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New PCVs in Uganda
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Review — “LOOK HERE, SIR, WHAT A CURIOUS BIRD” by Paul Spencer Sochaczewski (Malaysia)
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PCVs To Moldova
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Jody Olsen (Tunisia) speaks at University of Mary Washington
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HITCHCOCK’S BLONDS by Lawrence Leamer (Nepal)
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Peace Corps Tribute Garden at Colorado State University
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Second RPCV Writers’ Retreat is Productive, Fun, Fulfilling
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“Improbably Grateful” by Michael Varga (Chad)
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Review | IN THE AMBER CHAMBER by Carrie Messenger (Moldova)
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“Monadnock”
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Jonathan Zimmerman (Nepal) | WHOSE AMERICA?
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Founder of Timbuktu Center for Strategic Studies on the Sahel with Peter Chilson (Niger)
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THE COUSCOUS CHRONICLES by Azzedine T. Downes (Morocco
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IMMENSE MISSED OPPORTUNITIES — IMO Helen Dudley (Colombia, Slovakia)
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The Peace Corps’ Catch-22

New PCVs in Uganda

U.S. Ambassador to Uganda, William W. Popp Swears-in 24 Peace Corps Volunteers. U.S. Ambassador to Uganda, William W. Popp Swears-in 24 Peace Corps Volunteers.     Yesterday, Ambassador William W. Popp presided over the swearing-in ceremony of twenty-four Peace Corps Volunteers in Uganda, marking the commencement of their two-year service journey in communities throughout Uganda. Established in 1961 by President John F. Kennedy, the U.S. Peace Corps is dedicated to promoting global peace and international friendship through service. In Uganda, Volunteers collaborate with host counterparts in the Education, Health, and Agribusiness/Economic Development sectors. The Swearing-in Ceremony held particular significance as the second cohort since the global evacuation of Volunteers in 2020 due to the COVID pandemic. The event brought together distinguished guests, community members, host families, and institutional partners. The Volunteers contributions align with Uganda’s development goals, addressing education, health, sustainable agriculture, and economic development. The Peace Corps fosters cross-cultural . . .

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Review — “LOOK HERE, SIR, WHAT A CURIOUS BIRD” by Paul Spencer Sochaczewski (Malaysia)

  “Look Here, Sir, What a Curious Bird” by Paul Spencer Sochaczewski (Malaysia 1969-71) Explorer’s Eye Press 289 pages July 2023 $17.95 (Paperback)   Reviewed by Ed Putka (Malaysia 1969-72) By the time most people graduate from college, they mostly have an idea of a career. For me, the plan was Peace Corps, a little travel, a little diary, then back home to law school and a career in the law. Others let the road shape their careers. And so it seems with Paul Sochaczewski, a prolific writer and intrepid adventurer. After finishing college in 1969, Sochaczewski joined me and 125 other volunteers in Malaysia Group XXIV. Southeast Asia was in full conflict, but our destination, Sarawak, was an exotic and relatively quiet place. Sochaczewski fell for it, becoming immediately fascinated with not only the culture, but the sounds and smells, the spirits and the shamans, the flora and fauna of . . .

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PCVs To Moldova

A new group of U.S. Peace Corps volunteers is coming to Moldova for two years. According to the Embassy of the Republic of Moldova in the USA, this group is the first after a three-year break due to the pandemic. After a training course in Moldova, the 19 volunteers will go to the localities of the country that submitted requests to participate in the program. They will serve as either educational volunteers in schools, community development volunteers, or health education volunteers in schools/organizations. Many of the former Peace Corps volunteers who served in Moldova, upon returning to the US obtained important positions in public and non-governmental offices. Currently, Peace Corps Moldova is celebrating its 30th year of service in our country.

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Jody Olsen (Tunisia) speaks at University of Mary Washington

In the news Former Peace Corps Director Encourages Service for UMW Education Students by Lisa Chinn, UMW Voice October 10, 2023   When she arrived in Tunisia to teach English to a roomful of teenagers, former Peace Corps director Jody Olsen, then in her 20s, worried she’d made a mistake. “My first thought was to head for the door,” she said of the 1966 experience that ended up charting her course. Instead, “I said, ‘Good morning, I’m Mrs. Olsen,’ and my life began.” She shared her longtime relationship with service last week with students at the University of Mary Washington’s College of Education (COE) in Seacobeck Hall. Plucking tales from her lengthy career, including her time as Peace Corps director amid the COVID-19 pandemic, she wove a theme. International experiences — especially teaching abroad with the Peace Corps — can build the foundation for richer careers in the classroom. That’s . . .

