The three pillars of AID
Speech by Dr. Brij Mohan given at the AID - Baton Rouge Tsunami dance concert.
Click to download video of the speech
Ladies and gentlemen,
I am honored to speak to you on behalf of A.I.D., i.e. Association of
India’s Development. I wish to say a few words about the power of our
consciousness in support of mankind’s strife for dignity and freedom in
face of challenges that both nature and human nature present before us
.
Difficult as it may seem, it’s relatively easy to marshal resources to
meet the challenges of a natural disaster. It’s difficult to deal with
problems that human beings create for themselves and their fellow
beings.
As we have seen lately, the Tsunami disaster symbolizes the fury of
Mother Nature which can be monstrous. The problems that are perpetual--
call them social problems, universal and seemingly insurmountable--are
real challenges for us. It is our common destiny that glues us together
as a human family. Unfortunately, it takes a catastrophe to make us
realize this wisdom.
As members of this fragile global-human family, it’s upon us to see how best we can serve each other.
A few years ago, as I was concluding my last seminar at Coffee
Call, yes, the CC on College Drive, some students asked what they could
do to me as a returning favor for my guidance as a professor. I told
them, “You owe me nothing, but…
“Do some thing to an oppressed person to alleviate her or his
suffering without letting this person know what you have actually done
for her. And then, feel the fire inside you that this small unnoticed
act of yours has kindled inside you.” Build upon this inner power and
you will feel that you have morphed into an engine of social change!
A few years later, a young man knocked at my office and he
introduced himself as one of my students in a class that I had taught
on human diversity and oppression. He told me that he was going to
commit suicide that day… However, after listening to me, he said, he
changed his mind. Instead, he went straight to South Africa. As a
photographer he used his camera, and kept on talking pictures of
people, who were suffering under the abominable Apartheid. Subsequently
he published an award winning book of these photographs! He tells me
vividly how his camera helped him to survive and help others.
I can enumerate several examples how words –simple and
honest—can make a difference in real life. I can go on…but due to
constrain of time, I will only summarize a few salient points of
significance which have relevance to the occasion:
Never underestimate your strength as an agent of change. The
little you can do will have a butterfly effect to change the world you
live in. Existential philosophers whom I read and emulate call this
Praxis.
If you know me and my work, I have almost single handedly
launched a revolt in my profession: Social Work and its present culture
has to be transformed into a new discipline which I have named as
Social Praxiology! True Social work is not what you do for a living;
social work is what you do to transform this wretched world!
I honestly believe: Most of our social problems are our own
creations. I mean, social problems are social constructs. Social
constructs can be changed and should be changed. If our knowledge,
science and technology can’t help us resolve the problems created by
world poverty and hunger, there is no point in getting these college
degrees.
Alas, our material education only equips us to get jobs to
become consumerists in a hedonist culture. Generation X has morphed
into TWIXTERS who simply “won’t grow up” (Time, Jan 24, 2005). In a way
our whole warrior culture is made of “permanent adolescents” who seek
peace through war; virginity through sex.
If we could relate to each other on human level as human beings
without racial, ethnic, gender, and class differences, and work
together to resolve the problems that these hierarchies create, the
world would be a better place. There will be no war; there will be
no ethnic cleansing; there will no communal riot; there will be no caste
lynching.
If people are dying in sub-Saharan Africa, due to massive
violence and starvation, it’s not because they are underdeveloped. The
evil lies in the centuries old colonial-imperial exploitation that
perpetuates war and hunger in togetherness. And these evil forces are
still at work every where.
Ladies and gentleman don’t be fooled by the glossy picture of
our glittering advancements here and India. Poverty, homelessness,
disease and squalor continue to plague this humanity which we are a
part of.
There are no white and black and yellow races. These are our
social concepts which we have imposed on our development. There is only
one race: Human race. If you want to save it from itself, first
identify yourself as a member of this global family.
Then do what Suresh, Anand, Areendam and thousands other Jeevan Sathis are doing with and through organizations like AID.
Your small efforts will boomerang; the colossus of corruption,
ignorance and suffering is a hydra-headed evil. Only your
consciousness, unselfish dedication and concerted efforts can overcome
this danger.
In closing, as you will notice, AID’s three pillars include:
-
Selfless service (“Seva”);
- constrctive meaningful development
(“Niraman”); and
- nonviolent struggle (“Ahimsa”) for human rights.
Theses noble measures will involve Universal education, social justice,
employment, mutual tolerance, and respect for sustainable global
development and world peace.
Jan Paul Sartre one said, “Success is NOT progress.” What we need is progress which helps us stand together with our diversity.
The moment you realize this noble truth, you have already transformed the world!
Thank you for your patience and time.
Dr. Brij Mohan has been a Professor in the School of social work at
Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge for the past 29 years. He is
also the Editor in chief of the journal called 'New Global Development'
(http://www.newglobaldevelopment.com/). |