Mercy Corps -- Be the Change

Don't have a username? Register ›
Forgot your password/username? Get help ›
Who we are What we do Where we work Take action Join our cause Ways to give

The Mercy Corps Blog

A daily look into the work, thoughts and ideas of our team around the world.

Blog Post Posted May 19, 2009, 9:42 am by Roger Burks

When democracy doesn't photograph well


Mercy Corps field officer Hanife Limani explains a community project to villagers in Millosheve, Kosovo. Photo: Roger Burks/Mercy Corps

Many of the stories sent in from our field offices have to do with meetings. My colleague Dan and I get these pieces, which often read like hastily-transcribed minutes, and honestly don’t know how to turn them into something that anyone but development professionals would want to read.

These stories are usually accompanied by photos that illustrate a meeting in progress: someone speaking at the front of the room, flipcharts stuck to walls or blackboards and a few people sitting in chairs. In other words: nothing nearly as compelling as a camel herder standing in the Gobi Desert or a family returning to their Ugandan village after years of war.

But these meetings, as unglamorous as they might be, are the foundation of the work Mercy Corps does. They’re where communities are created, reconciled and energized. These are the places where citizen engagement and true democracy begin.

I was looking through notes from a trip to Kosovo the other day, trying to find a particular story I’d just remembered. But instead, I came across my own scrawled notes about a meeting — but I read on anyway.

This meeting took place on March 9, 2006 — almost two years before the country declared independence — in a war-scarred schoolroom in the village of Millosheve. There were a couple dozen villagers sitting on small wooden benches and chairs, all business. A young Mercy Corps field officer named Hanife Limani led the proceedings.

The questions they tackled were things most of us have never considered outside a history or civics class:

  1. What is a democratic government?
  2. What does government transparency mean to you?
  3. What are some ways that government communicates with you?
  4. Should government have regular meetings with citizens? How often?

These weren’t easy questions for most of the participants, who’d lived most of their lives under Yugoslavia’s total control. But here they were, coming to realizations together, deciding what they wanted from their government — creating a new country one village at a time.

Photos certainly don’t do the proceedings justice — and it’s hard to write a gripping story about three hours of discussion — but this is important work. And it’s happening every day, in classrooms and mud huts and under trees around the world.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
Please answer the following question to help prevent automated spam submissions.
18 + 2 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Donate to Mercy Corps

$
Your gift is tax-deductible as allowed by U.S. law

Sign up for email updates

Thank you!
Visit the Action Center
One Table: Help us solve world hunger by investing in the world's women

Mercy Corps

PO Box 2669, Dept W
Portland OR 97208-2669 USA
To give: (888) 256-1900
Contact Us   Office Locations

Mercy Corps exists to alleviate suffering, poverty and oppression by helping people build secure, productive and just communities.

Over the last five years, we've allocated more than 89% of our resources directly to programs. America's premier charity evaluator gives Mercy Corps four stars in organizational efficiency. Click here to learn more.

Mercy Corps is a 501(c)3 charity. Your gift is tax-deductible as allowed by U.S. law.

Copyright © 2009 Mercy Corps.
Mercy Corps will never sell, rent or exchange your email address.
See our Privacy Policy for more information.