The Map's Edge - Spring 2015

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image by REBECCA FRANCES BURNS

SPRING 2015 Global citizenship and leadership programs in the developing world since 1993

IN THIS EDITION:  THE HERO’S JOURNEY

6.

8.

10.

12.

16.

18.

ADVENTURE

UNKNOWN

TRIALS

TRANSFORMATION

Wanderlust, Home

Reverse Culture

Out of the

Bewildered,

Seeds of Resistance:

Photo Gallery:

& the Web of

Shock: Blindness,

Ordinary, Into the

Humbled & Alone

The Chico Mendes

Images from an

Interconnectedness

Super-Vision & the

Extraordinary

in the Shadowlands

Reforestation Project

Unvanquished World

by CHRISTINA RIVERA

Unconscious Mind

by COLETTE PLUM

by ELIZABETH JOHNSON

by ARMANDO POCOL

by REBECCA BURNS

COGSWELL

by JASON PATENT

THE CALL TO

ENGAGING THE

GAUNTLET OF

REVELATION &

THE RETURN

REINTEGRATION


This edition of The Map’s Edge is a literary mosaic designed to illustrate Joseph Campbell’s model of the Hero’s Journey. Each article represents a “stage” of the journey and is drawn from the experiences of our contributors. We hope that by sharing their tales of adventure, you might find parallels and inspiration in your own journey. As Campbell wrote, “Opportunities to find deeper powers within ourselves come when life seems most challenging.” Let the journey begin.

REINTEGRATION Having found balance between the temporal and spiritual, the transcendental THE RETURN

hero is now comfortable and competent in

Upon returning, the hero must retain the

both the inner and outer worlds.

wisdom gained on the quest, integrate that wisdom back into their life, and share the newfound wisdom with the rest of the world. THE CALL

TO ADVENTURE

TRANSFERENCE

The hero begins in a

The hero escapes

mundane situation of normality

with the boon and often encounters

he

difficulty with the

from which some information

n

is received that acts as a call to head off into the unknown.

t

newfound knowledge.

re

r tu

It can be just as dangerous returning from the journey as it was to begin.

TRANSFORMATION

departure

the hero’s journey

adventurous and

ENGAGING THE

UNKNOWN

The moment when

The hero achieves

the hero crosses into

the ultimate goal of

the field of adventure, leaving the known

the quest, such as

limits of their own

n

enlightenment. All

tio

of life or attaining

world, and ventures

initi a

finding the elixir

into a realm where the customs and limits

the previous steps

are unfamiliar.

serve to prepare and purify the hero for this moment. THE GAUNTLET OF TRIALS A series of tests or ordeals that the hero REVELATION

undergoes to begin transformation.

A spiritual death that evokes a state of

Often the hero fails at one or more of

divine knowledge, love, compassion and

the tests, but ultimately perseveres.

bliss within the hero. Alternatively, this stage can be a period of rest, peace or fulfillment before the hero begins the return.

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THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015


words by CHRIS YAGER

A LETTER FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

my personal hero

is a guy I knew only briefly, but one who changed my life. I don’t know a lot about his story. I know that he was an outlier from an early age, a Beat before there were Beats, a wanderer. I know that after World War II, he smuggled cigarettes between Europe and Libya. I know that he became an accomplished race car driver. I know that he spent time in India, and that he was transformed by learnings that he picked up there. I know that sometime in the 1950s, he found his calling as a teacher. I subsequently read that Jerry Garcia, guitarist for the Grateful Dead and an icon of his era, considered him the most impactful mentor in his life. His name was Dwight Johnson, and when I met him I was a 17-year-old like any other. And then I was transformed because this teacher, whose class was loosely titled “Ideas,” opened a door to mysticism, to the notion that the human experience could be a bold adventure in search of meaning—a Hero’s Journey. In Dwight Johnson’s class, we read sacred texts and legends from around the world. We read stories of daring self-exploration, and of finding meaning in unimaginably dark experiences. I don’t recall ever being asked by Dwight to find a “true” or conventionally accepted interpretation of a primary document; rather Dwight would ask us to explore a writing’s deeper meaning on personal levels; to consider a writing’s impact on our own psyches, on our own definitions of self. A hero’s journey begins with a question, “Who am I, and why do I matter?” Dwight Johnson gave his students the permission to ask this question. He provided a space and a true guru’s talent for deftly allowing his students to go deep with the material without throwing up roadblocks of judgment and criticism. We were allowed to consider the existence of a higher self and then to have a conversation with that self, undaunted. Years later, while visiting a Dragons semester course in India, a holy man said to me, “It’s wonderful what you’re doing here, providing a spiritual boot-camp for adolescents.” I had

never thought of our work this way, but at that moment I saw the truth in his words: we were providing an opportunity for students to develop a relationship with their spiritual selves. Hearing those words, on the banks of the Ganges, I thought of the teacher who had shown me at 17 years old that the best educators teach not only to the head, but also to the heart. Since beginning work on Dragons in 1993, I have had the privilege of working with educators who, like Dwight, have sparked students to begin their own hero’s journeys. Ben Bogin, Shannon Clements, Stew Motta, Luis Alverado, and many others have helped every one of their students see in themselves their greatest selves, their highest potentials, their hero-selves… they have helped their students imagine and undertake their own personal journeys. They are educators who awaken, who inspire, who give to their students the greatest gift imaginable: they cultivate in their students an understanding that at their highest selves, they can be anything. Like the class and the mentor who set me on my path as a 17-year-old, Dragons as a medium and our instructors as guides engender in our students the confidence to begin the long and arduous journey to becoming their hero-selves. Dwight Johnson started me on my hero’s journey. The educators with whom we work inspire me and countless others to keep putting one foot in front of the other, to walk a path that is epic and hard and honest and true. —Chris Yager

CHRIS YAGER i s the Founder and Executive Director of Where There Be Dragons. After graduating from Bowdoin College with a degree in Asian Studies, he worked with Colorado Outward Bound for several years before launching Dragons as a 25-year-old and leading the first courses in China and Tibet. Having worked with over 1,000 field instructors, Chris has been closely involved with the design of Dragons’ curriculum, in-country programming and new program development.

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM

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NOTES FROM AROUND THE WORLD WHAT IS COURAGE?

We sent a questionnaire asking Dragons alumni to “define courage.” Here are a few responses: It takes courage to admit you are wrong, or scared, or out of line, and it takes courage to embark on unknown things, big or small. It was on this trip that I realized how courageously cowardly I’d been all along.

Courage: To face the known, the unknown and the unknowable with equanimity and compassion.

Courage is exploring your discomforts, trusting your discoveries and laying your ignorance to rest.

Courage means witnessing a lofty wave, recognizing it may inundate you, but gallantly walking toward it nonetheless.

OLIVER CREECH  Burlington, VT

JON WEXLER   Philadelphia, PA

JORGE MEJIA  Bronx, NY

MARGARET WENG

Los Angeles, CA

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GLOBAL ELDERS

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The Elders is an independent group of peacemakers, peace builders, pioneering women and social revolutionaries dedicated to using their collective experience and influence to solve some of the world’s most pressing problems. They no longer hold public office and are independent of any national government or other vested interest. The group was chaired by Nelson Mandela until his death in 2013. inland 1  MARTTI AHTISAARI F Former President of Finland, Nobel Peace Laureate, international peace mediation expert

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4

9

2

7

5  JIMMY CARTER

United States  KOFI ANNAN  Ghana

2 Former UN Secretary-General, Nobel Peace Laureate, Chair of The Elders 3  ELA BHATT  India The “gentle revolutionary,” founder of the Self-Employed Women’s Association in India  LAKHDAR BRAHIMI  Algeria

4 Algerian freedom fighter, Foreign Minister, conflict mediator, UN diplomat 4

Former President of the United States, Nobel Peace Laureate, veteran peace negotiator orway 6  GRO BRUNDTLAND N First female Prime Minister of Norway, Deputy Chair of The Elders

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FERNANDO CARDOSO

Brazil

Former President of Brazil, acclaimed sociologist, advocate for drug policy reform

THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

8  HINA JILANI  Pakistan Pioneering lawyer, pro-democracy campaigner, leader of Pakistan’s women’s movement  ERNESTO ZEDILLO  Mexico

9 Former President of Mexico, economist, advocate of multilateralism

10  MARY ROBINSON  Ireland First female President of Ireland, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights 11  GRACA MACHEL

Mozambique

First Education Minister of Mozambique, advocate for women’s and children’s rights

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HEROES UNDER 20

“When the whole world is silent, even one voice becomes powerful.” MALALA YOUSAFZAI FELIX FINKBEINER  Germany

Felix, the 17-year-old Harry Potter look-alike, has planted more than four million trees with his international organization Plant for the Planet, a global network of child activists who aim to mitigate climate change by reforest-

ing the planet. Inspired by Kenyan Nobel Prize recipient, Wangari Maathai’s Green Belt Movement, Felix started his organization as a school project when he was nine years old. Today, Plant for the Planet works in 131 countries and employs 12 staff members.

