[OSList] OST and funding crisis

Juan Lopez amistadasc at aol.com
Sat Nov 26 01:08:39 PST 2011


Wonderful summary - thanks. 

juan t. Lopez

On Nov 25, 2011, at 11:45 AM, "Harrison Owen" <hhowen at verizon.net> wrote:

> Lori – Try these. All from Liberia – where there are lots of tough rows to hoe and multiple NGOs.
>  
> From: Susan Partnow <susan4ps at comcast.net>
> To: OSLIST at LISTSERV.BOISESTATE.EDU
> Sent: Tue, March 29, 2011 1:34:58 AM
> Subject: OS and World Cafe at a Community Meeting in Monrovia, Liberia
> 
> 
> Last Saturday my partners and I hosted over 120 community leaders at an Open Space Community Meeting here in Monrovia, Liberia.  My small non profit, Global Citizen Journey, in partnership with the Liberian organization, Population Caring Organization, are launching the Liberia Peacebuilder Initiative to help grow a network of leaders that cut across all of the many divides here:  traditional, Christian, Muslim; 16+ ethnic groups; men/women; youth/elders; educated/illiterate; ex-combatants; returning refugees.  We have recruited 35 leaders from the Interfaith Council of Churches, Tribal Elders Council, National Council of Tribal Governance, and several NGOs plus the Kofi Annan Graduate school of Peace Studies.  These 35 received a 5 day training in Compassionate Listening, Restorative Circles, Trauma Healing, Forgiveness & Reconciliation – and I will return in 2 months to continue this train-the-trainer program.  One of the components they will learn is how to facilitate Open Space and World Café, so they will have these powerful tools to share with their communities and bring their groups together in dialogue.  To introduce them to this practice, they were invited to attend with their invited guests to a Community Meeting last Saturday with the convening question,
> “It’s up to us – you and me.  We have challenges and opportunities.
> What can we do now to begin to create the Liberia that works for all of us”
>  
> For this first week, I was accompanied by a group of students and two professors from Salem State University (in Massachusetts) – led by Dr. Greg Carroll, chair of the Intercultural and Peace studies program there – and we offered a 3 day training to the Salem students plus students from the Kofi Annan School of Peace Studies at the University of Liberia. 
> For the community meeting, we started the morning with a World Café – to help connect everyone across the diverse groups present in the room – and to begin giving them the experience and skill of dialogue, i.e. each person having a turn to have their voice heard, each person listening to one another, weaving together thoughts into a dialogue – vs. their usual habit of orating, with each speaker giving their own little speech without connection to the speaker before or after.  We had three rounds with these questions:
> Round 1) What do you love about Liberia?
> Round 2) What keeps us from making Liberia what we want it to be?
> Round 3) How can we begin to work together to make these ‘better Liberia’ dreams come true?
>  
> Before we began the first round, we had everyone move around so they would be in a circle that included men  and women and people they didn’t know.  This took a while, but with help from the Salem students and PCO staff, we got them into the small groups of 4.  I introduced and explained the use of a talking object (we had stones picked up at their beautiful beaches).  After I explained in my US English, a local party translated into the local vernacular creole (“everybody talk small small time with ‘talking object-o’ and listen each other-o”).  Still, there was clear lack of understanding – this was out of everyone’s experience – so we went around to each group to help them get it:  so someone would actually pick up their talking object and begin – and pass it around, no cross talk…  It was fascinating to see how –by the third round—everyone in the room had caught on to the idea – and the groups were fully engaged, one round with the talking object, then really juicy and connected/coherent conversation…  We had a great debrief and discussion…  Then we moved into a large double circle and I introduced Open Space – so thrilled to tell them how it was really coming back home to them – since Harrison Owen learned so much from Liberia (where he was the head of Peace Corps) that he wove into the process…
> They were very responsive to step right up and offer topics… After creating the market place, we had lunch with some fabulous Liberian drumming and dancing… and then moved into the first session. Again, it took a while  for them to really understand how they could move from session to session – and how they could choose a session to attend – not just their own topic!  But by ~15-20 minutes into it, everyone was fully engaged in a topic of their choice…
>  
> For the Open Space, 26 topics were generated:
> How can we bring fair justice in Liberia to make peace
> Living as an ambassador of genuine peace
> How to resolve land dispute
> Creating peace among learners
