Beloit and the Peace Corps:
Adventures in Service
“... So we’re lying there under
mosquito nets, unable to sleep and wondering what kinds of lizards
and spiders are lurking about. That day, we had driven through Freetown
and were utterly shocked — stunned even — by the poverty we saw. And
all I could think was, ‘What have we gotten ourselves into?’”
It was 1969, and Michael’69 and Eileen
Grennan May’69 had just arrived in Sierra Leone, where they would
spend the next two years as Peace Corps volunteers. They, like so
many Beloiters before and since, sought a way to “...do something
constructive, while broadening our understanding of the world.” A
stint in the Peace Corps seemed just the ticket.
The
Peace Corps may be the best known service program in the United States.
Over four decades it has sent more than 160,000 citizens to work in
Third World and developing countries. Beloit College is a leading
producer of Peace Corps volunteers based on school size; recent records
show that 227 alumni have enlisted, and 12 are serving at this time.
Working in the Peace Corps isn’t easy.
Volunteers who persevere through a typical two-year assignment (and
some do not) live in countries and conditions that range from primitive
to grueling. While they receive in-country training and administrative
support, many reside in isolated communities, with few clear directives.
Most rely on tenacity and ingenuity to succeed.
Vic Webbeking’61 found that a standard-issue
medical kit also came in handy. A member of one of the first groups
dispatched in 1962, Mr. Webbeking was posted in Belize City, British
Honduras (now Belize). Ostensibly there to teach high school students,
he was soon providing first aid to local citizens.
“Another volunteer and I lived in what
was basically a home for delinquent boys,” he says. “People started
asking us to treat wounds and ailments. So we ran a clinic, which
we had no business doing, except that the people coming to us had
no alternative.”
Almost 30 years later, Tim Dowd’89
and Nancy Atwell’89 adjusted their approach to meet the needs of 200
villagers in Santiaguillo, Ecuador. Although Tim had trained in agricultural
pest management, his focus soon shifted.
“I tried to help farmers use fertilizers
properly,” he says, noting that many such chemicals were highly toxic.
“I would suggest to one farmer, ‘Let’s do an experiment on your field,’
and if it worked well, we’d try to develop new planning and planting
techniques.”
Ms. Atwell worked at introducing new
crops, including okra, broccoli, and zucchini. Her efforts were mostly
successful, but she realized that her gender limited her influence.
“The reality is that sometimes farmers
wouldn’t pay attention to me in the way that they would to Tim,” she
recollects. “So Tim and I tried to set an example by basic living
— we shared the cooking, cleaning, digging, and hauling, and I handled
difficult jobs as would any man. And some villagers recognized it
doesn’t matter that I am a woman.”
Today’s volunteers are often young,
single women. Alyson Carr’98 served in Namibia, an experience she
likens to living in a friendly fishbowl. “People always knew where
I was and what I had done,” she says. Her days as a teacher-trainer
“... gave me confidence to change. I learned to find creative solutions
to problems, and work with teams. I found different values and ways
of thinking, and realized that much of the world lives without things
Americans take for granted.”
It is a perception that Paul Fishstein’76
appreciates. While in Afghanistan in the mid-’70s, Mr. Fishstein witnessed
a military coup that transformed the country’s political system overnight.
At the time, he was living in a small town near the Soviet border,
teaching English and coaching basketball. “At noon the radio went
dead, then a local military guy showed up,” he says. “We were astounded.”
He did not witness violence but heard harrowing stories from friends
in Kabul. Shortly after, he completed his service, and the Peace Corps
pulled remaining volunteers out of Afghanistan. “It was grim leaving
Afghan friends behind, not knowing what would happen to them.”
Alumni of the Peace Corps often consider
their years of service to be a defining experience. Some recall it
positively, others with ambivalence, wondering if they truly helped
their host countries and questioning the United States’ role in world
affairs. Most use the episode as a springboard for subsequent interests
and achievements. Even those who suffer extreme hardship can put lessons
learned to constructive use.
After an initial rocky start, Michael
and Eileen May adapted to Sierra Leone and worked as an agricultural
manager and teacher-trainer, respectively. A week before they were
to leave, a kerosene stove blew up, severely burning Eileen. Her recovery
process — although prolonged and excruciating — inspired her to become
a doctor. Neither she nor Mr. May regrets the choices that led to
her cooking over the stove that day in Sierra Leone.
“It wasn’t easy, but it is the best
thing we ever did,” Dr. May says. “We developed a different set of
priorities, and learned to not be afraid to be different. If one of
our children wants to join the Peace Corps, I would highly recommend
it.”
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From Behind the Desk
“Peace Corps volunteers
always need someone to listen to their stories,” says
Margaret Goodman’69. She has done that — and a whole
lot more.
In 1998, Ms. Goodman
opened the Peace Corps Bangladesh office, and for more
than two years she directed its operations. The job
was exciting, challenging, and frustrating. “I learned
how to deal with red tape and natural disasters,” she
laughs. Working with a small staff, she placed nearly
50 volunteers while arranging housing and training,
and administering the country’s program development.
Prior to that, she worked
for four years as the Peace Corps regional director
for Asia and the Pacific, managing programs in 17 nations.
Although Ms. Goodman never served in the Peace Corps
herself, her experience with the Committee on Foreign
Affairs of the U.S. House of Representatives, in foreign
policy analysis, and with legislation helped prepare
her for her responsibilities.
Now retired from government
service, she remains a strong advocate of the Peace
Corps mission. “Peace Corps service can be life-changing,”
she says. “When it works well, everybody benefits.”
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