College of Arts and Sciences Alumni Tsunami Relief
 



L&C Community Responds to Tsunami Relief

Included on this page is a letter of appeal from Peter Cookson, dean of the graduate school, a message from Roger Paget, faculty emeritus and frequent visitor to Indonesia, as well as an account of Aaron Meyer's '95 involvement in Thailand's relief efforts.

Government officials are advising that contributions to aid in tsunami relief efforts be channeled through major, well-established relief agencies. Working with organizations that are well-known, who have longstanding experience in this type and scale of relief operation, will help ensure that your donations are used effectively, efficiently and as intended.

Click here to find out how you can help right away!

Graduate School Tsunami Response Initiative Forum
South Campus Conference Center
Monday, January 17, 2005
noon-2 p.m.

Please join the Graduate School community on Martin Luther King Day for a two-hour forum to discuss how we as a community can organize to assist individuals and families impacted by the December 26 Asian tsunami natural disaster. Find out how you can get involved through the Graduate Schools Tsunami Response Initative. Portland community organizations such as Street Roots will be on hand to facilitate this roundtable conversation.

For more information contact Allen Hall at ahall@lclark.edu or call Lewis & Clark’s Oregon Center Inquiry and Social Innovation at 503-768-6099.

Roger PagetA Message from Professor Emeritus Roger Paget

So far, I have been unable to make contact with any of my friends in Aceh, most of whom are academics at either the state university (Universitas Syah Kuala) or the Islamic university, both of which are located in Banda Aceh, the provincial capital. I picture myself seated in one or another of their homes, playing with their children, noshing greedily on super spicy tidbits flowing from the kitchen, and chatting about the latest “modernization” efforts and political shenanigans. And then it hits me that these homes all are easily within the tsunami’s three-mile inundation reach.

I have visited Aceh periodically over the past half-century but did not get to the area on my most recent stay in Indonesia a couple of months ago. Two years ago I gave some lectures at the Aceh universities and worked on a consultancy to evaluate American aid programs. Some of my remarks here reach back to that visit and to email communications from friends there since then.

Aceh, for those of you unfamiliar with the region, was the last morsel of the archipelago subdued by the Dutch—and the Acehnese insist that the Dutch never actually succeeded in quelling the fierce resistance. Indonesian Muslims often refer to Acehnese as the most authentically Islamic people in the country, so it may be of interest that the premier symbol of Acehnese resistance to the Dutch was a female guerrilla leader, Cut Nyak Dien. Indeed, Aceh is a splendid example of a culture which is at once profoundly religious in orientation yet at the same time pluralistic and independent.

Aceh was a crossroads of global trade and cultural interchange centuries before the Dutch took over in 1908 and before the word, Indonesia, was invented. It was, in fact, an independent nation, with diplomatic representation in Europe, rich educational exchange with other parts of the Islamic world, and with unequalled geopolitical clout because of its control of the Straits of Malacca.

Today, about 60% of world surface trade transits the Straits of Malacca. That, together with Aceh’s number one rank as exporter of liquid natural gas, underlines why Washington as well as Jakarta have paid close attention to Aceh’s political and economic status in the past several decades.

Indonesia’s five governments of the past fifteen years have sought to subdue Acehnese resistance, often through methods that have equaled the Dutch slaughter of a hundred years earlier. When the tsunami struck, it found a population living under prolonged and extreme deprivation and duress.

Click here to read the rest of Professor Paget's message.

Satya Byock '04 Assists Relief Efforts

Satya Byock '04 will be traveling to Sri Lanka to support relief efforts. Below is a statement about her interest and involvement in the region.

"I'm working on the steering committee of the Missoula Community Tsunami Response group, and will be arriving in Sri Lanka February 19th to begin working in Galle, Sri Lanka on long-term support projects. The Missoula community is interested in working on Cross-Cultural exchange as well as relief support, and hopes to have a presence in the area for a long time. I will be traveling there alone as the on-the-ground coordinator for the project.

I worked in Sri Lanka two years ago as an English teacher in a Buddhist temple kindergarten near Kandy, Sri Lanka. I spent three months in total immersion in the rural village, and fell in love with the people and culture there."

Learn more about the Missoula Community Tsunami Response group.

Rogers HallA Letter From Peter Cookson, Dean of the Graduate School

Dear Friends,

We are humble in the face of this reality and the outpouring of love from the people of the world. We join with those who recognize our common humanity. We at the Graduate School can make a real difference because of who we are, what we believe, and what we know.

This event calls forth, as Kim Stafford puts it, a "Tsunami of a human response." We need to break with routine and embrace a world in deep need of healing and solidarity.

Students, staff, and faculty of the Graduate School have created a Tsunami Information Center to show what we are doing as an institution to aid with relief efforts. We will soon have a site linked to the Graduate School where you can find out how to help us.

There is much we can and will do...

Let's make 2005 a year when we walked our talk....

Be well,

Peter

Aaron Meyer 2Aaron Meyer '95 Gives Relief Concerts

Over New Years I performed at the Four Season Hotel and Resort in Northern Thailand. Hours before my arrival in Asia, the Tsunami devastated parts of Southwest Thailand and South Asia. During my visit in Thailand, I was asked to come to Phuket, which had been hard hit, and agreed to host a benefit performance at Phuket's Chedi Hotel on Jan 5. That performance raised $10,000 in donations that are currently being used to rebuild 2 villages in Phuket, Thailand.

I will be hosting a 2nd benefit concert here in Portland for Tsunami Relief:

Friday, January 21, 2005
Portland Marriott Hotel on the Waterfront
1401 SW Naito Pkwy (corner of Columbia)

Oregon Ballroom, 7 pm
Admission is by donation
Proceeds will benefit Northwest Medical Teams - tsunami relief efforts

There will be open remarks by Gerry Frank. I will play some but also speak about my experience, talk through my photos I took, as well as open the floor to questions.

The benefit concert is supported by the Portland Marriott Hotel on the Waterfront and the Portland Oregon Visitors Association (POVA).

Those who cannot attend the concert can support the effort by sending a check made payable to Northwest Medical Teams' Tsunami Relief Fund to Northwest Medical Teams, P.O. Box 10, Portland, Ore. 97207-0010. (Note: Private donations made to the tsunami relief effort during January 2005 can be deducted on 2004 income tax returns.)

For those that wish to support the relief effort in Phuket, please visit www.aaronmeyer.com. Information will be posted after Aaron's return to Portland on January 7. Aaron is working closely with the General Manager of the Chedi Hotel in Phuket and can assure that any of the much needed donations will be directly used to assist the Thai people affected from the Tsunami.

Aaron writes on January 4, 2005:

"I am now in Koh Samui, which is an Island on the east side of the peninsula in Southern Thailand in the Gulf of Thailand. There is a Blues and World Music Festival here. John Lee Hooker's daughter is one of the headliners. I was flown here for one night by one of the major music promoters in Asia who happened to hear me play at the 4 Seasons in Chang Mai on New Year's Eve. The 8 day festival, which is the largest music festival of this kind in South East Asia, has turned into a complete charity event for the relief effort in South Western Thailand. They are now calling this project Adaman Aid (Adaman for Adaman Sea where the Tsunami hit). I was flown here to play a short set and sit in with Thailands #1 pop star Todd Tongdee."