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近年越来越流行到发展中国家做短期义工。能够牺牲自己的精神、时间和金钱,为有需要的人作一点贡献,是非常值得鼓励的事情。但是我们有否想过,自己一厢情愿的付出,当地人是否真的受益,还是受害?
一个普通的大学生或者写字楼文员,真的有能力帮当地人建一间稳固的房子吗?
在发展中国家,能够付出劳力的人多的是,你的苦工是否真的有价值,还是剥夺了当地人的就业机会?
孤儿真的每个礼拜需要不同的外国人与他们玩游戏画图画吗?还是这些风车转似来来去去的人,为孤儿们的心理带来更多的不稳定和失落?更何况有资料显示,有些孤儿院是利用儿童欺骗游客?
当然,这些负面的影响不代表我们以后不应该再参与义工旅游,以上的问题,在不同的情况会有不同的答案,但这些问题是有必要思考一下的。既然我们愿意花时间和心血去参加甚至举办这些义工活动,何不再花一点时间多做一点功课,考虑自己的义工活动对当地人真是有益还是有害,然后再作取舍?
你以下观点不代表我个人观点,仅参考:
Illustration: Simon Bosch
More Australians are adding a dash of volunteer work to their overseas holidays in poor countries. Between the trekking and the rafting, they are building houses in remote villages and working in orphanages.
They want to give back; they are appalled by global inequality; they seek personal fulfilment through encounters with the destitute and disadvantaged. Whatever the motive, the impulse to help is commendable. But the impact on the locals is not always beneficial.
At this time of year, students are planning - or embarking on - gap-year adventures that may combine mountain climbing with manual labour; and middle-aged professionals and new retirees are pondering how to have fun but spread goodness.
Before setting off, here is a question worth consideration: what consequences flow when an 18-year-old from Sydney's privileged suburbs goes to a village to build a house with a bunch of similar volunteers? Given their last encounter with bricks was with their Lego set, it is possible the youngsters won't build a sturdy house. More likely, the locals could teach them about unskilled manual labour.
Quite possibly, the young people are taking jobs from the locals. The youngsters benefit from the feel-good factor, their confidence and self-reliance grow. But manual labour is what is in abundance in the developing world. Who gains most here?
Being good is not as easy as it looks when the uninformed stumble naively into the complex world of international development. Experienced aid and development professionals are urging Australians to do their homework before they become "voluntourists". Decent impulses need to be channelled in useful ways.
The multimillion-dollar gap-year industry, for example, has come under recent scrutiny for its programs. Private operators charge hefty fees to provide the young with travel and volunteering experiences, but an ill-thought-out program can be bad for communities and for relations between rich and poor countries.
A report last year from the British research body Demos said the gap-year industry could be seen as a new form of colonialism, a new way of the West exercising power in the Third World.
One in five people who took one of the gap-year packages said they believed their presence in the place they visited made no positive difference to the lives of those around them, with one respondent in the study saying, "I felt that the local community could have done the work we were doing; there were lots of unemployed people there …"
But a good program, the Demos report said, ensured the young people had relevant skills to offer and gave them opportunities to continue their work once they returned home.
Another popular way to volunteer abroad is to work in orphanages for a short stint.
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Australians have visited orphanages in Cambodia and Bali, bringing gifts, money and their skills. So common is this practice that it now has its own name, "orphanage tourism". But are the children helped or harmed by the stream of tourists who move in and out of their lives?
Friends-International, a Cambodia-based development organisation, has called on tourists to stop the practice.
"Orphanages must be a safe place for children, not a tourist destination," it says. It claims the number of orphanages has proliferated in order to milk tourists of money; in Cambodia they are a booming business.
An official study showed just a quarter of the children in the orphanages had lost both of their parents. The most unscrupulous operators sent children to tourist haunts to do song and dance routines in order to lure rich Westerners to the institutions. A recent BBC radio documentary showed some of the orphanages in Bali were effectively rackets, exploiting the children and tourists alike.
Child development experts, such as the South African professor Linda Richter, co-author of the paper AIDS Orphan Tourism, have pointed out the psychological damage on very young children of a string of broken attachments with short-term caregivers passing through their orphanage
A volunteer may believe her or his contribution to be valuable but, in the wider scheme, it may be harmful.
We don't allow a parade of volunteers in Australian child-care centres. Apart from safety concerns, we know children need to form secure attachments to regular carers.
Volunteers are needed abroad but mainly those with specific, often technical or high-level skills. Once nurses were needed, now midwife trainers are needed, for example.
Reputable organisations such as Australian Volunteers International respond to formal requests for skilled volunteers from organisations in developing countries. Applicants are put through a rigorous and competitive process of selection.
TEAR Australia, a Christian development and aid agency, has harnessed the enthusiasm of Australians who are demanding the overseas aid experience. It has done this by setting up educational tours of development projects to bring Australians into contact with local communities. This is less about Australians "doing" the work and more about "learning" what the locals are doing.
Some people can't empathise unless they have first-hand experience and, once touched, they become lifelong ambassadors for a fairer global economic order; they become significant donors, letter writers and lobbyists.
But, if the first-hand experience is a pit stop between climbing mountains and riding elephants, you have to wonder who is benefiting from the experience.
The volunteer might find it "awesome" at the time and be chuffed by the locals' "gratitude".
But they may learn no lasting lessons about rights and justice and even, unwittingly, do more harm than good.
For help in finding reputable opportunities for overseas volunteering, see the federal government site: ausaidvolunteers.gov.au
Follow the National Times on Twitter: @NationalTimesAU
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