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Posts Tagged ‘Pakistan’

OBE on way; Facebook fan page; to Haiti and back

April 16th, 2010 ethancasey No comments

obecoverIt’s been nearly a month since I posted here, but it’s been a busy month. Since March 17 I’ve been to Haiti and back and have also spoken on behalf of my new book, Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip, in Tampa and San Jose, with other engagements scheduled in April and May in Seattle, San Diego, Santa Monica, San Francisco, and other cities. (I plan to visit the East Coast, Colorado and the Midwest in the fall)

Overtaken By Events is now in print, with about 3000 copies (out of 5000 in the first printing) currently sitting in my garage. I want the hundreds of you who pre-purchased it to know two things: that I’m grateful for your crucial early support, and that your copy will be in the mail to you within the next two weeks. I’m currently finalizing some printed cards that I want to enclose with pre-purchased copies along with a handwritten personal thank-you note from me, and to use for other purposes. Those should be ready by the end of next week.

If you haven’t yet purchased Overtaken By Events or Alive and Well in Pakistan, or pre-purchased my Haiti book in progress (to be published next spring), please support my work by doing so, from this site’s Books page.

I have plans to revamp this website, and I also will be launching a new companion www.ethancasey.com site to promote my public speaking and as a more appropriate long-term online home for my Haiti book and other projects. Stay tuned for more on these over the coming weeks.

In the meantime, if you’re on Facebook, please join the new Ethan Casey fan page being developed by my friend Asim Razzaq in Silicon Valley, which will be another way to keep up with my work:

http://www.facebook.com/ethancaseyfans

Facebook is an excellent way to spread the word about creative projects and independent writing around the Internet and the world, so please do help in this way if you can.

Many thanks,

Ethan

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Dr. Shahnaz Khan: Two nations, two earthquakes, one humanity

February 12th, 2010 ethancasey 3 comments

Dr. Shahnaz Khan, a family practice physician in Zephyrhills, Florida and chairperson of the Human Development Foundation, with Ethan Casey at an HDF location at Kharol War outside Lahore, April 2009

Dr. Shahnaz Khan (center), a family practice physician in Zephyrhills, Florida and co-chair of the Human Development Foundation, with Ethan Casey at an HDF location at Kharol War outside Lahore, April 2009

Dr. Shahnaz Khan, co-chair of the Human Development Foundation, has sent me this message:

Pakistanis all over the world were mobilized into action. I decided that sitting in front of the TV and watching the disaster and crying was not the way I wanted to contribute.

Two nations, two earthquakes, one humanity

I have been thinking about the earthquake in Haiti. It reminded me of October 8, 2005, when a similar disaster hit Pakistan. I watched the images on the television of the crumbling buildings, people trying to dig out their loved ones from under the rubble with their bare hands, children buried under school buildings and crying for help, people in shock and disbelief. The disaster unfolded slowly, and the number of dead, injured, maimed and homeless kept creeping up slowly.

I kept thinking: How will this poor nation cope with it? How will life be ever normal again? But then I also saw the images of the rest of the nation jumping into action. Peeple all over the country collecting food, clothing, blankets, tents and money. Trucks filled with supplies lining the roads and almost chocking the entry and exit points. True, it was chaotic and disorganized, but it was also how the nation found a way to heal itself. People coming together; victims feeling they were not alone. If nature had been cruel, human beings were kind and generous.

Pakistanis all over the world were mobilized into action. I decided that sitting in front of the TV and watching the disaster and crying was not the way I wanted to contribute. So, as the co-chair of the Human Development Foundation, I called an emergency conference call. Everyone pretty much had the same feeling. There were some initial reservations. HDF is not a relief organization; its charter is sustainable development. But then I said, “When the house is on fire, you put out the fire first before you decorate it.” So HDF officially became a part of the community of organizations and individuals who were trying to help the victims.

