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What You Can Do PDF Print E-mail
2000 - May 2000
Wednesday, 01 May 2002 08:54

What You Can Do

What I discovered on this third journey opened my eyes to the possibility that the overwhelming challenges facing Brazil might best be addressed by supporting communities effectively predisposed to helping themselves.
By Phillip Wagner

When I first visited Brazil in 1996 I discovered a country, and a culture, that was far more diverse and sophisticated than the media of that time would have led me to believe. It was, in fact, at just about that time that Western media finally began to shift from depicting any nation south of the United States as a "Banana Republic" to earnestly exploring, and reporting on the complexities of life in Latin America. Wall Street Week and the American Public Broadcasting System had just finished collaborating on the "Emerging Powers" series, which redefined Brazil, Ireland, Mexico, and other nations in substantial ways that went beyond the color and pageantry of traditional celebrations and ethnic mythologies.

I would only later discover Paul Rambali's revealing epic travelogue, In the Cities and Jungles of Brazil (1993) and Joseph Page's comprehensive treatment of Brazilian history, culture and society, The Brazilians (1995). I myself committed to doing whatever might be possible within my power to introduce America to an honest and meaningful exploration of the Brazilian experience.

On returning to the United States I authored an article, which only later appeared on January 19, 1997 as the cover story for the Indianapolis Star Sunday Travel Supplement. A copy of my article fell into the hands of the Rio Convention and Visitors Bureau. Rio, at that time, was trying to secure the 2000 Olympics, and I was invited back for an insider's view of the city. While there I discovered, quite by accident, something beyond the pale of orchestrated introductions that profoundly altered my view of the challenges facing Brazil and how to deal with them.

My original trip to Brazil had been under the auspices of an Information Technology (IT) company introducing Brazilian IT professionals to process management. The general idea is that there are certain things that all IT companies need to do in order to be successful. Commitment to those activities represents a form of "process discipline", without which success becomes marginal or even unattainable. Institutionalizing process discipline is viewed by IT companies as the first of several stages of maturation to be achieved by organizations pursuing constructive transformation. In the most widely accepted process model (The Software Engineering Institute Capability Maturity Model), discipline is internalized throughout an organization by asking each individual to satisfy process objectives, or goals, associated with each of six "key process areas".

By so doing, the organization evolves away from chaos and toward stability. A more stable environment, attained through commitment to discipline, allows the organization to invest more of its energy and limited resources in more constructive ways since less energy is required to address immediate crisis. What I discovered on my second visit to Brazil was that an intriguingly similar approach was being used to transform the lives of favela, or slum, children, and through them eliminate some degree of the chaos within their communities.

In May of 1997 I encountered Alonzo Gomez on the exclusive south beach zone of Rio. Alonzo is an artist who left his home in the mountains of Colombia in 1994 to find a meaningful and rewarding opportunity. On the islands of Aruba and Curacao Alonzo discovered he could materialize dreams by forming sands into castles. The sandcastles he fashioned attracted homeless children, who existed in chaotic environments bereft of hope. Realizing that beaches are the only playground available to many poor children in Latin America, Alonzo attracted them to his work and began to instill in them the discipline to adopt behaviors that might allow them to successfully integrate into society. The parallel between what he was doing, and what I was instructing, seemed uncanny.

Many of the children responded to Alonzo's encouragement, and he learned from them that the plight of the poor had not diminished the possibility that they might rise above it. Alonzo moved on from Aruba and Curacao to seed his work in his native Colombia, Venezuela, Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina and Brazil.

On my second return from Brazil I was able to sell a story describing the music of Marisa Monte and Zélia Duncan (July 3-10 NUVO Newsweekly Sound Section cover story "Meet the Girls from Rio"), but was unable to interest any publication in the story of "Alonzo's children". I countered by having a website created depicting Alonzo's work. Fate intervened at that point when I received an e-mail from a young woman in the city of Salvador, in Brazil's northeastern state of Bahia.

Danielle Valim informed me that there were many such programs in her city, and that many of them were well organized if not well funded. One striking difference was that music, rather than art, was the "bait" that attracted the children. Having just authored an article on Brazilian music, and wanting to further explore the transformation of marginal communities through constructive social engagement rooted in process, I returned to Brazil yet again.

What I discovered on this third journey opened my eyes to the possibility that the overwhelming challenges facing Brazil might best be addressed by supporting communities effectively predisposed to helping themselves. Widespread sponsorship, shared understanding, effective change strategies and other fundamentals facilitating constructive transformation were taking hold through ownership of problems within the suffering communities.

The Afro-Blocos and other projetos I encountered through Danielle and her friend, lawyer Márcia Aguiar Borges, appear to have evolved from music groups that compete at Carnaval time. (See "Blocos Afro e Bons Trabalhos na Bahia" at http://www.iei.net/~pwagner/gooddeeds/index.html visitors will find the information there in English.)

