Tuesday, March 24

Increase the peace


Monday, November 9, 1998

Increase the peace

With an growing number of UCLA student volunteers, the Peace
Corps hopes to make a difference in countries around the world

By Trina Enriquez

Daily Bruin Contributor

It’s the toughest job you’ll ever love.

Since its inception in 1961, the Peace Corps has sent 151,000
volunteers to make a difference in the lives of people in 130
countries scattered across the globe.

UCLA ranks ninth among universities in the country in sending
alumni abroad, a distinction for which Peace Corps director Mark
Gearan will award Chancellor Albert Carnesale in a closed ceremony
today.

Nearly 1,500 UCLA alumni, faculty and staff have served as Peace
Corps Volunteers, combating poverty, hunger, disease and lack of
opportunity in the developing world.

"At UCLA alone, volunteer inquiries have nearly doubled," said
regional recruiter Carol-Anne Bullis, noting the upward trend in
interest that has developed in recent years.

"Nowadays, students are looking to more global careers, perhaps
working for international corporations," Bullis said. "Peace Corps
is a way to gain that experience."

In an age when mail crosses thousands of miles in minutes and
people fly around the globe in hours, the Peace Corps is a way to
gain perspective on other cultures which meet in a rapidly
shrinking world.

The sensitivity to cultural differences gained by serving as a
volunteer has been an invaluable tool, according to businesses
whose clientele have become more and more international.

"You learn not to look at a situation only as an American," said
Christophe Tocco, a class of 1991 graduate who recently returned
from service in Morocco.

"You might think something is wrong from an American point of
view, but to people of your host country, it’s not wrong," Tocco
said. "They just look at it from a different perspective."

Insight regarding perceptions of America sharpens as two
different cultures come in direct contact abroad. Probably one of
the most startling realizations lies in the way American culture is
portrayed via satellite.

The prevalence of American programs and movies on foreign
television renders impressions that may take volunteers several
months to counter.

"It took folks a long time to believe I wasn’t from the CIA,"
said Russell Davis, resident director at Sunset Village, who worked
with small businesses in Honduras in the late 1980s.

"People would see images of American lifestyle on TV and think,
‘If the U.S. is so rich, why would you come here unless you were a
spy or had to perform mandatory service?’" Davis said. "We had to
reassure them that working there was our choice."

In fact, it often takes several months to gain people’s trust as
well as assess the needs of the community and adjust to another
culture.

Volunteers may find themselves dealing with other countries’
perceptions of Americans.

"Bad movies and TV programs influence their perception of
American lifestyle," Davis said.

He recalled how initially some mothers would grab their children
off the street when he passed by.

"They thought I must either be an athlete or a murderer or thief
of some type," Davis said.

After establishing trust and rapport, though, people of other
countries usually prove to be warm and open to volunteers.

"People live in big extended families, and that offers a sense
of community which sometimes lacks in L.A.," Tocco said of the
emotional support he received in Morocco.

Bullis, who also served in Morocco, likewise learned the
importance of family and human relationships.

"People really spend time with each other at such a different
pace than is common in the U.S.," Bullis said. "People are so busy,
so goal-oriented here; they don’t make time to enjoy just sitting
and talking."

Though she lived without comforts considered commonplace in the
United States, Bullis said that she grew to prefer the simpler
lifestyle. After returning to the United States, she concluded that
Americans consume too much, eat too much and buy too much.

"I would ask for jam at the marketplace, and the merchant would
hand over the one kind of jam available," Bullis said. "After I had
returned to the States, going to a supermarket terrified me. There
were so many choices ­ too many choices."

Davis came to similar realizations upon the completion of his
term.

"I became more aware of how much I have and of the resources
available here," he said. "I also became aware of how much we waste
here."

In Tocco’s opinion, every American should live in a developing
country for awhile, just to realize what the United States offers
and not take that for granted.

According to Tocco, Moroccans turned worn tires into water jugs
and sold old cardboard boxes.

"Other countries can’t afford to throw them away like we do," he
said.

