Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

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SPEAKER'S CORNER
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A Tourist With a Shovel and a Hoe

When she arrived in Kenya to volunteer with the Maasai, Daniela Petrova looked down her nose at tourists there to have a good time. But was her own motivation much different?

ASK ROLF
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How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

Q&A
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Paul Theroux: Invisible Man on a Ghost Train

Jim Benning asks the author of “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star” about his new book, aging and the challenge of disappearing in the age of the BlackBerry

HOW TO
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Eat Ceviche in Lima

Grab a Cusqueña and get comfortable. As Nicholas Gill explains, a trip to a Peruvian cevichería can be an all-day immersion in good conversation and raw seafood.

BOOKS
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Unsentimental Journeys: Wrestling With Paul Theroux

Bronwen Dickey considers “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star: 28,000 Miles in Search of the Great Railway Bazaar”

AUDIO SLIDESHOW
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My Travels, My Feet

After taking one too many headless torso shots of herself, solo traveler Sophia Dembling started snapping photos of her feet around the world, from the Grand Canyon to Red Square


THE LIST
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Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling

Sure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou.

TRAVEL BLOG
7.16.07

Iweala: Stop Trying To ‘Save’ Africa

imageVanity Fair’s Africa issue prompted World Hum contributing editor Frank Bures’s examination of the West’s efforts to “save” the continent. Beasts of No Nation author Uzodinma Iweala’s inspiration for a piece on the subject in the Washington Post this weekend was an encounter with a “perky blond college student” who yelled at him, “Don’t you want to help us save Africa?”

Iweala writes:

There is no African, myself included, who does not appreciate the help of the wider world, but we do question whether aid is genuine or given in the spirit of affirming one’s cultural superiority. My mood is dampened every time I attend a benefit whose host runs through a litany of African disasters before presenting a (usually) wealthy, white person, who often proceeds to list the things he or she has done for the poor, starving Africans. Every time a well-meaning college student speaks of villagers dancing because they were so grateful for her help, I cringe. Every time a Hollywood director shoots a film about Africa that features a Western protagonist, I shake my head—because Africans, real people though we may be, are used as props in the West’s fantasy of itself. And not only do such depictions tend to ignore the West’s prominent role in creating many of the unfortunate situations on the continent, they also ignore the incredible work Africans have done and continue to do to fix those problems.

Related on World Hum:
* Suffering and Smiling: Vanity Fair Does Africa
* Africa: Has the Continent Benefited from the ‘Awkward Embrace’ of Celebrities?

Relief image by NASA.

Posted by Michael Yessis • 7.16.07
Categories: WeblogAfricaGlobal VillagePage Turner

Share this item at del.icio.us PermalinkComments (6)


COMMENTS

Ron Artest is in Africa.  That’s where he learned of his most recent NBA suspension.  He’s saving Africa in his own special way.

Artest as quoted on ESPN.com:

“I am doing many positive things this summer. ... Me, Maurice Evans, Theo Ratliff and Etan Thomas are holding HIV babies and walking around in the slums where kids have no running water or electricity and no shoes on their feet, feeding rice and beans to kids.”

I hear Artest was up for canonization, but because of a messy late-night strip club incident it has been delayed 4 or 5 lifetimes.

And St. Artest has such a ring to it.

By Kelsey  on  7.16.07  at  10:36 AM

Indeed, Kelsey. St. Artest does have a ring to it.

Sounds like an intriguing story. I’ll have to check it out.

By  on  7.16.07  at  02:05 PM

How dare that woman be blond and perky and —horror of horrors—concerned?!

Iweala has done a nice job promoting apathy toward Africa because that will be the result rather than risk his elite St Albans school and Harvard university educated scorn.

By  on  7.16.07  at  08:11 PM

I think you’re missing the point, Jane. The point is that the whole business of ‘saving’ is inherently patronizing, vaguely insulting, and serves as much to benefit the saver as the alleged savees.  That’s all fine, I’d just like to see a little more honesty about it. To save something or someone you have no relationship with can put you on dodgy moral ground, I think. Because the fact is there are swaths of ‘Africa’ that don’t need saving at all. And the ones that have been subject to all this saving have not done so hot. But then, I’m in more Paul Theroux’s camp:
http://www.cjr.org/behind_the_news/the_obscure_continent.php

By  on  7.17.07  at  02:51 AM

How many of us have been around enough of Africa to make any sort of informed opinion on what we presume the severity of the problems are or what the implementation of potential “band-aid” solutions would do for the African people? Why in all fairness don’t we ask THEM to tell us what they think some of the solutions would be, and help them to achieve some of them. Maybe then we could be of some real help. Maybe then we wouldn’t need a plaque or press conference spotlighting ourselves as individuals or as a nation taking credit for something we are just as responsible for helping to create, if only by the old “if I can’t see it, it must not be there” routine.

By  on  7.22.07  at  10:53 PM

I believe there is a danger in the idea of ‘saving Africa’ because it is to broad.  There are many specific problems in Africa.  Someone starving due to a drought doesn’t mind if you pat yourself on the back because you gave them food.  However, when it comes to trying to save Africa in terms of economics and social welfare as a whole, the only possible long term solutions will come from Africa itself.  Anything else both breeds dependence and is seen (real or not) as being patronizing.

By  on  7.15.08  at  04:25 AM


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