Archive - 2011

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PCVs from the Philippines Publish Book
2
Candlelight Vigil for Kate Puzey on Friday, March 11 in D.C.
3
Wikileaks? No. National Archives? Yes.
4
February 2011 Peace Corps Books
5
Build a School in Mali! Support an RPCV!
6
Okay, Who Was First PCV on the Job?
7
Man Who Made the Peace Corps
8
Susi Wyss (CAR 1990-92) Writes A Novel in Stories, The Civilized World
9
Another RPCV Claims to be First!
10
Robert Textor’s Cultural Frontiers of the Peace Corps available in Digital format
11
Mike Tidwell (Zaire 1985-87) Saving Our Planet One Op-Ed at a Time
12
Listen to President Kennedy via recordings on Podcast speak about and to the Peace Corps
13
Were you assaulted in the Peace Corps? Congress wants your story!
14
Atlantic Wire picks Meisler's column as one of Friday's Five Best
15
Review of Meisler's When the World Calls

PCVs from the Philippines Publish Book

A new book published by our Peace Corps Writers imprint has just come out. Answering Kennedy’s Call: Pioneering the Peace Corps in the Philippines edited by four Philippines Volunteers from groups 1,2,3, (Parker W. Borg, Maureen J. Carroll, Patricia MacDermot Kasan, Stephen W. Wells). It weights in slightly less than 3 pounds and at 500+ pages. Their book is a series of essays by 90 Philippine Volunteers, plus a few essays from staff and a few Filipino observers. As Parker W. Bong, one of the four editors, wrote me, “These former Volunteers recount their personal crises, misadventures, apprehensions and foibles along with their sources of satisfaction and accomplishment. A common theme is humility and the sense they came back having gained far more than they were able to contribute. We believe we have not only created an interesting memoir for the former volunteers and their families, but a valuable history of the first Peace Corps years.” The book is available for . . .

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Candlelight Vigil for Kate Puzey on Friday, March 11 in D.C.

http://firstresponseaction.blogspot.com/2011/03/candlelight-vigil-for-kate-puzey-friday.html Candlelight Vigil for Kate Puzey on Friday, March 11 in D.C. Kate Puzey is a Volunteer who was murdered in Benin in 2009. Her story was highlighted on an episode of 20/20 in January. The Puzey family have started a new website in Kate’s memory and they are hosting a vigil this Friday in D.C. to honor her memory and service as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Here are details from the Kate’s Voice website, which the Puzey family started to honor Kate’s memory: March 11th Vigil: “Light A Candle For Kate” On Friday, March 11th – the 2nd anniversary of Kate Puzey’s death – there will be a vigil to honor Kate and the sacrifices of all other Peace Corps volunteer victims in front of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C. from 6:30 – 7:30 PM. They also have a facebook page for Kate’s Voice. The Puzey family . . .

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Wikileaks? No. National Archives? Yes.

(Please note:  The information here on how to access records may well be too old to be useful. Please visit the National Archives and Records Administration for current information.)   So what was happening with Peace Corps in Afghanistan in 1974? There are a handful of records online.  One does describe Peace Corps in Afghanistan. To find out what was happening in 1974, read this: A State Department cable, dated Mar 75, reads, in part, ” THE PEACE CORPS HAS HAD A FRUSTRATING YEAR, PRIMARILY BECAUSE OF THE DIFFICULT IN OBTAINING FROM THE GOVERNMENT OF AFGHANISTAN ITS (THE GOA’S) WISHES AND GOA PROGRAMMING PREFERENCES FOR PEACE CORPS AFGHANISTAN, AND SECONDARILY AND RELATEDLY BECAUSE ATTEMPTS TO BECOME INVOLVED IN SEVERAL ATTRACTIVE PROGRAMMING AREAS HAVE SO FAR BEEN UNSUCCESSFUL BECAUSE OF THE COLLAPSE IN 1973- 1974 OF SOME MAJOR HEALTH AND AGRICULTURE PROJECTS AND NON-REPLACEMENT OF VOLUNTEERS IN OTHER PROJECTS, ENGLISH TEACHING . . .

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February 2011 Peace Corps Books

History Begins in Africa by Mary Acosta (Afghanistan 1964–66) Birds Nest Publishing $29.95 385 pages December 2010 • Haiti: Ti Moun Se Riches [Our Children Are Our Treasures] photographs by Skyler Badenoch (Cote d’Ivoire 2001–02) Suzanne Guard and Tuck Stephenson, publishers $30.00 pages January 2011 • This is Africa: Peace Corps Malawi and the Liberian Civil War by Eugene T. Caruso (Malawi & Liberia 1990–92) CreateSpace $9.99 134 pages 2009 • The Family Goryachevix by Murray Davis (Russia 1996–99) Finer Images Printing $12.00 154 pages 2010 • Lake, and Other Poems of Love in a Foreign Land (Winner of the 2010 SRCA Open Poetry Chapbook Competition) by Jeff Fearnside (Kazakhstan 2002–04) Standing Rock Cultural Arts $12.00 24 pages February 2011 • Gloryland by Shelton Johnson (Liberia 1982–83) Sierra Club/Counterpoint $15.95 288 pages 2010 • A School For Others: The History of the Belize High School of Agriculture by George Lebard . . .

