Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Three Cups of Tea




Check out this inspiring book by Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin about Mortenson's attempt to build girls schools in the remote northern parts of Pakistan and eventually Afghanistan.



Three Cups of Tea:
One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School
at a Time

Greg Mortenson and David Oliver Relin
VIKING 2006
ISBN 0670034827

"Three Cups of Tea is one of the most remarkable adventure stories of our time. Greg Mortenson's dangerous and difficult quest to build schools in the wildest parts of Pakistan and Afghanistan is not only a thrilling read, it's proof that one ordinary person, with the right combination of character and determination, really can change the world."

-Tom Brokaw

"Greg Mortenson represents the best of America. He's my hero. And after you read Three Cups of Tea, he'll be your hero, too."

-U.S. Representative Mary Bono (R-Calif.)

"Three Cups of Tea is beautifully written. It is also a critically important book at this time in history. The governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan are both failing their students on a massive scale. The work Mortenson is doing, providing the poorest students with a balanced education, is making them much more difficult for the extremist madrassas to recruit."

-Ahmed Rashid, best-selling author of Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil, and Fundamentalism in Central Asia

Do you know anyone who would be willing to sell everything they own and live in their car just so they could save every dollar for someone else? Greg Mortenson, a great American hero, did just that when he followed through on his promise to an impoverished Pakistani village to build a school for its children, and in the process has found himself playing a major role in one of the most historically and culturally pivotal areas in the world today.

In THREE CUPS OF TEA: One Man’s Mission to Promote . . . One School at a Time (Viking/On-sale date: March 6, 2006) Greg Mortenson, and acclaimed journalist David Oliver Relin, recount the unlikely journey that led Mortenson from a failed attempt to climb Pakistan’s K2, the world’s second highest mountain, to successfully building schools in some of the most remote regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan. By replacing guns with pencils, rhetoric with reading, Mortenson combines his unique background with his intimate knowledge of the third-world to fight terrorism with books, not bombs, and successfully bring education and hope to remote villages in central Asia. THREE CUPS OF TEA is at once an unforgettable adventure and the inspiring true story of how one man really is changing the world—one school at a time.

In 1993 Mortenson was descending from his failed attempt to reach the peak of K2. Exhausted and disoriented, he wandered away from his group into the most desolate reaches of northern Pakistan. Alone, without food, water, or shelter he eventually stumbled into an impoverished Pakistani village where he was nursed back to health.

While recovering he observed the village’s 84 children sitting outdoors, scratching their lessons in the dirt with sticks. The village was so poor that it could not afford the $1-a-day salary to hire a teacher. When he left the village, he promised that he would return to build them a school.


From that rash, heartfelt promise grew one of the most incredible humanitarian campaigns of our time: Greg Mortenson’s one-man mission to counteract extremism and terrorism by building schools—especially for girls—throughout the breeding ground of the Taliban.

Mortenson had no reason to believe he could fulfill his promise. In an early effort to raise money he wrote letters to 580 celebrities, businessmen, and other prominent Americans. His only reply was a $100 check from NBC’s Tom Brokaw. Selling everything he owned, he still only raised $2,000. But his luck began to change when a group of elementary school children in River Falls, Wisconsin, donated $623 in pennies, thereby inspiring adults to take his cause more seriously. Twelve years later he’s built fifty-five schools.

Mortenson and award-winning journalist David Oliver Relin have written a spellbinding account of his incredible accomplishments in a region where Americans are feared and hated. In pursuit of his goal, Mortenson has survived an armed kidnapping, fatwas issued by enraged mullahs, repeated death threats, and wrenching separations from his wife and children. Yet his success speaks for itself. This year the schools will educate 24,000 children.