Other countries also maintain traditional ideas regarding gender
roles.

"American women have a certain level of power because of the
ability to have a voice that matters," Davis said. "In Honduras,
that doesn’t exist."

He recalled a time when, while channel surfing, he and several
other men from the village had happened upon a music video
featuring scantily clad women draped suggestively over the lead
singer.

"The men turned to me and asked if I could hook them up with an
American woman," he said. "They had the impression that American
women were loose."

"As sexist as American men are, we take our views for granted,
too," Davis continued. "That experience forced us to look at our
own selves and change our behavior."

Such individual changes characterize the scale of differences
made in the lives of people both here and abroad.

"We don’t go in and change the world," Bullis said. "But because
we want to learn and help, we make a difference in small ways that
eventually lead to change and progress."

President John F. Kennedy may have had precisely that philosophy
in mind when he first challenged 10,000 University of Michigan
students who had gathered at 2 a.m. to welcome him shortly after
his arrival in Ann Arbor in October 1960.

"How many of you would be willing to serve your country and the
cause of peace by living and working in the developing world?"
Kennedy asked.

The response was enthusiastic, and the following year, Kennedy
signed the Peace Corps into existence.

Since then, thousands of volunteers have ranged an age spectrum
from early 20s to late 80s. Ninety-eight percent of volunteers hold
a bachelor’s degree, and the remaining two percent possess
equivalent business experience.

Volunteers can work at assignments ranging from teaching English
and public health to business advising and environmental
engineering. Upon submitting an application, volunteers may state
their work and location preferences, though the ultimate decision
is left to the application committee.

Recent years have seen an increase in the number of older people
applying for assignments. Currently, the oldest volunteer is
76.

"We have volunteers who had served in the 1960s, came back and
had families, and are now ready for another assignment," Bullis
said. "People go when they’re ready."

Tocco was one of those who decided to apply after working for
several years.

"I felt strange working for a corporation where the only goal
was making money," Tocco said. "I knew I couldn’t do that for the
rest of my life."

Davis experienced similar dissatisfaction before he discovered
the Peace Corps option.

"I went to graduate school at USC and found a level of arrogance
there that I wasn’t prepared for," Davis said. "It’s a great
school, but there’s an attitude, a level of privilege there (that
bothered me).

"I felt that as an individual, I wanted to give something back,"
Davis said. "And after my assignment, I came back less cynical. I
learned to see the beauty of humans instead of the negative
part."

Thus, volunteers like Davis, Tocco and Bullis join the ranks of
those who forgo the comforts of home for two years of adventure and
service abroad.

Bullis acknowledged the concern many students have with the time
commitment, but stressed the importance of the two-year period in
accomplishing one’s goals for service.

"It may not feel like a traditional nine to five job, but
cultural adaptation is a huge part of the (time) commitment,"
Bullis said. "You’re expected to assess the needs of the community
and gain the trust of the people so projects will come out of
that."

Davis cautions against joining the Peace Corps for the wrong
reasons.

"Some people need to understand the difference between Club Med
and Peace Corps," he said. "It may be beautiful where you are, but
you’re there to work."

As Bullis said, once people’s gut feeling tells them the Peace
Corps holds something for them, "the challenge of any assignment is
that you have to create it."

"And there aren’t too many entry-level jobs out of college that
offer that kind of responsibility," she added.

"A lot of people are really afraid to give up family and
material comforts," Tocco said.

"There are bad times and there are problems," Tocco said. "But
all I can say is that at the end of two years, you’re getting 20
times more in return."

Photos courtesy Ann Gretter

Peace Corps volunteer Jo Anne Nagano of Los Angeles chats with a
Nigerian woman during her rounds as a health educator. Nagano
served as a Peace Corps volunteer for two years in Niger, West
Africa.

Carol Weymore was a teacher in California before joining the
Peace Corps.

Photo circa 1961.

Comments, feedback, problems?

© 1998 ASUCLA Communications Board[Home]


Comments are supposed to create a forum for thoughtful, respectful community discussion. Please be nice. View our full comments policy here.