

Not all South Africans
have xenophobia...
brainmattermedia on May 25, 2008
brainmattermedia on May 25, 2008
Deadline: July 31, 2011
First Place $100 Poetry PrizeFirst Place $100 Flash Fiction Prize
Poetry Judge: Lisa Marie BasileFlash Fiction Judge: Bridgette Shade
Online Entries Only - Details Below
GENERAL RULES & GUIDELINES
POETRY GUIDELINES
- Manuscripts must be submitted via our online management system and should be submitted in PDF, RTF, or MSWord formats only. Revisions are not permitted during the contest.
- The author’s name should NOT appear in the manuscript. Author information is collected separately in Submission Manager. Do NOT include author name, author bio, or any other identifying information in the manuscript file. Manuscripts will be read blind.
- The entry fee of $6.00 is payable via Submishmash.
- Winners are expected to be announced by September 2011. All entries are eligible for publication in WEAVE Magazine; separate submission during our open reading period is unnecessary.
- Eligibility: Writers writing in English are eligible. No previously published work. Students and former students of this year’s judges may not enter; close friends of the judge are also not considered eligible.
- Simultaneous submissions are permissible, but entrants are asked to notify us immediately if a piece becomes committed elsewhere.No refunds will be offered for withdrawn material.
- You MUST submit each poem in a SEPARATE document file.
- You may submit up to THREE poems.
- Your name should NOT appear anywhere on the uploaded submission documents.
- You may submit a brief cover letter using the form on Submishmash.
- DO NOT UPLOAD A COVER LETTER.
- Winner will receive $100 and publication in the seventh issue of WEAVE, plus one contributor copy.
- Up to three honorable mentions will receive publication in the seventh issue of WEAVE, plus one contributor copy.
FLASH FICTION GUIDELINES
- You MUST submit each flash piece in a SEPARATE document file.
- You may submit up to THREE flash pieces.
- Your name should NOT appear anywhere on the uploaded submission documents.
- You may submit a brief cover letter using the FORM on Submishmash.
- DO NOT UPLOAD A COVER LETTER.
- Winner will receive $100 and publication in the seventh issue of WEAVE, plus one contributor copy.
- Up to three honorable mentions will receive publication in the seventh issue of WEAVE, plus one contributor copy.
WEAVE Magazine, a member of the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses, conforms to the CLMP Code of Ethics.
The CLMP Code of Ethics: CLMP’s community of independent literary publishers believes that ethical contests serve our shared goal: to connect writers and readers by publishing exceptional writing. We believe that intent to act ethically, clarity of guidelines, and transparency of process form the foundation of an ethical contest. To that end, we agree to 1) conduct our contests as ethically as possible and to address any unethical behavior on the part of our readers, judges, or editors; 2) to provide clear and specific contest guidelines -- defining conflict of interest for all parties involved; and 3) to make the mechanics of our selection process available to the public. This Code recognizes that different contest models produce different results, but that each model can be run ethically. We have adopted this Code to reinforce our integrity and dedication as a publishing community and to ensure that our contests contribute to a vibrant literary heritage.
The Grub Street Book Prize is awarded three times annually to a writer outside New England publishing his or her second, third, fourth (or beyond...) book. First books are not eligible. Writers whose primary residence is Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut or Rhode Island are also not eligible.
Each winner receives a $1000 honorarium and a reading/book party at Grub Street's event space in downtown Boston. The reading and party are co-sponsored by a local independent bookstore, which will sell books at the event. Fiction and Non-Fiction writers are also invited as guest authors to the "Muse and the Marketplace" literary conference.
Winners will lead a craft class on a topic of his or her choice for a small group of Grub Street members. Grub Street will provide accommodations for one or two nights in Boston and cover all travel and meal expenses.
Though Grub Street's top criterion is the overall literary merit of the work submitted, the award committee especially encourages writers publishing with small presses, writers of short story collections, and writers of color to apply. We also want the award to benefit writers for whom a trip to Boston will likely expand their readership in a meaningful way.
Application requirements: (1) one copy of the author's most recent or upcoming book (Note: the publication date must be in either the year of the prize due date OR the year the winner is to visit Boston; in either case, the hardcover or paperback original must be available to booksellers by the time of the visit). (2) Curriculum vitae (3) 500-word synopsis of the proposed craft class (4) $10 tax-deductible donation/reading fee made out to Grub Street, Inc.
- FICTION (story collection or novel): app. postmarked by October 15th, 2011 (notification by January 15th, 2012; Visit Boston for the Muse and the Marketplace conference, May 5-6, 2012). NOTE: Books published in 2011 and 2012 are eligible, as long as 2012 books are available in bound galley form by October 15th, 2011 and in hardcover or paperback by May 5, 2012. We will not accept submissions in manuscript form for the fiction prize.
- POETRY: applications postmarked by March 15th, 2011 (notification by 6.15.11; Visit Boston in October 2011) NOTE: Books published in 2010 and 2011 are eligible. Galleys and Manuscripts for 2011 books are acceptable as long as the book is available for purchase by October 2011.
- NON-FICTION: applications postmarked by July 15th, 2011 (notification by 9.15.11; Visit Boston for Muse and Marketplace Conference, May 5-6, 2012) NOTE: Books published in 2011 and 2012 are eligible, as long as 2012 books are available in bound galley form by July 15, 2011, and in hardcover or paperback by May 5, 2012. We will not accept submissions in manuscript form for the non-fiction prize.