MALALA YOUSAFZAI

Pakistan

17-year-old Malala Yousafzai became the youngest recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 for the simple and unrepentant act of attending school. In the days after the Taliban prohibited music,

television and female education, Malala published a blog about life under in Pakistan’s occupied Swat Valley and began advocating for female education. She was subsequently targeted by Taliban gunmen and shot in the head while waiting to board a school bus. She survived and has become a symbol of courage for millions of girls worldwide. WILLIAM KAMKWAMBA  Malawi

William came to the attention of the world after building a makeshift wind turbine in his village in Malawi. Due to severe famine in 2001, William was forced to drop out of school at the age of 14. But with the help of a textbook with a picture of a wind turbine on the front cover, he built a windmill to power his family’s home out of a broken bicycle, tractor fan blade, old shock absorber, and blue gum trees. He has since authored a book entitled The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.

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CASSANDRA LIN

United States

Cassandra Lin is an inspiring social entrepreneur words by BRAD BOLLER,  Indonesia Semester from Rhode Island, USA. At Krishna, our main teacher, is a chill, charismatic 22-year-old who recently completed a permathe age of ten Cassandra Lin culture course in Jordan with one of the top permaculture scientists in the world. Growing up on initiated the project Turn Grease a farm and learning from his father, Krishna seems to already be a master of his field. However, Into Fuel, which collects waste he was not always like this. He was homeless for a few years after he decided to drop out of high cooking oil from residents school. Between begging, manual farm labor and a lot of personal growth, he realized that “Krishand restaurants to turn it into na-style” permaculture was his true calling. His family welcomed him back in to help further biofuel. The biofuel is then develop the farm and toy with new systems of permaculture to increase efficiency and output, the distributed to families with a way nature does it. Pak Iskandar, Krishna’s father, is the kind of person that mesmerizes an entire low income who cannot afford audience with just one spoken word. His wisdom and perspective on the world through a natural heating. She has since partnered and spiritual kaleidoscope captured us students for hours and hours of lecture discussion. He often with hundreds of restaurants compared permaculture to a religion, and showed us how traditional principles of Islam related to to turn waste oil into biodiesel, sustainable living. One of my favorite quotes from him was “Live as nature lives. Remember, it is benefiting low-income families often smarter than you are.” all across the region.

YAK YAK

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM

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words and images by COLETTE PLUM

THE CALL TO ADVENTURE

remapping our world Ever since I was a child, I knew that one day I would be a mother. I knew this with the same certainty I knew that, after months of school, there would always be summer, or that on my next birthday there would be cake and candles. I skipped along on a path towards “Parenthood”—a long season and a peopled location. My children would be tow-headed and longlimbed, a boy and a girl. And so it was mapped.

nodded as our chief doctor declared, with no diagnosis but with certain prognosis, “We will make you pregnant; you just may need a little extra help.” Double strollers with fertility twins were hip in our San Francisco neighborhood. Medical intervention was the known path, the popular path, to 30-something parenthood. Adoption was another avenue—apparently most people’s second choice—and one I believed I was open to. But when we went to adoption information nights we grew dizzy with the details: the paperwork and fees, the indefinite waits, the uncertain outcomes. And the choices: Domestic? International? Open adoption or closed? It seemed prohibitive to graduate students on research stipends, and the pencil-pushing alone felt more daunting than our research and teaching combined. When I mentioned to my dissertation advisor that I was considering adoption, he gaped at me, stunned, “Getting pregnant while you’re still young is one out of the ordinary thing, but adoption? Can’t you wait Until it wasn’t. Until we actually tried, to do that later?” Apparently birthing month after month with open hearts and babies is what young grad students do: an open womb, and there were still no it’s “natural” and it’s romantic. Adopting signs of a baby. The other babies started children is what tenured professors do: it’s coming instead: the neighbors’ babies, our practical and it’s prudent. siblings’ babies, our best friends’ babies, a talisman and all those babies in markets and in restaurants and snuggled against the There were babies at weddings, and I breasts of pedestrians on city sidewalks. played with one, Toby, child of Dragons And what had begun as a gentle and instructors, Charlotte and Brad. For a certain longing turned into a fullday and a night and the morning that blown affliction, a ceaseless and painful followed, I confided in Charlotte about gnawing—a child-hunger. my affliction. As we parted at the beach There was an ordinary route out of in Gearhart, Oregon, she spontaneously this affliction. My husband, Jason, and I slipped a ring on my finger: a thick silver were grad students in the Bay Area, with band that held a smooth red garnet. “It good insurance and access to some of the has healing properties,” she said. “Just best fertility doctors in the world. After rub it,” she said. “You are not alone.” a round of tests at the Stanford clinic, I wanted to know that the ring residents smiled over the promising could do something. From the internet numbers, declared us “fertile,” and I harvested hope about the healing 6

THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

properties of garnets. I mined commercial gem sites for action words to string together: “relieves depression,” “stops hemorrhaging and heals wounds.” I touched Charlotte’s garnet on my finger and imagined it flushing out some undiagnosed ailment, allowing me the effortless option of a “surprise” pregnancy. But each month hope hemorrhaged with a renewed cycle of wait and want.

the call to adventure It was an historically windy day in San Francisco. My husband, an extreme weather addict from Montana, convinced me to meet the gale with him at the coast. While he and our friend, Ed, fired a frisbee at one another in 30 MPH winds, I set off alone down Ocean Beach. Like many seasoned Dragons participants, I took a pit stop in the dunes. But this was not just any pit stop. The brute wind whipped sand all around me, nearly overpowering me, leaving me with little control—my hair lashed my face, my eyes watered and wept, my most sensitive exposed skin prickled and stung as I quickly squatted, urine blowing everywhere. Months of fertility treatment had rendered me vulnerable in countless intrusive ways. But this wind was more than intrusive; it blew violently. And I felt thoroughly humiliated in the face of forces beyond my control. But afterwards, when I could look around me with my hair tucked under my hood and my clothing tightly cinched, I began to marvel at the immensity of the winds howling round me. Pearly jade sea foam skated in airy tufts across the billowing sands. The ocean beyond rushed towards me, white and roiling. I threw my arms wide and leaned into the force that I had feared, moments before, would bowl me over. Instead of being knocked flat, I found my weight supported. I stood alone and faced the


“I knew I wasn’t pregnant. But I also knew I needed to risk losing the ordinary to say yes to the extraordinary.” vast sea head-on as the wind rushed over the Pacific and swaddled me in a soft deafness. And within this deep calm, I felt a tremendous presence, the quickening of another life and of a new kind of knowing. This baby I sought was not of me, or from me. It would come from somewhere I could not yet imagine. I might have to choose the uphill trek to find her, but I was already connected to this soul who would blow into our lives and our home in ways we could not control. Something had beckoned, and I would move towards this. The wind came from the Pacific. I had felt this presence when I faced towards China. I drove home alone—Jason would be returning with Ed. I wanted to bask in this new knowing, this fullness of anticipation.

