Monday, October 3, 2011

Visionary Living Series-Gaining Perspective on Poverty Part 1

Poverty: Gaining Perspective Part 1
When was the last time you were confronted by poverty and what did you do about it?
I heard a remarkable story of a life changing moment for Bill Hybels who was a guest speaker at this weekend’s gala that we attended. It was hosted by one of the charitable foundations we support as a company. Bill took his dad's advice and decided to travel around the world before undertaking a promising career as a commodities’ trader in Chicago.

Back then he wasn’t sure why, but he made his first stop in Nairobi, Kenya where he saw the face of poverty unlike any other. The sight of a small boy with leprosy (a disease he long thought had been wiped away), begging for loose change so startled him that he got scared and ran back to his hotel. He spent the next few days in his room agonizing about what he had just seen and for the first time asking God to use his life to address what he had just seen.

Bill would say that was the day everything changed for him. He gave up his promising career and family business and begun working with local communities eventually becoming a Youth Pastor. Today he is the founder and senior pastor of Willow Creek Community Church in Chicago, one of the most well attended churches in North America. Through his ministries, he has been able to do much more about what he saw that day. He is one of the leading voices on fighting poverty in his local city and around the world.

Not all of us will have the kind of jolt or impact that Pastor Hybels has had, but all of us can (if we chose to) have some impact. But Let’s not kid ourselves, facing poverty is hard. It forces us to look at our own lives in relation to what we are seeing. Personally, I always have a sense of being overwhelmed and conflicted about where to start. Thus it becomes easier not to talk about it or be in close proximity to it. The results are devastating when those who are capable of doing something chose to ignore it or step away from it.

The Ovarian Lottery
For whatever it’s worth here’s some perspective: When it comes to poverty, it matters where you are born, what time period you are born and in what family or community you are born into. All of which we have no control over. Warren Buffett calls this the ovarian lottery. He is quick to point out that had he been born a few hundred years earlier, all of his skills in financial markets wouldn’t have mattered. He would have been some animal’s lunch since he can’t run to save his life.

He asks us to imagine that it’s 24 hours before birth and you have to pick one ball from 7 billion (the number of people alive today). “That ball will determine your gender, race, nationality, natural abilities, and health” — whether you are born rich or poor, sick or able-bodied, brilliant or below average, American or North Korean. Here’s the question he ends up asking “Would you put the ball back and try and pick another one?”
If you answer NO based on the above then what you are saying is “I’m the luckiest 1% of the world right now”
Understanding as Mr. Buffett has, that this world is far bigger than any one of us, ought to make you think differently about your approach life.
I’ll go as far as saying that a good majority of those who would return their ball probably just need to travel a bit and see what the others got. Chances are they will choose to hang on to their ball.

The lesson is one of gaining a balanced perspective: Do we care enough to think  and act on behalf of those who can’t do anything for us in return? How do actively improve lives? More on that next week.
The gala we attended was hosted by Living Water international. Together with regular people, volunteers and donors, they provide clean water to those who don’t have access. Solving the water crisis would lift over 1 billion people out of poverty. To understand the crisis and how to help, please visit their website http:// http://water.cc/water-crisis/











Written by Bernard Wambugu, CEO Lantel Systems and Consulting

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