in a Proud, Primitive but Progressive Country American and African Meet ORDER is the key word to our exist- ence. We are born and we die. We are educated and we work. At age 65 we retire. If we have done anything of im- portance (such as creating a machine or developing a theory that helps to make more order out of the remaining chaos) we will be given an alphabetically correct spot in Who's Who or Who Was Who. When man looks at his life, he finds nothing but this emptiness. For an or- dered world is an empty world. We receive our rood, clothing, and shelter through an economic system. We are governed by a bureaucratic system. We receive most of our entertainment from the Columbia Broadcasting System. And we are educated in what is at times a stifling, drag-out, day-long university system. It is no wonder that one out of every 10 people in America is mentally ill. The boredom of life is unbearable. When a man looks at his past life and then into his future life he is shocked. He has devoted his life to being rational; he will abide by the moral, social, and political rules he was taught in school until the day he dies. Looking in a mirror, he will say to himself, "I have only one life to live. I am the most important thing in the world. I want to do something that will make my life worth the effort." But, yet, he usually goes on living as he had done, saying to himself, "I just feel depressed today." The man who knows he would like to give his life meaning is lucky. But there are millions of people that do not have this insight. They are born into the rational world and die in it. They can not see the stifling effects of our ordered bu- reaucratic society. They feel the straight jacket of routinization without being able to express or realize this feeling. All the hospitals filled with mental patients are examples of these unfortunate peo- ple who could not realize the nature of our ordered society. They could not see the order; they could not fit into the artificial system. Even more important they could not see that the system is artificial. Not being able to abide by a system they could not explain, and having the cold and truthful realization that they cannot find meaning in the real world, the mentally ill create a world of their own-a world of their imagination-or else fight the world in an attempt to change it, an attempt to give meaning to their lives. Regardless of how these people react to the feeling of not belong- ing to the world, they inevitably with- draw into themselves. They withdraw into a world of irrationality, a world which for them is more real and has more meaning than the artificial order of human existence. Irrationality is the only way that man can break away from a rational society. But the majority of men- do not with- draw from the rational world. They re-- main, and consciously or unconsciously wish for a change. They cannot find a meaningful life in requisitions, tax forms, factory systems and traffic tickets. Yet from the time they are born until the FRED RUSSELL KRAMER, an as- sistant night editor on The Daily, is time they die, they remain in the system. For those that deviate there are the law courts, the neighbor's gossip or the in- sane asylum to return them to our or- dered rational world. How,then, can man break away from the rational world to give meaning to his life without end- ing up in an asylum? THE ANSWER lies in the rational sys- tem itself. Max Weber, the noted so- ciologist, has carefully studied the pro- cess of rationalization. He says this pro- cess of rationalization is "punctured, by certain discontinuities of history. Hard- ened institutional fabrics may disinte- grate and routine forms of life prove in- sufficient for mastering a growing state of tension, stress or suffering." These discontinuities appear when the system of rationalization defeats itself as in great economic depressions, or when the agricultural system fails to produce enough food, or when the defense system fails to stop an invading army. It is here that the system breaks down: it is here that the system grows weak in the'eyes of man. It is in such situations that man's urge to find meaning in his life tells him to break with and defeat the ra- tional system. It is here that irrational- ity comes to the fore. It is here that man's will to find meaning to his life finds its agent in a force called charisma, the irrational force that drives man to create a different world. Before we attempt to see how charisma evidences itself, we must investigate its nature. We must pinpoint the source from which it- emanates. To do this, we will examine the areas where man tries to find a meaning to his life, as this is inextricably connected with charisma. * * * ART IS one way in which we search for life's meaning. The great paintings of the past few millenia communicate a certain feeling to us when we view them. They do not merely show us a particular scene. Rather, there is a deep, irrational inner understanding. There is a subtle quality in the painting that is the key to a door within our minds which when opened shows us the world in a way we can understand-in an irrational, emotional way. It is certain that the world can be understood better through emotion than through a statistical or rational analysis. In music, it is not the suggestion of the sea we feel when we hear "Victory at Sea," nor is it the suggestion of spring we feel when we hear the "Pastorale Sym- phony." It is rather the forces behind spring, the forces behind the sea, the forces which shape our lives, that we feel. In fact, it is the' forces that reach for God -irrational forces. If we look to the high seas and the tales of buccaneers and so-called adven- turer capitalists we feel a spirit of adven- ture, a spirit of irrationality. There is nothing rational about the adventurer. There is nothing rational about a man who fights the sea and endangers his