articlesandhow.com articlesandhow.com
Main About Us Security & Privacy ToS Add Url Submit Article
Search:   
 

Women Issues - Are Women Being Paid Less Than Men Are?

Women Issue - Michael Russell
 

America: Get Your Priorities in Order!

Here is what irks me about Americans bitching about the Mexican border. There is the incessant, "Oh ... - Douglas Bower
 

Support Our Troops - How to Gather Their Favorite Foods

Whether we agree with current foreign policy or not, our military troops need our support and kindne ... - Ginny Dye
 
 

How To Put Divine Order Back Into Your Life

This simple technique works about ten times better than a "to-do" list to accomplish all your chores ... - Saleem Rana
 

Social Security Disability FAQ

WHAT ARE SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS? Social Security Disability is a benefit received from ... - Sheri Abrams
 

Central Spain

Tourist information on central Spain, getting there, location, things to do, the capital and more... - David Woody
 

Swimming with the Dolphins

I have always felt an intense pull towards marine mammals. This is a weird thing for someone from Io ... - Jackie Wellman
 

Sudan, Women, and Darfur

Cultural and social commentary on Sudan, Sudanese Women, and the suffering in the North, South, and ... - Reem Elfatih
 
 

  Main » Society & Communities » History & Events
   
 

Out of Big-Hearted Africa

   

"What do the planes bring to Africa? The answers vary. In any case, they leave behind a scene of misery and devastation that "Darwin's Nightmare" presents as the agonized human face of globalization. While the flesh of millions of Nile perch is stripped, cleaned and flash-frozen for export to wealthy countries, millions of people in the Tanzanian interior live on the brink of famine. ? ?A. O. Scott, The New York Times Movie Review, Sunday, September 11, 2005

The devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina on America's gulf region brings to mind the tragedy of Africans in Africa who are dying like the flies on the faces of their emaciated children. The parallel between the slow response to pleas of help from Louisiana's state and local leaders, and the indifference to genocide and hunger throughout Africa is not coincidental. Why is it that as a former U.S. Government employee whose assignments included nine years in various African countries, I do not see improvement in the quality of life of the indigenous people thirty years later? In many instances it is worse. The answers are complex even for the experts, which I am not. But consider this: From the first invaders to Africa eons ago, to eighteenth and nineteenth century colonists to the present assortment of plunderers, everyone takes from big-hearted Africa.

Predominantly Islamic North Africa is rich in natural resources, has a moderate climate, abundant antiquities and active tourist industries. Considering the problems left behind from Apartheid, South Africa still remains the largest producer of platinum and gold, and its wonderful game parks attract thousands of wealthy tourists. But what about the rest of Africa, the hundreds of thousands of square miles between the north, south, east and west? For centuries the old trans-Saharan camel caravan routes were highways for taking out ivory, gold, silk, salt and black Africans to the slave markets of Timbuktu. Then and now, everyone takes from Africa.

Years ago, while on temporary assignment in Tanzania to work with local embassy staff, I visited the nearby breezy island of Zanzibar. The aroma of spices was ubiquitous, as were the exquisitely carved wooden doors of residents' homes. Unique to that place, the doors were art treasures. Today you can still smell the spices, but the original doors are now coffee tables in Beverly Hills. Authentic antique woodcarvings, bronzes, textiles and sculptures from across Africa have vanished into museums and collectors' homes. It is our good fortune that the ingenuity of the people who produced this imaginative art (and music) is alive today in their descendants who are scattered across the globe, many in America, some in New Orleans. (http://www.africanart.org/html/exhibitions.html)

In a remote area of Ethiopia I once talked with a woman who was languishing in front of her hut. "I don't want charity, ? she said. "Just a few seeds, a few beans that I can plant myself. ? Rather than handouts, people want the opportunity to do for themselves. They may be illiterate, but they're not stupid. While geography and climate play a roll in the pervasive hopelessness that exists in the majority of African countries, to a greater extent it's the corrupt African generals and politicians who keep their citizens in poverty. When Western leaders visit, the cameras turn our attention ever so briefly to the desperate need for humanitarian aid. When the cameras leave so does our capricious attention; we don't like watching the ugly and that is what despots count on. We never get to know the sweetness of these innocent people. Instead we are conditioned to seeing the poor starving African, the down-and-out ghetto American. We have developed a consciousness of passive indifference. When Barbara Bush made her recent "silver lining ? statement I like to think it was not out of meanness. In my view it is a way of thinking, subliminal or not, that many westerners are comfortable with because it avoids guilt and responsibility. If this kind of thinking continues, starvation, atrocities and genocide will continue to rape the big-hearted continent from which the developed world takes. Could the New Orleans nightmare of abandonment of the helpless be repeated in other American cities? "Am I My Brother's Keeper?" Genesis 4:9

Author: Susan Scharfman
 
Author Bio:

Susan Scharfman

A writer since childhood, Susan Scharfman's working life began with several years at CBS News before entering the Foreign Service of the United States. As a Foreign Service officer she served at embassies and USAID missions within Europe, Asia and Africa, as well as in the agency's Washington, D.C. press office. Now a private citizen and novelist, she is researching her next book, and is a writer/editor.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Social Security Disability FAQ
 
Women Issues - Are Women Being Paid Less Than Men Are?
 
Central Spain
 
Out of Big-Hearted Africa
 
Swimming with the Dolphins
 
Living With the Big Bang
 
Living and Dying In America After 9/11/2001
 
How To Put Divine Order Back Into Your Life
 
Tales From the Corporate Frontlines: A View from the Top at Sunset: Senior Management Musings
 
Sudan, Women, and Darfur
 
 
 
Get Multiple Links
 
   

Issues & News

   

Computers & Networking

   

Sports & Adventure

   

Self Help

   

Education & Learning

   

Society & Communities

   

Games & Play

   

Culture & Art

   

Fitness & Health

   

Jobs & Employment

   

Property & Agents

   

Garden & Home

   

Shopping Online

   

Science & Space

   

Finance & Banking

   

Relationship & Lifestyle

   

Business & Commerce

   

Law & Politics

   

Teens & Children

   

Healthcare & Treatment

   

Recreation & Entertainment

   

Travel & Vacation

   

Food & Recipe

   

Vehicles & Automotive

 
Main >> Security & Privacy >> ToS
Copyright © 2008 www.articlesandhow.com