Friday, June 22, 2012

Peru

As always, life has been extremely generous since I've last written. Visits to NYC, Ann Arbor, Chicago, San Fran and LA have allowed me to catch up with many of you in person, which has been great. A ridiculously mild winter in Boston also allowed for much personal exploration over the past few months. Externally, from comedy shows and food tours to spending time over coffees and dinners with new Cambridge friends as well as those who just graduated, it continues to be amazing how time flies, but it has been such a fantastic experience for me to have formed such deep relationships with people I've met only 9 months ago. Internally, through a powerful 4-day Art of Living course which has allowed me to expand in my practice of self-awareness and meditation, first catalyzed by free Monday night Qigong sessions at MIT, and the wonderful 10-minute-meditation-for-10-days iphone/android app, Headspace. I can discuss each of these experiences at great length (ask me more in person, or when you reply to this), but in sum its provided me with a wonderful start to dive levels deeper into getting to know myself - from understanding the complex factors that go into my daily decision making, to the bullshit that i feed myself (we all do, to some extent) on a regular basis. It can be a scary journey at times, but has also been a particularly rewarding one. To be fair, the fear dissipates rapidly knowing that I have someone like you to call a friend, and count on to provide me with your honest perspective on any given seemingly random topic. One of the realizations that I've had is that being aware and honest about my limitations has really been quite liberating - acceptance makes it much easier to ask for help, or take measures to improve in that area, rather than expend energy trying to convince myself that it isn't a big deal, 'not my fault' things don't go so well, or mainly that there are some things I should work on. I could go on for awhile, but this stuff is better explored more personally - I wonder if you've had any similar/comparable experiences of late? Care to share? :)

Sandboarding down those dunes!
On to the lighter travelogue which you may have gotten accustomed to, I finally got a chance to visit a continent which had eluded me thus far - South America. Spending 2 weeks (an extended spring break) backpacking across Peru on my own allowed for several adventures, as well as meeting some fascinating people. Starting the weekend off in Lima was great - a capital city with good restaurants, and access to beaches (and beach clubs) which I fully took advantage of. On Monday morning, the real adventure begun. Armed with my Machu Pichu train ticket for Friday and barely rough idea on how to get from one side of the country to the other by land, I hit up the bus terminal to catch the first available 4-hour drive to Ica, a town South-East of Lima and home to famed Huacachina, an oasis in the middle of the desert. Fate put me next to a Canadian 25-year old couple (Cou and Drew) on this pleasant 4 hr commute, who turned out to be pretty chill (we ended up sharing a hostel room in Huacachina) and were taking the year of 2012 off from life to travel around the world. Once at Huacachina, we wasted no time in negotiating a hostel room right on the lake, and proceeded for a few hours of sand buggying (roller coaster-ish ride up and down the sand dunes in a buggy) and sand boarding (sliding down sand dunes face first on a snowboard) down increasingly steep slopes. Standing atop one of these dunes allowed us to marvel at our surroundings - even one ingredient (sand) varied the landscape constantly, - fortunately we were provided goggles for the ride so the constantly readjusting sand particles didn't insert themselves into our eyes. After that adventure, we cooled down with a nearby 'winery tour' (15 min tour, 45 min grape stomping + shaman ceremony to be grateful for the harvest and pray for next season, 2 hr all-you-can-drink wine and Pisco). Of course, the afterparty for this winery tour happened to be at our hostel, which is where I met my companions for the next leg of my journey, 3 Argentinian girls who were also on the 17-hour cross-country bus ride to Cusco the following day. 

Ollantaytambo, the Sacred Valley
Expecting an adventure, Peru didn't disappoint. 12 hours into this journey, our bus halted, seemingly inexplicably. 2 hours later, at 7am, I got out to investigate. A 10 minute walk past 20 other tour buses showed me why - a waist-high landslide ~300m long and spanning the width of the road ruled out any chances of any of our buses making it across anytime soon, not to mention there being absolutely no sign of progress of the landslide being cleared. I thought quickly - if we waited to act, it could easily be days before we made it to Cusco. Instead, we followed the lead of some intelligent farmers who were utilizing the flexibility of minibus drivers. Like them (along with my 3 new friends, 4 other youngsters decided on the same course of action as us: a Colombian couple, a Portugese volunteer teacher and a native Peruvian), we gathered our luggage and carried it across the mud-and-rocky stretch, where we were able to convince a minivan driver to take us to the next town to catch a connecting bus. After a few more minor roadblocks, we finally made it to Cusco, 26 hours after leaving Ica.