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HITCHCOCK’S BLONDS by Lawrence Leamer (Nepal)

  Hitchcock’s Blondes: The Unforgettable Women Behind the Legendary Director’s Dark Obsession by Lawrence Leamer (Nepal 1965-67) G.P. Putnam’s Sons Publisher October 10, 2023 336 pages $5.95 (Audiobook); $14.99 (Kindle); $29.00 (Hardcover)   Laurence Leamer (Nepal 1965-67) shares an engrossing account of the enigmatic director Alfred Hitchcock that finally puts the dazzling actresses he cast in his legendary movies at the center of the story. Alfred Hitchcock was fixated — not just on the dark, twisty stories that became his hallmark, but also by the blond actresses who starred in many of his iconic movies. The director of North by Northwest, Rear Window, and other classic films didn’t much care if they wore wigs, got their hair coloring out of a bottle, or were the rarest human specimen — a natural blonde — as long as they shone with a golden veneer on camera. The lengths he went to in order . . .

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Peace Corps Tribute Garden at Colorado State University

New roots planted for Peace Corps Tribute Garden Tyler Weatherwax, Staff Reporter The Rocky Mountain Collegian October 9, 2023 Since the return to school, many students have walked past a new project being carefully crafted just outside one of Colorado State University’s most traveled areas. The Lory Student Center will soon have new flora, creating a peaceful space to pass through or study. The circular path that leads around the new Peace Corps Tribute Garden takes visitors past a few different signs that explain the history and mission of the Peace Corps. Several large stones have been laid out to sit and admire the scenery of CSU’s campus and the garden itself. According to the CSU Peace Corps Garden Tribute website, the purpose is “to celebrate CSU’s early and ongoing involvement with the foundation of the Peace Corps.” We want people 80 years from now to remember this history and take pride . . .

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Second RPCV Writers’ Retreat is Productive, Fun, Fulfilling

Eight RPCVs–Ethiopia. Uzbekistan. El Salvador. Morocco. The Philippines. Cameroon. Nepal.–traveled a long way to participate in the second Peace Corps Writers’ Retreat October 5-8 on the Eastern Shore of Maryland—at least as measured by the distances between their countries of services and the Chesapeake Bay. Whatever their actual commutes—one participant came from as far as central Florida—they said the trip was well worth it. Working with RPCV Mark Brazaitis (Guatemala 1991-93), the author of eight books, including the Iowa Short Fiction Award-winning The River of Lost Voices: Stories from Guatemala, the eight participants shared their creative work in a pair of two-and-a-half hour workshop sessions, participated in two craft talks about effective storytelling, wrote pieces in response to writing prompts, and learned how and where to publish their work. A reading by the participants capped off the four-day retreat. “As someone who completed her service in 2015, it was a . . .

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“Improbably Grateful” by Michael Varga (Chad)

In the news — Improbably Grateful by Michael Varga (Chad 1977-79) ’85 M.A. Notre Dame Magazine   In 1995 the doctors told me I would probably be dead of AIDS by April 1997. I had retired early from the U.S. Foreign Service, and AIDS patients were dying rapidly. There was no effective treatment for AIDS or HIV. It was a grim time, and I had no reason to think I would be any different than the hordes of patients who had already succumbed, who were deprived of a normal life span and the opportunity to grow old. I imagined some fairy-tale scene where my friends would gather around my deathbed as I took my last breath. Spurred by that image, I told my friends to come to visit “before it was too late.” I pressed them to understand the urgency of my situation and said I needed their support in . . .

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Review | IN THE AMBER CHAMBER by Carrie Messenger (Moldova)

  In an Amber Chamber, Stories Carrie  Messenger (Moldova 1994–96) Brighthorse Books 260 pages August, 2018 $16.95 (paperback) Reviewed by Eugénie de Rosier (Philippines 2006-08)   Carrie Messenger’s short stories paint dark and disturbing settings for people who lived in Eastern Europe under strangling communism. Romania and Moldova are noted. The former’s Ceaușescu brutalized his country. Famine was a scourge in the 1940s and in the 1980s, deprivation was widespread; and state enforced-pregnancy led to too many children that couldn’t be supported by their parents. The government opened orphanages which were run by people who seemed unaware of children’s needs. Themes of despair, loss, and vulnerability run through these 18 stories, but there are also uplifting moments . . . when a child’s laugh can be heard, a dog’s bark echoes in frolic, the surprise of a holiday in a new free country. About the stories In Edgewater, three Romanian . . .

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“Monadnock”

   A story by Giles Ryan (Korea)   Here in New England, about forty of us, old friends, have come together again to mark the fifty years since we all first gathered for Peace Corps language training, a shared experience followed by another, our time in Korea as school teachers, after which we were never the same. Tolstoy long ago observed that there are only two kinds of stories — someone goes on a journey, and a stranger comes to town. All of us have done both. We all went on a journey long ago and far away, and then we spread out across Korea, each one of us a stranger come to town. The towns were all different and we each had our own experience, and we were all marked by it for the rest of our lives. We are so pleased to reconnect like this, making eye contact . . .