For more information about Grub Street and this year's Book Award, call 617.695.0075 or send an email to info@grubstreet.org. Please send all postal mail applications and inquiries to 160 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02116.
Free contest, The Peace Corps Community’s Enterprise Solutions to Poverty Essay Contest, prize: $5,000 (worldwide)
Deadline: 31 July 2011The National Peace Corps Association and the SEVEN Fund are sponsoring a global competition inviting the submission of essays that describe innovative ideas for fighting poverty. The winning author will be a special guest at a distinguished panel in Washington, DC on September 24, 2011, during the four-day weekend of events for the 50th Anniversary of the Peace Corps.
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Why this topic?If the president proposed a program today that was cost-effective, inspired public service, trained Americans for 21st century jobs, strengthened our interests abroad, countered anti-American propaganda and had bipartisan support, we would consider it miraculous. Yet, we already have a program that does all those things: Peace Corps. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the executive order signed by President John F. Kennedy that established the Peace Corps.
In today’s interconnected world we need to know how the world really works, especially in developing countries where there are myriad emerging business opportunities. One of the Peace Corps’ greatest strengths is it serves as a 21st century job-training program. It provides the kind of training in language, adaptability, working in foreign cultures that simply can’t be taught in business school because to truly understand the world you have to live as others do, seeing the world as they do.
As a result, the Peace Corps also fosters social entrepreneurs. By necessity, volunteers are entrepreneurial because they often work independently or in small groups in areas where there are limited resources and weak government services, forcing volunteers to be creative and self-motivated in devising innovative solutions to problems. Figuring out how to provide a remote village with drinkable water with limited resources is a challenge that has a lot more in common with running a shoestring Internet startup than you would think.
What unique hands-on experiences and knowledge doing microenterprise work can current and returned Peace Corps volunteers offer to the larger development and business communities?
The essay contest
The National Peace Corps Association (NPCA) and SEVEN invite writers to submit essays exploring first person experiences with small enterprise development solutions to poverty in the developing world. Former and present Peace Corps volunteers are strongly encouraged to apply. Essays should highlight personal grassroots efforts and successes that can serve as models for creating prosperity around the world. We welcome and encourage papers that approach this topic through the lens of diverse cultural, religious, philosophical, technical, and academic traditions, as our goal is to assemble a collection of essays that is definitive both in breadth and depth.
Solutions to poverty require innovative technology and communications, greater attention to women, increased job generation and the promotion of sustainable grassroots efforts. We invite authors to share their first person accounts of enterprise solutions to poverty and the topics above.
SEVEN and NPCA will award a grand prize of $5,000 to one essay. The best piece will be featured in WorldView magazine and the winning author(s) will be introduced at the September 24, 2011 “Conversations: The Future of the Peace Corps Global Leaders” panel. The author(s) will also receive a ticket tothe “Promise of the Peace Corps” Gala in Washington, DC and will be publicly acknowledged in the program. The essay will be given top publicity on the National Peace Corps Association website and in NPCA and SEVEN Fund e-communications.
What are we looking for?
Submissions will be evaluated by a panel of judges, in relation to the following criteria:
* an engaging hook or premise;
* a clearly defined agenda or thesis;
* emotional appeal;
* compelling data;
* well-crafted arguments;
* robust discussion; and
* a powerful close.Submitted essays should be 750-1200 words and will be accepted from April 15 – July 31, 2011.
Models for the essays sought in this competition may be found in the recently published collection, In the River They Swim: Essays from Around the World on Enterprise Solutions to Poverty (Templeton Press, May 2009, www.intherivertheyswim.com).
Questions and Answers What is the essay topic?
The essay topic is this:
“Solutions to poverty require innovative technology and communications, greater attention to women, increased job generation and the promotion of sustainable grassroots efforts. We invite authors to share their first person accounts of enterprise solutions to poverty and the topics above.”
We encourage essays that address this question through the lens of any cultural, religious, philosophical, and academic tradition. The question may be considered from personal, social, economic, political, or religious points of view.
Who can participate in this competition?
The SEVEN Fund and NPCA essay contest is open to everyone. We welcome authors from all fields, disciplines, and professions. We encourage contributions from nations and peoples around the world.
How do I submit my essay?
Your essay must be submitted electronically in an MS Word or PDF format only via email with subject header “SEVEN Fund Essay Contest submission”. All information requested, including contact information, abstract, and essay should be included in a single document.
The email address for submission is:
Every essay must, in addition to the actual essay, add a 100 word abstract at the beginning of the document that includes:
* Contact information: your full name and mailing address, a contact telephone number, and your email;
* A brief, one-paragraph biography of each author, including your Peace Corps country and years of service (if applicable)Note: Submission of an essay is considered consent to be published, if selected.
Why have SEVEN and NPCA selected the short essay format for this competition?We believe that the short essay format is a powerful and underutilized mechanism in development thinking. It is a versatile medium that requires succinct, insightful writing that can be published in multiple venues.
How long should the essay be?
Essays should be greater than 750 words and should not exceed 1,200 words and must be written in English. (This word limit does not include the 100 words allowed for the Abstract, any sources, or footnotes.)How will essays be judged?
