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The Tranquilo Traveler

The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.

Archive for the 0. Volunteering Abroad Category

Volunteer Opportunities with Room to Read

September 7th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments 1 Comment »

rtr.jpgRoom to Read is a non-governmental organization founded by John Wood, author of the must-read Leaving Microsoft to Change the World. They have a long list of accomplishments including thousands of libraries and schools built, programs to provide education to girls, and computer labs throughout the Himalaya (where they got started) and all over the world. Room to Read’s website lists a number of volunteer opportunities, most of which are domestic based (starting a chapter, organizing a book drive, etc.). They also have a few paid overseas opportunities. Read John’s book to get an overview of the inspiring history of this movement, then hit their website and get involved.

Daniela Petrova on the Pitfalls of Volunteering Abroad

August 29th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

In her recent article for World Hum, “A Tourist With a Shovel and a Hoe,” writer Daniela Petrova “looked down her nose at tourists there to have a good time. But was her own motivation much different?” She hits on the main conundrum that faces short-term international volunteers—the actual effectiveness of such programs. Having been on a dozen such trips, mostly with American Jewish World Service, I’m well aware of this issue. A group might spend nearly $30,000 to visit a village and help build a school that costs $2,000 for a local non-governmental organization whose entire annual budget might be less than $20,000. What’s the point? (more…)

Matador Volunteer Offers Ten Ways to Volunteer Abroad

August 9th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

picture-7.pngThough there are a few obvious ones here—like Peace Corps and WWOOF (Willing Workers on Organic Farms)—I definitely learned a few things as well; I’d never heard of Sudan Volunteer Programme, Turtle Teams, or Help Exchange, for example. There is also something about volunteering for the United Nations that looks intriguing. Matador Volunteer is based on recommendations of Matador Travel users (a social networking site); the site seeks to promote work “by grass-roots organizations and NGOs worldwide, and to connect you with volunteer programs and opportunities that make travel matter.” [LINK]

When given cameras, what do kids capture? Gorgeous slide show from Empowerment International

July 28th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

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This is what happened when Colorado-based Nicaraguaphile Kathy Adams decided to pass out cameras in the village where she’d been working near Granada. Kathy founded Empowerment International, a grassroots development project for children which can always use your help. Enjoy the slideshow then consider donating to a worthy cause.

“Photos of Hope and Courage” from Nicaragua

June 12th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

nicakid.jpgEmpowerment International is a worthy non-profit organization, based in Colorado and Granada, and working with poor children in the outlying communities of Granada. Here is a beautiful post from the EI blog:

“A photograph can speak a thousand words. It can show that you do not require the most sophisticated cameras to capture the true essence of a scene. It can also show that you do not need to be a professional to make poetry out of an everyday activity. And, most importantly, it can show that children with no means or exposure can wield their cameras like paint brushes and create masterpieces out of the drudgeries of life.”

The EI website is filled with wonderful prose, inspiring images, and all kinds of ways to get involved, from volunteering at home and abroad, to making a donation. Enjoy: [LINK]

Of Bridges and Bullets: My Worldview article in the Spring 2008 Volunteer Vacation issue

May 29th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

My article in the Spring 2008 edition of Worldview, “Bridge to Somewhere,” is about a week-long alternative break trip to Guatemala. Worldview is the quarterly magazine of the National Peace Corps Association. The current issue is a special edition about volunteer vacations—a goldmine for anyone thinking about volunteering or working abroad. My article is about an intense visit to the dusty pueblos of Rabinal and Pacux in northern Guatemala, where justice and solidarity are the weighty issues of the day.
Here are some related links and articles:

*Bridge to Somewhere: Healing the World Begins in Rabinal, by Joshua Berman

*Two weeks among the Maya: my original blog post from the trip to Rabinal

*James Rodríguez: revisiting genocide in Rabinal, Guatemala

*Xeni Jardin: Accused mass murderer Montt to run for congress

guillermo.jpgUPDATE: Guillermo Chen, director of the Fundación Nueva Esperanza, was our host, guide, and friend during our week in Rabinal. He is featured in my article above and he has continued encouraging survivors of the massacres committed against the Guatemalan Mayan population to come forward and give their testimony. On March 5, 2008, the same day that victims were presenting testimony in a local court, two unidentified men on bicycles fired six shots into the door of his house (the same house where our group stayed the previous year).

