Susan - About a year ago I got a note from a friend who was also Opening Space in Monrovia. I thought you might find it interesting - ho
Dear Harrison, Just finished OS in an NGO office in Liberia that deals with malaria prevention, treatment and education. (25 people, 13 topics, 1 day) In the closing circle, I wished you had been there and thought of you everytime someone said "This is our heritage of how we use to do it and it feels good." " This is the first time we sit together in 4 years and it is because of our Liberian past ."" "It is how they do it in our villages and now it brings us closer together and we can be one team, one program." "This is the first time I have seen everyone smile in our office." "People were fully engaged in the room." Immense pride filled the room. (I was asked to go to this office to do some team building. I think it worked, wouldn't you say?) This team has gone through major transitions from working with malarial concerns in an emergency situation, just after the war to post emergency work; from one country director's style to an opposite country director's style; and a total change of expat management; all in the last 3 months. And, you know what the # 1 topic out of the 13, after they prioritized? LOVE, plain and simple and powerful. A committee is now in charge of finding ways to express it in the office. I think the country director was shocked at that choice but even more surprised that a quiet man who pushes the broom, convened the topic. I was a bit worried for the first hour as it was very slow moving and I thought I had made the wrong choice, so I left the room and worked on my laptop, to not control the group and close the space. Turns out, no one had ever asked them before for their opinions. That was the hesitancy. The ball started rolling after the first time period. So, my dear, Harrison...it all comes around and back to Liberia, you and your brillance at capturing the essence of the African culture and bottling it up for the rest of the world to sip. You have touched their hearts deeply. In the closing circle, they didn't thank me...at first I was...gee, no praise for me bringing it to them...HA! "When the best leader's work is done, the people say "We did it ourselves." Lao Tzu. Harrison Owen 7808 River Falls Dr. Potomac, MD 20854 USA 189 Beaucaire Ave. (summer) Camden, Maine 20854 Phone 301-365-2093 (summer) 207-763-3261 www.openspaceworld.com www.ho-image.com (Personal Website) To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of OSLIST Go to: <http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org> http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Harrison Owen Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2011 7:09 PM To: 'World wide Open Space Technology email list' Subject: Re: [OSList] OS in Liberia and Harrison's reflections The troubles were/are real and the disruption major, but I would believe that some of the old traditions live on. Wired in at a genetic level, perhaps. This belief is not without some foundation as I have continued contact with Liberian friends of some long ago. As also others have done the same. It is true that I have not set foot in Liberia since the '70's but I have been in related parts of Africa. All I am suggesting is that you start with something familiar (to them) and see if you can build. The issues you describe are real and pressing, but they will be solved, if at all solvable, in an African way. They will have to do that work and putting them in a place of remembering is not a bad place to start. I think. Harrison Harrison Owen 7808 River Falls Dr. Potomac, MD 20854 USA 189 Beaucaire Ave. (summer) Camden, Maine 20854 Phone 301-365-2093 (summer) 207-763-3261 www.openspaceworld.com www.ho-image.com (Personal Website) To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of OSLIST Go to:http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Susan Partnow Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2011 4:49 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [OSList] OS in Liberia and Harrison's reflections Thanks for your reflections, Harrison... There is absolutely enormous, deep wisdom to learn, observe, drink in. I appreciate what you are saying, though I fear some of the deep traditions have been so disrupted and even lost for the present generations with the chaos of the last 20 years. The Community Summit was a way to bring many diverse people together who do not have a chance to engage in conversation with other outside of that setting - unfortunately there is not a way for the flow to flow... Over half the population now lives in Monrovia and many have not experienced the richness of village life including the Palava Hut. The youth do not trust or especially respect the elders or chiefs. Women have many concerns. So it is a society in rough transition... Susan Susan Partnow Founding Director, Global Citizen Journey 4425 Baker Ave NW Seattle, WA 98107 tel. 206-783-8561 fax 206-782-7786 www.globalcitizenjourney.org <http://www.globalcitizenjourney.org/> join our mailing list <http://oi.vresp.com/?fid=fb96ddc75f> www.susanpartnow.com <http://www.susanpartnow.com/> Partnow Communications, Organizational Development, Consulting & Facilitation www.conversationcafe.org <http://www.conversationcafe.org/> Co-Founder www.compassionatelistening.org <http://www.compassionatelistening.org/> Sr. Certified Facilitator "When we seek for connection, we restore the world to wholeness. Our seemingly separate lives become meaningful as we discover how truly necessary we are to each other." --Margaret Wheatley
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