Sunday, January 20, 2013

Process and Content


New energy is always welcome here at Be Like Brit, so when Len, Cherylann and our U.S. Director Kristin flew in for a Monday-Saturday visit, those of us in-country were excited to get to work ironing out some of the last details before we began the process of bringing children into Be Like Brit.  Our 5 day marathon of meetings produced great results, set the tone of expectations, and has us all eagerly anticipating the day when we welcome our first children in to Brit’s Orphanage.
Someone once told Len, and he reminds us of this often, that the days are long in Haiti, and there is never enough time to get things done.  I had anticipated a bit of this before moving down to Haiti, as I had experienced it in Rwanda, and cultures outside the “developed world” often operate in such strikingly opposite ways, I knew “getting things done” would likely cause me to want to pull what little hair I have left out.  With all of this in mind, Team Be Like Brit sat down to undertake the task of putting all systems into place so that soon, children can call this place home.
Our packed agenda for the week-long series of meetings covered the gamut of issues:  Specifics and minute details like databases and calendars, rotations for our medical clinic, personnel schedules and job descriptions, Britsionary visits, meal plans, rules and regulations, etc., while all important, are not necessarily exciting ways to pass 10 or so hours.  While we ironed out the specifics of these requisite realms of operating a massive building that will be filled with children, I was patiently waiting for the whole reason we are all here:  Children!  Secretly, I think we all were.
Len, Cherylann, Gama, Jonathan, Susan, Kristin, and Gilbert - Round 1!
As a master’s level social worker with previous experience abroad, along with university teaching experience for the past year of my life, I am someone who tends to pay a lot of attention to process.  I very much feel the need to plan out in a methodical way the steps and stages to all of these tasks we have ahead of us at Be Like Brit.  Gannt charts and timelines are my nerdiest friends.  Until we are in a place like Haiti, we don’t realize how rigidly our Western taught minds tend to focus on the production of something tangible, on something that can be evaluated in a very formal and official way, only to later be revised and tweaked to serve a more relevant and effective purpose.  In preparing to recruit caregivers and staff, I had stayed true to this model of objective and methodical process.  I would very soon be switching gears.
If you hadn’t noticed, Len Gengel is not so much about the process, but about content.  What this means is that Len gets things done.  In light of the fact that nearly everyone told Len he would never build a 19,000 square foot building in the shape of the letter ‘B’ on a nearly inaccessible mountain in a country which lacks the very basic infrastructures that make such a gargantuan task nearly impossible, here I sit.  Surrounded by the walls of steel and mortar, looking down over a community that he and Cherylann helped to enrich and empower through opportunities of employment and their so very generous ways, I am here.  Be Like Brit is here.  Process helps, but content got it done.  Doing it got it done.  My newest task then became: How do I get things done when everything in my education, training, experience, and mind wants to plan for the how, rather than the what?
Done. Against all odds.

One of my more stressful experiences during the past week was interviewing potential caregivers for Be Like Brit.  Our program committee and the upper echelon of the Be Like Brit Organization had gone back and forth for some time on how these caregiver schedules would be arranged.  We had gone from a three and a half day on/three and a half day off schedule, to full-time live in staff, to primary staff with what translates to caregiver aide positions.  The hypothetical arrangements were endless, and as the program director, I made the decision to recruit only women who were able to commit to a full-time live in position with part-time aides coming in.  These women would be single and have no children.  If they did have children, the youngest would be 18, or maybe even 16.  My rationale behind this was simple:  Be Like Brit does not want to break up families.  By implementing these criteria, we would be able to maintain the integrity of the families that are already in tact rather than pull them apart so that mom could go to work taking care of someone else’s children.
Brilliant, right!?  We all agreed - this structure was ideal.  It would be in the best interest of the children who will live here at Be Like Brit in terms of consistency and fostering trust and attachment.  From a practical standpoint, it’s easier in terms of human resources, payroll, scheduling; all of those things.  It was exciting to think that we would be bringing women in to our home to live here and care for our children just as they would in their own home – as this would be their home. 
Children from the community preparing to welcome our visitors at opening weekend.
As we lined up our interviews and began to screen candidates, it became almost immediately obvious that this plan was not going to work.  The first blunder was thinking we could find women without children!  The second was the gross assumption that anyone would be willing to move in here at Be Like Brit.  Sure, the structure is amazing, sound, solid, and safe.  But it’s not home to them.  Home to these women may be something we consider condemnable squalor.  Home for these women might be a USAID tent or any of the hundreds of donated temporary shelters which litter the landscape like confetti thrown in a parade.  My presumptuous and even ethnocentric attitude that “this is a better option” turned out to be an egregious oversight.
The caregiver interview guide I had developed, while comprehensive, thorough, and impressive (if I do say so myself) was completely irrelevant in Haiti.  Questions like “why do you want to work for Be Like Brit” earned such seemingly thoughtless responses as “because I need a job.”  As I sat, unimpressed with the answers I was receiving to my journal-worthy, researched and validated questionnaire, I pushed it aside and instead began to have conversations with these women.  I realized that in a country where unemployment hovers around (at least) 40%, their responses to why they wanted to work for us were quite sufficient; they were literal; they were real.  Instead of being sensitive to their subjective realities, I held them to a standard to which they could never live up to.  Seeking a passionate response to my matter of fact question was nothing short of ignorant.
So, lessons learned.  We change gears and we revisit our efforts.  We talk to local stakeholders:  Pastors, Priests, teachers, people.  We won’t staff this orphanage or run programming at Be Like Brit if we focus on the process.  Process is, of course, important, and plays a very important role in how we assess and develop our individual life plans for each of the children we will bring in to Be Like Brit, but it’s not how we find those children or those staff.  It’s how we work behind the scenes to plan appropriately, but it’s not how we present ourselves and how we interact with real, living human beings. 
The process can be handled in those ten- hour long meetings.  The content, that is, what we do and how it affects the children at Be Like Brit is all in real human relationships; in affection and in warmth; in encouragement and in faith; around the table at meal time; in stories at bed time; in tucking children in and making them feel loved and safe and worthy.  And while these objective tools of world-renowned academia are essential in how we plan, it’s what we actually do that matters.
Tomorrow brings a new day in Haiti:  Another long day where there is never enough time to tackle everything we would like to get done.  But onward we go; we have built a building, and our task now is to make it a home.  With continued prayers, support, well-wishes, and the efforts of so many wonderful volunteers and friends, we persevere.  In that formidable and unparalleled Gengel way, we will get things done.