adoption seemed so arduous—too long, too I’d ever seen it, set in a whirl of sand and expensive, and way beyond my control. wind. And now the ring was gone. I knew I wasn’t pregnant. But I also knew I needed to risk losing the ordinary the call, again to say yes to the extraordinary. To open I drove back to the beach along wide grey my arms and lean into the wind, to choose streets, darkled by long shadows of doubt. what others have marked on the map as When I arrived, Jason and Ed were on the uphill trek. their egress and puzzled at my reappearThe next week I got a letter from ance. Ed offered to help me look for the Fulbright, offering me a fellowship to do ring; Jason cautioned me that this was a my research in Sichuan, China. And 6 long shot. They had spent the last 30 min- months later, without our being aware, utes digging out their lost frisbees. By now our newborn daughter was found in the early morning hours, in Chongqing, Sichuan, a half day’s drive from where Jason and I would live. She was brought to an orphanage to be cared for until she was matched with us, our adoption expedited because we were now living locally. Her sister joined us two years later, also first orphaned, also Chinese. Our family of four has flown across balking at the call the Pacific together more times than I can I resolved, as I drove, that despite count or remember—global nomads, with the uncertainty and the costs and the grazing lands on both continents. Our feet possibility of being blacklisted by my are planted on both sides of the Pacific in advisors, we would start the international ways I never could have imagined when I adoption process. Parking the car, I the ring would be deep in the sand. had first longed for a child. instinctively moved to touch the garnet on I led them to my pit stop, wishing A garnet ring given as a talisman from my finger. My fingers were white and cold the roaring wind would drown out Ed’s a friend, gale forces sweeping a beach, a and trembling. I froze. The ring was gone. musings that maybe the loss of the ring disembodied presence carried in the wind. I told myself not to panic. I checked my meant that I was pregnant and no longer This is the stuff of myths, of dreams. But clothing, my pockets, the car seat. I went needed it. No, the wind assaulted me, I to make it thus, I first had to say yes to a in the apartment and checked the shelf thought. It stole from me my hope. trans-Pacific wind that would launch our by the shower. And then, it hit me. I had We arrived at the dunes and starting trans-Pacific family on a journey that I removed my gloves during my pit stop in sifting handfuls of sand, the wind raging could not have charted. the dunes; perhaps the ring had slipped around us. Runnels of grains fell through Sometimes the cartographers are off with them. I checked my pockets, my our fingers scoop after scoop, dig after dig. wrong. They accurately measure the disgloves: no ring. Leaden, I returned to the It was up to me to call the whole tance and grade, but the map doesn’t forecar and wept. Was this a sign that I would thing off, but I was catatonic. Finally I tell the fellow travelers we’ll meet along never become pregnant? In saying yes was standing and watching Jason and Ed, the way, the ones who bring their stories to adoption had I unwittingly closed off nearly resigned, when Jason rose and held and their aid. And the surprising detours, other options? I began to doubt what I his hands out towards me like he was the deep valleys, the extraordinary vistas had known to be certain, to turn my back carrying an injured bird. And there was hidden beyond the margins. on that presence in the wind. The path to Charlotte’s ring, the stone darker than COLETTE PLUM i s a former Dragons instructor (China ’98-’01) and a China historian (Ph.D., Stanford University). She and her husband, Dragons coinstructor Jason Patent, have recently relocated with their daughters back to the Bay Area from Nanjing, China.

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM

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words by ELIZABETH JOHNSON, image by CALEB BROOKS

ENGAGING THE UNKNOWN

into the shadowlands If I had fully entertained the thoroughness of the unknown, I never would have boarded that first plane to India. On the other hand, I couldn’t stay home and leave the world up to my imagination. I was encouraged to ponder the dangers, all the reasons why a 21-year-old female should not embark on such a foolish journey. I was cautioned, “It is not safe.” And then warned, “There is so much that can happen out there that is beyond your control! The rawness of it all will kill you.” And yet, I had to get on that plane. When I looked in the mirror to question whether there was an inkling of insanity informing my decision to leave, I knew there was no going back. There was a look in my eyes that told me I had made some sort of bargain with myself and was taking a blind leap into my own shadow territory.

Webster’s defines shadow as “a dark area or shape produced by a body coming between rays of light and surface.” C ulturally, we are taught that light is good. It is our friend. It is predictable. In light-filled spaces we can see clearly. We know where we stand and whom we are standing next to. We are confident in saying, “I know.” But in shadow territories our “I know” quickly morphs into an “I don’t know,” or an “I can’t see, I don’t understand.” This inability to see, to place, to cognitively compartmentalize makes us frustrated and apprehensive. We are less capable of making immediate assumptions. We become vulnerable and exposed to discomfort. We are made to think that this is bad.

“Through a willingness to sit in the unknown, in the dark, we demonstrate a level of both vulnerability and courage that promotes compassion and acceptance for those around us.”

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“The point of this embarkation is to become disoriented, to make a descent into the dark underworld, to grow uncomfortable and humbled...” With a little bit of probing, we find examples the world over of the hero’s journey. I n this voyage, whether it be explored through myth, art, storytelling, or performed ritual, the hero is encouraged, forced or willingly embarks on a crossing into an unknown landscape. The point of this embarkation is to become disoriented, to make a descent into the dark underworld, to grow uncomfortable and humbled, and to then formulate a personal understanding of one’s own resiliency. So why do the majority of the people we know feel exempt from this process? W hy does it feel unattainable? Why don’t we live out our own hero’s journey? Why is the unknown looked upon as a place of defeat and something to be avoided? Unfortunately for us, we live in a culture that has tried to clinicalize, euthanize and sterilize the innate rawness out of life. We have bought into the argument that things are supposed to feel good, not scary. Life ought to feel controlled, predictable and agreeable. We have perpetuated this assumption to the point where living things are not even supposed to die. Instead of honest exchanges that reveal the complexity of our humanness and give voice to the internal impulses that beg for a proper descent, we are reminded to stay safe, to only seek, or dig, or journey so far. Ironically, shadow is an essential element that inspires human connection. It is the reason we can walk into a rural fishing village in Indonesia or Senegal and look strangers in the eye and feel a sense of compassion. “I too am searching,” we say. “I too have suffered and asked big questions and sometimes come up short.” Through a willingness to sit in the unknown, in the dark, we demonstrate a level of both vulnerability and courage that promotes compassion and acceptance for those around us. Daniel Siegel, a neuropsychiatrist from UCLA, uses nature as a way to teach us about our own personal resiliency. H e argues that organisms that are skilled at integrating a complexity of experiences and outside influences into their core function have the most robust and vital systems. Through exposure to a

combination of both challenging and supportive stimulants and experiences, one sees an advancement of flexibility, adaptability, coherence, energy and stability in an organism. It’s interesting to apply this to the hero’s journey. For one could contend that personal vitality and resiliency are actually dependent upon and fed off of a conversation with the “shadow.” A turning towards indigestible or uncomfortable encounters might actually make each of us more of a hero, both physiologically and emotionally. Travel is not the only way to take this journey, but it is, inarguably, a potent path. In getting on that plane to India in my 21st year, I had to agree to sit in a place of foreignness and lose all of my internal points of reference. By eating unidentifiable food, working in the midst of stomach-churning and heartrending poverty, traveling on long 72-hour train rides, I slowly began peeling back the layers of what I knew to be “me” and losing myself to a new and eventually more fortified identity of “I.” I felt small and out of control and rocked by answerless questions, and I realized that I needed to become a new incarnation in order to understand myself and life and integrate many irreconcilable moments into the core and unfolding story before me. The hero’s challenge is to be humbled and disassembled and bewildered enough that we can relinquish the attachments or self-imposed limitations that hold us back from our evolved and resilient selves. Through the journey, the hero learns to find trust in, and the necessity of, conversation with the shadow sides of life. The hero knows that fear and discomfort are part of the digging, of the seeking and our eventual materialization into a more balanced and world-wise version of self. Our own resiliency and the integrity of our current culture depend upon people saying yes to this journey. Without it, in the end, we remain only euthanized versions of our most compelling selves.

ELIZABETH JOHNSON is an expert in the field of community planning and non-profit management and a longtime Dragons instructor (Andes & Amazon` ‘07, Visions of India ‘12 & ’13). She is currently based in Bend, OR, where she coordinates Dragons’ Princeton Bridge Year partnership programs.