A panel of judges will evaluate and rank the essays according to the criteria described in the call for essays. Winning authors will be required to enter into a contract with NPCA prior to receiving the final award.
What is the prize?
SEVEN and NPCA will award a grand prize of $5,000 to one essay. The best piece will be featured in WorldView magazine and the winning author(s) will be introduced at the September 24, 2011 “Conversations: The Future of the Peace Corps Global Leaders” panel. The author(s) will also receive a ticket tothe “Promise of the Peace Corps” Gala in Washington, DC and will be publicly acknowledged in the program. The essay will be given top publicity on the National Peace Corps Association website and in NPCA and SEVEN Fund e-communications.
Can I submit multiple essays?
No, each author may submit only one essay.
Can I collaborate with another author?
You may decide to submit an essay together with another author, but the prize money is per essay, not per author. Prize money will be disbursed equally among multiple authors. SEVEN especially welcomes teams from different disciplines, as we believe that integration across domains provides the greatest insight into complex global problems.
What if I am unable to submit my application electronically?
Only applications submitted via email will be accepted. If you encounter problems, please contact NPCA.
How is this essay competition financed?
This call for essays is supported by a generous grant from the The SEVEN Fund and is under the management of the National Peace Corps Association.
What if I have additional questions?
Please send any additional questions to contest@peacecorpsconnect.org.
Important Dates
Program Announcement: April 15, 2011
Deadline for Submissions: July 31, 2011
Selection of Finalists: September 2011
The Small Enterprise Panel: September 24, 2011
Announcement of the prize-winner will be made at the “Conversations: The Future of the Peace Corps Global Leaders” panel on September 24, 2011.
More information here.
Crime Fiction Authoress
Persia Walker
Dishes Out Advice
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Ms. Persia Walker studied drama at the High School of Performing Arts in New York City and all kinds of good stuff at Swarthmore College. She spent a year at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism to emerge with a master’s degree.
She has worked for The Associated Press in Arkansas, Washington, DC, and New York. She has also written for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Inc., (RFE) in Munich. Outside of that she has worked as a freelance book editor and done cultural reporting and voice work for European publications. This native New Yorker is fluent in German, and claims to be breathtakingly disorganized, and is often sporadically inspired to cook. She enjoys Indian and Thai food for dining, romantic thrillers and detective stories for reading, super-hero movies, and television programs about desperate housewives and true crime.
Her perfect Sunday morning includes a lengthy and lazy browse through The New York Times. I have provided the link to the excerpt, Black Orchid Blues below!http://persiawalker.com/books/black-orchid-blues/excerpt/.
I like you! Thank you for this wonderful interview, Persia.
OTR: Tell us about your novels
Persia: My three novels, HARLEM REDUX, DARKNESS AND THE DEVIL BEHIND ME, and the newest, BLACK ORCHID BLUES, are all set in the 1920s against the glittering backdrop of the Harlem Renaissance. They’re mystery novels that each explore a different facet of the era. In HARLEM REDUX, criminal defense attorney David McKay reappears after a mysterious three-year absence to investigate his sister’s suicide; in DARKNESS AND THE DEVIL BEHIND ME, society reporter Lanie Price uncovers the conspiracy that led to the disappearance of a beautiful young pianist during a stormy night in Harlem; in BLACK ORCHID BLUES, Price witnesses the brutal kidnapping of sexy singer who has a dark and secretive past, then becomes involved in the race to save the singer’s life.
OTR: How and when did you first become a self-published authoress?
Persia: I first self-published HARLEM REDUX upon the advice of my literary agent. She had submitted the book to multiple publishers and each had turned it down. So I self-published it and marketed it to book clubs. One book club in particular was very supportive, the Go On Girl! Book Club. Members chose it as their book of the month. My agent conveyed this information to Simon & Schuster and Random House. The two publishers swiftly changed positions about the book and each made an offer. I eventually went with S&S.
OTR: How long have you been writing?
Persia: I’ve been writing since elementary school. I always knew I wanted to be a storyteller. However, when I was growing up, well-meaning people always said that no one makes a living as a writer. So I went to school, studied hard, and wrote in my spare time. Eventually, I got a Master’s Degree in Journalism from Columbia University. I then worked as a news writer for The Associated Press here in the States and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty in Europe. In the mid-1990s, RFE/RL laid off many of its workers, including me. For the first time in my adult life, I was unemployed. I decided to use the time to write novels.
OTR: Do you have plans of becoming a traditionally published author?
Persia: I’m already traditionally published.
OTR:Who inspires you as a writer?
Persia: Somerset Maugham, Stephen King, Michael Connelly, Alfred Hitchcock.
OTR: What makes you stand out as a writer?
Persia: I hope that the originality of my mysteries and my style of telling them do, but I think readers might be in a better position to say than I am. I know that I try to make my stories entertaining and well thought out. I believe in the intelligence of my readers and play fair with them. I give them a puzzle and the clues to solve it. But naturally, I make sure that my detectives are always one step ahead.
OTR: Where do you see yourself within the next several years?
Persia: I expect to have several more novels out, each one better written than the last, and I hope to have a wider readership.
OTR: What else do you do besides write?
Persia: I create digital art. I started with it as a means of creating portraits for my characters, then fell in love with the process. If readers visit my Facebook Page (http://facebook.com/author.persia.walker), then they’ll see some of the character portraits I’ve created. I’m working on a gallery to display on my main website, http://PersiaWalker.com.
