him begin to understand me, and I, him. With each word, he becomes less “Random Office Assistant” and so much more “Albert”. Speaking with Albert in broken Hindi gives me a window into an otherwise unreachable (for me, at least) linguistic soul. With more language acquisition, our conversations will deepen somewhat, and we will use words to get to know each other, as colleagues, and as friends. Although Albert and I are completely different people, Hindi words do not discriminate between us, and using them allows us to bridge the many cultural gaps that would otherwise keep us further apart.

Words affect our work (why do you think there is a phrase called “Vision Casting”?). Our office has a one-man finance department, and despite a tiny department, he has earned our office the highest possible Fiscal Accounting ratings for an entire year. To celebrate, we made him an award. It’s nothing fancy: just laminated paper with appreciative words printed in fancy font. Although it is not valuable in and of itself, I see that award pinned to his wall every time I sit in his office.
Words have a profound effect on the way I view my situation while living abroad. Astrid and I informally debrief after almost every workday and usually, this is a really healthy way to process our experience at IJM. Words are powerful because they identify (give a concrete identity to) real feelings, needs, and frustrations that cannot be ignored once they are named. There were natural frustrations associated with shifting into a new work environment that I did not deal with until Astrid made me begin spitting out the elephants...into the middle of the metaphoric room. Naming certain aspects of my experience is enabling me to more fully recognize, value, and savor the challenging aspects and the wonderful parts of moving to a new work environment, even ten months after my arrival. Words force me to engage with life, instead of merely living under a weak veil of contentment that comes from selectively focusing on the “good”.
Last week, in an address to government officials, the Minister of State for the Ministry of Labour and Employment (trust me, this guy matters in the world of labour law) openly recognized the existence of bonded labour in South Asia. Additionally, he spoke publically about a need to improve the enforcement instructions of the Bonded Labour Act (a key part of the Bandhua 1947 Campaign).  Although he did not change the life situation of any bonded labourers by his words on that day, the Minister’s very word has the power to influence the behavior of every member of the Ministry of Labour and Employment. This represents a huge success for our Government Relations team!
I am really good at believing the lies that creep into my self-consciousness: that I am not “intelligent” enough to be of use to anyone anywhere; that I am a burden and an embarrassment to everyone around me; that I deserve loneliness. Sometimes (especially in a place that can feel so far from anything like home), the lies get louder, leaving me feeling alienated from the world and unable to break through the thick glass that separates me from “them”.  I start believing that there is a limited supply of kind words, and that I must hold mine close, just in case I give them all away and find myself empty. But, astoundingly, the pathetic weakness and falsehood of these lies is revealed by the ease with which they are absolutely blown away by the simplest words of truth.
After years of prideful struggling against this confession, I must say that I need powerful, simple words of truth. I yearn to be reminded of how much I am loved, and of the fact that I can give freely, without holding back one word of encouragement. I need the reminder that God is Able, and that He gives me the power to make change, regardless of my IQ. I need to be told these things, and thankfully, there have been (and are) hundreds of people speaking true, powerful words to me over the years. I am privileged to know great pastors, bold family, irreplaceable friends, and gracious coworkers who insistently speak the simple truths to me, despite my attempts to drown them out.
The power of simple words inspires me to live more freely and to love more fully.
My prayer tonight is for those who have not experienced the gift of receiving relentless, affirming words.  You (regardless of what continent you’re reading from right now) and I are surrounded by multiple people who can be enriched by the power of a few, simple words. I may not have a law degree, or a lot of money, or the political power to influence change, or the fullest understanding of social phenomena, but I have the power of words. Call me idealistic, but if words are one of the big tools we have to fight the lies and break free from hopelessness and despair, then my hope for today is that we use them freely, without reserve or fear, to forgive, to heal, and to celebrate the fact that we get life.
Our Communications team struggles daily to use their words well. Please pray for them in this venture!
 Sincerely,
Alice
p.s. Today’s reasons to Celebrate: In the course of writing this post, I got back electricity AND internet connection!
p.s.s. Are you interested in supporting me this year? Learn more about giving here.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Photo Reel 1

 Although these photos do not represent the every-day living of this year, they are a fun illustration of recent highlights. Enjoy.