My heart goes out to the people of Haiti. But I take comfort in the fact that the rest of the world is not going to stand by and leave them feeling alone. And yes, there is chaos and disorganization as is almost expected in a third world country, but still people are better off with it than without it. I also hope that people of Pakistani origin are feeling the pain and doing their best to help out.

I think back to the Pakistan earthquake and know that life is not and perhaps never will be normal again for some of the victims. But what frustrates me is that the same people who get all energized during the acute stage of a natural disaster are mostly indifferent to what happens to these people in the longer run. Children who lost their parents, families who lost their breadwinners - what is happening to them? Perhaps there are neighbors and some charitable people who are still supporting them, but no one really knows. There is no systematic follow-up or data available. Pakistan does not have an organized welfare system.

I am afraid the same will happen to Haitians. Hundreds of NGOs who are there, and without whose help Haiti will have a difficult time getting over the acute stage of this disaster, will move on in a few months, because people stop donating after a while and the resources dry out.

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When history hits home

January 31st, 2010 ethancasey No comments

Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip (to be published in March 2010)

Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip (to be published in March 2010). Cover design by Jason Kopec: http://www.jkgd.biz/

Interim update: The Haiti earthquake is compelling me to kick into higher gear on all my work. For a bit of updated information (which I’ll supplement with fuller info here soon), kindly see the Books page of this site.

As I travel around the US and Canada this spring promoting Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip, which is on schedule to be published in March, I’ll also be speaking about Haiti in the context of both the Pakistan earthquake of 2005 and the Pakistani community’s ongoing (and so far very encouraging) response to the even more horrific quake in Haiti. The messages on both countries, both quakes, all events, resonate in profound ways, as I began discovering January 21-24 in Detroit, when I covered for Todd Shea at several speaking engagements in the Pakistani community there because he had gone to offer emergency relief in Haiti.
I was going to spend March 18-28 in Texas, but now have changed plans and intend to spend that ten-day period in FLORIDA instead. I will (inshallah) be in Miami for 5-6 days interviewing Haitians, then I’ll be speaking in Tampa on March 27.
I NEED YOUR HELP, in this specific way: Please help me arrange Pakistani community or Pakistan-related speaking engagements, large or small, formal or informal, in Miami/Fort Lauderdale and in Orlando, between roughly March 18 and March 28. I’ll be most grateful for any introductions or, even better, your active help. I’ve already received several encouraging emails and phone calls, so if you’re in Florida, I look forward to meeting you in March.
As I plan my public speaking now, I’m amazed and humbled to note that the opening passage of Overtaken By Events, which I wrote months ago, has suddenly been rendered rather startling. Here it is:

When history happens in a place you know personally, it messes with your head. I visited Haiti for the first of many times in 1982, as a teenager; when the crisis over Aristide and the Haitian boat people hijacked the world’s front pages during the excruciating early months of the Clinton administration, I endured an agony of helplessness far away, in Bangkok. The place name Guantanamo Bay took on personal meaning for me then, as the place the U.S. Coast Guard took Haitians they intercepted fleeing to Florida. When the semi-revolution came to Kathmandu in 1990, it hit home because I had lived there as a student in the mid-1980s.

Those early experiences reinforced a predilection for taking history personally. Much water had yet to flow beneath the bridge in Haiti and Nepal, and in other places I traveled inflicting experience on myself: Burma, Cambodia, Zimbabwe, Detroit. During the later Bush years, I returned full circle and saw truths I had learned elsewhere at play in my own country. You keep going back to places where you’ve experienced history because you feel that, somehow, there’s sense to be made of it. But when a place has been your home and something terrible happens there in your absence—well, it hits home.

So the feeling was familiar when Kurien walked into his flat in Mumbai and told Pete and me about the attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore.

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Nayaa Saal Mubarak: Alive and Well in 2010

January 4th, 2010 ethancasey No comments
Ethan Casey with Pakistani friends in Minnesota, November 28, 2009.

Ethan Casey with Pakistani friends in Minnesota, November 28, 2009. Photo by Munir Abid.

