The Impact of Tragedy

<p>Today, I realized that nearly 100, 000 people have died along the inner coast of Asia. </p>

<p>The statistic can hardly describe the harrowing landscape. On websites, I have seen mothers crumpled over their dead infants. Walls are covered with photographs of the dead, and family members must search the wall for missing relatives to identify. </p>

<p>I am unsure if I have made this decision in a fit of passion, but I want to be able to help these people. In seventh grade, I used to want to become a doctor, merely to join Doctors Without Borders and help others. Now, I realize that I can hardly stand the sciences. I eventually want to practice law, or enter the world of business.</p>

<p>My question is: how can I help others, while still following my passion? As a lawyer or a consultant, how can I reach out to other countries and actually get my hands dirty helping those who need aid the most? I want to do more than donate. What professions can I consider that will allow me to retain my interest in global affairs, yet still let me extend beyond my community in rendering aid?</p>

<p>Thank you for considering my post.</p>

<p>wow I was thinking about this earlier today, I saw those pictures, and I really wished that I could be useful</p>

<p>Have you considered joining the Peace Corps after college? That would give you a good idea of what kind of work can be done in developing countries, and I am sure you'd have the opportunity to meet people in a variety of fields who are doing such work.</p>

<p>As for lawyers, there are lawyers who specialize in advocacy work. I am not familiar with what they do internationally, but I know such lawyers in the US. </p>

<p>You might want to contact a law school and ask them what kind of international work is available for people who want to make a difference, and you also could see if you could contact some alum working in such fields.</p>

<p>When it comes to helping developing countries, agriculture is a very important field as are engineering and other sciences including environmental sciences. </p>

<p>With a business or economics degree, one also can do things ranging from banking systems in developing countries to working with individuals and family units to help them form microenterprises. I know a college economics professor who specializes in microeconomy and women in developing countries. She works directly with the women.</p>

<p>I also know a person with a doctorate who has specialized in children who have lived through horribly traumatic situations and who flies off to places after massacres and similar events, and she helps the children.</p>

<p>I know someone else with a doctorate in psychology with a specialty in group relations who works with groups of people who are enemies such as the factions in northern Ireland to try to help them collaborate.</p>

<p>There are some colleges that are known for having programs designed to prepare students for international careers, including in developing countries. I am not expert on this, but there probably are some parents who can give you advice. You might want to start another thread to attract attention on this.</p>

<p>I do know that Macalester College in Minn. seems to be interested in preparing students for such work. That is where Kofi Annan went to college and the brochures seem to take pride in this and in their international outlook.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, since you are in the US now and probably won't be doing your international work for a while, I assure you that there is plenty of work to be done here. We have people in this country who are homeless and hungry. We have children getting substandard education. We have people without access to health. We have environmental problems. I am sure that if you look around your own community or nearby communities, you'll find that there's plenty of work to be done.</p>

<p>Start with your school. In my S's public school, there are children who are homeless, hungry, and students who can't afford basic supplies like backpacks and supplemental texts. One time we had a student awaiting a heart transplant whose parents were low income and had difficulty affording to take the several-hour trip to his hospital.</p>

<p>S's friends live very comfortably, and we live in a city with lots of professionals and college grads. The reason I know about the poverty that some students in the school experience is through having a close relationship with administrators. You might want to ask your GC if there are students in need of help in your school, and you might be able to provide such assistance on a totally anonymous basis.</p>

<p>Stanford has a non-profit MBA program. Other school must have the same.</p>

<p>I could not believe the number when I saw it. 100,000? It seemed like a mistake. That is almost 50 times more people than we have lost in the Iraqi war. It puts things into perspective, at least for me.</p>

<p>" I am unsure if I have made this decision in a fit of passion "</p>

<p>I think that sometimes its the passion that illuminates the best road for a person to take.</p>

<p>The estimate is over 120,000 lives lost and it is race against time to get food and water to the survivors.
I hope that after Colin Powell and Jeb Bush tour the damage and destruction they will convince the President to release more money to what is allocated for the inauguration or at least to match the money given by the Netherlands.
China is giving 60 million, Australia 46.7 million, the Netherlands is giving 36.5 millions and the United States is only giving 35 million more than first announced but still a drop in the bucket to what we could afford. The inauguration will cost millions more than what the US is contributing.
<a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,11069-1404822,00.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,11069-1404822,00.html&lt;/a>
I think gaudy 2nd inaugurations are tacky even if you have a "mandate" :eek:, kinda like a gaudy shotgun 2nd wedding.</p>

