Collaborating on building hope and economic independence in Moldova · News · Lafayette College

Students smile in a group

Jonathan Ford ’23

EEGLP already has a familiar face on the ground. Former Gladstone Whitman Fellow Jonathan Ford ’23, now in the Peace Corps working on a community building mission in Moldova, has helped introduce the EEGLP and its mission to Eco-Razeni. As a student, Ford was part of EEGLP’s successful West Baltimore project.

According to Hutchinson, Ford was a highly effective captain of the student team on the EEGLP’s West Baltimore project and “it is a big bonus to have the benefit of his insights and judgment on this Moldovan project.“

Over the course of the assignment, the EEGLP will strive to produce democratic, socially valuable, and sustainable market-based solutions to community economic development challenges. It focuses on strengthening the capacity of residents to exercise voice, agency and empowerment over their community affairs, and to foster their investment in the resilience, dynamic competitiveness, and sustainability of their community. The Lafayette team began the process in the village of Răazeni by meeting with local stakeholders, elected officials, and entrepreneurs, and completing an asset mapping exercise.

One of the participants, Sergiu Gurau, executive director of Eco-Razeni, welcomes the input from Lafayette and the EEGLP to help the community of Razeni focus on its strengths and inspire other Moldovans to set a course for a prosperous future.

“In our daily life, we hardly take time to understand what is our community’s strength and what it has to offer. But to have a more holistic understanding of the community, first, we must learn to know our places as places full of positive, useful resources,” he says. “Due to the Lafayette initiative and their asset mapping exercise, all of Razeni’s strengths and resources have been inventoried and depicted on a map, where all its residents can more easily think about how to build on these assets to address community needs and make Razeni, which is seeking change, a better place to live for everyone.”

He describes Lafayette’s role as “huge,” noting how every Razeni resident who participated in the asset mapping exercise “understood that a community is more than the sum of its parts; it is also not any one of those parts alone.

“So, communities can only be built by focusing on the strengths and capacities of the citizens who call that community home,” Gurau observes. “And when people work together—drawing on multitudes of relationships, experiences, resources, and skills—they look to their community in positive terms and with an enthusiastic eye toward possible partnerships.”

Hutchinson says the EEGLP outreach represents historic connections between Lafayette and Moldova, noting the College’s participation in an exchange program in 1985-89 before Moldova broke away from the Soviet Union in 1991.

“Since their independence in 1991, they have faced a number of transitioning and redevelopment challenges, including understanding how best to establish a state where no tradition of self-government or sovereignty existed before,” he says. “They’re realizing the contestations and multidimensional complexities of the demands of self-government, something that our students experience in their daily lives, including on college campuses, and as a result take it for granted. Moldova also, in their own words, is struggling with transitioning from a state-controlled economy to a free-market economy because of its inherited tradition of centralized authoritarianism.”

Recently, the Whitman scholars, still fully energized by their spring break trip to Moldova, and Hutchinson gathered around the large conference table in the Whitman Room in Simon Center to process their experience and discuss their observations and understanding of, and hopes for, the small nation with big aspirations for its political independence and deeper commitment to free-market economics driving them to greater heights in economic prosperity, citizen human flourishing, and overall realization of broad-based and inclusive liberty.

Imani Patterson ’25 (film and media studies), team captain

“I’ve been deeply invested in researching this idea of liberty. And an author that I’m reading defines liberty as the freedom from coercion, from being forced or manipulated to do something. And if that’s what liberty is defined as, when you look around, liberty is something that everyone has strong feelings for, especially when unfreedoms brush up against our boundary line. I think the most important thing that finally solidified within me when I went to Moldova is that liberty is not something owned, achieved or consumed by a person—instead it’s owned, achieved and consumed by the people. It is something collectively shared, collectively celebrated, and collectively upheld, and unfortunately undermined by a person not appreciating how their decisions and actions affect others and the community around them.”

Hayden Girolamo ’27 (economics)

“A lot of the directional goals between the mayor’s office and the economics professor whom we spoke with at the academy in the city seemed very aligned in terms of goals. We can’t say for sure that the entire country is, but at least within the people we talked to, it seemed like they all had similar goals aimed at economic independence. One of the directors at Eco-Razeni said during a dinner that Moldovans are hard workers, and they care about good food, good wine, and great company. It’s not a bad combination. The people who we met are very celebratory. They don’t look at their deficits as oh, this is going to keep us down. But they seem to be looking at themselves in an aspirational lens.”

Carson Belaire ’27 (engineering studies and economics)

“Like many of us when we came to Lafayette last year, I had no clue that I’d be traveling to Moldova over spring break. It was a great opportunity. It’s impacted my time at Lafayette because as an engineer who’s going to help a community, you need a solution. Through this experience, I’ve learned the importance of listening and really putting the understanding of the community or the people you work with first. Learning how to do that, especially with exercises like asset mapping and really trying to gauge the voice of the community, is so imperative.”

Zoe Simonte ’27 (anthropology and sociology; film and media studies)

“This trip taught me how to go somewhere with an open mind. Everything I learned from Prof. Hutchinson in my first-year seminar is not just something on paper, not just something I’m writing an essay about, but something that can be practiced.

“And for me as an anthropology, sociology, and film media major, I look at it a lot from a human perspective. I really enjoyed meeting the teenagers and the people who were around our age. I was really surprised to see how much we shared, even though we live literally across the world, in terms of interests, in terms of hobbies, in terms of just aspirations. It’s a like mindset. This trip really taught me that you can go somewhere with an open mind, and we’re all human. You know, we all have things that we bring to the table. As much as we were coming in from the outside and helping this community, it was absolutely mutual in what we all gained together.”

Fiorella Garcia Sanchez ’27 (economics)

“As an international student, I’m just grateful for the opportunity. I learned by going to Moldova that studying economics is a means to help people. Working with people from a different culture taught me it may not be about getting a job that makes a lot of money. Something I learned about myself is I’d rather work with people like that instead of in an office because I think this is more meaningful. It’s something that just makes me happier.”

 

Source link : https://news.lafayette.edu/2024/06/26/collaborating-on-building-hope-and-economic-independence-in-moldova/

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Publish date : 2024-06-26 07:00:00

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