OTR: Why did you decide to become a writer?
Persia: No one in their right mind would decide to become a writer. You don’t choose writing; it chooses you. Many of us try to ignore it for as long as possible, but answering the call, as problematic as it may be, is the only route to happiness. For me, writing and editing are my only discernible (i.e., marketable) skills.
OTR: Who are your favorite authors?
Persia: I love mysteries and thrillers, so I’ll say Michael Connelly, Lee Child, Gar Anthony Haywood, Walter Mosley, Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, among others. When I’m in a less dark mood, I enjoy J. California Cooper, Ernest J. Gaines, Bernice McFadden, Alice Walker, Zora Neale Hurston, and Somerset Maugham, for example.
OTR: What are your favorite books?
Persia: Too many to mention.
OTR: What is it that you most people do not know about you?
Persia: Unfortunately, I have no interesting secrets.
OTR: Tell us what influences you to write the stories you write?
Persia: The film noir of the 1940s. As a child, I was very sickly and stayed home from school a lot. I used to watch a lot of those old black-and-whites movies and I suppose I internalized their kind of storytelling. I love elegance in a plot and economy in language. I’m attracted to stories about difficult choices, psychological puzzles, intrigue and betrayal.
OTR: What are/is your biggest pet peeve(s)?
Persia: It alternately makes me smile and grit my teeth when people who don’t read suddenly decide to write a book. Too many have no idea of the craft or of the hard work that goes into building a novel, and they don’t want to learn, either. They’re proud of their effort — as they should be — but they’re not dedicated and don’t realize that the work has just begun.
OTR: When aspiring authors/poets approach you about getting their book published, what do you usually tell them?
Persia: I tell them that writing is a craft; publishing is a business. I tell them to (a) take acting lessons and (b) join an established mainstream writers organization. The acting lessons will help teach the craft of writing — how to develop a story, write dialog, and create vibrant characters who live and breathe well past the last page. Joining an organization puts you in contact with the major players, the writers, the agents, the editors. You get to know them; they get to know you. You attend conferences and learn the business. In between, you do your homework. There are good websites that will tell you how to select an agent and write a query letter. Other sites will show you how to self-publish for free using Amazon or Barnes & Noble. Still others will tell you how to get your own ISBNs and set up your own imprint. None of this information is hidden, anymore. It’s right out there. There’s no reason not to be able to learn about this business, really none at all.
OTR: What is your advice to authors who are struggling with getting their book out to their target audience? Which innovative marketing ways would you suggest to new authors?
Persia: First, I’d like to congratulate any author who really knows who his target audience is. I mean that seriously. Very often authors (and publicists) will think that a book is perfect for one particular group and are surprised to see the book appeal to a whole different readership. So I suppose, my first thought would be that authors should be open as to who they think might like their work. Second, I would suggest using cooperative online advertising. What do I mean by that? I mean joining group blogs of authors who write in a similar genre. Instead of trying to go it alone, work together with fellow authors. Do joint signings and joint tours. Someone who comes to see your fellow author might also like your work and vice versa.
OTR: What do you think catapulted your success as an author?
Persia: What a kind question! I work hard and that’s the most common characteristic I know among successful authors. We’re a hardworking, dedicated bunch. We also try to support one another. And we write and rewrite and keep trying, despite discouragement. We often want to give up, but we somehow never do.
OTR: Do you have plans to open your own publishing company?
Persia: I already have my own publishing imprint. It’s called Blood Vintage Press. I used it to publish DARKNESS AND THE DEVIL BEHIND ME. The focus is on historical or vintage era mysteries.
OTR: Which well-known author(s) would you like to network with?
Persia: Hmmm. Well, I’ve been pretty lucky. As a member of the Mystery Writers of America (MWA), I’ve been privileged to meet a lot of talented people — agents as well as authors. It’s a great organization for sharing information and meeting top-notch (i.e. best-selling) authors. Who have I met so far? I’d rather not say, but take a look at the cover of BLACK ORCHID BLUES and get an idea. I’d still like to meet Alice Walker and Terry McMillan. I don’t expect to find them at an MWA meeting, of course, but yes, I’d really love to meet them. About networking, I’d like to give one last bit of advice: Be yourself and don’t try to use people. I know a lot of writers and they’re wonderfully generous people. They help and share because of their innate kindness, but they can spot a user a mile away. So be genuine; be serious about your craft and knowledgeable about the business. Impress them with that and you’ll make friends.
OTR: What is your advice to budding authors?
Persia: See above.
To find and Connect with Persia and read her novels, check out her websites below
http://PersiaWalker.com
http://Facebook.com/Author.Persia.Walker
http://twitter.com/persiawalker
__________________________
Black Orchid Blues by Persia Walker
This novel is set in Harlem in the 1920s, and features a society columnist for a Black newspaper trying to solve the mysterious kidnapping of a cabaret singer.