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM

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words by JORGE ARMANDO LOPEZ POCOL, interviewed by SIMON HART, translated by ARIEL STORCH

THE GAUNTLET OF TRIALS

an interview with armando: founder of the chico mendes reforestation project At first I thought I was fighting to save rubber trees, then I thought I was fighting to save the Amazon rainforest. Now I realize I am fighting for humanity. –Chico Mendes

the first call, and by the third call they’d come to my home to take me away. So I either had to show up or come up with a plan. I found a doctor who agreed to draft a document stating that I was sickly. When I showed up at the army and gave them the document, they said I was very clever and asked me why I had done this. Eventually they let me go. Around the time when they released me, I began to understand the degree of injustice in my country. I had many he history of my life with friends who lost their chance to study the Chico Mendes Reforestation and reach their goals because they were Project is a history of adventure. forced to join the army. I decided that During my childhood, my country of Gua- I would do something different with temala was locked in armed conflict, and my life, so I started reading books. My teenagers like myself ran the risk of forced parents didn’t have the means to offer me conscripted into the army. I’ve always an education. My father worked in the liked to organize and work with youth, fields; he was a peasant who worked the and even in those days people knew me as land to feed us. He planted beans, corn a good leader and coordinator. But due to and wheat, and he farmed vegetables to the war, I realized that my opportunities sell to support the family. We were six as a leader were ending. We couldn’t walk kids, and my mother told me they were around freely or ride the bus because we only able to send me to school through might be dragged from the vehicle and primary school. I tried to study on my taken to the army barracks. own with some help from my mother, but I actually escaped from the army. I had it was difficult. Around the same time, I been picked up, and I was in a truck being started to connect with people who were driven to the barracks when, by chance, all working to preserve the environment, but one of the soldiers guarding us got off and I saw that it was a strong need. So I the truck to stop another bus and search decided, along with some other friends for youth who were in hiding. Some who were in university, to band together friends and I shoved the one soldier out and create an environmental collective. of the way and, when he dropped his rifle, Ironically, the most difficult for me was jumped out of the truck and ran away. As that I couldn’t speak in public. People we were fleeing, I realized there were peo- don’t believe me now, but when I used to ple in the nearby community who were speak in public, I would tremble terribly. observing us, people who were loyal to the I could barely converse or eat with people army. Documents would arrive saying that at a table because I would drop things or I needed to present myself voluntarily on break cups.

“T

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o return to my childhood for a moment, t he fear of public speaking was particularly challenging because I am left-handed. In those days, school teachers believed it was a bad omen to be left-handed. They said it was a sign that we were revolutionaries. They would force me to sit in the back of the classroom and demand that I write with my right hand. Since I couldn’t, they would hit me with rulers. And because I was terrified to speak, I had trouble communicating in school. In time, I overcame this fear and advanced on my own, and eventually joined with a group of friends. One friend in particular, Carlos, was inspirational and really cared for the environment. He found opportunities for me to speak at conferences. He’d speak for the majority of the presentation and give me five minutes to talk. In the end, I found myself speaking in public in front of groups of foreigners in Spanish schools in Quetzaltenango. This is when I started to realize that colonization was a violation against the rights of indigenous communities. I realized that we Mayans, and many indigenas like us, had suffered extraordinarily over the centuries. Armed conflict is an injustice. When I watched documentaries about the exploitation of minerals in present-day Guatemala, I saw parallels to colonization and it left me infuriated. I knew this was the beginning of a new challenge for me. It became clear to me that our rights were not being respected, and there was a tremendous amount of corruption in my government, which continues today. I was determined to do something positive and practical. My father was


a real lover of nature; he had always planted trees. I saw how he cared for the seeds, and I felt compelled to follow in his footsteps. There was something inside of me that cared for the environment. I realized that I needed to form a collective, but Carlos and I were hesitant to create a group. Years earlier we had been part of a group, but became disillusioned when the majority of members became political and aligned with political parties. So our small group consisted of just Carlos, his girlfriend Vicky, and me. We started out working together but our visions were different; Vicky and Carlos wanted to start a small garden, while I was always thinking big. We collaborated for a while, but they decided to leave the project when they got married. So it was just me. All this took place back in 1999, afterwards I really started to form the project. Foreigners would come and ask me the name of the project. At that time we didn’t have a name. I had learned about the life of the Brazilian ecologist-activist, Chico Mendes, and I admired his cause. He motivated me. I could relate to his story because he didn’t learn to read or write until he was 33 years old. And so I told myself, “I also have problems. I don’t know how to navigate technology. I can’t open an email. But if he could do it, then I too have the capacity.” So I started the project and began without any funds.

Sally Morton planting beans with home-stay family in Cotzal

speaking like a revolutionary (I would say things like, “I don’t want destruction, I want life!”), every time I looked, my project was being vandalized. I’d find my bags of dirt (where seedlings are planted) cut open and scattered all over, and the small plants would be pulled out of the ground. But I never gave up or felt defeated; I continued working even though there was no money in the project. At this point, I was about 30 years old and I realized that it was important for me to make a life for myself and start a family. It still makes me sad to remember those days. I knew many women from my community, but I practiced Mayan started to think about how spirituality and unfortunately it is frowned best to move forward. M y upon in my country by other religious dream was to have a group of institutions. So many of the girls I fell in foreigners in my community, but I was love with would tell me that I was a good determined to make the project self-susman, but they didn’t agree with my spirtaining. I didn’t want them to just give ituality and I needed to change my views us money for free, or to give us a plate of and practices if I wanted to be happy with food because we’re indigenous. I always them. This was difficult to accept because wanted it to be sustainable. So I began it meant that many people in my comto work with this goal in mind. The most munity didn’t view me in a positive light. challenging aspect was that I also had to Even now, some of them still talk about it. work as an artisan to support myself while But it doesn’t affect me as much now as it getting the project off the ground. Bedid when I was younger. cause I was speaking in Spanish schools in I lived along with my parents because Xela, and perhaps because I had a way of all of my siblings had already gotten mar-

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ried by the time I met Claudia. She was coming out of an unhappy marriage when we fell in love. Claudia comes from a leftist family, a revolutionary family who has always fought for the rights of indigenous communities and against injustice. She had a job as a teacher, but was forced to leave it when she came to live with me, so we didn’t have a way of supporting ourselves. I earned very little, and she found a job that allowed us to continue working on the project. The biggest challenge was that no one believed in me. Everyone said that what I was doing was crazy. My friends asked me, “Why do you plant trees for free, are you a millionaire? Only rich people who can’t think of anywhere else to spend their money do this. You have needs. And you’re planting trees on community land. In the future, when the trees have grown, you won’t have the rights to sell the timber.” I told them that I don’t do this work for money. I do it for conservation and to preserve the forests and generate oxygen for the entire planet. One friend asked me, “Is the planet going to give you money for gifting oxygen? People in the world are eating well and you don’t have food on your table.” This was a painful reality because continued on page 20

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images by the amazingly talented REBECCA FRANCES BURNS

REVELATION & TRANSFORMATION

Rebecca Frances Burns is an analog photographer, global educator and actor in the field of international development. Over the past two years, she has instructed courses for Dragons in Jordan, China, Rwanda and Senegal, drawing from her years of scholarly inquiry of 21st century education, a decade of experience in the non-profit world and her background as a “third culture” kid. When Rebecca is not in New York, Los Angeles or working directly with students in the field, she finds sanctuary with her husband in the South Dakota plains. Rebecca’s photography and pedagogy seek to engage the creative in order to find human connection, and to draw on the beautiful, and sometimes difficult, stories of daily life in an increasingly globalized world. She collaborates with individuals and organizations in order to seek creative solutions, and to develop curriculum with a focus on interconnectivity and the skills needed to thrive in this era. She still shoots film because each capture is a choice, a moment in time that asks her to slow down and find authentic connection with her subject.