Some friends chanced upon this wall on our way to a South-Indian restaurant in a popular village. Graffiti [or graffiti art, as the more-forgiving might say] is uncommon in the city, so this wall stands out a lot against its bare neighbors. It is no Banksy, but it is still eye-catching.
Recently, my boss got married in the Portuguese-style church depicted above. The church is located at the top of a hill and overlooks the Arabian Sea.
 
 
 
 
 
Three months after moving into a new apartment with my roommate, Astrid, we began decorating. We have opted to go with the Vermont-lodge feel, which includes covering the pre-existing antique German furniture with bed sheets probably designed for eight year-old boys. We are currently looking for antlers to add to the walls.








The Khmer Rouge in Cambodia is famous for committing mass killings of intellectuals, artists, leaders, and prominent thinkers during their reign. At the Killing Fields memorial, one small-ish section was blocked off by these bracelet-laden bamboo poles, to mark the areas where babies and small children were beaten to death and buried.







A famous market in my area is called "Chandni Chowk", meaning "Moon Market". Apparetly a big river used to flow through the area, casting the moons reflection on the market streets. The river has since dried up, but the streets are still bustling with activity. After winding through back streets and climbing up steep stairs, this mosque popped into view, sitting quietly in the minutes before prayer.



                
 
 
 
 
After two days of exploring the area known as Ankor (home of  Angkor Wat) on our visa run, my friends and I went to one final temple, built to reflect both Hindu and Buddhist style. The structure was massive and so dilapidated that it took concentrated focus to walk through the long corridors. As my friends and I walked, these children ran around, obviously accustomed to balancing on the old, fallen stone.
 
If you pray, please pray for the health of my co-workers and friends. Two friends have recently overcome typhoid and dengue, and many more are falling ill due to the "changing weather" (I am still trying to understand this phenomenon). Pray for strength, especially in such a hectic time of activity for the Campaign.
 
Much love,
Alice
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Looking Ahead

Last month, I officially decided to accept an offer to extend my internship another 6 months.....! Let me explain what I am doing here:
 
IJM has been doing individual casework related to sex trafficking and bonded labour in South Asia for over 15 years. Over time, they have been able to identify key weaknesses in the legal/social system that prohibits them/the government from working well on behalf of the poor. In 2012, IJM set up their first advocacy office ever....in South Asia. That October, they kicked off a campaign called the Bandhua 1947 Campaign (Bandhua means "Bonded" in Hindi). The Bandhua 1947 Campaign is a campaign involving IJM and four other partners working in India that have the goal of ending bonded labour in India. This specific campaign is focusing its efforts mainly on improving and better enforcing a law called the Bonded Labour Act. The law defines bonded labour, and details who is responsible for identifying and prosecuting cases, along with outlining the various benefits that can be made available to released bonded labourers.
 
Needless to say, we have our hands full. As an admin intern, I have spent my days at IJM building a website for the office, doing research for government relations, putting together presentations, doing inventory, planning event logistics meetings, running strategy meetings, taking lots of notes, doing Staff Care events, creating knowledge management systems, editing news articles, and much more. Being the first intern allows me to dabble in every department, including admin, government relations, partnerships, and communications, and my supervisors have been incredibly accommodating in allowing me to jump into almost every aspect of the Campaign.
 