life when he could be safe at home on 'his farm. There is nothing rational about the ,ioneer or the man who fights against great odds. It is in this pioneer spirit. It is in this desire to do the new and excit- ing, that we find charisma. - If we look to war and find a man fight- ing for his life, and doing gallant deeds of bravery, we feel a thrill at the thought of someday doing similar brave deeds.,A war is not rational. When we view a cathedral we are filled with great emotion. This emotion points upward as the spires of the cathedral. There is no reason to feel attached to the rational world when we are in church and hear the organ and the choir. Here too, we find understanding in an irra- tional force. It is therefore in art, war, adventure and religion, for example, that we find a charismatic feeling. But the feelings we experience in these examples do not em- anate from them. The feelings of char- isma emanate from us. Any understand- ing about the world or life that we ex- perience comes from our own minds. These things merely release these deep irrational thoughts from our subcon- scious minds and bring them to our con- scious selves. The charisma is resident in us, not in charismatic objects or acts. S* * * WTHERE DOES THIS charisma come " from? It would be easy enough to state that it was inborn and drop the matter at that. But there is a better ex- planation. The explanation lies in the past. Be- fore the dawn of civilization the world appeared irrational to man. ie could not understand the forces that dominated him. Terror of the night, fear of light- ning and a horror of the forces in the sea dominated his existence. It was in these things that he saw the meaning in his life. He saw the sea and sun as gods. He fought the night and tilled the soil. When invaded by an enemy he fought to protect the" land he had built. Man began to conquer the irrational forces of nature. In conquering these forces, he learned to understand their meaning- the meaning in life. When man went to war he knew irra- tionally that he was fighting for the right to understand these forces. When he went to war he experienced the adven- ture and irrational joy of heroism. The early geniuses, who discovered and learned to protect fire passed on the ir- rational excitement of their stimulation to their fellow men. Each time another man learned to keep the fire he would understand without being able to verbal- ize it the same irrational joy experienced by the first fire builder. It is through this cultural communi- cation, therefore, that we can feel the irrational forces of fire even though we never discovered it in the darkness of the primeval forest. This is the force of charisma and is comes to us from the past through our cultural ancestors. concepts of volunteer service carefully developed by congressional studies and interested private groups, such as the University's Americans Committed to World Responsibility? Can they justify the publicity and grandiose words which have surrounded thePeace Corps? It would be folly to attempt any scien- tific study of the Peace Corps' effect upon the populace of the countries to which it is sent. In Tanganylka,-the pro- gram's objective is to provide technioal assistance to help solve social-economic problems-provide better roads and more- accurate estimates of Tanganyika's min- eral resources. Contact with the people will be limited to professional associates and to visits to the towns and villages for provisions and breathing spells from the extensive-travel expected from'each man. The technological progress can therefore be measured by the number of miles of road built or improved and by the num- ber of geological maps drawn. These achievements are difficult to point to and- brand. "Product of American For- eign Aid"-especially if after the road surveys are made, the United States fails to take the next step and provide funds tn actually build the roads. In Tanganyika, the basic obstacles in the path of development center about the need for capital to develop both the hu- man and physical resources. It is a coun- try neglected by the big companies of world trade and the big nations which have large amounts'to spend on foreign aid and military bases. One factor contributing to this situa- tion is the smaller number of Europeans in Tanganyika than elsewhere in Africa. Yet this has brought fewer political prob- lems with white settlers than in other African countries. Tanganyika's inde- pendence movement has been swift and peaceful. Under the skillful leadership of Prime Minister Julius Neyerere, the country has moved quietly through the stages leading to political autonomy. Into this econom- ically shaky but politically stable African nation have jumped nt only the Peace Corps but also other American groups to encourage and give assistance to the'Tan- ganyikans. One a two-year program of people-to-people social development are 12 American Friends Service Committee volunteers, of which the author is a part. A summer group of 20 from Harvard Uni- versity and Radcliffe College recently left. filled with enthusiasm for Tanganyika and its people. The Columbia Teachers Program, backed by the International Co- operation Administration, is providing eastern Africa with trained teachers to give two-year relief to an overloaded school situation. Other ICA projects are scattered throughout Tanganyika, along with a few United Nations projects, not- ably those of UNICEF and UNESCO. All of these programs, including the Peace Corps, are appreciated by the Tan- ganyikans, who are beginning to pride themselves on the attention they are re- ceiving from other parts of the world. Like the Peace Corps project, the others depend on the support of the people to continue the work of the experts or semi- experts, once the program is concluded. * * * THE PEACE CORPS GOALS-and those of most of the other programs-are to convince the