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Build a School in Mali! Support an RPCV!

Katie Christ (Mali 1989-91) is building a school in her former village. It is a project where the International Women’s Democracy Center, in Washington D.C. and run by Barbara Ferris (Morocco 1971-73), is the fiscal agent. If you were in Mali (or if you just want to help build “Mali Kalanso”) check out www.malikalanso.org.     Katie’s organization is a non-profit providing education to children in Mali. Katie is building the school, called ‘Kalanso,’ which means schoolhouse in the local Bambara language. Mali, as you may know, is one of the poorest countries in the world, and  has one of the lowest literacy rates, especially among girls. Katie is trying to change that,  one school at a time. From time to time we will use the site to point out RPCV organizations that are working, in the U.S. and overseas, to fulfill the goals of the Peace Corps, especially the Third Goal, which this site is all about.

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Okay, Who Was First PCV on the Job?

I’ve written about Pat Kennedy before. He was one of those early ‘Mad Men’ of the agency and in 1961 was the only agency training officer and set up the first Peace Corps training programs. Kennedy was also the escort officer for the Ghana I Volunteers. That group arrived in-country on the afternoon of August 30 (or the afternoon of  September 1, 1961,) on a  Pan American DC-7 that had painted on the fuselage, Peace Corps Clipper. John Demos, a PCV on that flight, is quoted in Come As You Are written by Coates Redmon and published in 1986 that “We were set down in Accra on the afternoon of September 1, 1961.”  It had taken the PCVs twenty-one hour to reach Africa according to Kennedy, but others on-board said it took twenty-three hours (but after all those hours who’s counting?) Gerard T. Rice in his book The Bold Experiment: JFK’s Peace Corps, published in 1985, has Ghana PCVs arriving on August 30, . . .

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Man Who Made the Peace Corps

Phil Hardberger recalls the impact the late Sargent Shriver had on the organization – and on him. Special To The Express-News Sunday, February 27, 2011  Former San Antonio Mayor Phil Hardberger holds a photograph of himself and Sargent Shriver.Sargent Shriver died a few weeks ago – just short of the 50th anniversary of the founding of the Peace Corps. There were many tributes to him. Various columnists and pundits gave accounts of his triumphs with the Peace Corps, the Office of Economic Opportunity and as the U.S. ambassador to France. His failure as a candidate for national office was dissected. Careful analyses were made of his connections with the Kennedy family (he was married to Eunice, the sister of President John F. Kennedy) and whether this was an advantage or disadvantage. Phil Hardberger writes: My own thoughts were more personal, more filled with memories, more illustrated with vivid images undiminished by . . .

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Susi Wyss (CAR 1990-92) Writes A Novel in Stories, The Civilized World

EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE I get a surprise in the mail. Out of nowhere comes a book by an RPCV that sets me back in my work as I have to sit down and read it asap. When I finish, I end up thinking: ‘wow’ we (i.e. RPCVs) are writing prose that still makes us want to turn the page. We are writing literature in ways that no one else can because of our Peace Corps years. Yesterday I received in the mail from Holt Paperbacks a debut novel entitled The Civilized World: A Novel in Stories written by Susi Wyss (Central African Republic 1990-92). Susi was raised in the U.S. and the Ivory Coast and worked for twenty years managing health programs in Africa, where she lived for more than eight years. She has a B.A. from Vassar, an M.P.H. from Boston University, and holds an M.A. in fiction writing from Johns Hopkins University. . . .

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Another RPCV Claims to be First!

Robert Potter with Judy Irola, who did that wonderful Niger ’66 film, recently did a short youtube piece on Jake Feldman who says he’s the first PCV. Jake was a Volunteer in then-called-Tanganyika back in ’61. He might indeed be the first Volunteer, but so many RPCVs claim that honor I’m losing count. Anyway, it is a nice piece, take a look, and for those who missed the background on this issue, here is a short blog (reprinted)  I wrote almost a year ago on the whole issue of  “who was first.” Check out the youtube item. Jake has a lot of good things to say about being in the Peace Corps, #1 or not. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUpx8MVdOuI&feature=youtube_gdata_player Who Was The First Peace Corps Volunteer? Posted by John Coyne on Sunday, April 18th 2010      Lately there has been endless talk among RPCVs about who was the first PCV. Perhaps I’m partially to blame with my blogging about the early days of the Peace Corps. Or . . .

