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ARNOLD R. ISAACS '61 spent last summer in the Ashanti Peace Corps is, of course, an experiment. Nothing quite like Technical level on which the Peace Corps will operate has been Peace Corps must be prepared to do a job that cannot be done Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
Peace Corps is, of course, an experiment. Nothing quite like Technical level on which the Peace Corps will operate has been Peace Corps must be prepared to do a job that cannot be done Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
Peace Corps is, of course, an experiment. Nothing quite like Technical level on which the Peace Corps will operate has been Peace Corps must be prepared to do a job that cannot be done Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
Technical level on which the Peace Corps will operate has been Peace Corps must be prepared to do a job that cannot be done Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
Peace Corps must be prepared to do a job that cannot be done Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
Corps members will be working for the most part in technical What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience. Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic. Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions. Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries. Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
What has been obscured in these shenanigans is the basic fact that physical adjustment is the least of the problems confronting the Peace Corps. In almost all areas to which Peace Corps members may be sent, Europeans have been living for many decades. They have arrived at ways and means of living in a tropical area. With a little education and a little common sense, the risk of disease or debilitation need not be any greater for the Peace Corps member than they would be in this country. The emotional adjustment is by far the more important and the more worrisome problem. To a greater or lesser degree, every Peace Corps member will experience what is called "culture shock," "cultural isolation," or a loss of cultural cuts and supports. An adequate physical examination should suffice for the selection board to determine who can or cannot tolerate changes in climate. No one has as yet developed an examination to determine who can survive with the least damage the inevitable period of loneliness, frustration, and psychological uprootedness which will accompany any prolonged overseas experience.
Mr. Shriver and other have repeated endlessly the principle that Peace Corps members will live on the same level as the local peasant, that he will live in the same kind of housing, that he will try in every way to become a member of the community in which he is working. To a limited extent, of course, this is both necessary and desirable. The Corps member should obviously be flexible and open to new experience. He should realize, however, that a simple-minded attempt to become an African or an Asian peasant by adopting the outward forms of their life will not accomplish any constructive purpose. No matter what he does, he is not an African; he will remain an American, and no mortification of the flesh will change that fact. Leaving aside for the moment considerations of health and nutrition, it is certain that any American who tries to live in a grass hut and subsist on yams and termites will soon find himself ostracized by his colleagues at his own professional level, who will invariably live on a standard inconceivably higher than that of the peasant and who will in most cases be quite jealous of their own status and position. He will also find that the villagers, instead of living him, will quite rightly dismiss him as a lunatic.
Implicit in the hair-shirt approach is a curiously inverted or disguised condescension. It assumes that the peasant has no tolerance, no appreciation of differences, no standards of hospitality. It assumes that the villager would demand complete conformity to his own mores before he would accept the Peace Corps member as an individual. Both these assumptions are sheer nonsense. The peasant may be illerate, but he is not stupid, and he is as keenly aware as any anthropologist of the social divisions in his own world. He will expect the American teacher to live as a teacher, not as a peasant. The proper and desirable course of action for the Peace Corps mem- bers is for him to live on approximately the same level as citizens of the host country who have equivalent training and hold equivalent positions.
Above all, he should not feel called upon to sacrifice all his most deeply imbedded cultural tastes and traits in the name of intercultural good will. After all, nobody has suggested that the Peace Corps member, in an effort to cement intercultural relations, should enter into negotiations for the sale of his sister. No one could expect him to violate in this way his deepest values and beliefs. For the same reason, nobody should suggest that he be required beyond the limits of necessity to give up the habits and tastes of a lifetime of eating, drinking, working and playing. Tact, sensitivity, and consideration are certainly needed. Every Corps member will encounter situations in which he must be flexible and perhaps willing to go more than halfway in giving up his own preferences. But generally he will find that others are willing to make concessions too. He will be most effective if he is able to be himself. All our experience shows that one can reach across cultural boundaries most successfully if he is standing on the solid ground of self-knowledge and self-respect. The man who stands on the shaky and uncertain ground of self-rejection and martyrdom, the man who is not a fish and yet is trying desperately not to be a fowl, has no footing from which to reach across any boundaries.
Finally, in the area of policy, the Peace Corps may be in serious error in its announced policy of complete American financial responsibility for all Peace Corps operations. It is necessary and desirable that host governments should have the major authority for assignment, since most volunteers would have to be integrated into national planning and development programs. It would be wise to accompany this authority with a certain amount of financial responsibility, since authority without investment is the surest way to ineffectiveness and irresponsible behavior. An incompetent local administrator, or one who wishes for his own purposes to embarrass the United States overseas program (and there are plenty of these, in some areas) is far less likely to be overruled or replaced if his incompetence or malevolence does not cost his own government any money. A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
A sharing of financial responsibility would probably ensure a The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
The Peace Corps is going to confront some of these facts
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