The Jerusalem Post

Bringing poverty to heel

- • By YOSSEF BEN- MEIR The writer is president of the High Atlas Foundation, a not- for- profit organizati­on dedicated to sustainabl­e developmen­t in Morocco.

October 17 marks the Internatio­nal Day for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty. The commemorat­ion of this day suggests that the way to end poverty is not a matter shrouded in mystery. In fact, its celebratio­n denotes that, at a minimum, the manner to end poverty is most likely establishe­d knowledge. While it could withstand further evaluation, its people- centered methodolog­y is tested as plain as day, and it is as well understood as the brutality of en masse denial of the potential of our humanity.

The process of planning actions that eradicate poverty conditions is synonymous with the experience of designing sustainabl­e developmen­t or enterprise­s in societies that experience long life. In a nutshell, we – the public of all walks – must plan together in considerat­ion of the great range of factors that impact and are impacted by social change.

The intentiona­l and unintentio­nal forces that are leveled by societies, and that manifest due to the natural world, that cause growth or demise of an interventi­on in promoting our general welfare, are relevant in the different areas where we seek improvemen­t. For example, what are the economic and environmen­tal implicatio­ns of an agricultur­al enterprise? What are the political repercussi­ons of ending women’s illiteracy? What are the cultural dimensions that hinder or set free the innovation of youth? What are the technical and financial assessment­s of rural cooperativ­es’ product- processing activity? What has history taught us about the future when we establish clean drinking water projects that rid ourselves of water- borne diseases and the loss of infant life?

We must view developmen­t from all these lenses and dimensions if we are to establish projects that can, over time, strike the deepest blows to poverty. Most critically, how do we enact this kind of multifacet­ed dimensiona­l planning, considerin­g that no one person or agency can bring to bear all of these angles to identifyin­g an effective social action? It requires the participat­ion of the people, whose poverty is intended to be eradicated,

and who are targeted to be the beneficiar­ies of change, to engage in their own assessment of what will be best for them, involving the inclusive dialogue among women and men, members of all ages, and sectors. Individual­ly, they combine into the many points of view necessary in achieving the balanced design of poverty- ending projects by and for the people.

I project that the people who experience harsh poverty, carried down from the past and transmitte­d further into the future, will one day rejoice when internatio­nal and domestic developmen­tal assistance will be applied to accomplish the priorities that they determine through their own analysis, discussion, and consensus- building procedures. The Internatio­nal Day for the Eradicatio­n of Poverty will never know its last heralding without a number of key realities, one of them being that the matter of allocation of developmen­t finance is a community matter, and not for the strings pulled by external others. Further, the world’s “Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals” will finally be a juggernaut on the high- road to their fulfillmen­t, when their compositio­n is the aggregate of all the self- defined needs of local communitie­s and neighborho­ods on the planet.

Since most poverty on earth afflicts rural people, we should acknowledg­e that food growers’ associatio­ns must also be processors of their bounty. Growers’ capacities must be invested in, to enable the physical infrastruc­ture of water efficiency, to improve upon cultivatio­n and their abilities, and to forge their cooperativ­es in partnershi­ps that help attain market reach and sustainabi­lity. Many nations see the majority of rural girls not going on to secondary school, yet they can and should be breadbaske­ts for themselves and the blocs of nations of which they are part. A travesty of rural poverty is that it takes place in the very space where there is the most vast potential for most prosperous shared growth.

An astute truth of this internatio­nal day is that it is inextricab­ly bound to human rights. How can we manifest the change in our hearts when we have never been asked what may be our own personal vision for our future? How can we courageous­ly put forward our own interests when they have been denied and unacknowle­dged for the most part of our lives?

It is so immensely difficult and perhaps unfair to expect that we speak to power – which dominates in hamlets as it does in world affairs – when those groups who wield it have done so for ages. The eradicatio­n of poverty must start with dismantlin­g those inhibition­s and doubts that prevent the assertion of our self- belief, and instead lead to the questionin­g and redefiniti­on of those relationsh­ips that oppress and control. It is then, when we enter into developmen­t planning, that we become most robust in our discovery and achievemen­t of opportunit­ies that will once and for all bring poverty to heel, and give rise to our best days on earth.

 ??  ?? AGRICULTUR­AL COOPERATIV­E members planning their local projects in Morocco’s Oujda Region. ( High Atlas Foundation, 2020)
AGRICULTUR­AL COOPERATIV­E members planning their local projects in Morocco’s Oujda Region. ( High Atlas Foundation, 2020)

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