Saturday, July 16, 2011
Wide Open Walls In The Gambia
The Wide Open Walls project was founded by Lawrence Williams, a keen artist who had been working with local artists on a project called Bushdwellers for a few of years and always wanted to expand the project into something bigger. The idea was to turn villages in the area of Ballabu Conservation Project into a living art project. Something which would last and function as a valid art installation whilst simultaneously promoting the tourist appeal of The Gambia.This year Wide Open Walls collaborated with Write on Africa, the Cape Town based community art project. The main focus was to encourage and inspire urban rejuvenation through special events, initiatives and art in public space to “inspire ourselves to inspire others to inspire change”.
Art supplies were provided to children of various villages, and a dilapidated classroom was refurbished by Freddy Sam and community members, creating a colourful space for children to use as a crèche and a classroom. South African photographer, Jonx Pillemer and filmmaker Rowan Pybus were there to capture the two week long project, spending ample time with community members and the street artists reflecting on the interactions and friendships formed during the collaborative creative processes. A ten minute documentary of the project will be released in August.
I have always believed that art can change lift up the spirits of a community and bring them together in a unique way. This project is surely a great example of that. The photographs of the project, depict a a colourful and lively lease on the villages involved. It will be interesting to see the documentary and see the emotional and physical engagement of the communities and facilitators working on the project.
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SOURCE: KILELE, WIDE OPEN WALLS & FACEBOOK
Unnatural disaster
Even before the earthquake struck, Haiti was a land of broken promises and crumbling buildingsBy Susannah Nesmith
Dr. Paul Farmer opens Haiti After the Earthquake with a short essay by Joia S. Mukherjee, medical director of Partners in Health, the international health and social justice organization Farmer helped found in Haiti in 1987. Mukherjee describes how, two days after the quake, she wept at the sight of a statue of a freed slave that stood in front of the rubble of the national palace. An old woman who was also crying put her arm around her.
“I said, ‘Neg Mawon toujou kanpe!!’ — the free man is still standing!! And she replied, powerfully, ‘Cheri, Neg Mawon p’ap jamn kraze’ — my dear, the free man will never be broken.”
Farmer knows and loves Haiti, and perhaps this incident illustrates why. Though the earthquake of Jan. 12, 2010, destroyed so much, it didn’t destroy the faith ordinary Haitians have in their brave, fragile, little republic.
Sadly, Farmer explains in sometimes daunting detail, the earthquake failed to make a dent in the mind-numbing mess that has always seemed to characterize aid to Haiti. After the disaster, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and foreign governments rushed in, only to continue bickering over funding, priorities and paperwork, while the national government continued to struggle, as it has for so long, to function.
Farmer has attempted for decades to help the country right itself. In 2009, he was appointed U.N. deputy special envoy to Haiti, working under Bill Clinton to coordinate aid. He has spent a career fighting the theory that Haiti is hopeless. Haiti After the Earthquake chronicles his efforts in the months before the quake and in the immediate and months-long aftermath. The narrative is sometimes dense, but his honest assessment of what the people trying to help Haiti did well — and where they failed — is important for anyone who cares about the country or international aid in general.
The book is not an indictment of the donor nations or NGOs working in Haiti; Farmer is diplomatic, sometimes to a fault. One gets the feeling that he could have gone further, named names maybe. But his goal is to help Haiti, and venting his frustrations too boldly wouldn’t serve that goal. Instead, the book is his answer to the questions: What’s wrong with Haiti? What can we do? And maybe most importantly, why hasn’t what we’ve done so far made much of a difference?
Farmer points out that a much stronger earthquake hit Chile in February 2010, yet fewer than 600 people perished. (Estimates are that 300,000 people died in Haiti.) Haiti’s earthquake would not have been so devastating if the government hadn’t been chronically underfunded, if the infrastructure hadn’t been already on the verge of collapse and maybe if the billions of dollars in aid promised over the years had actually been given to Haiti.
In that respect, not much has changed: Nine months after the quake, less than 15 percent of the post-earthquake reconstruction pledges made by donor nations had arrived. None pledged by the United States had managed to pass Congress.
Farmer frequently takes aim at the reluctance of the international community and NGOs to work with Haiti’s government. Their preference for civil society has left Haiti with more NGOs per capita than any other country but India. And all their fractured efforts haven’t solved Haiti’s problems.
But Haiti After the Earthquake isn’t a grim reminder that Haiti is hopeless. The book is peppered with uplifting tales of how individual Haitian overcame hardships. It also includes essays from leading voices within and outside Haiti, including novelist Edwidge Danticat and several doctors, nurses and aid workers who struggled to help in the immediate aftermath.
Farmer uses the personal triumphs and essays to explain that Haiti’s hope for a better future need not be in vain. The international community’s failure does not have to continue along the same dead-end path. Some will argue with his conclusions; he’s not the only expert on Haiti. Others are experiencing “donor fatigue” after trying for so long to help, with little to show for their efforts. He understands their frustration, even if he doesn’t agree with their conclusions. He’s frustrated, too; but he has not given up.
“We could have done better, certainly, and can do better in the future. We must do better at reconstruction than we have to date. We need to draw on every noble sentiment and every bit of technical skill to make Port-au-Prince a livable city and to make ‘build back better’ more than an empty slogan,” he wrote on the anniversary of the earthquake.
Susannah Nesmith is a writer in Miami.
The Reporter and
the Rape Victim
When an American journalist and a cadre of aid workers in Haiti set out to tell a horrible story, they thought they were on the same side. But it didn't turn out that way.