<p>The Thais, Indians, Indonesians and Sri lankans are responding in huge numbers, assisted by professionals from Australia, Japan, Europe, the US and many others.</p>

<p>The Aussie gov't asked volunteers to stay home--the remoteness of the regions that still need help is too big a hinderance and the disease risk is so high. Instead, Howard asked them to raise money. </p>

<p>That's good advice for any potential do-gooder. Fund raising is a critical skill in the world of non-profit.</p>

<p>EK; The US may have held back announcements of funds in order to encourage others to share the burden. I doubt the amount will stay at $35M. Other nations have lost huge numbers of citizens. The Swedish Dept Foreign Minister spoke on the BBC yesterday and said they estimate that 3000 Swedes are missing.</p>

<p>mahajan2005: your desire to do "good" does not have to modify your desire to become a lawyer. I know it goes against "popular thought" (not so much here on these boards, but in society in general) to see lawyers as a benefit to society -- but that indeed can be the case. As the first wave of aid is supplied, and the rebuilding begins, there will be many challenges and opportunities for lawyers to do good. For example, just the task of making sure that insureds are fairly treated (and, yes, I know that many in the region are poor and not necessarily insured) and recieve benefits will be a very important task. For every resort and/or business that was destroyed, think about how many locals were put out of work. There are other ways lawyers can help, and I am sure others here will chime in.</p>

<p>Whatever area that you are drawn to, there is a way to bring that into public service.
A friend who was a trial attorney also runs Kidlaw, a program for children to learn more about the law and engage in higher level thinking skills.<a href="http://www.kidlawtrials.com/%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.kidlawtrials.com/&lt;/a>
Another friend is a plastic surgeon and he donates time and money to helping children with severe problems who otherwise would not recieve help.
Lots of doc donate time to Doctors without Borders. Writers/local politicians raise money to fund projects to benefit children locally and abroad. Really no end to what you can do with a little elbow grease and the will to do it.</p>

<p>The US has now increased aid to 350 million
<a href="http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sns-ap-tsunami-us,0,1429631.story?coll=sfla-home-headlines%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/southflorida/sns-ap-tsunami-us,0,1429631.story?coll=sfla-home-headlines&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>And I am going off to help pack supplies
<a href="http://www.kintera.org/site/pp.asp?c=fvKVLbMVIwG&b=277262&campaign=1274434&cmp=KNC-1274434&source=goog&keyword=worldvision%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.kintera.org/site/pp.asp?c=fvKVLbMVIwG&b=277262&campaign=1274434&cmp=KNC-1274434&source=goog&keyword=worldvision&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>mahajan2005...
Northstarmom has given you great advice in looking into the Peace Corps. My brother got an International Agriculture degree at Purdue....then worked in the Peace Corps in rural Thailand...got a job with the United Nations working in rural Cambodia....returned to the U.S....got a Masters in St Paul....a doctorate at Cornell....got a job working in a development company based near D.C. While he worked out of their office for 2 years, he is now working on a project in Indonesia. He was out of the country visiting his wife's family in Thailand when the earthquake/tsunami hit. He will return Monday to Jakarta. The focus of his development work now immediately changes to working with the victims of the crisis....getting food, plastic sheeting for shelters, and generators to the people in the hardest hit province of Ache. His work with the Peace Corps started a lifetime of working to help the underprivileged sectors of our world. Maybe it will provide a base for you too.</p>

<p>Thank you for all the suggestions! I have actually looked into the peace corps, and will probably consider it after my undergraduate education. Instead of a domestic advocacy lawyer (one of my cousins hoped to do this, but after frustrating experiences with new york insurance groups and bureaucratic offices, she has moved into politics) I am looking into aid groups. The International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent is particularly popular these days, and I have looked into the requirements for introductory level posts. What I am hoping is that I can become a representative for underrepresented international groups that are currently overlooked by the foundation. </p>

<p>Northstarmom, Macalester College is fantastic, and one of my friends attends it. She has actually said that there are many opportunities for volunteerism and that the student body is naturally enthusiastic about raising money, etc. This fall, I'll be going to Princeton, so I am trying to look for service organizations there. I hope that if I start participating in community volunteerism, I might gain insight on what steps I can take to improve international conditions (maybe too overwhelming of a goal right now!).</p>

<p>Once again, thanks!</p>