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Unpacking Development
Other Peoples’ Tomorrows

Just finished Dr. James Orbinski’s new book, An Imperfect Offering: Humanitarian Action for the 21st Century.

For those of you who don’t know him, Orbinski is one of Canada’s global health heroes. He accepted the Nobel Prize for Doctors Without Borders while he was its international president and has since worked on developing MSF’s Access to Essential Medicine’s Campaign and establishing Dignitas International, an organization that provides community-based HIV/AIDS treatment in Malawi).

I’ve heard Orbinski speak a couple of times, including at the Hope in the Balance forum last November and his talks provoke the idea of growth, of thoughts and a world view constantly evolving.  This makes him especially human, despite his almost super-human committment to justice and health.  One of his strongest messages is the world’s need to create what he calls “humanitarian space.”  Orbinski’s experiences in Somalia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and elsewhere have made clear the problems of military co-option of “humanitarianism”.  The classic example is the dropping of both bombs and food packets within Afghanistan; in several cases children confused the two and were harmed, not fed.

Orbinski’s book is part memoir, part call to action.  He takes the reader through some of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the past 20-odd years, from the Rwandan Genocide to New York on September 11, 2001, when Orbinski worked in triage at Ground Zero.  It struck me that on several occasions, Orbinski has had a relationship with the countries he visits beyond their experience of humanitarian emergency, allowing him to describe the harsh differences between the time of acute crisis and normal daily life.  This element challenges the perspective African nations (and other developing countries) as places of perpetual crisis.

Books about global health and its personalities are compelling reads.  Despite the complexities of humanitarian action that Orbinski describes in An Imperfect Offering, the moral action of healing the sick seems so much less ambigious than the general project of development.  As he describes his quest to ask the right questions necessary to improve “other peoples’ tomorrows,” Orbinski recognizes the political side of humanitarian action, and the need to speak up about what he has witnessed.


May 14, 2008 | 5:05 AM Comments  0 comments

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