In October, my office will begin undergoing some major changes. We will be expanding our office to include casework from all over South Asia and one more big project that trains pre-existing ngos who are doing the same work (They have been incredibly successful thus far. People are successfully coming out of bonded labour by the hundreds, every month). IJM's vision is for this office to become the hub of bonded labour work in South Asia, starting in January 2014. Needless to say, I would love to watch that happen. The Campaign will begin wrapping up around June of 2014 and since I know so much about the project, I have been asked to stay on as the Executive Assistant to IJM South Asian Director of Advocacy. The position will entail some basic admin work, but it will mainly require me to do program design/knowledge management and act as the order-keeper of a buzzing office. The advocacy director needs someone with whom to digest all of his thoughts and he also needs someone to organize his work. Given my interest/understanding of programs and my attention to detail, I think the role will be a good fit. Staying with IJM will give me the opportunity to (hopefully) travel more within South Asia while giving me great experience in development, migration, and law. I need to sort out the logistics of living for another 6 months in India, but the experience, the ways I have been blessed thus far, and the number of people whose lives will be indirectly affected leaves me breathless at the thought of staying in Delhi to see this project through.
 
Last week I found myself in a room, surrounded by the leaders of major ngos working to end bonded labour in South Asia. One man told an awesome story involving their cooperation with the government on rescues while another woman discussed livelihood options and rehabilitation. Yet another ngo went into detail about their success in connecting with 120 villages. Amidst taking notes, I had to sit back for a minute to take in the fact that there are people here making a beautiful history and that so much of this activity will go unnoticed by anyone outside of the villages in rural South Asia. The basic hope in that room was palpable.
 
Some of you have financially supported me this year. Thank you so much for doing that! Your gifts allow me to do awesome things like take notes in meetings with history-makers. Your generosity has contributed to one of the most incredible years of my life thus far and I have been able to see God working in India as a result. That is huge.
 
Please tell me if there is anything specific you would like me to write about in this space as I continue discovering life in my corner of South Asia!
 
Blessings,
 
Alice
 
p.s.- Interested in learning more about supporting this work? Click here.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Sunday Afternoon Shopping

Today while waiting for the tailor to come back from lunch, I found the meat vendors in the local market. The air was heavy with the smell of recent death and the sound of unhappy roosters, awaiting a messy fate. The crowing of the roosters was what originally drew me to that corner of the market:
(These guys are tied to cages that hold hens snuggly beneath them. PETA would have a collective meltdown in a place like this.)

I was tempted to take photos of the market once I entered, but then decided that it wouldn’t be fair to show photos of bloody alleys, layered shelves of fatty flesh, and dried goat heads to a reading public with potentially weak stomachs.

It’s been over eight months of cooking vegetarian food at home. Today confirmed that it may be another eight months of the same.
Once back at the tailor, I handed over a receipt and was handed a beautifully-made, Indian-sewn suit in return. I noticed however, that the string that makes a suit “drawstring” was missing, so I inquired of the tailor where I could buy one. Instead of charging me the infamous “white tax” for a small piece of string, he walked next door, bought a string, and handed it to me, completely free of charge. In a world where almost every interaction I have in public is tainted by the color of my skin, this interaction gives me hope for a near future where the people in my neighborhood recognize me and trust me (and vice versa) despite the fact that our only point of intersection until now is an exchange in a market stall. Moments like the one with my tailor make me feel more and more at home in my neighborhood, renewing my desire to get out of the house, explore, and take in every possible site and sound of my corner in South Asia.

If you pray, you probably believe that prayer has the power to do some pretty big and awesome things in the world. In that spirit, pray for the end of bonded labour in India. I think it can happen in our lifetime. A few weeks ago, my boss joined two released bonded labourers for a special show on India’s CNN-IBN. If you’re interested in learning a bit more about bonded labour, click and watch, here. On a more tangible note, please pray for safety as my roommate and I cross the main road every day in our area. Traffic is always heavy and I have heard of one death there already since the walkway underneath closed two weeks ago.
A more thorough update on IJM and my work is coming soon. Thank you so much for the support you have shown thus far! It is truly sustaining.

Love,
Alice


Ps- Interested in learning more about supporting this work? Click here.

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Hot Mess Days


It’s been 6.5 months since I first set foot on Indian soil. Looking back, I think I had an expectation that by now, I would have things pretty much figured out and that this beautiful, messy country would make some sort of sense. By now, I would be able to properly construct the defined boxes in my mind into which I could file every experience of the upcoming months. By now, I would know how to speak Hindi and would understand the cultural context of every joke; cows in the street would no longer surprise me, and no spice would be too spicy. More importantly, by now I would have learned to really love people, forgiving with ease, with an unending supply of gratitude for these precious months that I have been given here with IJM.