Cusco is a wonderful city. Not only did it have a great use of space - multiple piazzas, each with attractive business options, churches and government buildings on 3 of its 4 sides are a prime example of this - but there was a vibrancy that was present at any hour of the day or night. I spent a day visiting Ollantaytambo (the Sacred Valley) and other sites, but the real highlight was Machu Picchu on Friday. 

The plaza at Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu itself is amazing – the intricacy of construction of the entire site over 500 years ago still belies comprehension, and the fact that so many of the structures are still made up of original material (97% of the sun temple is made up of original rocks!) despite earthquakes, natural erosion potential and other concerns astounds me. Part of the intrigue is that no one fully agrees on what this UNESCO World Heritage site was actually built for (it was abandoned by the Incas during the Spanish Conquest before completion), theories range from a religious site, to a prison, or even an agricultural testing station.

A view of Machu Picchu (left side) from the sun gate
For me, the next stop was as important as marveling at Machu Picchu close up: a 1 hr trek to the sun gate allowed a gorgeous view of Machu Picchu from above, and spending time reflecting on how small it seemed, yet fitting so naturally within the broader natural Peruvian landscape was simultaneously a peaceful and cathartic experience. Such a prime example of how man made structures can blend with nature, beyond just co-existing and even ubiquitous destruction of our surroundings, gives me hope for the future.

I capped off spring break by flying back to Lima (phew, no more landslides) for the weekend, where I got to check out Old Lima aka downtown, home of the original Pisco Sour drink. Spent an exploratory night in Panama, then finally made it back to Boston.

This summer, I have a fantastic opportunity to explore bits of another continent I’ve been wanting to spend time in: Africa. I’ve been in Addis Ababa for over a month, and am spending a total of 11 weeks working with TechnoServe, a non-profit focused on figuring out and implementing business solutions to poverty. I’m working on scaling up business support to agricultural cooperatives, and developing a plan to expand this across Ethiopia. Aside from spending weekends exploring more UNESCO World Heritage sites (I went to Lalibela and Axum last weekend), I also get to do field trips to other parts of East Africa (I’m spending this weekend in Nairobi).

Friday, June 15, 2012

A louder voice for civil society at Rio+20?

This article was also published at Riomatters.org, a UN sponsored blog discussing the upcoming Rio+20 summit.

Since the creation of the UN Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) in 1992, nine major groups of civil society have been given important roles to play as partners in sustainable development. I got to speak with Kiara Worth, the Organizing Partner for the UN Commission for Sustainable Development Major Group for Children and Youth, ahead of the Rio+20 summit to discuss her thoughts on the main goals for Rio+20, participation from youth on key issues and a greater role for civil society through the arts.

RD: What do you see as the main goals for Rio+20?
KW: To advance participation of young people at local, national and global levels to influence sustainable development according to a youth specific policy; and to inspire local action for the implementation of sustainable development.
Rio+20 is an opportunity for youth around the world to be involved in ways they haven’t been before. We can create a world in which human potential is explored, and celebrate our differences via performance arts – bigger notions of sustainable development.
In fact, Rio+20 is the most important conference because it lays the framework for everything else – so not as ‘sexy’ as climate change or other self-contained issues, which reflects the broader challenge of sustainable development as a whole: a massive integrated array of things that is harder to manage. It is difficult to support, there will be lots of challenges, because it requires people to change the way things work. There are a lot of governments that are quite comfortable with their economic and social positioning at the moment, why would they change things?
Ultimately it’s about building that energy, its about giving people the idea that things can be different, its just about how you can make it different. And that’s social transformation, that’s whats so exciting that can come about from these conferences hosted by the UN that are independent of the policy outcomes.

