Last Monday, I
went to a diversity event lectured by Anne Clifford. The event was about
Wangari Maathai and her role in the Green Belt Movement. Wangari was a Kenyan
woman who was an environmentalist and won the Nobel Prize for her work in
sustainable development and promoting democracy and peace. I didn’t stay for
the whole event, but I did learn quite a bit about Wangari. I learned that she was
one of the first scientists to identify the problem of climate change. I also
learned that she sought to eliminate discrimination not just in Kenya but in
Sub-Saharan Africa as well. She did this by having women help with her projects
to show that they were important as well.
Overall, I
thought that this event had too much of an emphasis on religion. However,
considering that Wangari was a Catholic, and because the event was sponsored by
the St. Thomas Aquinas Church, this was probably unavoidable. In addition, I
thought that Wangari’s actions are something that we can all learn from.
Finally, I felt that Wangari is an example of one person having a great impact
on the world. She is proof that you do not need to be powerful to make changes.
One of the
things I learned about and that I can apply to being a peer mentor is Wangari’s
idea of the African Stool. She argued that the African Stool can be applied to
life in that it has three important components: A need for democracy, sustainable
management of resources, and formation of “cultures of peace.” I can apply
democracy to being a peer mentor by allowing recitations and planning with co-leaders
to be a place where everyone can have a voice. Sustainable management of
resources is something that Chapter 10 in Students
Helping Students mentioned as well. It is important because it promotes a
better future. Finally, with the formation of “cultures of peace,” I, as a peer
mentor, can make recitations be filled with compassion, tolerance, and justice.
One final thing
I can apply as peer mentor is the idea of Catholic Social Thought (or common
sense to the non-relgious). As a peer mentor, I can promote respect for the dignity
of every person in my classes. In addition, my co-leader and I can work for
solidarity and the common good in order to see development in the classroom. Finally,
it is important to promote peacemaking not only to be a good role model but
also to solve conflicts as well.