WELCOME

The challenge of the next half century is whether we have the wisdom to use that wealth to enrich and elevate our national life, and to advance the quality of our … civilization.
Your imagination, your initiative, and your indignation will determine whether we build a society where progress is the servant of our needs, or a society where old values and new visions are buried under unbridled growth. For in your time we have the opportunity to move not only toward the rich society and the powerful society, but upward to the Great Society.

This exhortation of Lyndon B.Johnson to youths of his time is as important to this generation as it was to those youths. We are the future and can make a difference.

Welcome to this blog in which Kwa Gaston reflects on how his dream world-A world in which though scarce resources are equitably distributed to its inhabitants each according to his/her needs and merits and in which the long ignored potentials of youths as key development actors is acknowledged and tapped for the achievement of a world that is just through more people-centered and more youth inclusive policy formulation and implementation processes
-could more than a dream become a reality.

dimanche 2 décembre 2012

Our Generation: A Hopeful or Hopeless One?

‘It was the best époque,’ said the driver to the man who occupied the front seat of the car as I boarded. ‘Yes it was,’ ‘Yes it was, ‘ quietly answered the middle aged man in a manner that clearly revealed that he was in a contemplative mood and took the discussion with the driver seriously. I must confess that as long as I have been boarding Taxis, never have I boarded one in which the atmosphere was so contemplative.   ‘How I wish that the youths of our time had the opportunity to experience an educational system as effective and efficient as ours, ‘ quickly added the driver, just as I started wondering what these two men were discussing that made them so passionate and engaged. When I had reached my destination, the discussion between the two men, nostalgic of their school days and educational system, had not stopped and as I alighted from the Taxi, I started having a deep thought on all the things I had heard the two men discuss. I asked myself, ‘What will I talk about with so much emotion and passion in two decades from now? ‘. As this question wondered in my mind, I soon became nervous and started blaming the generation of the Taxi driver and his passenger for having done nothing to ensure that people of my generation enjoy the efficient and effective educational system that they had.
As a young person, I am conscious of the fact that there is a great tendency for people of every generation to blame the generation that preceded it as being the cause of its turmoil. According to international bodies like the United Nations, no generation before ours has ever had the tools and means of overcoming all the things we inherently hate and would not like to be associated with like poverty, hunger, abuse of human rights, and all forms of violence. To me, this raises the question of ‘what legacy do I want my generation to leave to future generations? ‘   Such questions should be constantly on the minds of every youth of this generation.
About 43% of the world’s population is under the age of 25. Youths therefore make up close to half   of the global population and are logically those most affected by the plagues of our generation (disease poverty, hunger, and abuse of human rights).The above reinforces my belief in the fact that it is in the ultimate interest of youths of this generation to make the eradication of those things plaguing our world a priority. It is only then that governments, policy makers, traditional and religious authorities  will clearly see how much we long to live in a  world where people’s gender, sexual orientation, and status in society is nothing compared to their right to treatment, safe delivery, and  access health facilities.
While we have rights we also have responsibilities, and one of those responsibilities is to leave the world better than we had it for the generations to come. If we expect to receive more let’s be prepared to give more than we receive. Come to think of it, we are the generation with the highest chances ever of making access to health care for all a reality, ending gender based violence, and making poverty history. Our time really is now and we must never allow this opportunity to leave a cherished legacy to future generations pass us by. Do something today for this generation’s legacy and the good of future generations so that we could one day proudly say: Our generation made the world a better place.

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire