17 Apr Inspiring Young Leadership In Ghana
With touches of resourcefulness and Tikkun Olam, they found the perfect solution.
“One of our enrichment activities for children is a sports project that serves as a way for developing life skills,” says Rachel Shaya, 31, of The Jewish Agency’s Project TEN center in Ghana. “At one of our meetings, the children told us they had no soccer goals, so we brainstormed together and decided to build them using water bags and other recycled materials. They’ve learned a way of using available materials that are in abundant supply.”
Project TEN: Global Tikkun Olam is a Jewish Agency service-learning program that brings young Jewish adults from Israel and around the world to volunteer, study, and travel together in Israel or other developing regions across the globe. The program’s work is rooted in the central Jewish value of Tikkun Olam — translated from Hebrew as “repairing the world.,”
Throughout her year and a half long appointment in Ghana, Shaya was on a journey beyond her wildest imagination.
“I run a house with 15 Jewish volunteers — a diverse but united team from all over the world,” Shaya says. “I also run the partnerships with visionary locals. We work together with existing local NGOs and provide them with informal education tools to help them function independently. Our main goal is to generate social and environmental change in the community.”
Throughout her time in Ghana, Shaya experienced cultural differences between Israel and Ghana.
“As Israelis, we’re used to getting things done, but here people behave differently,” she explains. “The attitude to time is different. Schedules are seen as recommendations only, which can make working here a bit trying. The moment I let myself learn and experience the culture, I let go. I also learned that being on the go all the time doesn’t necessarily lead to better results. The relaxed approach allowed me to enjoy the process much more and open myself to real cultural learning.”
Then why not stay in Ghana?
“I’ve learned about myself and other people. I’ve learned a different culture, and the meaning of partnership and sustainability. But I want to continue putting all that to work in the place I call home – Israel,” Shaya says. “I’m connected to the land and am excited and eager to put all I’ve learned into practice in whatever new direction I go.”
Indeed, Shaya’s work in Ghana has come full circle. In the course of pursuing shared goals with Project TEN volunteers and locals alike, she empowered them to become leaders in their own right.
“Now they’ll be able to build goals by themselves,” she says of the soccer equipment. “They’ve experienced teamwork and learned that in order to create something they want or need, they have to assume responsibility and be proactive. We left them something tangible on the soccer field that will serve them for many years to come, but more importantly we left them with a way of thinking and working that will last them a lifetime.”
You can be driving along in Ghana, when, suddenly, you see Israeli flags along the road.