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Robert Textor’s Cultural Frontiers of the Peace Corps available in Digital format

It is fitting that today, March 1, 2011, fifty years from the day when JFK signed the executive order that created the Peace Corps the first study of the agency  Cultural Frontiers of the Peace Corps, edited by Robert B. Textor (PC/HQ 1962-63), is available in digital form on the Stanford home page.  To get there, google –textor stanford–and the top item will be the home page.  Click that.  Then click “Publications,” and the third item is “Cultural Frontiers.”  Allow about two minutes for downloading. Update: 3.09.18  There is a problem downloading this book. We are working with Stanford to correct it. The fourth item, just below “Cultural Frontiers,” is his historical essay,  “In Up Out” on the personnel principle that has governed Peace Corps staff policy since 1963.  Allow half a minute for downloading. This study is now in the public domain, thanks to the generosity of the MIT Press, and the  cooperation of . . .

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Mike Tidwell (Zaire 1985-87) Saving Our Planet One Op-Ed at a Time

[This piece entitled “A climate-change activist prepares for the worst” was in the Washington Post Outlook Section on Friday, February 25, 2011. It was written by Mike Tidwell (Zaire 1985–87) who is executive director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, and author of The Ponds of Kalambayi: An African Sojourn, newly re-released. Sarge Shriver called The Ponds the best  Peace Corps memoir ever written.] • A Climate-Change Activist Prepares for the Worst Ten years ago, I put solar panels on my roof and began eating locally grown food. I bought an energy-efficient refrigerator that uses the power equivalent of a single light bulb. I started heating my home with a stove that burns organically fertilized corn kernels. I even restored a gas-free lawn mower for manual yardwork. As a longtime environmental activist, I was deeply alarmed by new studies on global warming, so I went all out. I did my part. . . .

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Listen to President Kennedy via recordings on Podcast speak about and to the Peace Corps

Hear President Kennedy speak at the University of Michigan in the Fall of 1960 and then in the Rose Garden sending off Ghana I. The National Archives administers the Presidential Libraries.  It has made available online podcasts of the Presidents speaking on historic issues. I have read the transcripts of President Kennedy speaking, but I have not listened to the Podcasts.  There are instructions on the website on how to connect to the Podcasts.  I can only link to the Home page of the National Archives and Records Administration, nara.gov.  It is not possible to hyperlink to a specific page from outside the web.  The steps I outline should take you to these valuable public records. Please note:  On January 31, 2013, I learned that the page with these podcasts was no longer operative.  I contacted the JFK Library and spoke with an archivist who was not aware that the . . .

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Were you assaulted in the Peace Corps? Congress wants your story!

Following a recent episode of 20/20 featuring former Peace Corps Volunteers who were sexually assaulted during their overseas service, Congress has decided to explore the issue further and has asked a group of assault survivors to provide it with additional information from former volunteers about their experiences, prevention and response efforts, and possible policy enhancements, for an upcoming hearing, most likely at the end of March.  Pursuant to that request, First Response Action is gathering stories of former volunteers who experienced sexual assault while serving in the Peace Corps.  First Response Actions has model affidavits to help survivors tell their stories, and will share those stories with Congress affording survivors whatever level of anonymity or attribution they choose.  First Response Action is also interested in the stories of other Returned Peace Corps Volunteers, including former Country Directors, who may have information regarding sexual assault prevention and response policies. If you . . .

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Atlantic Wire picks Meisler's column as one of Friday's Five Best

Stanley Meisler on the 50th Anniversary of the Peace Corps  Meisler, a former L.A. Times staff writer and author of a book on the Peace Corps, writes that the Corps today is in some ways “a shadow of what it once was.” He recounts the history of the Corps from its founding in the 60’s, when it was held in such high esteem that volunteers names were often included in the papers, to current days when many people have forgotten that it even exists. Still, the effectiveness of the Peace Corps on-site, “providing skilled manpower to poor countries in need,” has in some ways improved. The Corps’ role in local and American politics has always been fraught, he says, but it has been useful in improving the image of America abroad. He notes many famous alumni, from Chris Dodd to Paul Theroux to the founder of Netflix. “It’s possible to . . .

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Review of Meisler's When the World Calls

When the World Calls: The Inside Story of the Peace Corps and Its First Fifty Years by Stanley Meisler (PC/HQ 1963-67) Beacon Press 272 pages February 2011 Reviewed by Robert B. Textor (PC/HQ 1961-62) STAN MEISLER’S “COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE” in writing this book is significant. During the mid-Sixties, he served as a member, and later deputy director, of the PC’s Evaluation Division, reporting to the legendary Charlie Peters. This evaluation function was initially conceived by Bill Haddad, one of the PC’s founders. Its purpose was to visit the PCVs in the field, and to identify problems before they became serious, so that corrective and preventive action could be taken. From the beginning, Haddad and Peters stressed that these evaluators should be journalists or lawyers. (It is no accident that Haddad was a journalist, and Peters was a lawyer). Their reports were to be brutally truthful, and interesting to read — and . . .

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