Leader
A world apart
 |
| Pat Anderson, 59, from Guisborough in Nepal |
Fifty years ago, a letter to The Sunday Times helped found the Voluntary Service Overseas. Since
then, 32,000 volunteers have travelled abroad to help developing countries. Owen Amos
speaks to three North-East volunteers recently returned from far-flung corners of the world
ON March 23, 1958, the
Bishop of Portsmouth
wrote to The Sunday
Times. "A number of
headmasters are very
much aware that many of
their senior boys, including the most gifted, are
having to wait a year before vacancies become
available in universities and technical training," he wrote.
"So many of these young people have
something very worthwhile to give; but where
and how? It is, I submit, the underdeveloped
territories of the Commonwealth that today offer
opportunities of service."
Less than two months later, eight 18-year-old
men left the UK for a year's voluntary service in
Ghana, Nigeria, Northern Rhodesia (Zambia)
and Sarawak (part of Malaysia). Voluntary
Service Overseas had begun.
Fifty years on, 32,000 people have followed
those first eight men, from Sierra Leone to Sri
Lanka; Vanuatu to Vietnam. Today, there are
1,500 VSO volunteers aged 20 to 75 overseas,
recruited from the UK, Canada, Kenya, the
Netherlands, the Philippines, Ireland and India.
Specialist assignments last from two weeks to
six months, long-term assignments last up to
two years. Work includes health care, leisure
and tourism, and agriculture. In 1958, the
Bishop of Portsmouth's letter - titled "The Year
Between" - concluded: "Is it beyond our
organisational capacity to unite these needs?"
The answer, resoundingly, was no.
Philip Needham 76, from Barnard Castle
PHILIP worked with VSO from 1986 to 2006 in
Sri Lanka, Gambia and, mainly, China. "I
had been in farming for 30 years but, in 1985,
decided I wanted to work full-time in development,"
he says. "I had always had ambitions to work in the
colonial service. I met a young lecturer who had
worked with VSO, we became close friends, and he
got me interested in working in developing
countries."
His first posting was Sri Lanka - "a thrilling experience"
- working with Salvation Army children's
homes, and livestock and agriculture projects. In
1990, he accepted a VSO job in China, first at a pig
farm, then teaching animal husbandry and English
at a new college. "It was particularly interesting in
China," he says. "I enjoyed the challenge of working
there. The change was terrific. The country was
opening up to the world and we were there, where
the Chinese wanted us to be. They particularly valued
English speakers.
"To help people, first you have to listen to them.
I think it's so very important to find out what they
really need. It's no use going to these countries
thinking you can dictate to them. You can't."
Philip went in his 50s. Are older people as valuable
as youngsters?
"There is good work done by younger people - but
as an older person you have more experience to
offer," he says. "In some ways older people are accepted
more because those you are helping see you
have experience. I think being 40 to 50 is the ideal
time to go."
So does he miss the excitement of life abroad?
"Definitely," he replies. "I definitely miss it. But you
have to call it a day sometime, slow down and take
time for retirement." Philip gets out a short, typed
diary of his experiences, which ends: "Life is not
measured by the breaths we take, but by the places
and the moments that take our breath away."
Pat Anderson, 59, from Guisborough
PAT was head of Northgate Junior School,
Guisborough, before she spent two years
in Nepal. "I was ready for early retirement,
but I didn't just want to stop working," she
says. "I wanted to carry on in education and I'd
heard about VSO wanting education managers.
"I applied in February 2005, was accepted, and
they asked if I would go the following September.
I hadn't planned it quite so soon, but I did it.
I was offered several places, but Nepal's was the
job description that I thought best suited me.
"I'd never been out of Europe before. All I
knew of Nepal was that it was mountainous -
and I don't like heights! Or, should I say, didn't
like them."
Pat had a month's training before leaving,
where many questions were answered - and
more emerged. She finished work on August 31,
and left on September 14. "The six weeks before
I went I was really up and down," she says. "I
didn't have much time to get my head round it."
She worked in a local education authority office,
one step down from the ministry. "It was a
very big district, with hills, jungle, flat land and
paddy fields," she says. "I was working with their
equivalent of school advisors, helping them set
up training.
"At the end of the two years there was a lot of
frustration - the political situation meant a lot
of time was wasted.
"But when I was talking to the women I had
worked with I began to realise how much we had
helped them. We were able to give them much
more opportunity to have their say. I could see
we really made a difference."
Pat has two grown-up sons. "I said I wanted to
work abroad, and they wanted me to go somewhere
they could come on holiday," she says.
"They didn't think of Nepal, but they both came.
They said Good for you Mum', and they were
proud of me."
Jenny Search, 31, from Durham
JENNY spent two years in
Ethiopia up to 2004 with
her then partner, now
husband, Neal. She had just
finished a PhD and was doing
cancer research. "I think the
main reason was I wanted to see
a bit of the world and experience
it as close to being a local as I
could," she says. "VSO seemed to
be an obvious choice. Although
you're a volunteer, you do get a
living allowance, which is
enough to live on while you're
there."
The VSO placed Jenny and
Neal in Ethiopia, where she
lectured in a new university's
biology department. "It was an
amazing experience," she says.
"The students were really, really
hard-working. They totally
appreciated the chance of going
to university - which is quite a
different attitude.
"I also developed labs with the
students, which was interesting
as there was hardly any
equipment over there. A lot of
secondary schools here have
better equipment."
On weekends and evenings,
Jenny and Neal would socialise
with colleagues and other
volunteers and explore the
country. "There's not a big nightlife
- especially for women," she
says. "Though I remember when
Euro 2004 was on they had big
screens in one of the fields in the
city, sponsored by the local beer
company, which isn't what you'd
expect.
"We would go on bike rides
quite often - it was beautiful,
totally different to how you
imagine. Not like a desert at all -
very green, very mountainous."
But it wasn't all a walk, or
ride, in the park. "As a white
person in Ethiopia - sometimes
it was quite fun, if you were in
the right mood, with kids
chasing after you, shouting and
asking for money," she says.
"But you couldn't leave the
house without getting attention,
and that was quite tiring."
VSO cannot always
accommodate couples, but Neal
was placed in the physics
department of the same
university as Jenny. "I think it
works really well with a
partner," she says. "You have got
a built-in support system. It also
makes a difference when you get
back."
* For more information about
VSO and details of how to
volunteer, log on to
www.vso.org.uk
9:33am Thursday 27th March 2008
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