Pop-tech Re-cap: reflections from an Iranian-American blogger
I am so grateful to collaborate with Hamid Tehrani in sharing my experience of Poptech with an Iranian audience on Global Voices Online Farsi. However it is in the time after the conference that I am able to truly reflect and share my experience to both Iranian and American audiences, and as a citizen of both of these countries, to speak to all people about the things that are closest to my heart.
We are the ones who can solve the worlds’ problems. To solve these problems we must first recognize that there are people who share with us a dream for a better world. The first step is to hold on to the dream that there can be peace, and I realized that at Poptech there are many people who share this dream with me. For example, Zainab Salbi was a great source of inspiration when she spoke about the role of women in maintaining peace within society. She founded Women for Women International, responding to a need to make sure that the world is safe for women. Women hold together the family structure, and if women are being raped, killed, or offered food in exchange for one of their children, a society can only fall apart. Her organization makes it possible to give these women a chance, and a choice.
Van Jones is another world-changing thinker that is bringing his dreams to life. He realized that people living in poverty were not being given chances to succeed the way more affluent, educated kids were given chances. He recognized that he could combine solutions to social inequality and environmental destruction. He explains that by creating green jobs [jobs that are beneficial for the environment], he could work in creating educational, rewarding work opportunities for people–creating “green pathways out of poverty.” He worked to create the Green Jobs Act, an initiative that identifies jobs and skills needed to grow renewable energy and energy efficiency industries, while creating a way out of poverty for low income adults.
The solution that Van Jones brings to life is the type of thing I dream of seeing happen between Iran and the US–exchange of culture, tools, ideas, and technology that improve our understanding of one another, and help us all toward achieving a safer planet. Rather than fighting about how we disagree on certain things, we should keep our focus on the problems that relate to us all, and find solutions to those problems. Our environmental problems are a global concern, and our emphasis as citizens of this planet should be on generating global solutions to bigger the issues that impact all of humanity. We have a choice: to focus on “the other”, creating labels such as terrorists, militants, freedom fighters… or we can find solutions, collectively, for global exchange, interconnection, and peace.
Very well written. It inspires me to think that there are people like you and the people you mentioned at pop-tech, in this world. What a great expereince it must have been to be there. Thanks for sharing.
Very interesting topic. I wish I had hope. Rather, I do have hope but feel it is a futile hope. I hope that one day we will stop believing things that we cannot sense. As long as we believe that we know what happens after death we devalue our lives on earth because we believe that such life on earth pales in comparison to heavenly existence after death. For as long as we refuse to recognize this to be the source of our problems we will continue to fight and exterminate each other.
Thanks for the article.
It is becoming more and more clear that it is through people who are taking committed action towards shifting the way our society functions that we’ll be able to continue living as a race and on this planet.
Since the media never reports about the wonderful shifts that are taking place, it is through word of mouth and articles as the one you’ve written that we can learn about the differences that are being made everyday.
Thanks very much for educating us.
p.
I’m happy to see your respect for people who reject the ‘us vs. them’ mentality. It’s good to see that people are working to put our similarities at the fore. Of course, one doesn’t have to create an international organization to foster peace. Peace will come about when we begin to search ourselves and earn self respect.
Respect for women, respect for the environment and respect for the power of economics all must be based on a fundamental respect for ourselves. We break the world up into ‘us’ and ‘them’ but never really understand what makes ‘them’ so fundamentally different and abhorrent as to place them in a separate category from ‘us’.
The things we dislike about ‘them’ are the very things we dislike about ourselves. Instead of recognizing and addressing our own shortcomings, we project the things we dislike about ourselves onto others. When we do battle with others, we are able to take on our own demons while deluding ourselves into thinking our personal integrity remains intact. When we make war with others, we are at war with ourselves. When we are attacked, the attackers are attacking themselves.
All of this philosophy would be fine, except that the consequences of attacking others and making war are not abstract. The consequences are lost lives, lost progress and lost opporunity. We cannot respect ourselves while inflicting these consequences upon our society.
OK, parismarashi, now you’ve caused me to get all preachy. Hopefully you will continue the thought provoking work, and hopefully people will continue to respond with their thoughts.
Excellent points. The People of the nations of the world should not let those in power (in any country) create artificial hatreds and wars to maintain a system that supports their wealth and dominance.
My dear Parastou,
What a beautiful article…thank you for sharing this wonderful information with us.
[…] Paris was one of the Global Bloggers attending this years conference. Below is her wonderful post-conference thoughts from her blog Ride the Wave **************** […]
Thanks for your important contribution at this critical time. It sounds like a cliche, I know, but peace is far more than the absence of war: it’s about the positive and active presence of a spirit that recognises our common humanity and our deep interdependence on each other. Just as the butterfly that flaps its wings in the silence of the rainforest can (if chaos theory is to be believed) trigger events like cyclones and hurricanes, so the despair and humiliation of those who are not accorded the full respect and dignity owing to every human being by virtue of their humanity will thwart our hopes of a peaceful world. Peace must be built on a recognition of the inviolable dignity of every human being wherever in the world that person lives (Iran, Ireland, Ivory Coast or Israel) and on each of us living our individual lives in accordance with that principle.
[…] Paris was one of the Global Bloggers attending this years conference. Below is her wonderful post-conference thoughts from her blog Ride the Wave **************** […]