UMUGANDA A national day of community service held on the last Saturday of each month. Byumba, Rwanda

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SUNDAY SACRAMENT Quetzelan, Mexico

RED SHORTS Serer Wrestling on the island of Niodior, Senegal

SUNDAY MARKET Quetzelan, Mexico

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words by PETAL NILES

EMERGENCE

the echo within ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF NAHIN, a far-flung

outpost just off the old Ho Chi Minh trail in central Laos, I sit at the river’s edge and watch the sand come alive with the movements of ants and spiders. On the riverbanks nothing is still. Even the silent kingfisher darts its eyes across the current, ready for a glimmer of iridescence to flash beneath the wooden skiffs lurching on their keels, themselves in stasis waiting for working hands to untether them and push them into the shallow depths. As I linger, I sense something unseen and restless here, a spirit caught in the forest of tangled vines and ever-growing bamboo. But the source of the spirit is unclear, lost in the shadows under the banks. Unable to remain still, I step into the river and feel the spirit follow as I traverse shifting sands and climb roots of ancient trees onto higher ground.

catch at my throat and linger there. I am trapped in the heavy silence. At last, there at the heart of nothingness, my mind clears. Then I realize: this is where water and rock live, where the flitting life cycles of creatures warmed by the sun give way to the slow work of forces that know no time. Here, where the water courses out of blackness, here is the source of the restlessness. The meeting of the jungle and the cave is the meeting of different worlds, and at the frontier both forces become clear, more defined. But even in the silent, dark death within the cave, there is a sense of life waiting in the currents, a chance that the water connecting the two worlds will offer up the hum of existence. But the boat engines rev, tearing apart the silently stitched unity, and my thoughts return to my temporal breaths and lingering fear once more. A fracture of light emerges from the

“But the present moment can be a dangerous moment...” Some hours pass until I am together again with my companions in the heat of the day. Drenched in sweat, we head where light cannot follow, just upstream from where the mouth of Kong Lor cave, a seven-kilometer-long subterranean river, gapes from its rotting karst mold. We enter the chasm on longboats. Our battery-powered lights fail, and we are left to imagine just how high the ceiling vaults within the belly of the mountain as we venture deeper into the earth, swallowed whole by the black ether. I retreat to a place of placidity balanced in the thin skiff, straining against the current, counting my breaths in the cool, wet darkness. As the memories of light fade so does my serenity, and I begin to feel a nameless fear kindle and burn like embers within me. The darkness settles on my skin and squeezes my lungs until I am only my fear. I try and to surrender back to my breaths but they 14 THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

current like a knife slicing through the opaque underground stream. It grows, overtakes the boat and burns my eyes, burns this moment upon my mind. Black becomes brown and slowly my pupils adjust to the sunlight. The spirit too feels burned away by the winds and warmth. Something obfuscated exists, like the shadows under the bank at morning, but I don’t know if I’ll encounter it fully again. SOME WEEKS LATER FARTHER SOUTH,

I find myself in a cave outside Thakhek. Sitting in pure darkness I feel the restlessness descend again, but this time my mind remains clear. This time the restlessness moves within me, but I do not move with it. This time I let fear dissolve and disperse powerlessly into the ether. The first time I encountered the darkness I had, “the experience” as T.S. Elliot


wrote, “but missed the meaning.” But now I realize that during my time crossing the fast paced, sunlit world, with no home and yet at home, I have become more than a stagnant stitch on the cloth of life. I sense the restlessness because I have become part of the buzzing at the edge of the unknown between past and future. The spirit in the darkness has returned me to the stillness. The transience of the past months and the stability of the place I sit now are no longer in contrast. In this place of unity, I see that it is no chore to let time slip by in a haze of nostalgia and exaltation of the future. It is a simple thing to ignore the sensations that sight, sound and place inspire in us, and it is natural to feed fear. But I can also see that both past and future are held in this darkness as one, waiting on the currents of the river. There is no need to dream of other times when Time is present in every swirling drop. But the present moment can feel like a dangerous moment. UNTIL I FACED THE DARKNESS, I FEARED THE PRESENT. The past and future offer

a cocoon of distance, a fog of anticipation, expectation and memory, but the present moment rips us open. Within its sharp embrace, we become vulnerable to every sensation. Feelings demand recognition. Intuition and impulse guide us. In the present, we become the river in all its darkness and all its light. Yet for all its force, the present is a subtle force. The present is the moment in between. As the water of our life rushes onwards, we pull ourselves onto the bank and blink as it passes, constantly looking back and ahead. I know now that I do not have to spend so much time fixated on that which was and that which will be when the real challenge is discovering that which is. There is no need for fear. There is beauty in the fragile hum of vulnerability. Past and future will forever remain as my protectors. I call them forth when I focus on the ground beneath me. I find them in the echo within. PETAL NILES is a Dragons alum (Nepal ‘13 & Life Along the Mekong ‘14) and is currently back in Nepal helping her past instructor, Amrit Ale, organize his annual free Nepal Health Camp.

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words and images by CHRISTINA RIVERA COGSWELL

THE RETURN

where we... When I first left the country I was an angry girl: ashamed of my country, annoyed with American tradition and culture, dismissive of my family history, disappointed with my education and no longer on speaking terms with religion. It was the story of Santiago, the young shepherd in The Alchemist, that filled my spirit with an insatiable fire to move, and specifically to buy my first open-ended plane ticket to what would eventually accumulate into seven years of adventures abroad. But I still vividly remember the moment when I closed that little book and said to myself, with notable disappointment, “Wait. The boy ends up where he began?” I was just barely clever enough to discern, with a squinted and suspicious eye, the personal foreshadowing. Of course, I ignored the winking omen and picked up the challenge of the chase. Home? I don’t need one. House? On my back. Family? They can live without me. Country? Never belonged there. Religion? I’ve got big skies and starry nights to answer those questions now. Over time, my notion of home as an outward place harboring social detest devolved into something much softer and closer. For somewhere along the path, I picked up meditating. And I remember for a few years telling people that “home” was that warm little nook in which I centered myself every morning—with eyes closed—for about ten minutes, deep in meditation. But this version of home is lonely. As every long-term traveler eventually learns, the charms of a transient life are, mockingly, transient. I began to feel myself scraping: the surfaces of cities; the shallowness of temporary friends; the stereotypes of a culture; the Lonely Planet highlights of a country. My travels weighted too heavily on the side of quantity, I added a few stones to the quality side by slowing down my itinerary and stationing myself in small communities for three to six months at a time, usually working with this or that NGO with the goal of fostering the connection between local and international circles. Over time I finally learned full names, foreign languages, local bus routes, and the best street food stand in town. Still, I found myself in the strange position of never asking a person his or her name because I was forced to ask myself a conditional question, “How long would I be staying?” And that is perhaps when the big “C” word entered my mind and vocabulary. I decided that I did not care where in the world I lived, so long as I was surrounded by people with whom I shared like-minded values, trust, curiosity and intentions. In a word: community. One in which I could foster my new understanding of the concepts of interconnectedness and interdependence. A place and people in whom I could invest and connect. Just as I, in perpetual pilgrimage, had learned that my travels were less about the goal than the journey, so had I learned that my relationships were less about the people than my interactions with them. And I needed a circle…of brothers

FROM THE JUNGLES OF LATIN AMERICA TO THE TIBETAN PLATEAU, C hristina has spent the majority of her adult life exploring and documenting the far contours of the globe. Check out her photo galleries at: www.flickr.com/photos/seekingsol/sets.

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and sisters and parents and lovers and extended family and community with whom I could exchange trust, teachings, experience, dependence, beliefs, challenges, support and, of course, love. But before I continue, I must also include the most noble, impactful, profound and beautiful lesson that my travels have BEATEN into me: humility. Reminiscing about the arrogance and ignorance with which I stomped upon my world gathers within my cheeks the cold shades of shame. That I left my country on the spit and snarl of these two charges emphasizes the depth of my personal projection. What self-righteousness we assume in the task and name of seeking change. The world is change. It’s the predominant characteristic of nature and the Earth and nothing less than comical to presume that we need seek it out. We human beings, both individually and cumulatively, will constantly be presented with the challenges and opportunities to evolve to our higher selves regardless of the continent upon which we happen to find ourselves born or standing. I need not cross the world on a jet engine to solve the puzzles of the planet or recognize the mystery of life. But perhaps, like Santiago, we must undertake the physical journey—with good humor, self-deprecation and humility—to come to that same conclusion. A few months ago, I drank yak butter tea in an underground stone house at 15,000 feet on a shelf of the Tibetan plateau. And as I watched the children playing with puppies, and the women chatting happily over the meal cooking on the fire, and the father spinning yak wool while checking in with the teenagers coming in from the fields, I realized that every community is precious, none more or less than another. Be it a tiny village high in the Himalayas or the park of a busy urban city street, the challenges, lessons and connections are the same. We don’t need to cross borders, but only to venture consciously into the unknown. For only by leaving all that we know, can we examine ourselves objectively. And there, sipping tea in one of the most remote corners on the globe, I concluded that the joy of travel is not where it takes us, but the new awareness of where and who we already are. It matters very little where we go. Where we begin is the only place in the world in which we can end. In the concluding passages of The Alchemist, Santiago returns to the sheep, fields, trees and family of his upbringing with a smile. His community had not changed. But his awareness and appreciation of his role interwoven within it did. Home, to me, is defined as the circle of people and places in which we choose to foster kindness and love. It’s a community of friends, teachers, lovers, mentors, family, students and every messenger met along the path. Home is the web of our interconnectedness. And once we realize the degree to which we are interdependent, the rest, I believe, becomes irrelevant. The home we return to is nothing more than a deeper awareness of what’s been there all along.

begin.