On September 17, 2010, magazine reporter Mac McClelland climbed into a car in Port-au-Prince. The driver, a Haitian man named Alain Charles, was speeding a young rape victim and her mother to the hospital, and had invited McClelland along. Parts of the Haitian capital had disintegrated into chaos following the earthquake earlier that year, and the sprawling refugee camps were producing stories of horrific and frequent sexual violence. McClelland, on assignment from Mother Jones, where she works, had come to investigate.
Within two days of arriving in Haiti, McClelland linked up with Charles, whose work as a driver and translator for some of Haiti's largest foreign aid organizations brings him into frequent contact with journalists. He's also the project coordinator for the Patricia Fleming Fund, which provides safehouses for Haitian rape victims. By taking a ride with one of those victims, a then-24-year-old mother of three, McClelland was hoping to put a human face on Haiti's rape epidemic. Instead, their day together became the subject of a heated and still-roiling dispute over what really happened between McClelland and the young Haitian woman, over how McClelland told the story, and over the basic nature of the relationship between journalist, subject, and the intermediary who connects the two. Nearly a year later, the incident has divided much of Haiti's once tight-knit community of Western journalists and aid workers.• • • • •McClelland and the Haitian rape victim she shadowed on September 17 share no common language. The young woman, who now identifies publicly as K*, does not speak English, and McClelland lacks Haitian Creole, a notoriously difficult language for non-native speakers. Before and during her time with K*, McClelland relied on Charles to serve as interpreter. He assured McClelland that she had K*'s consent to ride along on the trip. McClelland, an active Twitter user who today has over 12,000 followers, began tweeting from her smartphone shortly after getting into the car. "On my way to the hospital with a girl whose tongue was bitten off when she was raped," she wrote. And later: "This dr's consultation room has used gynecological exam materials lying about. And she will not look [K*] in the face." Her tweets throughout the day reported K*'s name, her medical exam, the story of her rape, and her return home to a camp McClelland described as "rape central."Within hours, the riveting, revealing tweets had circulated widely, sparking a debate over whether K* was psychologically capable of giving consent so soon after such a traumatic incident. MotherJones.com posted a selection of the tweets, calling them "amazing real-time reportage" and asking readers to "Help fund Mac's Haiti trip." But when McClelland's in-depth, 6,000-plus-wordfeature ran in Mother Jones' print magazine in January, the article contained no mention of K* or of the ride-along that had earlier generated so much interest."You have no right. I did not speak to you."Sorting out what exactly happened between September and January is difficult. By one account, K* never really consented to having her story told. This is the view of Jayne Fleming, a San Francisco lawyer and the founder of the Patricia Fleming Fund. Named for Jayne's mother, who left her collection of dresses to needy Haitian women just before she died in April 2010, the Fund provides housing and emergency medical care for Haitian rape victims. She says the plan was only for McClelland to go along for the trip. She adds that she and McClelland had agreed, through Charles, that anything McClelland eventually wrote would have to go through Fleming for approval. "I am VERY careful to set ground rules when I work with reporters and I have worked with many, including in Haiti," Fleming wrote in a lengthy September 30 email to McClelland's editors, which she later posted in the comments section of a related article. "I thought I had set these rules with Mac when I asked her (through Alain) to speak with me before writing about my clients. I have never in ten years had a reporter violate such a verbal agreement." Mother Jones editors-in-chief Monika Bauerlein and Clara Jeffrey dispute the Fleming account. They say that McClelland initially had the consent of K*, but she later revoked it, putting Mother Jones in a difficult position. McClelland and her editors insist they never agreed to give Fleming a veto over what McClelland wrote. "I think my understanding -- and I talked to Jayne quite a bit about this -- is we're all agreeing that Alain called her pretty much on the spot and got permission for the ride-along. And you know he then connected with the family and assured Mac that she had their permission," Bauerlein told me. For Fleming to request prior review would have been unusual; for a national publication like Mother Jones, known for its investigative reporting, to consent would have been very unusual. "I guess there are scenarios when you would want to do that but they would be few and far between," Bauerlein said. In either case, the result was the same: K*'s story, which at one point was to be the centerpiece of the print article, barely appeared in the final version.The rift between Fleming and McClelland opened on September 30, when Fleming sent the email harshly criticizing McClelland's reporting -- and at points lambasting McClelland herself. Fleming called her tweets "destructive and potentially life threatening," accused her of choosing to be "provocative" rather than "considering K*'s emotional condition and safety," and suggested she is untrustworthy. Fleming concluded, "I could go on, but it seems pointless." Fleming asked for K*'s name to be redacted from the web story Mother Jones had already published and fumed at not having been given prior review of McClelland's tweets, but said nothing at the time to suggest McClelland had lacked K*'s consent. The magazine began work on the print article. Planned for January, it included K*'s story. Fleming, whose knowledge of Haiti and of K* in particular made her an attractive source, stopped returning the editors' and fact-checkers' emails.A few weeks later, on November 2, Fleming emailed the editors a scanned, hand-written letter in Haitian Creole. It was from K*, she said.You have no right to speak of my story.
You have no right to publish my story in the press
Because I did not give you authorization.
You have no right. I did not speak to you.
You have said things you should not have said.