Theirs is more refined than Alonzo's, and requirements for participation are more formalized. They include elements, analogous to process management "key process areas", which, when internalized, make it possible for a child living on the margins of society to significantly enhance his, or her, chances for a better life. Those elements are:

Adoption of self-discipline

Family sponsorship

Pursuit of education

Commitment to community

Acceptance of civic responsibility

Spiritual development

Focus on ethnic origins

Virtually all of the programs I've discovered in Salvador, Bahia seem to employ the same approach involving most, if not all, of the elements described above. But, to the best of my knowledge, there has been no serious effort to generate inter-organizational coordination on a grand scale. Establishing a council representing each participating program would offer a number of advantages. The council could agree that adoption of certain, if not all, of the elements described above should serve as the basis for membership. This would lend credibility to all of the programs by offering a clear, public, definition of what it is they're trying to accomplish.

The council could also establish common objectives, or goals, for each element. Doing so would establish what the children would have to accomplish through participation in any one of the programs. But how the children would accomplish these things would be left up to each program to decide. One of the reasons these programs seem to be effective is that they have autonomy, control of their own destinies. That autonomy should be respected and preserved.

Establishing common objectives would also allow for meaningful assessment of what each program is doing, and would create an environment within which expertise could be more formally developed within, and leveraged between, the member programs. It would also encourage potential private donors, who want to know how their funds will be spent.

Another significant advantage of inter-organizational coordination is that it could facilitate the growth of political influence to generate public support leading to a greater level of assistance from municipal, state and federal governments. It would also provide an infrastructure to initiate voter registration drives within the marginal communities supported by these programs. Doing so could franchise large numbers of disenfranchised Brazilians while simultaneously creating additional momentum within the communities for literacy and self-improvement.

The fact of the matter is that there is much to be done in Brazil, and for Brazil. The strain on the fabric of Brazilian society is truly enormous. But it's neither true nor constructive to suggest that there's no point in trying to do anything about it.

In his eulogy, following the assassination of his brother Robert in 1968, Senator Ted Kennedy noted that "Like it or not we live in times of danger and uncertainty". He went on to say that Bobby "said many times…. to those he touched, and who sought to touch him" that "some men see things as they are and say why, I dream things that never were and say why not". I can think of no better words to express how I feel about Brazil.

What You Can Do

Would be philanthropists can support the work of well established social programs like Projeto Axé or Projeto Educacional Ilê Aiyê in Salvador, state of Bahia, and Cidade das Crianças (City of Children) in Fortaleza, state of Ceará. Projects like Didá and Bahia Street are less well established and offer opportunities for individuals with fewer resources to provide much needed basic materials for educational activities or individual participant sponsorships. Alonzo Gomez in Rio, and other individuals engaged in constructive social engagement, often have no source of income and live on the generosity of private donors.

Any individual can create, or have someone create for them, a web page publicizing the work of individuals or programs like those described above. Sponsoring web sites or individual web pages is another possibility. And underwriting the efforts of selected individuals who would dedicate their lives to a better understanding of Brazil through scholarship funding or post-graduate sponsorship and mentoring pose opportunities.

Some programs need reliable volunteers willing to commit to an extended period instructing English or other subjects. But these volunteers must truly be focused on giving, rather than on receiving. I periodically, through my websites, receive inquiries from individuals expressing an interest in volunteering their time and effort. But I often discover, only after extended correspondence, that these inquiries are from people looking for me to assist them in securing sponsorship for travel and other expenses.

Many view their willingness to volunteer as an opportunity to travel while they're "between other obligations". Others have a religious motive. I neither condone, nor condemn, "working vacations" or missionaries, but I have no interest in promoting or supporting them either. I feel strongly that assistance should not be intended to support a personal agenda. Helping people to help themselves means letting them do it themselves too, and in their own way, according to their own perceptions of their place in the universe.

Tourism offers an indirect opportunity to make a positive contribution to the betterment of Brazil. And so does the purchase of Brazilian music and film. But I would encourage everyone to consider more direct involvement. I've previously encouraged people to write Netcard at netcard@netcard.com.br and request them to add submissions I long ago submitted for their "Good Works" category. This category was created by Netcard at my suggestion, as a means of bringing attention to the efforts of individuals and programs engaged in constructive social engagement in Brazil. The new submissions may be found at http://www.iei.net/~pwagner/netcard/

Finally, I want to say that I, personally, am not a clearinghouse of contacts and information for individuals wanting to help out. I'm more than willing to enter into a serious dialogue with anyone who can bring significant resources to bear, and is committed to assisting specific programs or in encouraging the work of one or more specific individuals. I periodically hear from individuals whose commitment is not supported by access to resources, and I truly haven't the time to help them discover how they might participate. My own resources are all too limited and I must necessarily devote them to pursuit of my livelihood so that I may meet my responsibilities.

Phillip Wagner is a regular contributor to Brazzil. He's a freelance photojournalist who also instructs and consults on subjects related to IT Process Management and Risk Management. In May of this year Phillip addressed a process maturity model conference in the Dallas area, and will be presenting at the American Society of Quality conference near Detroit in October. Visit his Página da Casa do Phillip do Brasil website at http://www.iei.net/~pwagner/brazilhome.htm One of Phillip's goals continues to be pursuit of postgraduate study focusing on Brazil. You can e-mail him at pwagner@iei.net

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