CHRISTINA RIVERA COGSWELL is Dragons’ Director of Princeton Bridge Year programs and a past instructor (Visions of India, Himalayan Studies, Guatemala). She currently lives in Vail with her husband and their two adorable babies.

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words by JASON PATENT

REINTEGRATION

a blind spot... obviously God bless parents, especially moms. At least, especially my mom. J ust after I turned 24, in 1992, I returned to my parents’ home in Missoula, Montana, USA, after having spent the academic year teaching English in a medium-sized industrial city in the far, far northeast of China. “Reverse culture shock” is a term I may or may not have heard before that homecoming. Either way, I was utterly unprepared for what was about to hit me…and my mom. I was rude, insensitive, and sometimes even cruel to my mom, who only wanted to welcome her son home and make me feel at home. Nothing she did was enough for me. She tried to empathize, she tried to nurture, she asked questions. Nothing worked. I was just too jumbled. My case may be extreme, but I know that the general sense of instability, of not feeling quite right, is common for people just back from big adventures in new places. And it turns out that the brain has a lot to do with it. 18 THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

Please indulge me in doing a brief exercise. H old this page at arm’s length. Now, while keeping your left eye closed and your right eye laser-focused on the plus sign, slowly (slowly!) move the paper closer to your face. At some point something will happen to the dot. (If the paper ends up at your face you’ll need to try again. It’s crucial to start with the paper far away, to keep your right eye squarely focused on the plus sign, and to bring the paper in very, very slowly.) How could the dot just disappear like that? It turns out that each eye has a blind spot, where the visual field is blank. The retina gets no information from this part of the visual field. Why don’t we see some kind of hole or emptiness where the blind spot is? Because the brain invents something to “put” there—in this case, the color or pattern of the paper around it. How does this work? T he brain just invents it. Volumes of evidence from vision

experts have proven that the world we see is a massive illusion. Just twenty percent of visual information comes from the retina; the remaining eighty percent is pure fiction, manifested by the brain in order to create a sense of coherence. Think about that: four-fifths of what we see is just the brain’s best guess. It’s not actually there. I love this simple exercise because it gets right to the heart of two key issues when it comes to human identity. First, reality is a product of our own brains, based on our particular set of experiences. Second, our brains have a primal need to create coherence. They are doing this constantly, in the background, completely out of our conscious awareness. Another thing our brains do all the time, automatically, is warn us of threats in the environment. One part of the brain in particular—the amygdala, or “lizard brain”—gets highly active when it thinks we’re being threatened. And when the amygdala is active, it inhibits activity in


Four-fifths of what we see is just the brain’s best guess. It’s not actually there. the prefrontal cortex and other parts of the brain that govern our “higher” functions. The amygdala is fast but coarse: it knows nothing about nuance or subtlety. In one important sense this is a good thing: it keeps us alive . If a tiger jumps out of the bushes, we really don’t have time to consider the tiger in all its uniqueness. We just need to know right away that it’s a tiger and that it’s dangerous. The problem is that the amygdala does its thing even when we don’t need it to. It sees almost anything new as a potential threat, and since difference is a form of novelty, we tend to see people different from us as threatening. This leaves us with a rather bleak picture of humanity: If our brains are busy inventing coherent realities about the threats posed by groups of “other” people, then we don’t stand much of a chance of getting along. And isn’t this, when it comes down to it, the story of humanity’s dark side? Now for the good news: we can relate to difference in ways that aren’t dominated by threat. It just takes a lot of awareness and hard work.

When I returned from China in 1992, I had a lot going on in my brain. D uring my year in China, my brain had started out in full-on threat mode, reacting negatively to the confusing behaviors all around me. Over then next nine months, my brain gradually created a sense of coherence, as I began to understand all the new patterns I was seeing, and to empathize with the people around me. I was starting to understand why people did what they did, and even though it was different from what I was used to, I could at least see the logic. New worlds were opening up to me, and it was thrilling. I was a new person in a new world, eager to return home and share my bounty. But when I came home I found a place that looked exactly as it always had, inhabited by people whose worldviews hadn’t budged an inch. The “mistake” I made is a common one for returnees from abroad: I had replaced a single view of the world with a different, single view that I’d judged to be better than the “old” view. And this is where the brain’s good news begins to come in handy. Thankfully, we’re not slaves to the amygdala and

to our brain’s tendency to create a single, coherent story. As humans we have the ability—thanks to the prefrontal cortex and other more recently evolved regions of the brain—to see the world from multiple perspectives. And it turns out that this is the key to reintegration—indeed, to what reintegration is all about. Joseph Campbell wrote, “‘The Cosmic Dancer,’ declares Nietzsche, ‘does not rest heavily in a single spot, but gaily, lightly, turns and leaps from one position to another.’” We don’t have to fear “other” ways of being. Fear is natural, but we don’t need to let it rule us. What we need is to thank our amygdala for keeping us alive, and to ask it to please quiet down while we listen and look for what there is for us to learn. We all can, in Walt Whitman’s famous words, “contain multitudes.” Indeed the future of our species depends on it. So let’s keep asking, keep reaching, keep learning.

JASON PATENT , Ph.D., is a leading cultural interpreter on China-related issues and previously served as American Co-Director of the Hopkins-Nanjing Center for Chinese and American Studies in Nanjing, China. He is a former Dragons instructor (China ‘98-’01) and co-founder of the Dragons China Semester Program. Currently Jason is Chief of Operations and Director of the Center for Intercultural Leadership at UC Berkeley’s International House. He lives in the Bay Area with his wife, Colette Plum, and their two daughters.

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continued from page 11

THE GAUNTLET OF TRIALS, CONT asking the man how much they owed him. He began to charge. We didn’t have any money to give him, so I told my wife I’d talk to him and see if we could pay him back in the future. “There will come better times, Armando,” Claudia assured me. “We’ll see what happens.” We got off the truck and I asked how much we owed. The man said, “You don’t owe me anything.” He said, “The money I paid for gas is so that you can eat tomorrow.” I told him that what he did for me and my family I considered to be a huge action. I admired him. This small act gave me the strength to continue fighting, to continue working against mining companies, to continue planting trees.

Dragons group with a local Shaman in Guatemala

I would arrive at home and my wife would tell me that we need food. I’d see my three kids, who came from her first marriage, walking to school without shoes. And yet, I didn’t see another way. If I looked for another job my project would terminate. So I started going into Spanish schools in Quetzaltenango to see if they could help. They were already using the project and my work as a source of income for themselves. They were receiving donations of 1,000 quetzales ($140 USD) periodically, which would have been a huge sum of money for me. But they were taking advantage of the situation, skimming money off the top, and giving me only 100 quetzales for the project. I tried to look for other ways to generate income and continue working on the project; I dreamed of opening a school. We had the resources in my community—teachers, families and space to build the facility—so I took the initial steps and brought together a group of teachers to train. They asked me if there was going to be work for them, and I told them yes, even though I knew there wasn’t any. I didn’t have anyone whom I could count on, only the hope of waking up from a dream and seeing a line of students arriving at the project. It took time, but eventually the community began to support 20 THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

the project. Still, that didn’t alleviate the problem of financing it. We didn’t have anything. I couldn’t even dream about having an office; I just wanted to cover our basic needs and costs.