> Conflict Resolution
> How can we reconcile?
> What is the future after 2011 elections?
> How can we build peace in Liberia?
> Peace begins with us
> Culture into education
> Improvement of education sector
> Good working relationship
> What you can do to bring above peace?
> What it takes to be a community leader?
> Peace brings unity
> National reconciliation
> Forgive one another
> How to avoid bad governance
> How can Salem State University help Liberia?
> Methods of building peace
> Promoting peacebuilding implementations @ workplaces/ schools & Universities/ communities/ churches/ government & institutions
> Democracy & good governance, leadership with integrity to have a peaceful environment in Liberia
> Peace in the family
> Peace in 16 counties
> How do we protect the peace we enjoy?
> What Liberians stand to benefit should the peace process become successful?
>  
> Since there were no computers available and many people do not write, we had a helper in each group help create a flipchart with key points discussed and any action steps identified.  Our Liberian Partners will create a report that contains much of this information and will disseminate it to each of the key groups that sent participants.  I’ll keep you posted on outcomes we hear of.  Though already we heard there was quite a buzz about what a successful and engaging event it was – and how people are introducing the idea of circles and talking objects to their communities.
>  
> All for now,
> Susan
> Susan Partnow
>  
> And From Blake Mills – also from Liberia—
>  
> Dear Harrison,
> > 
> > Just finished OS in an NGO office in Liberia that deals with malaria
> > prevention, treatment and education. (25 people, 13 topics, 1 day) In
> > the closing circle, I wished you had been there and thought of you
> > everytime someone said "This is our heritage of how we use to do it
> > and it feels good." " This is the first time we sit together in 4
> > years and it is because of our Liberian past ."" "It is how they do it
> > in our villages and now it brings us closer together and we can be one
> > team, one program." "This is the first time I have seen everyone smile
> > in our office." "People were fully engaged in the room." Immense pride
> > filled the room. (I was asked to go to this office to do some team
> > building. I think it worked, wouldn't you say?)
> > 
> > This team has gone through major transitions from working with
> > malarial concerns in an emergency situation, just after the war to
> > post emergency work; from one country director's style to an opposite
> > country director's style; and a total change of expat management; all
> > in the last 3 months. And, you know what the # 1 topic out of the 13,
> > after they prioritized? LOVE, plain and simple and powerful. A
> > committee is now in charge of finding ways to express it in the
> > office. I think the country director was shocked at that choice but
> > even more surprised that a quiet man who pushes the broom, convened the topic.
> > 
> > I was a bit worried for the first hour as it was very slow moving and
> > I thought I had made the wrong choice, so I left the room and worked
> > on my laptop, to not control the group and close the space. Turns out,
> > no one had ever asked them before for their opinions. That was the hesitancy.
> > The ball started rolling after the first time period.
> > 
> > So, my dear, Harrison...it all comes around and back to Liberia, you
> > and your brillance at capturing the essence of the African culture and
> > bottling it up for the rest of the world to sip. You have touched
> > their hearts deeply. In the closing circle, they didn't thank me...at
> > first I was...gee, no praise for me bringing it to them...HA! "When
> > the best leader's work is done, the people say "We did it ourselves." Lao Tzu.
> > 
>  
>  
> Harrison Owen
> 7808 River Falls Dr.
> Potomac, MD 20854
> USA
>  
> 189 Beaucaire Ave. (summer)
> Camden, Maine 20854
>  
> Phone 301-365-2093
> (summer)  207-763-3261
>  
> www.openspaceworld.com
> www.ho-image.com (Personal Website)
> To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your options, view the archives of OSLIST Go to:http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org
>  
> From: oslist-bounces at lists.openspacetech.org [mailto:oslist-bounces at lists.openspacetech.org] On Behalf Of Lori Palano
> Sent: Friday, November 25, 2011 2:01 PM
> To: Open Space Technology email list
> Subject: [OSList] OST and funding crisis
>  
> Hello all
>  
> I have been lurking on this list for quite some time. I'm finally writing to call upon your collective experience to find a couple of good stories for a potential client. 
>  
> I am going to be discussing the possibility of using OST with an international solidarity NGO who is in the middle of a funding crisis. Does anyone have good success stories along this line that might inspire the client to make an OST invitation?
>  
> Thank you!
>  
> Lori 
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