Saturday, December 28, 2013

The Christmas "Wars"

Most every year my sister-in-law asks me to offer a "toast" at the family Christmas dinner.  This means that I get to negotiate the ground between the brother-in-law who is offended by people who say "Happy Holidays" and the brother-in-law who can't stand it when Christians try "to ram their religion down his throat."  So I try to emphasize how Christmas helps us to remember and honor family members past and present who have sustained us and that we are also honoring the birth of Jesus, the Lamb of God.  Most of all, I try to keep it short.

For me, personally, Christmas has become a profoundly important event, the moment in history when God intervened to restructure radically our relation to the Divine.  But I realize that this is not how most Americans view Christmas or, for that matter, Christianity.

Jesus called upon people to repent and to follow him into a life of radical discipleship and service to God and humanity.  Of course earnest Christians can and will disagree over what that should look 2,000 years later.  But in a world and nation filled with self-preoccupation, injustice, violence, poverty, and ennui, I'll be so bold as to suggest that badgering the beleaguered clerks at Target to say "Merry Christmas" rather than "Happy Holidays" is not high on God's "to do" list.

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Overlooked Heroes

As the director/go-fer of Yo Ghana! I spend a fair bit of time visiting schools here in Oregon, including some schools for children who have not succeeded in conventional classrooms.  In fact, just a few days ago I was at such a school.

I am almost always deeply impressed by the dedication of the staff who work at these schools.  These are teachers and administrators who work with very challenging students who often have poor impulse control and other behavior issues.  Yet I'm continually struck by how deeply the staff care for their students--and even a visitor can see that the students apprehend and appreciate this.

These jobs aren't glamorous or high paying.  The people in them are seldom featured in the media.  Few of us notice their work.  But in working with and cherishing students who have experienced a lot of failure and often trauma, they serve and--if we care to notice--inspire us all.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Yo Ghana Near the End of 2013


We have a lot of good news at the end of 2013!  The I.R.S. just approved our application to be a 501(c)(3) public charity.  A set of very dedicated teachers in Ghana and the Pacific Northwest cheerfully and smoothly manage our letter exchanges.  Our brand new board features people raised in diverse places (Ghana, England, Haiti, the U.S., and Canada) and possessed of varied skills (community development, project evaluation, law, accounting, education, Black Studies, economics, computing, engineering).  And we have provided scholarship assistance to students (such as those shown below) whose families cannot afford to send them to school, funds to finish a school’s first library, and electronic equipment such as computers and printers.

            Most of all, we bring Ghanaians and Americans together.  That’s what the students from Morle Junior High School are so excited about in the photograph to the right.  It’s not an athletic contest they are celebrating; they just learned that Yo Ghana! paired them with a school in Springfield, Oregon!

Those schools became our seventh set of partners, and several more are on the way.  Students write about who or what inspires them, family members they miss, their favorite foods, and what goes on outside their classroom door.   They also encourage each other.  As one Ghanaian recently wrote her new American friend: “All that I have to say is that life is not easy at all, but with hard work and dedication things shall be well in the future.”

Please consider a financial gift at the end of the year to help our own “hard work and dedication.”  We are run completely by volunteers both in the U.S. and Ghana, and your donation is tax deductible.  Our website has a Paypal button:            http://www.yoghana.org/   Or contact David del Mar (delmard@pdx.edu)

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Passionate, Overworked Teachers

Mr. Essan Weah and I presented a few days ago at the World Council of Oregon "Teach Africa Youth Forum" on Yo Ghana! and came away impressed and inspired by the level of dedication of the students and teachers.

Near the end of our session, one teacher asked us what guidance we had for people trying to select from one of the many opportunities she had been exposed to for a deeper engagement with Africa.  My only piece of advice was to choose a project that she felt passionate about, as she was no doubt already overwhelmed with responsibilities.

I think that's what impresses me most about the teachers Yo Ghana! works with in the U.S. and Ghana.  None of them have the time to take on the extra work of overseeing the writing and sending and receiving of letters.  But they do so anyway.

Teachers in both nations are confronted with a growing list of responsibilities growing numbers of children who need extra attention.  They are also expected to raise everyone's scores on standardized tests that have become the judge and jury as to whether or not their school are deemed good or bad.

How fortunate we all are, then, that so many of these overworked and underpaid professionals are not only willing but eager to search out opportunities for their students to learn about the broader world in ways that will not show up in a test score.