Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Some significant voices defending Greg Mortensen

The problem with all the discussion about Greg Mortensen’s failures has been the eagerness with which his work has been debunked whereas the picture seems not to be as black and white as it was portrayed in the “60 Minutes” exposĂ©. Evidently some schools were built as Mortensen claims.
Radio Free Europe found
“some surprising backers who have come forward to praise Mortenson. One of them is a local politician in Pakistan's northern Gilgit-Baltistan region who originally fiercely opposed Mortenson's work.

In "Three Cups of Tea," Imran Nadim Shigri is described as an influential political figure who backed a conservative Shi'ite cleric's religious decree against the CAI's school-building.

Shigri has confirmed that Mortenson did build schools in the remote valleys of his native Baltistan. He could not recall the exact number of schools built by the CAI but said that in the remote Braldu Valley he had personally supervised the handover of five of Mortenson's school buildings to the government, which is now providing teachers and funds to run them.

Shigri says Mortenson's heart was in the right place but that the main problem was his lack of management skills, because Mortenson trusted some local people who misguided him and overinflated building costs.

Shigri also faults Mortenson for focusing largely on building infrastructure without concentrating on the education that would be provided in these buildings. "He only focused on constructing schools. He failed to ensure their sustainability and [proper] management," he says. "He also failed to ensure a high quality of education in these institutions." …

Across the border in Afghanistan, Gul Zaman, governor of the remote Naray district in insurgency-plagued eastern Konar Province, says that three of Mortenson's schools are already working in his district while one more is being built.
In the settlement of Saw alone, Zaman says, "around 700 to 800 boys and girls benefit" from the local school and there are also "200 to 300" pupils enrolled at each of the schools in Samarak and Suna Gala.

On its website, the CAI lists eight schools in Konar and in a recent U.S. television interview, Mortenson claimed to have built 11 schools in the province.
But Zaman says that two of the schools named by the CAI were actually built by a NATO provincial reconstruction team. Zaman's statement was verified by Syed Jamaluddin Hassani, head of Konar's education department.

That the schools are not all being used should surprise no one.

This is not to say that Mortensen's evident distortions of truth should be condoned, merely that some honest achievements did take place even as some embarrassing distortions of truth were used to attract funds. It was a betrayal of all the interested parties -- of Mortensen himself, even, as well as all the rest.

The tragedy for all of us is that we fail more often than we want anyone else to know. Mortensen's failures are now hung out for all to see. We can all be glad "60 Minutes" doesn't think our lies are worth exposing. Sometimes telling the truth can be costly, but in the end the price of not telling the truth can surpass all attempts at restitution.

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous4:16 PM

    Kindness in Korphe

    (to the tune of Friday by Rebecca Black)
    Petition in musical form to Jon Krakauer and Greg Mortenson to make peace, and invest restitution for refunded donations into nonprofit work to rescue women and children from trafficking and Asia, especially to train more teachers for the students to go to school)

    Climbing K2, getting lost in the mountains
    Gotta get back, gotta get up there
    Do it for Christa, honor my sister
    Lost 'Angrezi'*, face is freezing
    Trekking on and on, Found (God willing)
    Gotta get back to the Vill-age
    Where they welcomed me
    With three cups of tea:

    First sip, you're a new guest
    Second time, you're good friends
    When you take your third cup
    Now you're family!

    In Korphe, someday
    Gonna build a school in Korphe
    80 kids in the village need a building, here in,
    Korphe, some way
    Gotta get back to Korphe
    Education is the key to end oppression

    Pennies for Peace pouring in
    Pennies for Peace pouring in
    One cent, fifty cents
    Children helping kids in Pakistan

    Truck full of stuck, but I'm stuck at the river
    Gotta build a bridge,
    that'll take more time (forever!)
    More funds? Where to get funds?
    Right back at square one!
    Impatient *"foreign man"
    Got to stop and breathe
    I can't fail at this plan!
    Please God, help me

    They need a school in Kuardu
    And a bridge in Skardu
    I'm just a poor man
    Where do I begin?

    In Korphe, Korphe
    Gonna open up new doorways
    First a bridge and then a school
    for children, here in
    Korphe, where they
    Touched my heart in more ways
    Education is the key to end oppression

    Pennies for peace pouring in
    Pennies for peace pouring in
    Ten cents, small dents
    Helping kids across Afghanistan

    Who knows where I was kidnapped
    Between the heartbreaks and the hard facts
    But the children, they're so excited
    To have a blackboard
    Inside their own classroom
    They dream of medical school
    And building, a hospital ...
    Not writing with sticks in the sand!

    From New York to Norway
    Kick bullying out the doorway
    Charity can change the world
    From here to Pakistan

    The kindness in Korphe
    Can touch the world in more ways
    Forgiveness is the key to end division

    First step, you're a new guest
    Second time, you're good friends
    One act of love can
    Save humanity!

    -- for Jon Krakauer and Greg Mortenson
    also Rebecca Black and the students at
    school who bullied her to drop out.
    May we find better ways to work together
    creatively to help others instead of wasting
    resources fighting each other. Peace to all!

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