Thank you
The magazine, deep in the production cycle, redrafted the story to remove all but the most oblique and passing mention of K*. Fleming backed off, though McClelland's tweets, as well as the blog post touting them, remained online. The article, a first-person account of McClelland's time in Haitian displacement camps, ran in January.• • • • •That might have been the end of the story. But a few weeks ago, on June 27, McClelland published anessay on the website of Good magazine. Titled, "I'm Gonna Need You to Fight Me On This: How Violent Sex Helped Ease My PTSD," it described how, after contracting post-traumatic stress disorder during her reporting trip in Haiti, she medicated herself with rough sex. It also told, for the first time in a full-length article, the story of K*'s rape. Though K*'s name was changed to Sybille, the details, for anyone who knew the story, were unmistakable."I think one of the worst things about PTSD is that nobody understands it," McClelland later told Ms. Magazine. "This conversation needs to be happening. I'm a writer. I can't really sit around and say, 'I wish someone else was writing about this, I'm too much of a coward to deal with the consequences.' I kind of felt like I had to." She added, "This was not my Haiti coverage; this was about me."The provocative article inspired a heated debate among bloggers over its treatment of rape and post-earthquake Haiti. Then, four days after the story went online, a group of 36 women who work in Haiti, mostly as journalists or NGO workers and most of them American, sent an open letter to Jezebel.com denouncing the article. "The way she uses Haiti as a backdrop for this narrative is sensationalist and irresponsible," they wrote. "As women who know and love Haiti, we are deeply troubled by Ms. McClelland's approach." The speed of the backlash, and its apparent size relative to Port-au-Prince's small community of American journalists, was unusual. "The Good story made it clear to us how out of touch Mac McClelland was with the reality on the ground in Haiti and how little regard she had for the people in her stories," one of the letter's organizers told me in an email. But she said their quarrel was about more than just the latest article. "Most if not all were familiar with MacClelland's other work on Haiti, as well as the controversy regarding the Mother Jones story featuring K*, 'Mac's Must-Read Tweets from Haiti.'"A week later, prominent Haitian author Edwidge Danticat, a small celebrity in the Caribbean nation and one of the women to sign the open letter, posted her own response on Essence.com. She published K*'s November letter saying that McClelland did not have consent to tell her story -- the first time it had become public -- and wrote that K* was "angry" and felt McClelland had "ignored" her wishes. "Our choices about when and how our story is told must be respected," K* reportedly told Danticat. The novelist also suggested that K* had never consented to be reported on in the first place.Ms. McClelland has stated on this same twitter account that she had K*'s permission and K*'s mother's permission to ride along with them, but she certainly--according to K*'s lawyer, and the driver on the ride along, and K* herself--did not have K*'s permission to tweet personal and confidential information about her.
The post revealed, for the first time publicly, K*'s letter and much of the eight-month-old dispute between Fleming and Mother Jones over the story. But Fleming had only complained about McClelland violating what she says was a promise to grant the lawyer prior review. Danticat's charge that K* had never consented in the first place was new. Coming so soon after the already controversialGood article, the revelation proved explosive, with critics of McClelland's Good story clearly feelingvindicated. McClelland's own bosses said she should not have published the Good piece. "Mac understands that this was a serious lapse in judgment," Mother Jones editors Bauerlein and Jeffrey wrote in the comments at Essence.com. The September MotherJones.com blog post lauding McClelland's tweets from Haiti went down a few days later. (Bauerlein told me they had meant to remove it in November, when they received K*'s letter, and wasn't sure why it had remained online.) McClelland was less willing to concede fault, writing that she was sorry if she "caused K* any distress whatsoever" and added, in seeming half-apology, "I take full responsibility for using a few of the already-published details about K*." Of course, she was the one who had published the information on Twitter in the first place -- her identifying tweets, like the Good story, are still up. McClelland and Mother Jones dispute that K* had never consented to being the subject of McClelland's reporting. After all, she had consented ahead of time to McClelland's ride-along, as had Fleming, Charles, and K*'s mother. If you let a reporter ride along in a car with you, knowing she is acting in her capacity as a reporter, doesn't that imply you consent to letting her report the ride? And why would that consent apply to only certain mediums and not, for example, to Twitter? There are exceptions, of course -- reporters are sometimes invited to closed-door meetings, for example, on the condition that they don't report what they see -- but McClelland insists she made no such agreement.Still, the Good story revealed little about K* that hadn't gone up on Twitter and the September MotherJones.com post aggregating McClelland's tweets. Why, with this article eight months later, did both Danticat and Fleming -- and apparently K* herself, not to mention 30-plus signers of the open letter -- publicly turn against McClelland?Bauerlein suggested that McClelland's unusual writing style -- very personal, a clear if sometimes over-the-top attempt at something like Hunter S. Thompson covering human rights -- might have rankled some people in Haiti. "I think, as it played out and as criticism came in, people started feeling that this wasn't what they had signed up for. Particularly the advocates were I think not happy with how it played out," she said."Perhaps there was a feeling ... that they were on the same side"The same criticisms that people had made privately to McClelland's editors about her Mother Joneswork were made publicly after the Good article. For critics, it wasn't just that McClelland had been so willing to defy K*'s wishes. It was that she'd done so not to draw attention to the plight of sexual violence, or the need of helping Haiti, but to herself. McClelland, purportedly trying to help the young rape victim tell her story, instead cast K* as a supporting (and unwilling) character in a story about herself.Still, that is not the same as writing without consent. It's possible