NY Times on Todd Shea: “I’m the one who’s here”
From today’s New York Times:
From today’s New York Times:
Here’s a three-minute video of me and Fawad Butt, commenting on our visit last visit as guests of the World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh.
The latest installment of my column for the Books & Authors section of the Pakistani newspaper Dawn has just been published. Headlined “Leading us with language,” it’s about President Obama’s historic speech on June 4 in Cairo, addressing America’s relationship with the Muslim world.
Until the next printing, whose timing I don’t control, a very limited number of copies of Alive and Well in Pakistan are available. I’m making these available in a special offer with the sequel, which I’m currently writing, for US$50 including US shipping. The first book will be shipped to you immediately, the second as soon as it’s published in 2010.
You also can make a $100 contribution to support the Alive and Well in Pakistan project and receive a copy of either book (your preference) as a token of my thanks:
Other options for supporting this project financially will be offered soon.
From the Huffington Post, a reminder of the severity of the immediate humanitarian crisis in Pakistan:
“One challenge to the world’s capacity to care for its citizens is taking place right now in Pakistan, where the conflict between the government and militants in the northwest has forced almost three million people from their homes. According to the UN Refugee Agency, this is the most rapid large-scale displacement the world has witnessed since the movement into the Congo after the Rwandan genocide.
“More than 80 percent of the displaced are staying with host families, posing a tremendous burden to already poor people, and making it difficult for humanitarian agencies to reach the most vulnerable.”
Just watched this 6-minute video about CDRS Pakistan, the admirable NGO run by Todd Shea, whom I had the pleasure and honor to meet in Southern California in February. Todd has just returned from Pakistan, and I’m looking forward to hearing from him firsthand about the IDP situation there.
I want to tell you about three Americans that Pete Sabo and I ran into on our recent trip to Pakistan.
In my latest column the Books & Authors section of Dawn, I found it necessary to write about the situation of the (now) 2.5 million people in who have been driven out of their homes by the Pakistan Army’s decision to attack the Taliban in northwest Pakistan, but I didn’t want to write what I think of as “mere commentary”.