BBC Science Focus

ALEKS KROTOSKI

How a hand-holding charity stunt launched a social network, way back in the 1980s

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Back in 1986, over six million people joined hands across America as part of a charity event that ended up funding an early social network.

On 25 May 1986, 6.5 million people joined hands over 6,638km (4,125 miles) from New York to Los Angeles to do an impossible thing. They were part of Hands Across America, a fundraisin­g stunt to improve awareness about hunger and homelessne­ss in the world’s richest country. I was there. We held hands for 15 minutes. It was thrilling.

Hands Across America was organised by a team of people who had their internal threshold of reality skewed by successful­ly carrying off previously impossible things. The team was USA for Africa, who, a year before, had raised $64m (about £45m) for famine relief with the charity single We Are The World. As Marty Rogol, the executive director of USA for Africa, explained to me, “we were probably a little full of ourselves in terms of what we could accomplish.”

And so, as a follow-up to the fastestsel­ling US single of all time (at the time), they orchestrat­ed a human chain across the USA.

There were a few gaps in the middle and it raised far less than the organisers had hoped, but as I discovered recently, it was a surprising success.

To distribute the cash, Rogol hired Bob Greenstein, a poverty policy

“On that computer was a service called HandsNet, the first online community for hunger and homelessne­ss groups”

adviser to President Jimmy Carter. He helped distribute the proceeds, and gave guidelines for what grantees had to do with them – they were to be used for collaborat­ion purposes only.

Nancy Berlin ran a homeless shelter in the Los Angeles area known as Skid Row that received a grant. She explained to me that these are the most unusual grants to receive: “If somebody says, ‘We’re going to give you this money because we want you to talk to each other and strategise about how to end poverty and hunger and homelessne­ss.’ Well, then you go, ‘Wow, I know that’s important. And someone else is telling me that, too.’”

But the shelter didn’t just get money. The grant also gave Berlin a computer at a time when few people had them. She did the shelter’s book-keeping on it, which freed up time and helped her keep better track of expenses so she could prove to other funders that she and her colleagues knew what they were doing and that they were responsibl­e. But there was even more.

On that computer was a Hands Across America-funded service called HandsNet, the first online community for hunger and homelessne­ss groups. Berlin was HandsNet user number 16 and she was suddenly able to reach out to people, such as attorneys, who she didn’t know very well to establish a relationsh­ip and begin to form more of a connection. HandsNet still exists today (handsnet.org).

On the surface, Hands Across America appeared to be a spectacle. But behind the scenes were folks who knew which people needed to be at the table to tackle the complex issues of poverty and homelessne­ss. Did it solve hunger? No. But for 15 minutes, we held hands across America, and the country was united.

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 ??  ?? ALEKS KROTOSKI
Aleks is a social psychologi­st, broadcaste­r and journalist. She presents The Digital Human.
ALEKS KROTOSKI Aleks is a social psychologi­st, broadcaste­r and journalist. She presents The Digital Human.
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