I sit here, thinking about those original, unsaid expectations. And I giggle.

There are many days that I come into work, looking and feeling like a hot mess. Vegetable vendors still manage to rip me off and the heat makes me cranky. I get annoyed by children begging on the road who refuse to leave me alone. And then, like a perfect hypocrite, I am frustrated by the opulent Audi-and-Armani lifestyles of the “new money” families in this city and their decidedly blind eyes toward the poor. I routinely get honked at in the road and I offend people more often than I realize, and I still cannot make a perfect dal with rice.

…It is precisely in this messy space that grace has repeatedly crept in over the past month and tenderly reminded me to laugh.

Here are some ways of those reminders:

                - On Wednesday, I saw my friend’s leg get healed. As in, her leg grew before my very eyes. I laugh because I forget just how powerful God is and that being on his “team” means that not even the huge, systematic sicknesses like sexual trafficking and bonded labour have a chance of survival against what He is doing in the world.

                - Ever since the arrival of our office’s first Fellow (she is now also my roommate!), she has made it her goal to use positive reinforcement with auto drivers who agree to charge us a fare rate*. I laugh, as I see sweaty auto drivers smile with surprise at her cheers, and I am reminded that auto drivers are people too and that commuting can be an uplifting experience, instead of a battle of the wills over a mere 10 rupees.

                -In Bangkok, I was overwhelmed by the amount of sexual tourism that has permeated the city. On multiple occasions, I had menus of various sex acts shoved into my face, at which point I was prompted to choose one. And yet, I was able to rendezvous with a college friend who is now living in Bangkok with the sole purpose of loving on lady boy prostitutes. I laugh because I am reminded that God is finding ways to love “even the least of these”, despite the fact that they are overlooked by the rest of the world.

Despite my best efforts to focus solely on the ways that I and the world epically fail over this last month, Grace has poked and prodded its way into my field of vision, obscuring my view of the mirror.  I think He wants to teach me to laugh, or at the very least, to smile in hope, as I watch Him move in this country.

Tons of exciting things are going on with IJM’s work in South Asia right now. As our Communication capabilities have grown, so has our reach to both the policy-makers and to the general public grown. Every week, more non-profits are learning how to connect current and released bonded labourers to government benefits. In this month, the Bandhua 1947 Campaign has made leaps and bounds toward finishing a draft of the Bonded Labour (Abolition) Act rules that they plan to present to the government later this year. In the midst of these exciting progresses, I have been asked by my bosses to take on more responsibility in the area of program design and Knowledge Management. I am thrilled by the faith they show in my potential to contribute to the office and am looking forward to more formally transitioning into the new role.

If you pray, pray for me this week as I make decisions about next year. I have the opportunity to extend my stay here and continue to invest in this Campaign and I want to make a wise choice. Pray also for my office, as we plan events and work toward better enforcement of a long-forgotten law. Pray that my roommate and I make space to relax and recharge after a long work week. Finally, I am doing some travel with a friend in the coming weeks to Sri Lanka and around India. Pray for safety as we take trains, board planes, and catch taxis.

To those of you who have continued to prayerfully and financially support me this year, thank you. Thank you for allowing me to invest in really exciting work. Thank you for making it possible for me to live, surrounded by people bursting with Hope. Thank you for believing that God can work through me. It’s just too great!


Sincerely,

Alice


*Fare rate. Fair rate. Get it?
Interested in supporting this year? Follow this link to learn more.

Friday, June 14, 2013

Hot Stuff




Friends,

It has been a hot few weeks. As the temperature has been rising, I have made some mental notes on living in South Asia during the summer. It’s time to share some of them with you (But bear with me. It gets gross.):

Here, I drink water by the litre.
Dry heat causes nosebleeds too. Not cute.