About the Author:

Greg Mortenson, is the director of the Central Asia Institute. A resident of Montana, he spends several months each year in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

David Oliver Relin is a contributing editor for Parade Magazine and Skiing Magazine. He has won more than forty national awards for his work as a writer and editor.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

John Cleese: Michael Palin No Longer the Funniest Palin on Earth

Former Monty Python comedian John Cleese thinks Sarah Palin is like a parrot (from the Dead Parrot sketch, perhaps?) for the way she's been able to memorize and regurgitate Republican talking points without fully understanding them. He cautions that there's virtually no one in Europe who thinks she's qualified for the White House -- a scary thought considering she's running with a "a 72-year-old cancer survivor."

Cleese laughs, "I mean, Monty Python could have written this!"

Click here to watch the video.

falling

It is a crisp fall morning here. Frost on the car windows, leaves on the ground and lots of snow on the mountain peaks.

Phil and I are going on a date tonight to have diner with a woman he works with and her husband because they want Phil to educate them about financial planning. If you did not know this, Phil spends at least half of his non-working, non-sleeping hours reading financial blogs, watching financial indexes (around the world) and thinking about money in someway or another. You'd think with all that we'd be rolling in the money. Not so much...

I guess petitioning can work

The good news is that there was a ruling that those of us already in the system of adopting will remain grandfathered in, even though some of us (like myself) have to renew for the second time.

So even though I will have to pay fees again (~$1200) and redo my paperwork and take another day off of school to make another trip to Anchorage to get FBI finger printed a 3rd time and submit the Visa immigration paperwork a 3rd time and see my social worker again (the 6th time), at least I won't have to go through the new convoluted and timely process they have come up with to make it even harder and more cumbersome to adopt from a foreign country.

I guess all this is teaching me patience (as if being an educator didn't already instilled me with that) and perseverance.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Great Compassion Mantra


Compassion

"Compassion sets in motion an exponential multiplication of our powers. We might even feel as though we have the power of a thousand arms, a thousand eyes....."

Romio Shrestha

I am trying to figure out how to instill a sense of compassion in my students. I am dismayed and disheartened when I hear them laugh at the plight of others and say things that are so closed minded they border if not actually cross over the line into offensive. It doesn't help that we have a governor who practically preaches hate and intolerance through her distasteful attempt to get elected.

I know that in this country the generally accepted view of teenagers is that they are self absorbed and are to be excused for their lack of caring. I was sitting here wondering if even I was like that as a child, which prompted a call to my mom who verified that I was in fact a compassionate child, to which I credit my parents and the way they brought us up. I don't think it is too much to ask my students to be moved when they see someone who has gone through hardship, who has seen their home destroyed by a hurricane or their school destroyed in an earthquake.

How do you teach compassion? Seriously, I would like any and all advice people might have.
I try my best to model compassion for them, to show them the importance of caring about other human beings, no matter where they live or what they look like; to respect the inherent worth and dignity of all people. But I don't think this is enough. I feel the need to do more. I wish they (my students, their parents and some of my fellow staff members) could have just a little of the passion that I feel about life, about respect, about knowledge and the importance of truth.

“Compassion”
Brian Howlett and John Tarrant

Monday, October 6, 2008

52!

It was Phil's birthday Friday. Went to Anchorage for the night. We splurged and stayed at the Captain Cook hotel, which is a kind of swanky place downtown. We were on the 15th floor and had a great view of the city and mountains beyond.

Phil really wanted a PS3 (play station 3) because it plays Blueray disks. So (with a contribution from him) that is what I got for him for his birthday. I was dubious, but it is pretty cool. Not only can you play movies, you can also play games, store pictures to show slide shows, go online and much more.

Yesterday evening, while the snow was falling outside, we were curled up inside watching the first Harry Potter movie on Blueray (which Phil had never seen). It was a perfect Sunday.

SNOW!

It is snowing! Bit, fat, fall snowflakes.

We woke up to snow yesterday morning and it has been snowing off and on ever since. Coming home from school today, the falling snow made it hard to see more than a few feet in front of you. The good news is that it is barely sticking, still, I am not ready for snow. The first appointment I could get today to get my snow tires on is Friday. Hopefully we won't have too much accumulation before then.

It seems early for snow!