Sunday, August 10, 2014

Help Wanted

Just as interests in finance, fashion, sports, and other subjects can lead to international career options, an interest in helping others also can cause students to find work beyond their borders. In fact, a handout from the American Academy of Pediatrics encourages early adolescents to "try activities that help others." The earlier post, "Hope for the Future," suggests ways, even at a younger age, children can begin to alleviate some of the world's suffering.

It is interesting to see how often young people are in the news for helping others. A child has her head shaved to show a classmate with cancer that she is not the only one who looks different. An Olympic athlete bonds with a brother with special needs. College students spend their spring breaks, not drinking and tanning in Florida, but building a senior citizen home in earthquake-ravaged Haiti. To test out how well a student is suited to help people in a foreign country, the earlier post, "See the World," has information about educational experiences that young people can try overseas while they are in school.

An early commitment to helping others can continue into a life's work, even to the point of extreme personal sacrifice. Missionaries Dr. Kent Brantly and Nancy Writebol contracted the deadly Ebola virus at medical facilities in Liberia. Father Alexis Prem Kumar, the director of Jesuit refugee services in Afghanistan, has been kidnapped by terrorists, and U.S. AID workers are imprisoned in Pakistan and Cuba.

While helping others in a foreign country entails a certain amount of risk, the abundance of positions available is worth exploring. Start by going to directories for development organizations (devdir.org) and the individual websites of Care (care.org) that fights poverty around the world, the Red Cross (redcross.org) that goes where foreign disasters strike, Unicef (unicef.org) that concentrates on the needs of the world's poorest children, Doctors Without Borders (doctorswithoutborders.org) who are now fighting Ebola in West Africa, and Operation Smile (operationsmile.org) that performs surgery to correct cleft lips and palates on children in foreign countries. Almost every year a nurse friend of mine spends her vacations assisting the doctors at Operation Smile.

Short-term, overseas assignments also are available at organizations such as: Cross-Cultural Solutions, Global Volunteers, Habitat for Humanity's Global Village Program, Projects Abroad, and United Planet. Volunteers in these programs find themselves caring for children in foreign orphanages, rescuing endangered animals, teaching English, digging wells, painting classrooms, and unearthing archaeological treasures.

As a marketer, I have been especially pleased to find organizations like SERRV (serrv.org) that send experienced marketers to help foreign artisans design products that consumers in developed countries want to buy. Father James Martin, in his book The Jesuit Guide to Almost Everything, writes about how he used the corporate experience he had before becoming a priest to help a seamstress in Nairobi, Kenya, gain an income by turning fabric remnants into religious goods for tourists. Artist Iris Shiloh's visit to India and Swaziland inspired her to found Kids for Kids (kidsforkidsfashion.com). She prints designs created by orphans and poor children in lesser developed countries on T-shirts and then donates a portion of the sales revenue back to the organizations that sponsored the little artists.

Hawaiians say missionaries came to do good and did very well (buying land and establishing plantations and businesses). Even if it's not motivated by altruism, going overseas to help others can have benefits. Colleges and corporations look for students and employees who have international experience.
(Additional information about international careers also is available in the earlier post, "What Do You Want to Be?")


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