My life and career have taken me through four continents and
countless countries, but this next stage is taking me back to that day in 1985
when I stood there proudly posing for a photograph as I made my way to Bovo
School. In pidgin you would say ‘em
place bilong mi’, and that’s just how it feels:
the place where I belong, my home.
The histories of Papua New Guinea (PNG) and the Autonomous
Region of Bougainville (ARB) are complex and turbulent. They are steeped in bloodshed, greed, and the
pursuit of power. They also abound with
tradition, rich cultures, and a diversity which is unparalleled anywhere in the
world. In PNG there are over 850 linguistically
distinct indigenous languages in a population of around 7 million. I can just about manage “can I have a beer please?” in French, German and English, but
most people in PNG will speak at least two languages and many several
more. The PNG people are rightly proud
of their cultural heritage but the country also faces significant challenges
which have held it back from reaching its incredible potential.
I am so privileged to have received the opportunities in life that so many people have not. I am fortunate to have had an excellent education. I have never been unable to access healthcare. I have had steady work throughout my life and have been able to make choices about the direction that I want my career to go. I have not lost family through war, ethnic clashes, because of accusations of sorcery, or as a result of sexual or domestic violence.
However, the reality and experience of many of the children that I played with as a kid will have been very different from my own. Those playmates will now be adults, many with children of their own. And the world in which they live is surrounded by a statistical reality which breaks my heart.
HIV/AIDS is at epidemic levels. Access to healthcare is limited. 85% of the population live a subsistence lifestyle within a cashless or limited cash economy making access to the rapidly expanding ‘modern’ civil society difficult. PNG is marred by perceived corruption taking the dubious accolade of the most corrupt country in the Pacific, and one of the top 25 most corrupt countries in the world. Forced evictions are not uncommon. Police brutality and institutionalised torture are systemic. So what will the future hold for this next generation of Papua New Guinea children?
With this destructive record of achievement many people have asked me why it is that I want to go back? Why am I willingly and excitedly throwing myself into that situation? The truth is, I don’t know. I have thought about this long and hard and I can’t explain what it is about PNG that has such a magnetic pull.
But that’s exactly what
it is. There is something utterly
absorbing about PNG despite and in spite of its challenges.
Never before have I received such an unfettered welcome
every time I walk into a village. Nowhere
else has the spectacular beauty of virgin rainforests, stunning beaches, and crystal
blue oceans taken my breath away in quite the same way. I am moved to tears each and every time I
hear PNG voices raised in song. I will
never tire from the excitement of watching sing sing groups so proudly display
their tribal heritage through music and dance.
There is something about PNG which gets under your
skin. The
people of PNG recognise the challenges that they face, and I am looking forward
to working with some incredible local NGO’s that are setting the agenda at
grassroots level. Working towards
eliminating violence against women is a key priority. However, there are also other programmes
which are having a significant impact on helping to reduce poverty and empower
local communities. Water and sanitation
are vital. Economic Development through
sustainable farming solutions provides communities with the means to support
themselves. Working on resilience
strategies which reduce disaster risk will create safer and more robust
mechanisms for communities to protect themselves and their livelihoods. There
are so many ways in which the PNG people are working to create a stronger civil
society, and I feel privileged to be part of supporting that work.
I could probably spend a lifetime
trying to explain it and I’ll never be able to provide a satisfactory
answer. What I do know is that I am
embarking on the journey of a lifetime. I
hope that in some small way I will be able to give something back to the people
who made such an impact on me as a young child, and whose friendship has grown
with me as I became an adult. I know
that journey will be complex, emotional, tumultuous, full of frustrations, and
as potentially hazardous as any I could imagine; but it will also be infinitely
rewarding and worth each and every step.