Tanganyikan people that Americans are interested in helping them without necessarily asking a kickback. The objective is to establish people-to- .people contact through young, mature Americans working under living situations approximating those of Africans. The hoped-for result is that this approach will be more effective in generating a peaceful world than the bombs for which America has become better known in these developing nations. Out of five questions asked me once by a group of young Tanganyikans, three referred to America's nuclear war preparation-after 'I had talked for 15 minutes on the geog- raphy of the United States. The Peace Corps in Tanganyika will attempt to show American interest by Prime Minister Nyerere addresses a crowd aiding in the development of a better internal transportation system and the training of young Africans who can suc- ceed the Americans after their two years of service is completed. The importance of good transportation within a country which is trying to get itself into a viable economic condition can hardly be over- emphasized. With the need for more cash crops and capital investment, roads must be built to carry produce, livestock and mineral wealth to the processing centers and market areas. Presently, the Tanganyikan road net- work is in no condition to handle large- volume, heavy-duty vehicles. Although most main roads are passable during the rainy'-season, they slow traffic to a crawl. The primary roads are mainly of gravel, but more necessary than surfacing is the need to eliminate dangerous curves, hills and narrow bridges which create hazards beyond the available skills of many African drivers and those unac- customed to primitive roads. From the viewpoint of economic de- velopment, the road dilemma creates a vicious circle since there is reluctance to raise transportation overhead costs by, operating vehicles requiring frequent and expensive maintenance. The wealth which exists latently in the back areas-min- erals, livestock, crops and consumer mar- kets-stay neglected. An example is the estimated millions of tons of coal which lie in the southern highlands. Because of the lack of both rail and road develop- ment it remains untapped, while ex- pensive diesel fuel is used to provide electric power for most of the areas which have electricity. By tapping the coal, the cost of electricity could be lowered and the number of possible kilowatt hours in- creased, thus offering greater attraction to industry and greater incentive for consumer consumption. Into this situation of road under devel- opment comes the "Peace Army"-as Swahili translates "Peace Corps"--to give .a needed boost to the three-year program of economic and service expansion pro- posed by the Tanganyikan government. After the basic work is done, the govern- ment hopes to borrow money to do the actual construction. Thus the Peace Corps opens up the possibility for aid loans which the United States, Soviet Union, Great Britain, Western Germany and Red China held out to the smaller nations, ROAD BUILDING is not only a tangi- ble bench mark in the economic ex- pansion of a country, but also a symbol for intangible forces working within a society. The Tanganyikan can point to a new road with increased traffic and busi- ness speeding by and identify this with his newly-won independence. It-can stim- ulate him to improve his agriculture, and provide a foot-in-the-door for the harried agricultural officer who is battling to in- troduce improved agricultural techniques to overcome low yields of poor quality. - If the community is invited to help build the road, there is the possibility of in- creased community cooperation which could extend beyond road building to san- itation improvement, literacy work and public health measures. By providing more opportunities for the villager to see the "outside world" through better transportation connections to the large towns, there can also develop an important step in the war on disease -better housing. With building materials available for the first time, the quaint and picturesque banana thatch hut or mud-dung house can be replaced by gal- vanized iron- roofs and concrete block walls. This may dishearten the tourist, but Tanganyikans will appreciate the disappearance of disease-bearing insects, tuberculosis-producing stale air and high- ly inflammable thatch. Most Tanganyikan government officials recognize that change is inevitable, but wish to insure that change will come when and where the people themselves want to break old traditions. Matters will not proceed so smoothly for the Peace Corps once they begin pushing roads through private fields. One thinks of many contemporary Americans who pro- test the introduction of a road through their backyard or "back 40." In the jeal- ous guarding of personal holdings, people around the world differ little. One danger facing Peace Corps road builders is the use local politicians can make of them. These local "big-wigs" may be expected to associate themselves with the new "Bwana Americans" if the pub- lic response is favorable or make them scape goats for such unpopular results as crop failures, land grabs or latent ra- cial hostility. Even before the Peace Corps members had assembled in Texas, the leader of a minor African political group made the standard remark that the Peace Corps was an arm of the Central Intelli- gence Agency sent to spy for the United States. (After all, he argued, wasn't it called an "army?") By remaining poli- tically neut menting on the Peace C of the deve Initially, advantage mosphere s ganyika. Ar waves, cony students a f ica. When 1h tains, the rides have "thank you American v the Comm ment. For "Peace Co: something Swahili. I l of the "arn is sending comes inde IN NTHE I Peace Cc young Ame digenous p they were action to ti tourist who fellow Ame contact wit hosts. 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