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Laura Simms had joined us for a Knowledge Fair in Assam where we brought the communities together to share and exchange. So when there was a presentation organised by Taos Institute on the Assam project and Knowledge Fair, Laura joined us. Here are our thoughts on the presentation sent to me by email. The title of the blog is from Laura.
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Some notes from the meeting:
For ownership to happen, awakening must come from within individually and in the community. When we realise our joint responsibilities, slowly things are changing. The discourse evolves from: “It is their job” “It is our tradition” to “We slowly realise that unless we take action nothing will change” “We are in control” “Why do we keep this old age heritage?”
The SALT-CLCP approach builds the awareness of being a community and of being capable of doing something about challenges. It gives time to the community to talk and reflect at each step, at its own pace. The problem is when there is an impatience to go forward and with time constrained projects. NGOs cannot own the agenda if they really believe that communities own the project.
In Assam, we have been three years. It is the longest time that we have been accompanying communities. Some communities did not respond, some reacted very quickly, others took time to internalise…
The biggest compliment a community can do to a facilitator: “We do not need you anymore. You are welcome to visit us anytime.”
In a knowledge fair, it is difficult to create an atmosphere where people can be themselves, where there is no judgement because of the presence of external people who are not used to the way of working and multiple languages, but it is worth it. The communities involved are already in a ‘non-judgement’ and ‘building from strength’ state of mind built over time during the process. The challenge is for NGOs’ facilitators to unlearn and let go, stop being an expert and simply be human.
Steps in the process are very helpful to give a structure to the conversation based on facts not emotions. This allows people to listen to each other’s point of view. Each step provides that opportunity.
To exclude no one, the SALT-CLCP asks from the beginning “Who are we?” “Who is the community?” A group organically emerges who wants to act, but the facilitator should continually ask “Who is missing?” Meeting in small groups helps.
Indicators of ownership can be (1) Do people share with other communities? If they benefit from it, they will share without facilitators’ intervention; (2) Are new relationships build between people?
Who decides what is credible evidence?
Thank you. That's a beautiful sharing of personal experience.
I make a sentence out of it, which is a source of reflection for me (at least): Deep listening is a language without words. All what we express without words is felt by the others; but the attentive or deep listening is somehow a positive message we send to the person who speaks.
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