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’ll never forget the day my wife and I hiked into the mountains with 15,000 trees to plant and only 25 cents in our pockets. We didn’t bring any food; we didn’t have any. There were about 400 people from the community who went with us to plant trees. We carried everything up and planted the trees and then came lunchtime. When everyone else from the community pulled food from their sacks, I looked at my wife and kids and thought, “What do we eat?” We just sat in silence for a moment. And then something happened, something that I value about my community. When they saw us without food, one person brought over bread, and another gave us tamales, and someone else meat. We suddenly had a banquet. We were in a remote area below the peak of a mountain and we were all tired. But there was a dirt road nearby where cars travel. That afternoon, a man passed by and told us all to get in his truck. When we got back into town, the others began to get off and were

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ven though I know there are organizations with official papers, I ’ve always been the type of person who doesn’t want to waste time in congress. The congress of the Republic of Guatemala is extremely corrupt. But by 2006, we had arrived at a crossroads. We still didn’t have anything to eat. Claudia was working, but she hadn’t been paid in six months. Chico Mendes was doing well, and we were busy. Quite unexpectedly, some government officials arrived one day with a proposal. These people were friends of mine, people who had known me since childhood and knew me as an activist who loved working within the community. They proposed that I take a salary from the government of 15,000 quetzales. They offered to give me any car I wanted and to help improve the project. In return, I would have to renounce my ideological beliefs because it was a black eye on the government. I would also be required to advocate for mining projects and the privatization of water. I refused directly, and told them that I would continue my efforts. They left and told me to think about it. I spoke with Claudia that night and she said, “You decide and I’ll follow you. I am your partner, but you know what they are doing is wrong. I’m ready to endure what-


ever comes. Maybe I can find a better job and we won’t lose Chico Mendes.” When I declined their offer, they told me I was going to die of hunger. They warned me that I would end up with nothing, and that what I was doing didn’t make any sense. “The government and the mining companies have power,” they said. “Your project will wither away and die.” This is when I first encountered Dragons. I don’t know how they found out about the project, but I met with Simon and we walked though the forest. Claudia and I still didn’t have anything at this time. Occasionally volunteers would come, but only on a work-exchange. It was still a huge challenge to continue trying to establish my community. So when Dragons arrived, it lit a light in my soul. Just seeing the faces of the students made me realize I was doing something good. The day when they arrived I didn’t want to sleep because I wanted to make sure they were taken care of. When the first group left, I realized that with this relationship it would be possible to continue advancing the project. When more groups came and wrote about their experiences in Pachaj, the government backed off too. The presence of foreign students and outsiders caused them to stop pressuring me.

tors didn’t see me as just a coordinator; rather they told me that I was inspiring, and students valued our discussions greatly. I realized that my self-esteem had been very low. Their words, their presence, gave me security to confront life and the challenges of the project. Still, there was a final threat where agents of the government destroyed a seedbed that held about 70,000 seedlings waiting to be transplanted into bags. The threat was mainly symbolic: This time it’s your plants, the next time it will be you. I told my wife, who looked at me and said, “If they already said it, they’re not going to do it. They’re not going to kill you.” I spoke with one of my friends who said, “Look, Armando, they are doing this because you’re an important person. But it’s your decision. You can continue or stop here.” In that moment I decided to continue, to keep going, to refuse to tire. I told myself that the day they stop bothering me is the day I become no one. And so the project continued to grow, and my wife began to promote Chico Mendes in her work, and the youth of the community started to ask me what they could do to improve the environmental situation. When I started the project, I was thinking about protecting the water sources in my community. I never thought his is when things started that we were also generating oxygen for to get easier. E ach year we the planet, along with everything else that would wait for Dragons students trees give us. I also realized that I was to arrive like rain in May because they collaborating with teachers to generate were the only group that believed in us. work and earnings for home-stay famThere was something we really liked about ilies—families who are truly grateful to Dragons: their instructors prepared the have students live with them. students before they arrived at the comOne of my friends asked me, “What munity. They explained to the students do you want to do in the future, what are that they were going to use an outhouse, you looking for?” I told him that I want to that they may find themselves eating in a go to the United States and talk about my house with dirt floors, and so the students project. Not with the idea of filling Pachaj felt prepared. In 2007, the arrival of two with thousands of foreigners, just to learn Dragons groups helped pull me out of the about life in the US and how people live. abyss and allowed me to see that I could When they granted my visa, I was both very do something great. The Dragons instruc- content and afraid because I had never

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stepped foot on a plane or crossed a border, and I didn’t know what was going to happen. When I arrived here it was a different world. It had been 20 years since I’d seen my brother and nephews, which was the first thing I did. We talked for a long time.

I

know that this story of Armando is a small story. There are others who have been threatened and tortured in my country, who to this day hide when they see or hear the army because they think they are still living in the war. They also deserve to be mentioned. I consider myself a small man in comparison to them. I don’t consider myself a person who has done a lot. I know I’m a person who has done a little and that I am one of many who want to improve the planet. I’d like to leave a small message for all the people who are going to read this. We need to believe in indigenous peoples. We need to support them, not with money but with confidence in their ideas. We need to teach them to be self-sufficient because this helps preserve their ideologies. A man who works for a cause and is gifted lots of money will lose the money. I believe that if someone wants to do something, they need to suffer. They need to pass through the fire and navigate the wind and water. And when they arrive, they arrive to the joy of triumph. So my advice for the young people of this country is to challenge life. Leave what they have at home and “put on the boots” as we say in Guatemala. Begin to walk on the land, have contact with the mother earth, and know that the earth is where everything comes from. It’s where our sustenance comes from and where we need to be and receive that energy. They say that those who listen to advice reach old age. I hope that if they listen to these words they will grow to be old, or how we say in my culture, “elders with grand knowledge like the moon.”

JORGE ARMANDO LOPEZ POCOL i s founder of the Chico Mendes Reforestation Project in Pachaj, Guatemala, and a mentor for hundreds of Dragons students since 2006. Of Mayan descent, Armando recently completed a speaking tour in the US where he discussed environmental preservation, the privatization of water and indigenous rights.

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM 21


THE ALUMNI TOOLKIT

alumni updates

‘07

ASTRID SCHANZGARBASSI C hina

Language Intensive, Summer

Astrid is working on a nutrition-based project that a.) she’s really excited about; b.) affects travelers and adventurers of all kinds; and c.) might appeal to some of you health conscious folks!

‘14

GABE GRESCHLER

Visions of India, Fall

Starting this month, Gabe will bike 314 kilometers from Seattle to Portland to raise money for children at The Little Stars School, an elementary school in Banaras (Varanasi), India, that serves underprivileged youth in the Assi Ghat community. TO LEARN MORE ABOUT HIS RIDE, CHECK OUT: facebook.com/

seattletoportland

It’s called Phi Bar, and she’s teamed up with a nutritionist to create an energy bar that’s not full of sugar and carbs, and is built for that time when you’re summiting Kilimanjaro— or for the plane ride that’ll get you there.

THE REFUGEE RESPONSE

Cleveland, OH

BAHEYA MALATY

Jordan: The Fertile

Crescent Semester, Fall

Their project aims to use soccer as a platform for women’s empowerment and leadership, and to provide a safe space for the girls of the three Bethlehem refugee camps to play soccer. IF ANYONE HAS ANY QUESTIONS OR WOULD LIKE TO DONATE USED SOCCER EQUIPMENT, PLEASE CONTACT BAHEYA AT: b aheya. malaty@coloradocollege.edu

PAID POSITION: P R/Marketing Manager and Donor Manager. Contact: jobs@paradoxsports. org

2.

FOR MORE INFORMATION,

This past winter, Baheya was honored as the Colorado College recipient of the 2015 Davis Project for Peace Award. She will travel to Bethlehem, Palestine, with her friend and co-founder, Mary Jones, to initiate their project BINAT: Bethlehem Inter-camp Athletics.

Boulder, CO

Paradox Sports seeks to recognize and foster an individual’s potential and strength, defying the assumption that people with a physical disability can’t lead a life of excellence. They provide inspiration, opportunities and specialized adaptive equipment so that anyone is able to be an active participant in human-powered sports.

INTERNSHIP: P rogram Assistant. Contact: w ww.paradoxsports. org/climbing-club

CHECK OUT: www.eatphi.co

‘12

1.