that the issues of consent -- whether K* explicitly consented to McClelland's reporting, and whether McClelland agreed to Fleming's prior review -- simply got confused. "This is an area where you're particularly likely to have misunderstanding," said Brian Concannon, who as director of the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti deals frequently with victims as well as reporters. "It's a very highly fraught situation." The "cultural and linguistic" barriers, not to mention the near-chaos of a third-world disaster zone like post-earthquake Haiti, made McClelland's ride-along especially prone to misunderstandings. He added that Mothers Jones' reputation as an "openly progressive" publication might have led K*'s handlers to be laxer about clarifying ground rules than they would have been with another reporter. "Perhaps there was a feeling shared by everybody that they were on the same side," he said. McClelland might have been sympathetic to the cause, but she is still a reporter first.There is one person who could clear both issues up: all of these conversations went through Alain Charles, the driver and translator. When I asked Fleming, Charles's boss, if she would put me in touch with him so he could verify her story, she refused. I contacted him directly, but the response I received was from Fleming: "I told you last week that we are not talking with reporters because that is what K* has requested. I am offended that you ignored her wishes and contacted Alain directly without copying me. I have tried to assist you by answering limited questions. I will repeat: We are not speaking to reporters, including you."For all the anger and accusations flying, there seems to be little concrete evidence, with the obvious exception of McClelland's Good story publishing details that McClelland knew K* herself and theMother Jones editors wanted to remain private, that anyone involved in the episode ever acted with less than the best intentions. And yet, there were so many missed opportunities to prevent things from going so far. McClelland, even if she had K*'s consent, could have clarified her use of Twitter and unique reporting style before sending her first tweet. Fleming could have better understood McClelland's work before allowing the ride-along; after the fact, she might have been less antagonistic in expressing her concerns, and thus more likely to influence the reporter's writing. The episode offers a window into the cozy relationships that can develop in conflict zones between reporters and aid workers. The two often need each other -- the reporter to get access, the aid worker to draw attention to his or her cause -- and might come to believe they're on the same team. But when one of the two violates that unspoken partnership, as Fleming seems to believe McClelland did with her initial tweets, their relationship can go sour. That mistrust can make their common goal -- in this case, telling the story of a young Haitian rape victim -- more difficult, and more likely to fall apart.It's only if reporters and advocates work together to navigate the fog of war that can surround foreign disaster reporting, Concannon said, that a young woman like K* can be protected. Protecting trauma victims might not be in a reporter's job description, but protecting sources is. Is it up to the journalist to make sure her reporting doesn't unduly endanger sources? Or is it up to the source and her advocates to determine what's best? "It's everybody's responsibility," Concannon said. "And it's a delicate balance, where people like us, who are advocates, they see some value in press coverage towards the greater advocacy effort. That can obviously be good. You have to do it in a way that doesn't traumatize people.""Frankly, I find the entire thing heartbreaking on all sides," Danticat wrote in an email. "There was no intent on my part to harm or shame Ms McClleland, just to help K* tell her side of the story, which had been missing from the conversation." She added, "If there is a human takeaway from this it's that, nearly two years after the earthquake now, we all need to renew our commitment to Haiti's women and girls, to continue to do all we can to help them in concrete ways, which is what I saw K* and the other rape survivors trying to do for one another in Port-au-Prince." Meanwhile, the American journalists and aid workers are still fighting.This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/07/the-reporter-and-the...
Twitter. - Max Fisher is an associate editor at The Atlantic, where he edits and writes for the International channel. Follow him on
The Biggest Lie About Race?
That It's Real
Dorothy Roberts says race is a social and political construct, and she won't rest until we know it.
- | Posted: July 26, 2011
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Branford Marsalis Quartet
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‘In The Crease’
The Branford Marsalis Quartet
I saw this great quartet yesterday (though with a different bassist) and I was blown away by this great, 20 year old drummer, Justin Faulkner. This footage is from 2009, at the ‘Sous Les Pommiers Jazz Festival’.
From the Marsalis website:
“I was attracted to his natural understanding of how to play jazz, especially in the left hand, which many professionals 10 years his senior seem not to have grasped.”, Marsalis explained via e-mail. “I first heard him playing with a high school band that was, admittedly, not too good. But I was surprised at his ability to keep time and swing, and not try to call attention to himself.”A few weeks later, Faulkner received his first call to sit in with the band, and earlier this year the spot became his on a permanent basis. His first show was on his 18th birthday, and the tour wrapped up just in time for him to make it to prom and graduation.
Marsalis shrugged off any doubts about Faulkner’s age. “I have not qualms with age,” he said. “Just maturity. I’ve played with musicians who are much older yet behave much younger on an emotional level. Mature young players have a desire to learn, and they bring instant energy to a bunch of old fogies like us.” Flexing his chops onstage every night but still getting back to the hotel in time to finish his homework was a difficult balance to maintain, but his experience have matured him, Faulkner said.
“People always paid attention because of my age, but I always had to think of myself not just as the 13-year-kid who everybody’s going to treat nicely. Being in this business, I’ve been around adults for the majority of my life. That totally changed my thinking about my playing and the way that I handle myself in the company of others.”
Branford Marsalis - Tenor Saxophone
Joey Calderazzo - Piano
Eric Revis - Bass
Justin Faulkner - Drums