[chapter-delegates] ISOC Response to Tsunami Crisis in Asia PROPOSAL
Ramon Morales
ramon at isocpr.org
Sun Jan 9 23:13:17 PST 2005
Chapter Delegates:
After reviewing the situation with respect to ISOC's response to the tsunami
crisis, I would recommend that we create a mechanism to support the
formation of a school in Thailand along the lines that Gene has proposed and
as a long term focused project along the lines that Tommi has so eloquently
summed up in this passage. The issues before us have more to do with the
type of global organizational structure that can conduct support of its
chapters particularly during these catastrophic events.
I agree that we are not UNICEF and that the immediate relief type work
should be done by those organizations that are organized and suited to do
this. Yet, it seems that we at ISOC have a special and unique role that we
can play. We could render much needed assistance to the Internet sector in
these countries and strengthen their ability to use the net to turn things
around both in the short and long term.
We can
1. Adopt a school and support its reconstruction (Long term)
2. Identify technology products such as those that Tommi mentions that can
help the local chapters assist the local authorities (WiMax,mobile stations
etc...) Those companies that are organizational members such as Microsoft,
Hewlett Packard, and Cisco for example can help in ways based on ISOC asking
them to assist our chapters with much needed equipment and expertise.
I have 25 years of experience building schools in New York and I am about to
start up a new one in Puerto Rico for academically talented children from
poor and economically depressed areas who otherwise could not afford a
private school education. I know that the key to any successful endeavor is
to bring together and focus our energies with a clear purpose and mission.
Once we grasp the principle and value that just commencing these efforts
will do for our chapters, we will bring motivate others to take up the call
with us.
We can become the champions of something truly great and bring the Internet
culture of collaboration and mutual support to be understood in concrete
terms by the people most affected now. We stand to support the Internet
sector and through our ISOC chapters we can identify both short and long
term realizable goals that can be meaningful in a humble way. If one school
is built, if one community is better connected to the net, if even a small
group of students are being mobilized with the appropriate tools to support
the recovery efforts, then we would have made a difference.
I wish to share this poem that guides my work and is my morning prayer, a
poem regarding success. It reads as follows
Success: A poem By Ralph Waldo Emerson
To laugh often and much;
To win the respect of intelligent people and the affection of children;
To earn the appreciation of honest critics and endure the betrayal of false
friends; to appreciate beauty;
To find the best in others;
To leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch
or a redeemed social condition;
to know even one life has breath easier because you have lived.
This is to have succeeded
What will define our success will be that we cared enough to mobilized
resources within our means to "To leave the world a bit better, whether by a
healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition"
Tommi has set up a framework and Gene has made an excellent recommendation.
Let's bring these ideas together from the various chapters, let's work to
identify the needs of our chapters in these countries affected and start
taking concrete actions based on a consensus around the specific goals on
which we can all agree. Let's practice sound global citizenship and act as a
responsible entity that serves its constituents particularly in a time of
massive devastation and the huge loss of human life.
Ramón Morales
Internet Society of Puerto Rico
-----Original Message-----
From: Tommi Karttaavi [mailto:tommi.karttaavi at isoc.fi]
Sent: Sunday, January 09, 2005 4:05 PM
To: chapter-delegates at lists.isoc.org
Subject: Re: [chapter-delegates] ISOC Response to Tsunami Crisis in Asia
PROPOSAL
Dear friends,
If there is something we can do together to help the people in the
devastated area, we should do it. Re-building even just one school is
much better than nothing. Still, we musn't let our frustration lead us
to start projects that may only add to what someone called 'the anarchy
of altruism'. Too many well meaning players without proper co-ordination
easily leads to waste of resources.
Gene and Jacques both talk about long term involvement and that sounds
like the best way to go. ISOC is not an organisation capable of quick
relief projects. We should leave that to the experts.
If re-building schools is something we feel that we could do together,
let's do it by all means (although I'm not sure fundraising is our forte
either). This is something that we should maybe talk about with
Unesco/Unicef and see what is already being done and if we could
contribute in some way.