RD: What kind of tangible outcomes do you see emerging from Rio+20?
KW: In terms of concrete outcomes, we are aiming for a stronger policy document that will hold governments accountable. We want to focus on a new concept of sustainable development, to redesign the way the world works – focusing on equity, justice, youth. The outcome document should also include a continued focus on human rights – there needs to be a discussion on how governments are weakening references to human rights obligations from the outcome document.
Additionally, we hope to inspire a youth movement: There have been discussions around whether the negotiations are going to be successful, and whether there is going to be a legally binding document. Will people come to action? Largely the expectation is no, but there is still an opportunity to empower young people across the world to engage in policy negotiations at the local level.
Rio+20 is about building the process of how people engage in the process, rather than just about the outcome document. We have had a focus on policy through our contributions to the Zero draft. Along with formal negotiations, networks have been set up with thousands of youth around the world contributing to policy. Various task forces have aligned to different topics that have contributed to drafting the texts.

RD: How are you planning to get participation from a variety of youth at and beyond Rio+20?

KW: At Rio+20, we have targeted a Youth Blast – a conference of the youth, and the official young people side event at Rio+20. Beyond the Rio+20 summit, we have an e-participation plan. It’s not just about attending Rio+20, its about the youth involving themselves in the process and implementing at the local level.
Youth Blast: About 3000 people registered to attend, and it was divided into 2 segments from 7-12th June.
Objectives of Youth Blast:
a) build capacity: provide young people with the tools to effectively engage in the process at Rio+20
b) strategize for Major Group’s participation at Rio+20
c) develop a post rio+20 agenda that incorporates the outcomes at Rio
7-8 June: Brazilian days – To support the local movement, these sessions were oriented for Brazilian youth in Rio
10-12: International days – The Brazilian youth movement was introduced to the international youth movement in preparation for the main Rio+20 summit.
How: Plenary sessions in the mornings were followed by 2 ‘streams of engagement’ breakout sessions: The first was a policy overview, while the second was an elective stream, consisting of over workshops organized by youth around the world running 45-90 min sessions – over 300 applications to host workshops were received, including youth activism, stories, art workshops, policy workshops.
While only 500 people turned up, likely due to the high cost of international travel and accommodation costs in Rio, that too over a week before the final Rio+20 negotiations, those who had a chance to attend had diverse backgrounds and experiences.
Youth Blast participants at work. Photo courtesy of Sébastian Duyck
Sébastien Duyck, from the Adopt a Negotiator Project, for instance, provided his thoughts: “Walking around the Youth Blast is indeed a unique experience, inspired youth painting banners, while high-level UN officials share their expectations and accept to be challenged by uncompromising activists in relation to the activities of the bodies under their supervision… While discussions on banning (fossil fuel subsidies) were in full swing, another group engaged in discussions with Achim Steiner, UNEP’s Executive Director.”

E-participation plan: We will have thousands of people updating social media, not just on Facebook but also through livestreaming, and tweeting, to build the youth movement across the globe. We’ve hosted several #mycity+20 conferences (like #NY+20, in partnership with the Ford Foundation and others) which has got the youth excited about contributing to Rio+20. Our twitter account, @MGCY_UNCSD continues to post live from Rio, and we encourage people to use the hashtag #beyondrio to input ideas on how young people can build a movement after Rio+20.

RD: Can you elaborate on how you foresee a greater role for civil society through the arts?
KW: The arts can help revive the spirit of Rio: both by instilling greater participation of civil society, and by helping people shift paradigms through motivation and inspiration. Ultimately, the only way we can rethink our perception of wealth is by changing behaviors.
The arts are a mechanism to build relationships, find points of interest and
commonality. The role of art in sustainable development is huge: we can ‘Inspire the future’, reviving the spirit of Rio from ‘92 – Through the arts, video, and social media, we can mobilize a space where people can share ideas, stories, and have a platform to engage with each other.
We’ve had various people around the world have competitions, drawing symbols for Rio+20. At the Youth Blast, there were creative workshops, creative spaces for banners, paint, story cabinets and an exchange of cultures. Our website is and will continue to be a platform where people can engage, network and sustain contact post Rio+20.