Thanks for reading,
Jonathan

13 comments:

  1. Wow Jonathan,
    What a job you all have before you. While communicating with pastor folk, have you considered also other missionary, or world help organizations for recommendations. (Like networking in the states) I know a missionary couple in Haiti, that has lived there since the early 90's. Some of the children brought to the orphanage in those early years are now young adults. Maybe some young adults would make good candidates for your part time positions? Maybe other helps groups you are affiliated with can suggest a woman or two that they would use if they could, but just can't manage them on their own staff.
    I know you all have worked very hard at this, hope you don't feel like you have to re invent the wheel, and can get some help from what has worked for others!

    Bless you, and Know that I pray for all you do, everyone at BLB!

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    1. Laurie,
      Part of what I've been doing is reaching out to other organizations and community stakeholders! We've hired our first round of caregivers - just had to adjust the way I went about doing it! Navigating all the nuances one forgets to consider is an interesting learning experience! I have definitely learned to network with anyone and everyone available! Thanks for your prayers and well-wishes!

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  2. We are pretty close to real time communicating here Jonathan! I JUST left my comment! So I wanted to let you feel RIGHT now, that others are with you, even though you may be alone in a room, or maybe close to alone. You and your work are on the minds and hearts of hundreds!

    Have a restful evening. So happy you have found your workers!

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    1. I stay up late - lots to do! Thanks again for all your kind thoughts. We definitely feel all the love even way down here in Haiti! And we appreciate it!

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  3. Loved reading your blog. My husband and I will be in Grand Guave in June and I look forward to meeting you and seeing "Be Like Brit" completed! Godspeed as you carry on this process!

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  4. Jonathan, what a turn around in your thought process, sounds like you have a good handle on it now! as tough as the building of BLB was, I think the very tough job starts with the choosing of the caretakers and getting the children in and settled. sounds like Len's favorite saying "Its Haiti" will get used many times. we keep you all in our thoughts and prayers! Lisa and Megan

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    1. Thank you Lisa! I think you are right - tough job is ahead of us - but I'm confident we'll succeed! Send our regards on to Megan - and be well!

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  5. Hi, Jonathan..
    Busy place there! Just took the three bags of ready dresses over to your dad's workplace, gave them to the girl at the counter, who said she'd be sure to get them headed to you. As quick as I get my copy of "Heartache and Hope" back, I'm passing it on to my daughter who works in Albany, N.Y. in mental health and is a grad student at SUNY Albany in the MSW program. Who knows? Perhaps she'll be interested in heading down that way at some point. What is the time commitment for a Britsionary, length of time, that is?
    Thanks,
    Mary Lou Leavitt

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    1. Hi Mary Lou!
      We have short term (1 week)and long term (minimum of 1 month) trips available! Check out our website for more information on the Britsionary program: http://sponsorships.belikebrit.org/

      Thanks for the dresses! And my Dad already has them at home for my cousin to bring us this week!

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  6. Well written. As a fellow social worker and former (and future!) missionary, your thoughts make a lot of sense to me. Keep up the great work!

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    1. Thank you! Social workers and missionaries together can't go wrong!

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