Construction workers and street sweepers hose off the roads and their construction sites to keep sand and dust from blowing away.

It is possible to sweat while standing still.

Tap water is too hot to drink, even if it were potable.

Riding in an auto rickshaw (I describe them here) feels like sitting while someone holds open your eyelids and points a blowing hair dryer at your face.

Bananas last longer in the fridge. So does bread.

I have ring tans from commuting at 9am every day.
The Taj Mahal is so hot that it burns your feet. The masses tour it by following skinny rows of mats placed out by tour guides.

Some cement gets too sticky to step on.

Everyone knows the difference between cotton and other poly-blend imitations.

Midday napping is less luxury and more necessity.
 

It is possible for heat to affect the appetites of an entire state of people.
The metro is wildly popular. AC is cited most commonly as the perk for that kind of transportation.

The best way to sleep comfortably is by jumping in the shower and getting onto (note my usage of the word “onto”) bed without toweling off.

Clothing dries on the line in 20 minutes, always a shade lighter than it was when you hung it out.

When the electricity is cut, I eat watermelon to stay hydrated, while watching my neighbors get into their air-conditioned cars for respite.

Lying down to sleep reminds me of how hot my hair feels.

I shower at night or early morning, in hopes that the water tank has cooled off.
It is impossible to ever “towel dry”.
 
No one in India comments on sweat marks. They are a given.

While adjusting to extreme temperatures in May, our office was busy responding to some claims made about bonded labour on behalf of a national initiative called the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA or NREGA). The initiative is aimed at improving the lives of low caste, impoverished members of the rural community in South Asia, by providing unskilled manual labourers with 100 days of work in agriculture per year. This employment guarantee hopes to protect some otherwise vulnerable rural families from being forced to migrate seasonally to other states in search of cheap labour. So far, it has been successful in making benefits available to otherwise helpless families. Although the act is making positive impacts on those who qualify for its benefits, a recent article entitled “Thanks to MGNEGRA, no bonded labour anymore” misrepresents the state of bonded labour in South India.

In the same month that the article on MGNEGRA was published, multiple rescues took place around South Asia, in which families were freed from years of bonded labour. In this story, 20 men, 9 women, and 11 children are taken out of sugarcane fields and investigated for bonded labour. Here, 17 people were rescued from working in rice paddies. Just this week, 273 people were freed from bondage!

In the face of these overwhelming stories, our office and various partners have been trying to redirect the media’s attention toward evidence of the egregious exploitation still taking place throughout South Asia. We hope that responses to this recent article highlight the situations of those who have been overlooked and the amount of work that can still be done on their behalf.  If you pray, please pray that the recent news coverage of bonded labour in South Asia can serve to inform the wider reading public of labour issues in their own regions. Pray that the right people will continue asking the right questions about how to systematically provide bonded labourers with more access to their rights, building on the work of MGNREGA. Finally, pray that each member of my office continues to joyfully seek the Lord’s direction in this Campaign, with renewed vigor to reach our goals every day, despite a massive task. There is so much hope yet to be realized and I love watching it unfold. 

Personally, pray for smooth transitions as we welcome our first IJM Fellow (and my future apartment mate!) to our office. Pray for my health as the heat continues. Pray for sustained energy on my part. After almost five months of continuous work, I look forward to a break at the end of this month!

Every month, I am reminded in different ways of the incredible generosity of those who have chosen to prayerfully and financially support this year. As I pay for electricity bills, know that I am thanking God for every cent and every prayer!


Sincerely,
Alice

 

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Friday, May 3, 2013

Fifth Floor Friends

            The city where I live is not made for walking. Its streets are littered with potholes that can consume a man; the “curb” comes in the form of an occasional raised, road-side platform separating two plots of land. Environmental conservation has failed to catch on, so even if you are successful in finding a park in which to be ambulatory, the chances of stepping on some sort of sharp or infectious refuse is not zero. This may sound like a stressful situation, but when you combine the condition of the roads surrounding my house with the level of traffic and the number of people, walking to the metro station can seem like an exciting, mid-stakes video game; it keeps you on your toes.