There are some areas where ISOC could IMHO take a leading role:
promoting communication technologies that would enable the relief
organisations to quickly set up communication networks in disaster areas
(delay tolerant TCP, ad-hoc networks, Wimax and other wireless
standards, VoIP emergency messaging etc.). We could start by contacting
the Red Cross and asking what they are using now and what could be done
to improve it.
Meanwhile there are little things every chapter can do, like putting
links to local charities' donation pages on their home pages.
Just my thoughts,
Tommi
Gene Gaines wrote:
> Jacques,
>
> Thank you for your response (below) to my proposal.
>
> My intention is not to compete with current disaster
> assistance efforts, and not to divert one centime of funds
> that would go to those efforts.
>
> Relief organizations cannot do everything. If you doubt this,
> then I suggest that you make a personal visit to one of the
> well known relief organizations and ask their advice on the
> subject of small volunteer organizations such as ISOC chapters
> providing long-term assistance for a specific local project
> such as a school.
>
> For 20 years, my hobby (avocation) has been volunteer work
> to assist with education, job training and economic development
> in financially depressed areas. I believe I know what I am
> doing. My success rate is good. Not in _my_ achieving good
> things, but rather in my assisting local people in achieving
> good things.
>
> The bad effects of the tsunami disaster will be felt by the
> local people for years to come. How to provide assistance
> during those years?
>
> You will recall humanitarian aid leaders stating that, after
> the immediate disaster relief, it is better to provide good
> seed and farming technology than it is to provide food.
>
> Make an analogy between seeds and children.
>
> My vision is to build and equip a school which provides
> children:
>
> (1) basic education,
> (2) learning of the whole world through the Internet,
> (3) learning skills for good jobs, and
> (4) hopefully creating new economic opportunities for their area.
>
> Totally different from immediate disaster relief.
>
> Gene Gaines
> VP, ISOC Washington DC USA Chapter
>
>
> On Friday, January 7, 2005, 6:28:08 AM, Jacques wrote:
>
>
>>Dear all,
>>I am sorry to interfere as a dog in a skittles' play, or to turn up
>>when least wanted.
>>Let me say first that I greet with an immense hope the solidarity
>>that is manifested world-wide to the dramatic situations in the
>>tsunami crisis in Asia.
>>But I must say also that I don't understand why ISOC should play on
>>its own in response, when the international community is trying to
>>organize the relief on the most efficient way. The best that ISOC has
>>to do his to offer its services to well known organizations which
>>have a good knowledge of what must done. I don't see any difficulty
>>in organizing ourselves to collect money, and give it to the funds
>>which are responding to the first and basic felt needs of people. I
>>don't see what does mean to reconstruct a school with the best
>>computer equipment. In what world are we moving?
>>There are 5000 deaths in Thailand (half Thai, half foreigners) and
>>the Government announces five thousands more. But the disaster counts
>>today more than 150,000 deaths - the last figures are "more than
>>160,000" -, especially in Indonesia (90,000), Sri Lanka (30,000), and
>>India (10,000), where the situation is still worse than in Thailand.
>>I should be careful to go ahead without knowing where are the most
>>urgent needs. ISOC is not equipped for answering that question.
>>Promises remain often promises, but when the momentum is over... See
>>the case of earthquake in Bam (Iran): they have hardly received 45%
>>of what was promised.
>>What we need in the case of Asia is a long term involvement and
>>strong structures more than little projects at hand. Generosity is
>>not sufficient, the situation is more dramatic than we can ever feel.
>>Yours,
>>Jacques Berleur
>>President ISOC-Belgium (Wallonia)
>
>
>
>>>At 10:33 05-01-2005 -0500, Gene Gaines wrote:
>>>
>>>>Srisakdi,
>>>>
>>>>I PROPOSE THAT WE UNDERTAKE THIS AS A CHAPTERS PROJECT.
>>>>It would be good for Americas ISOC chapters (North America,
>>>>Central America, South America) and EU ISOC chapters to
>>>>join in this.
>>>>
>>>>Veni, Rosa, Ramon, Srisakdi Charmonman, do you consider this
>>>>a constructive project?
>>>
>>>Dear Gene,
>>>Borka from Slovenia is already discussing the issue within the
>>>European Chapter Council. We hope it will be able to respond soon.
>>>
>>>best,
>>>veni
>>>
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