PARADOX SPORTS

jobs

RETURNING TO THE UNITED STATES AFTER A DRAGONS COURSE CAN BE MORE CHALLENGING THAN YOU MIGHT EXPECT. With all the opportunities available, figuring out your next step and finding ways to stay involved in inspirational work can feel overwhelming. With that in mind, we have collected a list of organizations scattered around the country, focused on environmental and social movements, which are seeking passionate employees, volunteers and interns.

22 THE MAP’S EDGE SPRING 2015

The Refugee Response (TRR) empowers refugees to become self-sufficient and contributing members of their new communities. The Refugee Response was formed to help refugees adjust to life in Northeast Ohio. They work to empower the region’s growing newcomer population, particularly those living in the greater Cleveland area between three months and five years, by providing opportunities to acquire the skills they need to succeed in their new communities. VOLUNTEER: H ome tutoring and Refugee Empowerment Agricultural Program (REAP). Please contact: therefugeeresponse.org

3.

SAVE OUR SEABIRDS

Sarasota, FL

Save our Seabirds is a nonprofit wildlife conservation center working to aid injured sea birds along the Florida coastline. They offer permanent housing for birds who cannot be released back into the wild and educational programs for the public. UNPAID INTERNSHIPS: F or students currently enrolled in a college or university, interested in environmental and/or animal science, biology, or ecology. Interns will have a chance to rescue, rehabilitate, and release injured birds and educate the public about environmental issues and sustainability. Minimum tenweek commitment in spring, fall, summer or winter. Contact: saveourseabirds.org

4.

OUTRIGHT VERMONT

Burlington, VT

The mission of Outright Vermont is to build safe, healthy, and supportive environments for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning youth between the ages of 13-22. Their youth programs, groups and queer youth space (unless otherwise stated) are for young queer people, ages 22 and under. Their education and outreach work is for all ages and ranges from work in schools to local non-profit agencies. TO VOLUNTEER at

afterschool, weekend and summer events. Contact: i nfo@outrightvt.org or call 802.865.9677

WE WOULD LOVE TO HEAR WHAT YOU ARE UP TO; SEND US A NOTE. Write to Admissions Director Eva Vanek, eva@wheretherebedragons.com or call 303.413.0822.


5.

GIRL UP

National

Girl Up is the United Nations Foundation’s adolescent girl campaign intended to raise awareness and funds to help girls in remote places around the world. Through teen advocacy and campus clubs, Girl Up works with girls in the U.S. to provide healthcare and educational access for girls of all nationalities.

7. N

ATIVE AMERICAN COMMUNITY

BOARD  Lake Andes, SD

The Native American Community Board (NACB) was founded by a group of Native Americans on the Yankton Sioux Reservation in South Dakota to address various issues relevant to the Native American community. Since its founding, the NACB has been able to open a resource center to shelter and provide support UNPAID INTERNSHIPS: and information for members Semester-long opportunities of its community locally, for college students or recent graduates. Contact: w ww.girlup. nationally and globally. org/about/staff TO START YOUR OWN CAMPUS CHAPTER OR CLUB, CONTACT: Grassroots

Associate, Rachel Wisthuff at rwisthuff@girlup.org or Teen Advisor, Janet Diaz (Dragons Alum) at diaz.janet02@gmail.com

6.

THE GLOBAL SOAP

PROJECT  Las Vegas, NV

The Global Soap Project’s mission is to reduce waste produced in the U.S. and increase health standards in other countries by recycling partially used bars of soap from hotels and redistributing them to communities in developing countries. By eliminating waste and providing accessibility to basic healthcare needs, The Global Soap Project is helping the environment and individuals worldwide. VOLUNTEER: R ecycle

gentlyused bars at the Global Soap Factory. Contact: v olunteers@ globalsoap.org

PAID INTERNSHIP: Looking

for interns who are passionate about Native American rights and health issues to work from three months – one year. Paid $500.00 a month with free lodging and reduced board. Contact: charon@charles-mix. com or call 605.487.7079

8.

THE MOUNTAINEERS Seattle, WA

The Mountaineers is an outdoor education non-profit based out of Seattle that works to preserve the backcountry of Washington. Through classes, programs, trips and gatherings, the members and volunteers of The Mountaineers promote conversation efforts and sustainable outdoor recreation practices. VOLUNTEER: P ositions

include hosting a film festival, leading outdoor courses, being a part of a trail maintenance crew, mentoring youth. Contact: info@mountaineers.org

dragons’ partners

DRAGONS WORKS WITH REMARKABLE COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS WORLDWIDE. COME SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR ONE OF DRAGONS’ LONG-TERM BOLIVIA PARTNERS ON THEIR U.S. TOUR. THE WORLD RENOWNED

CIRCUS GROUP CIRQUE DU

SOLEIL RECENTLY INITIATED

A PARTNERSHIP WITH ONE OF DRAGONS’ PARTNER

Contact Justin Kiersky at justin@wheretherebedragons.com.

WHY TRAVEL HALF-WAY AROUND THE WORLD TO FIGHT THE GOOD FIGHT WHEN YOU CAN MAKE AN IMPACT IN YOUR OWN COMMUNITY? Poet, professor, bio-regionalist and environmental activist, Gary Snyder, once said, “The most radical thing you can do is stay home.” Here are some great ways to support your local community and create a global ripple effect.

ORGANIZATIONS IN

••

arts-based organization that works with children that live and work on the streets in Cochabamba. By training highrisk youth in the performing arts, they promote safer working and living conditions and empower participants to get off the streets and continue their education.

••

BOLIVIA, PERFORMING LIFE. •• •• Performing Life is a Bolivian

Food Bank Homeless Shelter Humane Society Retirement Home

••

Literacy Campaign

••

Community Garden

••

Refugee Center

••

Meals on Wheels

••

After-School program

••

LGBTQ Center

For a limited time, Cirque Du Soleil has allocated a portion of their ticket proceeds to Performing Life. If we can help sell 50 tickets to Cirque Du Soleil’s upcoming tour, 100 percent of the proceeds will go to Performing Life. DATES SHOW: K urios DATES: J une

11 – June 26 CITY: D enver, CO SHOW: K ooza DATES: O ctober 15 – November 15 CITY: A ustin,

WANT TO CONTRIBUTE TO A FUTURE EDITION?

your local community

TX

TO PURCHASE TICKETS, EMAIL JULIANNE CHANDLER:

Performing Life

correction

IN THE FALL ‘14 EDITION,

The People’s March Q&A misstated one of the leaders of Harvard’s divestment campaign.

andesandamazon@

Her name is Chloe Maxmin, not

wheretherebedragons.com

Chloe Hall.

WWW.WHERETHEREBEDRAGONS.COM 23


Where There Be Dragons 3200 Carbon Place,  Suite #102 Boulder, CO  80301 tel. 800.982.9203  | 303.413.0822

gap year programs

asia     |      latin america      |       a frica      |      m iddle east Dragons offers semester-long experiential education programs in some of the world’s most transformative locations. Visit our website to learn more about course highlights, college accreditation, our instructors, and what makes us different. Here are a few of the semester programs we offer.

rhythms of west africa

AGES 17–22

FOCUS: S piritual Traditions, Music and Dance, Language Immersion COURSE D ATES: September 15 – December 6, 2015 & February 12 – May 1, 2016 Learn traditional drumming and dance, bond with your home-stay family, examine models of community development, and explore traditional healing and Sufi Islamic practices in Senegal.

life along the mekong

AGES 17–22

FOCUS: B iodiversity, Development, Cultural Immersion COURSE DATES: S eptember 15 – December 6, 2015 & February 12 – May 1, 2016 Follow the Mekong River through China, Laos and Cambodia, trek in the Himalaya, explore the region’s spiritual traditions, and live with home-stay families on idyllic river islands.

myanmar in transition

AGES 17–22

FOCUS: D emocracy, Development, Theravada Buddhism COURSE DATES: S eptember 15 – December 6, 2015 & February 12 – May 1, 2016 Study Theravada Buddhism, explore the ancient temples of Bagan and Mt Popa, work with refugees on the Thai borderlands, and examine the challenges of democratic reform in Yangon.

w w w. w h e r e t h e r e b e d r a g o n s . c o m

WATCH US,  LIKE US,  LOVE US

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