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World Issues
About
India:
Long known for its vibrant traditional culture, but also for poverty
and economic stagnation, India is quickly transforming into an
international model for development. This transition, while
unquestionably a step forward, presents many serious challenges.
Global Action India explores how forward-thinking people in northern
India are working to foster development while simultaneously
striving
to protect rich natural resources and cultural traditions. In both
rural and urban settings, students have the opportunity to see
first-hand how creative, small-scale, local initiatives offer
alternatives to massive, centralized projects.
Ladakh –
Alternative Approaches to Development:
The group spends two days in New Delhi and then flies northwest into
the Himalayas to Leh. Situated at 11,000 feet, Leh is an historic
trading town steeped in Tibetan Buddhist culture. Our base is a
school in a village near Leh. Visiting local grassroots projects,
students converse with Ladakhi activists who are working to protect
native species of plants and herbs and to create markets for their
selective harvest, conserve exotic animals like the snow leopard,
educate children, promote ecotourism, and create alternative energy
sources. Students join groups working to promote ecologically
responsible development, women’s cooperatives, and micro
hydro-electric projects. The Indian government is building immense
dams and pipelines through the mountains that bring much needed
water from the high Himalayas to the cities below, but that also
flood entire valleys. Students have the opportunity to assess these
alternative models for development by visiting the sites and
speaking with proponents and detractors. In Ladakh, accommodations
range from simple guest houses and a school campus to short stays
(in pairs) with local families.
Trekking:
On a
short but rigorous trek, students climb to altitudes up to 12,000
feet through a mystical landscape of desert valleys and jagged
peaks, echoing with the sounds of chanting monks and bedecked with
colorful prayer flags. They visit a meditation center high in the
mountains and experience firsthand the roles of meditation and yoga
in traditional Buddhist culture.
Delhi-Urban
Issues:
The group spends
the program’s last days in and around Delhi, with a side trip to
visit the Taj Mahal in Agra. Nowhere in the world are the pressures
of population and poverty more evident than in India’s largest
cities. In Delhi, students have the opportunity to learn about NGOs
that organize health and childcare for slum dwellers, to visit with
children in orphanages, and to see community organization efforts
close up. India is in the midst of extraordinary change. The goal of
substantially improving the lives of its people seems, for the first
time, to be attainable. But choices made about the mechanisms of
change will have an enormous effect on the outcome. Should the focus
be on local or national development projects? Is economic growth
compatible with environmental protection? Can development coexist
with centuries-old traditions? Students take their conclusions about
these and other issues to Yale to present their findings to other
Global Action groups.
Participants must be physically fit and prepared to go without many
of the comforts of life at home. Living conditions are often
primitive. Those with a history of altitude sensitivity should not
apply.

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