ELST Workshop 2003
Source : Phayul
By Yen-pei Chen
On 24 August, twenty-one Tibetans from settlements in India and the Himalayan
regions joined eight students and professionals from Cambridge, England at the Pavilion
of Tibetan Culture in Auroville. Among the Tibetans were university finalists,
teachers, journalists, a travel agent, a settlement camp leader, a hospital
adminstrator and an artist. The Cambridge group included nationals from
England, Ireland, Scotland, the United States and Taiwan, with academic
backgrounds from Medicine to Italian Literature. The result - an intensive
three-week workshop titled 'English Communication and Enterprise Skills' - was
electric. For myself, a member of the Cambridge team, it would certainly be no
exaggeration to call it life-changing.
This was the second workshop run for Tibetans in exile by the British charity
ELST (English Language Scholarship for Tibetans). The Cambridge-based
organisation aims to help young Tibetan professionals realise their potential
and contribute to the community in exile through mastering English as a global
communication tool. The Workshop 2003, with its emphasis on enterprise, was
born out of the conviction that business is crucial not only to promote the
status of Tibetans within India, but also to secure a voice for Tibet around
the world.
Communication was at the core of the three weeks. As 'resource persons' - an
amusingly pompous but accurate term for the role of the Cambridge team - we worked
from the premise that the confidence to communicate was as important as, if not
more so than, grammatical accuracy. Thus, a typical day included besides
language classes a choice of 'Focus Sessions', discussion groups on topics
within our field of expertise and interest and ranging from the American Dream
to the Bible, terrorism, genetic modification and the postcolonial diaspora.
Presentations are crucial in many professions today, and they formed a central
-- to many the most memorable -- part of the workshop. Through the three weeks
the participants undertook five presentation projects, involving increasingly
challenging tasks from directed interviews with local enterprises to
independent planning and research. The culmination in the final week saw a
participant-organised debate on the essence of Tibetan culture, presentations
on environmental technology - for which Auroville is a major advocate in India
- and five business plan presentations. The result of the intensive training
was phenomenal. For many Tibetans, some of whom had no previous experience in
public speaking, the greatest progress was their leap in confidence.
From the Cambridge team's point of view, we certainly learnt as much as we
taught. The workshop was a unique, intense opportunity for cultural exchange.
In the classrooms, through the discussions and the presentations, we were
introduced to Tibet's geography, history and its rich spiritual heritage. But
the most affective 'learning' took place outside: conversations over tea, reminiscences
over dinner, riotous pilgrimages to nearby beaches, spontaneous singing through
the lightning storms.
I came to respect the Tibetans as an admirably resilient and dedicated people:
the personal stories of hardship and repression in Tibet and their continued
political struggle in India, as well first-hand accounts of how individuals
achieved success through sheer determination, will live long in my mind. I came
to love the passion of the Tibetan songs and the warmth of the Tibean
character. At the same time, I will always remember that wonderful sense of
fun, and those memorable moments when dance, songs and games erased cultural
and linguistic boundaries. Above everything, I feel a deep sense of gratitude
to the Tibetans, who welcomed me so unquestioningly to their midst and who so
willingly shared their remarkable culture.
We have all grown in Workshop 2003. We have faced and overcome new challenges.
Through interaction with other cultures, we have been made to reflect on the
basis of our own identities. Like the Auroville parable of wasteland
revitalised as thriving woodland, we return to our respective communities
optimistic in the knowledge of new, and certainly attainable, possibilities.
<i>The next ELST Workshop is being planned for 2005, incorporating
experience and feedback from the two previous workshops. A major aim will be to
recruit more women participants. For more information write to elstcam@ntlworld.com.
</i>
This article can also be found at http://www.phayul.com/news/article.asp?id=4427
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Posted 31 October 2003