|
'To be a UNV volunteer is to be in a different
dimension'
I come from a very large, very poor family from an isolated
rural area. Unlike many around me, I had the great fortune
of travelling, learning and acquiring skills, and I feel a
moral debt, a desire to give back and share with others my
knowledge and experience. I have always believed that real
development starts at the bottom and makes its way up-this
conviction inspires my work in grass-roots development and
with refugees and displaced persons in my region.
 |
| Dennis Mairena
(second from right) UNHCR VENEZUELA/ANDREA SIMANCAS |
As a UNV volunteer, I am now responsible for verifying, monitoring
and advocating the rights and protection of displaced persons
in Chocó, an area much afflicted by the ongoing conflict
between guerrillas and paramilitary groups. I spend a lot of
time on the road or more accurately "on the river",
travelling for hours in canoes and visiting displaced communities.
My UNV colleagues and I participate in village assemblies and
together with the communities identify social, economic and
protection challenges. We then accompany them in the journey
to make their needs and voices heard, vis-à-vis municipal
authorities. The combination of the UN flag and being a volunteer
helps a great deal in earning the trust and confidence of all
parties.
I believe there is a lot of indigenous capacity that should
be mobilized and I am working on an idea to do this through
volunteerism. I would like to work with several institutional
partners to launch a programme involving young university volunteers.
These volunteers would form "multidisciplinary teams"
to support both displaced persons and reception communities.
This is not in my terms of reference-it is an idea I have had
and would like to pursue. To be a UNV volunteer is to be in
a different dimension; it gives you a certain "moral authority",
vis-à-vis the people you serve, that you cannot attain
quite in the same way as a paid employee. Volunteers are able
to get especially close to and learn about the communities they
work with, be they in rural or urban settings. And I find personal
satisfaction in being driven by the motivation of solidarity.
BIO
Dennis Mairena is a UNV volunteer, currently serving as field
officer with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR) in Colombia. He has spent 20 years working in rural
development and 12 years with refugees and displaced persons
in Central and Latin America.
'Volunteers always seem to go the extra
mile'
For 17 years, I have devoted myself to the practice of journalism
in my home country, Chad. What motivated me to work as a UNV
volunteer was to take advantage of all of this experience
and share it with others to whom it could be of service. Chad
has been perpetually war-stricken, and it has never been easy
for us journalists to work in a country at war. The Democratic
Republic of the Congo, unfortunately, has also been experiencing
a similar situation for nearly a decade. I felt that there
would be similarities in the approach to the job in both places.
In a peacekeeping mission like the UN Organization Mission
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUC), any contribution,
no matter how small, helps advance the peace process. My contribution
as a UNV volunteer is to help make the Mission's efforts towards
peace more visible to the Congolese people, so that they understand
the importance of its presence in the country. Many do not
understand why MONUC is here and, in the context of the elections,
parts of the population mistakenly assume that the international
community explicitly favours one side. This is not the case
since the Mission's role is limited to supporting the peace
process. This message needs to be driven home continuously-and
that is my job. My experience with restrictions on the freedom
of the press in my country has made me aware of how easily
rumours can spread and become dangerous. I take my job of
conveying accurate information very seriously.
I am delighted to be a UNV volunteer, because I feel that
I am constantly learning new things that I would not have
been privy to in my home country. Being a volunteer is a very
unique engagement, a conscious commitment to serve. My vision
of my job revolves around the idea of volunteerism for development,
and I am working with other volunteers to promote this idea.
We volunteer after office hours and we are getting ready to
use the International Volunteer Day to spread the message.
I have the impression that volunteers always seem to go the
extra mile-it is in their nature.
 |
| Miriam Asmani/MONUC |
BIO
Sy Koumbo Singa Gali is one of 700 UNV volunteers supporting
MONUC, where she is serving as public information officer.
A well-known journalist in Chad, she was formerly Managing
Director of the independent weekly L'Observateur and a vigorous
defender of a free press.
|