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 Mortenson stresses the need to build relationships

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Top: Greg Mortenson, best-selling author, addresses attendees during the second plenary session on 21 June at the RI Convention in Montréal.
Bottom: Father Marciano "Rocky" Evangelista, founder of the Tuloy Foundation Inc., talks to Rotarians about the urgency of helping street children. Photos by Monika Lozinska-Lee/Rotary Images

Greg Mortenson, best-selling author of Three Cups of Tea and cofounder of the nonprofit Central Asia Institute, encouraged Rotarians on 21 June to keep working to make the world a better place and thanked Rotary for its efforts to eradicate polio in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Speaking during the second plenary session of the 2010 RI Convention in Montréal, Québec, Canada, Mortenson stressed the similarities between how his organization works and how Rotarians operate, especially the importance of building relationships and involving local leaders.

"All of us here, as Rotarians or honorary Rotarians, we are compelled to help people," he said. "The real key -- and Rotarians do this -- is that it’s not about helping, but it’s about empowering people. And when you empower people, then you can make a change in the world."

The Central Asia Institute has been empowering villages throughout Afghanistan and Pakistan to combat illiteracy by building schools for children, especially for girls who have been denied an education. Mortenson shared that there are now more than nine million children in school in Afghanistan, 2.9 million of those girls, compared with only 800,000 children, mostly boys, 10 years ago.

"We can drop bombs, we can surge troops, we can put in electricity, we can build roads, we can put in computers. But if girls are not educated, society will never change," he said. "In Africa as a child, I learned a proverb. It says, 'If we educate a boy, we educate an individual. But if we educate a girl, we educate a community.'"

Mortenson said he learned a powerful lesson from an elder named Haji Ali in Korphe, Pakistan, a village he described in Three Cups of Tea. After watching Mortenson struggle for almost three years to build a school, Ali told him that he needed to sit down, be quiet, and let the villagers do the work.

"He took my plumb line, he took my receipts and records, and he locked them up and came back and said, 'There, everything will be fine,'" Mortenson recalled. "Of course, I was horrified. Guess what happened? Six weeks later, the Korphe school got built.

"What that does, as you know with many of your efforts, is that it ensures local buy-in," he added.

Rotarians also heard from Father Marciano "Rocky" Evangelista, a member of the Rotary Club of Alabang, Metro Manila, Philippines, and founder of the Tuloy Foundation Inc., who spoke about the urgency of helping street children.

"Children in distress cannot wait," Evangelista said. "For you or me, what is a day or two? But for a child who is slowly being toughened and hardened by the harsh realities of the school of the streets, waiting is a luxury that he or she cannot afford."

The Tuloy Foundation takes in street children from the ages of 9 to 18 and provides them with vocational training tailored to each child. From a one-room facility that helped 12 children in 1993, the organization has grown to a 4.5-hectare compound that serves about 700 youth.

"But we cannot sit back and relax. I know the smell of misery from wandering the streets at night with volunteers to seek out street children," Evangelista said. "And let me tell you, the smell never leaves you. I will never forget that there are still children in the street."


6 Comments:
At 9:15AM on 1 November 2010, edd mendoza wrote: I feel so blessed that Fr. Rocky intervene and re-constructed my life. You might be wondering who i am....... i'm just one of the thousand kids who had the opportunity to become a member of the Tuloy family. I'm so proud of being a Tuloy kid... Thank you Rotary International for all you support to us.!
At 1:24PM on 9 August 2010, Jack Kimbell wrote: Greg's results in Afghanistan & Pakistan in building schools and educating girls is amazing and should be supported by Rotary Clubs world-wide and a matching grant program be set-up by RI. He is truly "Building Communities & Bridging Continents."
At 5:46PM on 22 June 2010, PDG Zahir Kamruddin wrote: Kudos to Rotary for bringing Greg Mortenson to speak to the Rotary audience. I am a big fan of Greg and his Central Asia Institute. If Rotary International and The Rotary Foundation would deviate from its rules against brick & mortar and put all its resources in building schools in all impoverished countries after eradicating Polio from the face of this earth. Health, Water, Sanitation, Food and others would come. Educating every child would bring peace and deprive radicals a recruiting ground. It is a big ambition, however, just see what Greg has been able to accomplish.
At 1:42PM on 22 June 2010, Thomas J Setter wrote: Thank you Greg. I second your suggestion about GIRLS in AFRICA. If the women get trained to get a job the whole family benefits. I support your efforts.
At 9:03AM on 22 June 2010, Cécile Leveque wrote: Although Greg Mortenson is a man, his life is dedicated to help women and girls through literacy and education, and that is what this world needs more than anything. Thank you Rotary International for bringing this inspiring and courageous man to Montréal and I hope we all put more emphasis on education of girls. He also challenged Rotary International to put more women as Board Directors (right now there is one woman and 19 men), which received the biggest applause of his whole talk. Let us see in ten years if that will change.
At 9:09AM on 22 June 2010, Ajayi Adeoye Idowu wrote: Greg's effort in Afghanistan and Pakistan and that of Father Marciano's in Philippines need to be commended. they are really Rotarians Partners and if we have more of such individuals doing their bits coupled with what Rotary International is doing,then the Lomg for PEACE ,Eradication of Poverty,Polio, Literacy,Health for all would be a thing of the past.

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