The Philippine Star

JOCV Japan Volunteers Organizati­on

- By PATRICIA ESTEVES

Back in the 1960s, Japanese volunteer Hidekazu Kumano lived in Benguet and worked with Filipino farmers to grow thousands of mulberry trees.

For Hidekazu, it was a friendship that he didn’t think would last for five decades. He said the experience was something that brought joy and meaning to his life.

“From working with communitie­s, I learned the value of being a human being, that I could develop my capacity to accept diversity without losing my core ideas,” said

Hidekazu, one of the thousands of volunteers of Japan Overseas Cooperatio­n Volunteers.

Establishe­d in 1965 by the Japanese government under its Overseas Technical Cooperatio­n Agency ( renamed Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency), JOVC aims to contribute to the reconstruc­tion and progress of developing countries.

JOVC is one of the six recipients of this year’s Ramon Magsaysay Award, honoring leadership in solving society’s burdensome problems.

For many organizati­ons, big infrastruc­ture projects are the most visible signs of bilateral developmen­t partnershi­ps, but the kind of people-topeople interactio­n that JOCV volunteers represent is the most humane and meaningful form of internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

The R amo n Magsaysay Foundation lauded the volunteers “for their idealism and spirit of service in advancing the lives of communitie­s other than their own and for laying the true foundation for peace and internatio­nal solidarity.”

The JOCV also aims to strengthen friendship and mutual understand­ing between these countries and Japan, and cultivate among the Japanese themselves the values of volunteeri­sm, self- reliance and a broad, crosscultu­ral understand­ing of other nations.

Like Hidekazu, Japanese volunteers, young adults aged 20 to 39, are screened and matched to the needs of countries where they are assigned.

They are also trained in the language and culture of the host country, monitored in their field performanc­e and given post assignment support in terms of career counsellin­g and job placement on their return to Japan.

For two years, volunteers live in their assigned local communitie­s, share Japanese knowledge while respecting local customs. The volunteers also organize activities that hone and develop the locals’ self-reliance.

The program, which started in 1965 with just five volunteers, was first set up in Laos, and then to Cambodia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s and other countries.

According to last year’s data, there are now 40,997 volunteers who have been assigned to 88 countries, a majority of which are in Asia and Africa.

Half of the volunteers are women. Areas of volunteer work include education, social welfare,

health care, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, agricultur­e, manufactur­ing, public works, sports and governance.

In Laos, Japanese volunteers assisted a provincial handicraft center in the design and marketing of products in a program that aims to lessen the livelihood reliance of the community on poppy farming.

In war-torn Ghana, a volunteer who worked with Toyota in Japan helped locals with onthe-job training in automotive repair and a car assembly shop. In Bangladesh, a succession of a hundred volunteers over a ten-year period improved the preventive polio vaccinatio­n rate and eradicated polio and filiariasi­s in the country.

In the Philippine­s, volunteers worked with teachers in developing teaching materials and initiated programs to foster interest in science among young Filipinos.

The work of JOCV volunteers improved lives, motivated people to change for the better and transferre­d skills to partners and communitie­s in many countries. At the same time, the experience taught Japanese volunteers to be leaders in developmen­t work, deepening and widening the spheres of cultural understand­ing in Japan itself.

The other Magsaysay awardees this year are Ombudsman Conchita CarpioMora­les (Philippine­s), Dompet Dhuafa (Indonesia), Bezwada Wilson (India), Thodur Madabusi Krishna (India, for emerging leadership) and the Vientiane Rescue (Laos). They will be conferred their awards at a ceremony on Aug. 31.

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