PTPI Blog


Archive for January, 2010

Discussion Question 2 for Strength in What Remains

Monday, January 18th, 2010
Bookmark and Share

Special Announcement: Join the conversation and you could win a free copy of the next book the Global Book Club will be discussing.  Leave your comment on any of the posts related to Strength in What Remains between January 18 and January 25, 2010 and you will be eligible to win!  The winner will be chosen at random and notified the week of January 25, 2010.

Question answered by Ruth Gardner, Membership Assistant at PTPI

2. Why do you think Tracy Kidder chose Strength in What Remains as the title to Deo’s story?

The title of this book, Strength in What Remains, in my opinion is a perfect fit for Deo’s story. Reflecting back to the section of the book where Deo is trying to escape from the Hutu militia, Deo witnessed unspeakable sights, he thought his family was dead, he had to go days without food or water, and every day he lived in fear and isolation. After experiencing such tragedies it would be fair to assume that Deo wouldn’t have any strength remaining, that he would give up, but no he prevailed. In essence the strength that did remain was echoed through Deo’s escape from the genocide in Burundi to New York and how he fought to become the person he is today.

(Strength in What Remains takes its title from William Wordsworth‘s Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood):

What though the radiance which was once so bright
Be now for ever taken from my sight,
Though nothing can bring back the hour
Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower;
We will grieve not, rather find
Strength in what remains behind;

The opinions expressed by PTPI staff and other book club members are entirely their own and are not necessarily the views of  People to People International or that of PTPI’s Officers, Board of Directors and Board of Trustees.

Discussion Question 1 for Strength in What Remains

Friday, January 15th, 2010
Bookmark and Share

Question answered by Rebecca Nunn, Assistant Director of Administration at PTPI

1. What is your overall impression of the book?  Would you recommend it to your peers?

I had such a wonderful time reading this book.  The story pulled me in from the first chapter and I just couldn’t put it down!  Although I cannot relate to Deo’s story, (I don’t think anyone can unless you have been through such a tragedy), the author Tracy Kidder was able to tell Deo’s story in such a way that you don’t feel pity for him but inspired by him to help others because of his amazing story.  I have been recommending this book ever since I started reading it because it is so inspirational and I think everyone who reads this book can find a valuable lesson for their own life.   I feel like I see refugees and people coming to America in a different way.  Before I would think “they probably know somebody, they are fine”.  But after reading Strength in What Remains, I feel more inclined to ask if they need help.

The opinions expressed by PTPI staff and other book club members are entirely their own and are not necessarily the views of  People to People International or that of PTPI’s Officers, Board of Directors and Board of Trustees.

A Note from Manel Diallo

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010
Bookmark and Share

Mbaty Ba, age 109, lives in the village of Keur Mbaye Peul, Senegal.  To show the rest of the world the respect and admiration given to elders in their country, the members of PTPI’s Senegal Chapter embarked on a humanitarian visit to see Mbaty on December 26, 2009.  Chapter President Manel Diallo wrote to tell us about the event.

Members of PTPI's Senegal Chapter

Members of PTPI's Senegal Chapter

With the main objective of expressing charity and thankfulness to African women, and promoting PTPI, members of  the Richard-Toll sub committee initiated a visit to Mbaty Ba, a 109 year old woman living in a the village of Keur Mbaye Peul, which is about 425 kilometers from Dakar, the Capital of Senegal.  Our humanitarian activity was graciously supported financially and logistically by PTPI Senegal Chapter member Mouhamed Dia, a sales manager at Nestle Senegal for the area of Saint-Louis. He contributed milk, sugar, coffee and many other products.

PTPI Senegal also wanted to pay tribute to elders in Africa and in the world through this initiative.  As the African writer Amadou Hampate Ba said, “En Afrique, quand en viellard meurt, c’est une bibliotheque qui brule.”  (“In Africa, when an old man dies, it’s a library burning.”)

Mbaty Ba talks with members of PTPI's Senegal Chapter

Mbaty Ba talks with members of PTPI's Senegal Chapter

The date of the visit coincided with the Muslim feast of Ashura.  As a result, many of the villagers went to the market to buy food and different stuffs for the event and the village was nearly empty. We were greeted by Djiby Ba, the Chief of the village who is also Mbaty’s grandson.  He told Mbaty that members of an international association were there to visit her, and she welcomed us and asked her family members to take care of us. When we told her that our organization deals with peace and exchange between people of different countries, she said that what we are doing is very important because all human beings are equal and its good to learn about others cultures to better understand them. At the end of her speech, she graciously offered us prayers and thanked us for the presents.

In her younger ages, Mbaty was a well known activist in the cause of improving women’s lives. Thought of as the weaker, more vulnerable of the two sexes, women in Senegal, until recent years, were not respected as people but as property, labourers and producers of children. Women in her village were deprived the right to own land. Mbaty diplomatically arranged to make it possible for women to acquire land.

Keur Mbaye Peul is a village of the Pulaar ethnic group.  It is neighbored by Keur Mbaye Wolof, of the Wolof ethnic group. Pulaars are known to be pastoral, with animals such as sheeps, goats and cows. Wolof communities are most of the time cultivators. So it conflicts used to arise between the two villages and Mbaty played the important role of a peacekeeper. Through storytelling and advising, she also helped educate children and even adults in the village.

Village Chief Djiby Ba with PTPI Senegal Chapter members

Village Chief Djiby Ba with PTPI Senegal Chapter members

Djiby Ba, the Chief of the village, thanked the delegates in very grateful words and showed us official documents of their village.

A special thank you to Mouhamed Dia for sponsoring the event and congratulations to the sub committee’s staff for their determination and their initiative.

Manel Diallo
President, PTPI Senegal Chapter