Well, 2009 is finally over and it’s time to turn the page, with big plans and hopes for 2010. As my mother likes to say, life is a constant leaf-turning process. It’s an anxious and melancholy moment in our world, but we’ve gotten used to those, and I think the only effective way to combat the otherwise inevitable, and all too understandable, despair and paralysis is to insist on living in hope – by which I mean not just sitting around choosing to feel hopeful, but turning hope into meaningful and concrete action.

For me, 2009 was all about researching and then writing my new book Overtaken By Events: A Pakistan Road Trip. It feels as though it’s been a long, hard slog, but at the moment I’m feeling tired in a pleasant and gratifying way, with a big load off my shoulders. If you’re on my email list, you know that throughout the fall I was writing the book while also taking daily Urdu language classes and starting a master’s degree program in South Asian Studies at the University of Washington in Seattle, where I live, as well as traveling a lot to promote the book project in both mainstream and Pakistani communities across the United States and Canada. November in particular was a crazy month for me, with trips to Orange County and San Diego; Portland; Fort Worth (speaking along with my colleague Fawad Butt at Texas Christian University); and Minneapolis/St. Paul.

The point of all the travel has been to raise awareness of and support for the book ahead of its publication this March, and the point of the book is to encourage – and to participate in – a much-needed conversation between the Muslim world and the West, and specifically between Pakistanis and Americans. From fifteen years’ worth of direct personal experience of Pakistan, I know not only that it’s a country that faces severe challenges – everyone knows that – but that those challenges are different from what most Americans suppose them to be. And I know that Pakistanis are resourcefully rising to the occasion in meeting them, and other Americans need to know that too. And they’re challenges faced by Pakistani people – parents who worry about their children’s education, health and safety, for example, just as American parents do, geopolitics and religion notwithstanding. But of course those things can never quite be notwithstanding; they impinge too much on all of us, especially these days, especially in Pakistan.

If 2009 was, for me, the year of the book, 2010 will be the year of the blog. It’s understandable enough that I haven’t posted on this blog since November, but with the book finished and its publication coming soon, one of my New Year’s resolutions is to blog weekly. Authors I admire, such as James Howard Kunstler, whose important book The Long Emergency I recommend highly, do this very effectively. From reading Kunstler weekly, I’ve come to see how a blog can supplement and complement a book and vice versa. If, as I say, it’s all about initiating and continuing a needed conversation, then there can be few better ways to do that today than by blogging frequently and on a reliable schedule. For several reasons, I plan to publish a new entry every Tuesday.

I’ll be doing other things too, including plenty more travel around North America. My travel schedule is public on Google calendar as “Ethan Casey’s travel calendar,” or visit the Calendar page of this site. I’ll be in Southern California in late January, visiting several colleges in Colorado in the first half of February, in Texas (Dallas, Houston and hopefully Austin) in the third week of March, and in San Jose and Fresno in early April. If I’m coming to your city – or if you’d like me to – please drop me a note.

Ethan Casey in Port Angeles, Washington, September 12, 2009. Photo by Jim Dries.

Ethan Casey in Port Angeles, Washington, September 12, 2009. Photo by Jim Dries.

There are several concrete ways you can support my work. By all means, invite me to your city if you can – and, if your group’s budget is limited, we can work together creatively to make it worth everyone’s while. I’m starting to schedule my calendar for fall 2010 now. Also, now is a great time to pre-purchase your copy of Overtaken By Events, if you haven’t yet. There are buttons in the upper right corner of this page, and you can buy it singly, or in a package with my previous book Alive and Well in Pakistan, or multiple copies to give to family and friends. All pre-sold copies will be shipped, with a thank-you note from me, in late March or early April, immediately after the book is published.

You also can help by sending the link to this or any other blog entry far and wide, and by otherwise encouraging people you know to visit this website and follow my work.

That’s all for this week – talk to you again next Tuesday!

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