Although I have only just mastered the art of walking around my city, it became clear early on that attempting to run on the road for exercise would probably result in a hospital stay. With this in mind, I have spent the last couple months exercising on my terrace, located six floors above ground. Most of the buildings on my block are only about four/five floors high, so I spent the first few weeks of my stay performing calisthenics in peace, knowing that I was relatively safe from the prying eyes of early morning-risers looking for their sunrise entertainment.
Slowly, though, that peace has evaporated. There is constantly construction going on in my neighborhood, as there is all over this city. When I moved into my apartment this January, I could look out of my bedroom window and see the top of the building next door, two floors below. In the picture below, you can see that it (on the right) is under construction:

A full schedule, culture shock, laziness and a painful foot injury (obtained, ironically enough by my one attempt to walk in high heels here) resulted in what you might call an “extended-leave” from morning exercise last month. But two weeks ago I woke up early, excited to restart the regimen.
Upon reaching the terrace and stepping outside, I was surprised to see that, in the span of just a few weeks, the building next door had gained two floors, both of which were partially covered in brick*. “No problem”, I thought. “May as well take advantage of the privacy to exercise until tenants move in.” With a shrug, I began my squats. Around five minutes and two jumping-jack sets later, I noticed the unmistakable smell of curry wafting over from the direction of the new floor next door. Noting the smell with a level of curiosity, I continued moving. Halfway through the workout, I was pushing through a set of burpees, which require a person to constantly move between standing and being in pushup position. While moving up to standing position on one of these repetitions, my eyes skimmed over my terrace wall, back to the building next door and were met by the eyes of a man, standing on the terrace, eating his breakfast and watching me with contentment from across the road. With a high heart rate clouding out my confusion, I decided to ignore the man and finish exercising, with plans to later ask my national friends to fill in any holes I was missing regarding people who inhabit construction sites.   
It turns out that an entire family has taken up residence in the open stairwell on the unfinished terrace of the building next door. There are at least four people whom I have seen waking up and getting ready for the day at 6:30am. They have a tarp to create a ceiling, a stove for cooking curry, and a line strung up to dry clean clothing. This is a family of construction workers.
There is not enough space to house all of the people in the city where I live and I have learned that most construction workers live near or around their current projects because they cannot afford a form of shelter, apart from the one they are building. Because of the high number of migrant workers and their willingness to work in almost any situation, it is also not uncommon for construction worker families to be exploited. They are the face of cheap labour in my city.
My fifth floor friends remind me that I am not here for the abstract. I am here to support the work of awesome, passionate people on behalf of other, equally dynamic people who are not in a place to legally represent themselves. I have been advised against interacting unnecessarily with the construction workers in my neighborhood, but their presence is a good reminder that their counterparts with IJM are real people, some of whom would also happily eat breakfast curry and watch the foreign girl contort herself in strange ways.
Where is hope? Hope is in the fact that I can sleep through the night despite the heat. Hope is in the face of the man who gave me a fair price for mangos today. Hope is in deepening relationships with new friends. Hope is in this story. Hope is in the familiar feeling I had when returning to this city after a weekend away. Poverty and brokenness is so visible here; I find hope in the knowledge that people have to consciously respond to it with either decided activity or decided passivity.
If you pray, pray for our office’s ability to affect strategic change in the Bandhua 1947 Campaign. Pray for good communication between all of the people in South Asia who are working against bonded labour, that we may combine our strengths. Pray that my body adjusts quickly to the summer weather and pray for my foot, as it continues to heal, that there will be no long-term damage.
Thank you for your support and for following along! It is a pleasure to share this year with you.
Sincerely,

                Alice

*You may be wondering how I managed to overlook the construction of two floors right next door. Well, it is really hot here. In order to stay sane, people hang incredibly thick curtains over their windows to keep the sun’s heat out. In an effort to adapt (and survive), I have done the same. Now the world directly visible from my room is, for all intensive purposes, dead to me unless I choose to look out into the sunshine.
 

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