Ukrainian Weekly Interview
Karl Beck, Director of the U. S. Peace Corps Program in Ukraine
With 235 Volunteers, Peace Corps
Ukraine is the largest of all Peace Corps programs in 80 countries. Over the
next 18 months Peace Corps Ukraine plans further growth up to 300 Volunteers.
Peace Corps especially encourages Ukrainian Americans and other people with
fluent Ukrainian and Russian language skills to contact Peace Corps via the
website http://www.peacecorps.gov
or toll free phone 800 424 8580 to find out about service opportunities in
Ukraine.
In 1992, Peace Corps’ Ukraine program
was the first to set up operations in a successor state of the former Soviet
Union. To date 1,000 Americans of all demographic groups have performed
teaching, consulting, and advisory services in Ukrainian schools, universities,
business centers, nature and environmental centers, local government
offices, and non-governmental
organizations. In addition to their
primary job responsibilities as English and management teachers, business
advisors, and environmental activists, Volunteers work as change agents in
Ukrainian towns and villages carrying out community projects that address youth
leadership training, HIV/AIDS education and awareness building, teacher
training, gender issues, curriculum and textbook development, Internet and
computer training, and civil society development through non-governmental
organizations that provide aid to the poor, promote environmental clean-ups,
discourage young women from accepting risky foreign employment propositions,
encourage networking among youth leaders, upgrade schools, organize summer
camps, and tackle many other community needs.
Because they live and work in
Ukrainian communities without the special advantages that foreign development
experts normally have, Volunteers succeed in directly representing the United
States and its people and culture to Ukrainian people of all walks of life. At
the close of 27 months of service, each Volunteer brings back to the United
States knowledge and understanding of Ukrainians that usually cause them to
continue to be active in U.S. – Ukrainian relations for many years.
Karl Beck arrived in Kyiv to take up
his Peace Corps Country Director assignment in October, 2000. Karl was a Peace
Corps Volunteer Teacher Trainer in Africa in
the 1960s and went on to be a U.S. diplomat, university professor, and
international civil servant over the next 30 years.
UW: How did you find yourself
in this position?
KB:
It was something
I had been wanting to do for a long time. I was a Peace Corps Volunteer just
after I finished college and then worked on the country staffs of 3 Peace Corps
programs in Africa in the early 70s. I liked the work and especially the
contacts with the people who join Peace Corps and their host country
counterparts. I always looked forward to returning to Peace Corps. Of course in
the 60s and 70s, I never would have imagined one day I would work for Peace
Corps east of what was then the Iron Curtain.
UW: What is the structure of
your organization in Ukraine?
KB:
Our
structure mirrors our responsibilities to Volunteers and Ukrainians. We have a
Training Office that provides pre-service and in-service training to Volunteers
and their Ukrainian counterparts. This training equips the American Volunteer
to communicate in the language commonly used at his/her site and to operate in
the Ukrainian context. We also have a Programming Section that finds job
assignments for Volunteers and supports them in the professional and personal
adjustment areas and a Medical Section that works to keep Volunteers healthy.
Of course there is also a Financial and Administrative Section that supports
all the other sections and makes sure Volunteers receive their monthly living
allowances and all other financial support they are entitled to.
UW: What is the size of the Peace Corps and distribution across Ukraine?
KB: At present we have 235 Volunteers distributed more or less evenly throughout Ukraine’s 26 Oblasts and Crimea. Of course this distribution is influenced by Ukrainian population densities and by the various levels of progressive development that are occurring in the different parts of the country. We especially seek opportunities to place Volunteers in disadvantaged areas where extreme poverty and other problems make it hard for people to hope for a better future.
UW: What types of projects are
currently pursued?
KB:
Peace Corps
Ukraine carries out 3 categories of projects. Approximately 100 Volunteers work
in English language education. This includes teaching at the secondary school
and university levels and several types and levels of teacher training for
Ukrainian teachers of English. An equal number of Volunteers work as management
educators in a great variety of assignments that include business consulting
and advisory services, teaching business in high schools and universities, and
working on the staffs of non-governmental organizations that target community
needs. In addition we have a small Environment Project in which Volunteers
mostly help community organizations and nature centers educate youth about the
need to protect the environment and the methods of doing so.
UW: How is help received? What
are the attitudes toward Volunteers?
KB:
There is a
lot of interest on the part of Ukrainians in working with Americans, but often
neither side understands in the beginning what this entails. Often the
Ukrainian partners want to change old attitudes and methods but have
given little thought to the difficult challenges that change will present to
them. On the American side, the Volunteer wants “to get things done”. When there is sufficient good will on both
sides, Ukrainians and Americans almost always find a way to cooperate and learn
from each other. But usually the initial 6 months of a Volunteer’s service are
a difficult and frustrating time when the Volunteer sees little progress and
the Ukrainian counterpart feels the American should have more patience.
UW: What are some of your
success stories?
KB:
There are
many. They range from the achievements of a grandmother from Bowling Green,
Ohio who revamped and strengthened the management of Donesk’s largest and most
effective public charity to the success of a young woman from southern
California who taught a whole class of second graders in a Ternopil Oblast
village to speak English so fluently that the kids could grill me in English
for more than an hour with questions and opinions when I visited the school.
Peace Corps Ukraine Volunteers’ successes also include the work of another
grandmother from Atlanta who wrote state of the art textbooks for five years of
university level English teacher training, the creation by a retired architect
from Princeton, New Jersey of green parks throughout a western Ukrainian town,
the training by a young Cornell University Business graduate of dozens of dairy
farmers in L’viv Oblast about how to manage the business aspects of farming,
the refurbishment of a Kirovograd orphanage by a young man from Connecticut,
the launching of a nationwide campaign against the spread of HIV/Aids by a
young woman from New York City, the establishment of women’s business centers
in Crimean Tartar villages by a woman from Dallas who before retirement
had been one of Kodak’s top managers, and the list goes on and on.