AJWS reports that “Guatemalan human rights organizations believe the shots were a clear attempt to intimidate Guillermo, his family and his colleagues from proceeding with their efforts to enable the prosecution of atrocities.” To learn more about the threats against Guillermo and his family, visit his “fear for safety” page on Amnesty International and read this AJWS background article: “The Persistence of Historical Memory.”

To support his work, visit the Fundación Nueva Esperanza website.

Tranquilo Tip of the Hat to David Arnold, Worldview Magazine Editor Extraordinaire

April 29th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

staffdavid2a.jpgI’d like to belatedly join Peace Corps Polyglot (blog of the National Peace Corps Association) in wishing Worldview editor David Arnold well as he moves on. After 14 years of transforming and improving Worldview magazine, which as a result of his vision and work is so much more than a mere alumni rag, David has accepted the position of international supervisor for the Horn of Africa broadcasting service for Voice of America. He’ll be returning to the region where his career of service began in 1964 as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ethiopia. His final issue of Worldview, a special international volunteer edition (with an article on Guatemala by yours truly), is on shelves now (though not online yet). [LINK TO POLYGLOT POST]

[LINK TO WORLDVIEW]

Ghana girls dorm is finished!

April 11th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments 2 Comments »

ghanagals.jpgLast October, I posted a plea from Peace Corps Volunteer Carl Allen in Northern Ghana, who was raising funds to build a girls’ dorm at a business school in the village of Nakpanduri. We had met Carl two years ago while visiting the palace of his village’s chief, David Kansuk Laari. Today, I am happy to pass along the news from Nakpanduri that the girls’ dormitory has been completed and a new generation of rural Ghanaian young women will now be able to attend the Nakpanduri Business Secondary School. Eighty girls from surrounding villages can come stay in the accommodations and get an education. This is huge. It is widely accepted that one of the quickest ways to bring an entire community out of poverty is to educate its girls and women, so a hearty congratulations to the students, teachers, Chief, and to Carl.

(more…)

Living abroad: life changing AND a nice resume liner

April 7th, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments 1 Comment »

jumper.jpg“Young people who study abroad for a year often come back with a newfound passion for social change, a fresh worldview and even different career interests.” So begins Seth Green’s article, “The Gap Year: Passion for Social Change.” Top universities, he reports, are encouraging students to spend a year abroad before matriculating. “Harvard encourages students to take a ‘gap year’ between high school and college and travel the world. Princeton will soon even be offering financial aid to students who want to participate in a year of global service before coming to college.”

I say do one gap year before college, one or two after you graduate, then see if you don’t get addicted. (thanks L-Boogie)

Peace Corps Wiki Project

March 3rd, 2008 | Username By Joshua | Comments No Comments »

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Nearly 190,000 Americans have served in the U.S. Peace Corps since the program was launched by President John F. Kennedy in 1961. PeaceCorpsWiki is the effort of a few Returned Peace Corps Volunteers to create a “collective public information exchange” for their fellow RPCVs. There are over a thousand pages, but they still need contributions from former volunteers:

“The ultimate goal is to have everything cross referenced, searchable, and freely available to anyone interested in the Peace Corps; countries, cities, sectors, volunteers—all relating to the Peace Corps service and its history for the past 47 years. We’re hoping that eventually volunteers would be able to read what progress has been made in Tamali, Ghana (for example) in the past 40 years. Which volunteers were stationed there? What did the Education volunteers have to do differently in The Gambia then Education volunteers in Senegal, Guinea or Mauritania? What projects did volunteers in Malawi work on 10 years ago, were any in Mzuzu?”

[LINK] 

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