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Jonathan Zimmerman (Nepal) | WHOSE AMERICA?

  Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools by Jonathan Zimmerman (Nepal 1983-85) University of Chicgo Press August 2022 $22.94 (Paperback),   In this expanded edition of his 2002 book, Zimmerman surveys how battles over public education have become conflicts at the heart of American national identity. As the headlines remind us, American public education is still wracked by culture wars. But these conflicts have shifted sharply over the past two decades, marking larger changes in the ways that Americans imagine themselves. In his 2002 book, Whose America?, Zimmerman predicted that religious differences would continue to dominate the culture wars. Twenty years after that seminal work, Zimmerman has reconsidered: arguments over what American history is, what it means, and how it is taught have exploded with special force in recent years. In this substantially expanded new edition, Zimmerman meditates on the history of the culture wars in the classroom—and . . .

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Founder of Timbuktu Center for Strategic Studies on the Sahel with Peter Chilson (Niger)

In the news   Foley Institute hears about effects of climate crisis overseas   Founder of Timbuktu Center for Strategic Studies on the Sahel recounts experiences facing climate and migration crises AIMEE SULIT, Evergreen reporter October 4, 2023 Washington State University   English professor Peter Chilton (Niger 1985-87) shared that the United Nations High Commission for Refugees has found that almost 100,000 people try to leave Africa within West Africa every month and the population of displaced persons in places such as Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger reach about 3.2 million people at Tuesday’s Foley Talk. El Hadj Djitteye, Timbuktu Center for Strategic Studies on the Sahel’s Founder and Executive Director also spoke and discussed the climate and migration crisis in the West African Sahel as well as the conflicts that result from them. Djitteye gave his presentation alongside Chilson, who has been traveling to West Africa since 1985 and was . . .

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THE COUSCOUS CHRONICLES by Azzedine T. Downes (Morocco

  The Couscious Chronicles: Stories of Food, Love, and Donkeys from a Life Between Cultures by Azzedine T. Downes (Morocco 1981-85) (PC Staff 1991-95) Disruption Books 328 pages June 2023 $12.99 (Kindle); $18.02 (Paperback)   Azzedine Downes moves between cultures, places, and time in this wryly comedic, at times mysterious, and always curious memoir of a lifelong nomad. The best strategy was to drink tea, smile, and enjoy the frustration of not knowing where the story leads. If time is endless, why rush to the point of a story? Now an international leader in the fight for animal welfare, Azzedine began his career as a volunteer teacher and later was appointed to leadership in the U.S. Peace Corps. An American Muslim with Irish roots, he’s a natural cultural shape-shifter, immersing himself in the cultures of Morocco, Eastern Europe, Northwest Africa, Israel and his native United States. Along the way he befriends . . .

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IMMENSE MISSED OPPORTUNITIES — IMO Helen Dudley (Colombia, Slovakia)

  Immense Missed Opportunities —IMO by Helene Ballman Dudley (Colombia 1968-70; Slovakia 1997-99) Peace Corps Writers Press 246 pages September 2023 $10.00 (Kindle); $22.00 (Paperback)   Immense Missed Opportunities – IMO draws on the author’s 23 years of experience building sustainable micro-loan programs in marginalized communities around the world. Based on her experience, and backed by research and recommendations from renowned experts, IMO identifies the vast and largely untapped potential for high-impact, low-cost interventions to reduce poverty, food insecurity, economic migration and gender-based violence. Extreme poverty has marginalized people who are living on the front lines of those problems and who have, perhaps the greatest potential to help solve those problems. People living on under $2 per day require all their energy and problem-solving skills to meet the most basic needs for their families. IMO offers examples of what they can accomplish when they are freed from abject poverty. The . . .

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The Peace Corps’ Catch-22

  “Under Conditions of Hardship”: The Peace Corps’ Catch-22 for Survivors of Sexual- and Gender- Based Violence by E.L. Tremblay The Peace Corps’ treatment of Volunteers and trainees, particularly with regard to the policies and permissiveness surrounding sexual- and gender-based violence, reflects and perpetuates workplace sex discrimination. Because the agency fails to collect adequate data, it is impossible to determine the precise nature and degree of the problem, but it is likely worse than what annual reports have described as a persistently growing crisis despite twenty years of criticism, activism, and reform efforts. Without legally enforceable accountability mechanisms — the simplest and most effective of which would be to recognize Volunteers and trainees as federal employees — the discrimination is likely to continue. Continue reading “Under Conditions of Hardship”: The Peace Corps’ Catch-22 for Survivors of Sexual- and Gender-Based Violence

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