I
believe Volunteers’ most important successes are those that promote the
development of individual Ukrainians and help them realize their full
potential. Once when I was talking with the young man who manages the Ukraine
branch of the Gillette Company, I asked him if he knew anything about Peace
Corps. He replied that a Peace Corps Volunteer changed his life on one day.
When he was a 16 year-old high school student in an eastern Ukrainian village,
he went along with a friend to a Saturday meeting for students who wanted to
learn how to become businessmen. At the meeting an “old man named Ralph who
said he was a Peace Corps Volunteer” told the kids if they wanted to succeed
they should try being different. The Gillette manager recalled that this advice
shocked him profoundly because all his upbringing had taught him to be the same
as everyone else. After a few days’ reflection he took Ralph’s advice and
started on a course that led him to an MBA from Clark University in
Massachusetts and a senior position with an American company.
This
process of human development is the essential value of Peace Corps’ work. The
other day in Ivano Frankivst, the director of a business center was praising
the contributions of his young Ukrainian American Volunteer from Chicago. The
center director shook his head in amazement as he said “Mark keeps coming up
with ideas we never would have dreamed of.”
UW: What are some problems you encountered?
KB:
When I
first arrived in Ukraine, I made the same mistake most Americans make. I tried
to appeal to the intellectual side of the people I was working with. It took me
a while to understand how important the emotional side also is. It has been one
of my goals to make the Peace Corps office and our operations in Ukraine a
reflection of the modern management techniques and principles that our
Volunteers teach in Ukrainian schools and business centers. At first this posed
some very heavy issues for my Ukrainian colleagues in our office. For the most
part they were used to top down management and to a work culture that
discouraged information sharing and the assumption of personal
responsibility. I found however that if
I succeeded in clearly explaining the purposes of the changes we were trying to
implement and if the Ukrainian colleagues could perceive the benefits the
changes eventually would bring, the pace of successful change became very fast.
At this time I am quite satisfied that we now have an office and an operation
that is second to almost no others in Ukraine in efficiency, effectiveness, and
client service.
UW: What are the requirements for becoming a Peace Corps Volunteer?
KB:
The
applicant should be a U.S. citizen and at least 18 years old. He/she also
should be in sufficiently good health to be able to live and work in the
country of assignment, and there should be a demonstrable desire to serve and
contribute to the development of people.
UW: Are there other organizations similar to yours in Ukraine? If so, who are they and how are they organized?
KB:
I am not
aware of any.
UW: How is a Peace Corps Volunteer prepared for his/her job in Ukraine?
KB:
For three
months after arrival, the new Volunteers live in groups of 4 in small towns and
villages where each Volunteer lives with a Ukrainian host family. During these
home stays, the Volunteers receive lessons in culture and language from
Ukrainian teachers and design and carry out practical work in schools or
organizations that are like the sites where they eventually will go for their 2
years of service. In addition, to promote continued language and cross cultural
learning, for 3 months after the new Volunteers arrive at their sites they also
live with Ukrainian host families. Volunteers can continue to receive language
and professional skills training for the entire 2 years they are working in
Ukraine.
UW: What do Volunteers find
most memorable after their stint in Ukraine?
KB:
I have a
lengthy conversation with every Volunteer at the end of service. From the views
Volunteers have expressed in these conversations, I would guess that the most
frequently felt sentiment that they carry home has to do with the “heartfelt”
nature of Ukrainian friendship. Almost all Volunteers stay in touch with
the Ukrainian friends they have made during their service. Many former
Volunteers return again and again to Ukraine to visit their friends and to
experience the special feeling of being part of Ukrainian society. I suspect
also that almost everyone goes home with an embroidered dress or shirt and a
favorite recipe for borsch.
UW: What do they find most
objectionable?
KB: The winter weather and lack
of heat and water would be high on their lists. But I think all of them would
agree that the most difficult thing about working in Ukraine is the pessimism
of so many Ukrainian people. This pessimism is understandable given the ancient
and more recent history of the Ukrainian nation. And it is not every Volunteer
who succeeds in causing his/her site supervisor to express something as
appreciative as one in L’viv did about a Volunteer business advisor from San
Diego. The Volunteer’s supervisor wrote: “Where we see only problems, she
always sees opportunities.”
UW:
What is President's Kuchma's attitude toward the Peace Corps?
KB:
Peace Corps
operates at the grassroots; so we don’t have any real contact with President
Kuchma. When we have needed the help of the Presidential Administration, it has
always been offered promptly and effectively. Ministers who work for the
President and Prime Minister are more frequently in touch with us, and we
collaborate with them and their subordinates without any hitches. This would
lead me to conclude that President Kuchma and his Administration are positive
in their views of the work of Volunteers in Ukraine.
UW: Is the Peace Corps viewed
as an extension of security forces of America?
KB:
I see no
evidence of this. I believe Ukrainians accept the essentially non-political
nature of Peace Corps and our Volunteers.
UW: You have been there for 3
years. What changes have you observed? And what do you forecast of the future?
KB:
Over the three years I have visited every oblast and Crimea several times. With
each visit everywhere, I see definite physical signs of repairs of old
buildings, openings of new businesses, and construction of new single-family
homes. More important however is the great proliferation of start-ups of
non-governmental organizations that are working without government support on
every conceivable community problem. The private sector and civil society are
expanding rapidly in all parts of Ukraine. It often seems to me that large
numbers of Ukrainian people have awakened from a long sleep of despair and
helplessness. Now they are reaching out to grab a future that is not yet
knowable in its entirety but which certainly will be greatly influenced by
strongly held notions of individualism and self-help.