Kisah Greg Mortenson, pendaki gunung yang beralih menjadi aktivis
kemanusiaan, membangun 58 sekolah dan mendidik 24 ribu anak di
Pakistan.

http://www.altmuslim.com/perm.php?id=1867_0_24_0_M

He Went From Climbing Mountains To Moving Them

Greg Mortenson was so moved by the people he met while mountain
climbing in Pakistan that he returned to build 58 schools and educate
24,000 children.

By Sadia Ashraf, February 1, 2007

        A heart the size of a mountain

Meet Greg Mortenson, a mountaineer turned humanitarian, whose book,
written with David Oliver Relin, "Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission
to Fight Terrorism and Build Nations ...One School at a Time",
illustrates how he build 58 schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Greg
Mortenson is one of the rare individuals whose benevolent feats
supercede their personal boundaries of language, culture, race and
religion and he epitomizes the terms philanthropy and altruism.

His incredible voyage of triumph, as illustrated in the book, began in
failure. In 1993, after a disastrous and catastrophic attempt at
climbing K2 in Pakistan, he walked for five days, injured and
emaciated, stumbling into the village of Korphe, where the villagers
nurtured him for several days. While recovering, he saw their
"school", and the scene of 84 children sitting on a frosty ledge, with
no roof over their heads, writing on the ground with sticks,
promulgated his life's vocation. Since they couldn't afford their own
teacher at $1 a day, they shared one with a neighboring village.
Appalled, he rashly promised the villagers he would build them a
school.

In America, raising $12,000 was no mean task for a climber who lived
out of his car. Frustrated at the lack of response from the famous
people to whom he wrote 580 letters of appeal, he even sold his car.
It was not until his niece's school raised $623 that fundraising
success ensued. Then fortunately, Jean Hoerni, a physicist and a
one-time trekker to the Karakorum Mountains, gave him $12,000. Back at
the village, he realized they would have to build a bridge first to
carry the school construction supplies. Undaunted, he went back to
raise more money, returned to build the bridge with the villagers, and
then built the first school. Now, after 31 trips over 14 years,
Mortenson's non-profit Central Asia Institute has built 52 schools in
Pakistan, 6 in Afghanistan, (and also 30 tent schools after the
earthquake of 2005) helping educate 24,000 children, some of whom walk
up to three hours a day to attend classes.

Mortenson has made tremendous personal endeavors to build cultural
bridges with the people of the Northern Pakistani, having learned to
speak Balti, Farsi and Urdu. In addition to reading the Qur'an and
studying Islam, he always portrays a constructive image of Muslims in
all his interviews and publicity appearances. His journey, though, has
had some treacherous bends. In Afghanistan, he was kidnapped and held
captive for eight days. After September 11, he received death threats
by Americans and has been "debriefed" by the CIA twice. Two separate
fatawas issued against him to banish him from Pakistan for educating
girls were repealed by enlightened clerics.

Mortenson admits the book's subtitle — One Man's Mission to Fight
Terrorism and Build Nations One School at a Time (chosen by the
publisher) is a distortion. "I don't really care about fighting
terror," Mortenson tells me. "The biggest issues in the world we need
to address today are poverty, illiteracy, ignorance. Ignorance breeds
hatred." And as the book title implies, it's important to have 'three
cups of tea' to do business in that part of the world. As he explains,
"The first cup of dudh patti (Pakistan's sweet milk tea) or kahawa
(green tea in Afghanistan) - you are a stranger. The second cup - you
become a friend. And the third cup - you become family - but the
process takes several years and is about relationships. When you are
family, your hosts are prepared to even die for you. Here in America,
we have two minute football drills, thirty minute power lunches, drive
through fast food, and six second TV sound bytes, but in Pakistan and
Afghanistan it takes three cups of tea..."

One memorable situation from his 14 years experience, as elucidated in
the book, is when he built the first school and was micromanaging and
trying to hasten the construction. One of the village elders led him
aside and said, "We've been here for hundreds of years, and we're
grateful to Allah that you're helping us build a school. But you need
to do something: You need to sit down and shut up and let us do the
work." He learned to listen rather than deliberate and to let the
communities be empowered to do the work themselves, rather than
commanding them. It is no wonder then Mortenson's picture appears over
hearths and on Jeep dashboards throughout northern Pakistan.

Mortenson grew up in the proximity of Mount Kilimanjaro, where his
father found Tanzania's first teaching hospital and his mother
launched an international school. That personal history seems to
compel his tenacious struggle, despite the hurdles he faces. "When I
see those little girls — their tiny bare feet, or in plastic Chinese
boots, walking to school — those little footprints in the dust may be
tiny, but I think of Neil Armstrong on the moon," says Mortenson.
"She'll become a role model, a giant leap for her community." Case in
point: a girl named Aziza was the first educated female in the
Charpusan Valley in northern Pakistan. Before her maternal health care
training, five to 20 females died in childbirth every year in her
valley - there were no doctors, medicine or clinics - and one out of
three children died before the age of one. Since she received her
training and returned to her village in 2000, not one woman has died
in childbirth, and the infant mortality rate has gone down to about
one in five.

Mortenson's monumental humanitarian effort and his ideology of loving
every child as much as his own two children have earned him many
humanitarian and peace awards, but no honor is so gratifying to him as
the smile of an impoverished child rewarded by knowledge. "I look into
the eyes of my children, and I see the eyes of children in Pakistan
and Afghanistan," he says. Some of the students who yielded more than
literacy are now in college and technical training centers, studying
to be teachers, medical health care workers, computer technicians and
engineers. Greg Mortenson says of global literacy, "There are over 145
million children in the world today deprived of education (age 5-14),
and the cost to provide them an education is only about $1 per month
per child. The total cost would be a global investment of $6 billion
per year for 15 years. Last year, the US government spent $94.2
billion in Iraq and $14 billion in Afghanistan solely for the 'war on
terror'. With the same money we could eliminate global illiteracy in
18 months!"

Stubborn hope begins in the dark, as Anne Lamott expressed, while
waiting for the dawn to come, and likewise Mortenson's optimistic
quest today is a magnanimous vision for the children of tomorrow.

Sadia Ashraf is a mural artist (www.ashmurals.com), a free-lance
journalist and creative writer who has written for Muslim Girl and
Chicago Crescent. Her Graduate English degree from Loyola University
focused on post-colonial studies. Greg Mortenson is currently visiting
America for a book tour. For further information and donations, please
visit gregmortenson.com, ikat.org, or call (406) 585-7841.


DWS
-- 
Genderpedia.Org
Proyek Ensiklopedia Gender Online


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