My wife, Alice, and our three
twenty-something children spent last week bouncing
through Kenya (the roads leave a little to be
desired.) We were there to witness some of
the projects supported by our favorite charity,
International Partners in Mission (
www.ipmconnect.org).
During the trip, in which my
emotions ran from despair to elation, I remembered
talking with our guide, IPM CEO Joe Cistone, when
he asked me to help him with the business side of
the organization in 2001.
I said,
"I'll help but I have two conditions: 1. you
never make me sit on a board and 2. please don't
make me travel to your projects".
On
the plus side, we've had seven wonderful years
helping Joe and his team build their organization
six-fold.
On the "negative",
he only kept his promise of no board meetings -
last week's trip to Kenya was our third "immersion
tour" in the last four years.
Joe
reneged on his original promise but we decided to
go because of a new promise Joe made: that
Africa would be "life altering".
It was.
For those
interested, I'll do a deep dive on our learning in
Kenya in my "Bridging the Gap" article on the
website (
www.thebusinessofgood.org) in
a couple weeks but for now, here's the summary:

Here's a
little example of Kenya's dysfunction: Our van was
stopped on the way home one night by Nairobi
police brandishing uzis. They suggested we
could pay our fine in cash right there for back
seat-seat belt violations or be taken to jail.
Big example: Political officials
live in grand compounds while over 46% of Kenya's
population lives on less than $2 day. (And I
thought we had no middle class!)
Over the coming year I will write
about some of the new-to-me heroes of social good
that I met in Kenya. For every groaningly
depressing sight we saw, we would also see brave
people . . Sister Gladys Owuor, Priscilla
Nangurai, Brother Francis Okaye and the women of
the Dandora Women's Cooperative.
A week's worth of watching their work has
taken me a week to recover from. Thank
goodness I don't need to get up every day and do
what they do - I couldn't. But what I do is
important to them and to IPM, and so I do my
business of good gladly.
Sister Gladys, Priscilla, Francis
and the women of Dandora didn't ask for our
sympathy or just our money. They asked
instead that we hold hope for them, pray for them
and continue to support them in the ways we've
learned to over the last seven years.
I promise, we
will.
Peace,
tim@thebusinessofgood.org"
target=_blank>Tim
McCarthy