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	<title>Prout Journal &#187; oppression</title>
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		<title>Participatory Action Research in the Missouri Ozarks</title>
		<link>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-in-the-missouri-ozarks</link>
		<comments>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-in-the-missouri-ozarks#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Jun 2002 00:39:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Allan Rosen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PROUT JOURNAL Summer 2002 Issue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[action]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[activist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oppression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[participatory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[research]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[workshop]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[“The aim of participatory action research is to change practices, social structures, and social media which maintain irrationality, injustice, and unsatisfying forms of existence. … [It] is emancipatory, it leads not just to new practical research, but to new abilities to create knowledge. In action research knowledge is a living, evolving process of coming to [...]<div class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style addthis_" addthis:url='http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-in-the-missouri-ozarks' addthis:title='Participatory Action Research in the Missouri Ozarks ' ><a class="addthis_button_preferred_1"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_2"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_3"></a><a class="addthis_button_preferred_4"></a><a class="addthis_button_compact"></a></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“The aim of participatory action research is to change practices, social structures, and social media<br />
which maintain irrationality, injustice, and unsatisfying forms of existence. … [It] is emancipatory,<br />
it leads not just to new practical research, but to new abilities to create knowledge. In action<br />
research knowledge is a living, evolving process of coming to know rooted in everyday experience.”<br />
 - The Handbook of Action Research, Participative Inquiry and Practice, by Peter Reason and Hillary<br />
Bradbury</p>
<p>“To liberate society from this unbearable situation, [when bureaucracy is turned into oligarchy],<br />
consciousness will have to be aroused among the people; their eyes will have to be opened by knowledge.<br />
Let them uderstand the what’s the why’s and the where’s. Thus study is essential, very essential.”<br />
 - Liberation of the Intellect, P.R. Sarkar</p>
<p>This summer, at the Ananda Kanan Retreat Center near Willow Springs, MO, more than two dozen Prout<br />
activists took part in a Participatory Action Research (PAR) workshop. PAR is an activist strategy<br />
inspired by the Brazilian revolutionary philosopher and teacher, Paulo Freire (1921 &#8211; 1997). In this<br />
process, workshop participants form teams to learn about local issues, while reflecting upon their<br />
values, relationships and ideals in developing an activism of liberation.</p>
<p>The participants&#8211;from Germany, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Mexico, and the US&#8211;were comprised of teenagers<br />
as well as senior members of Proutist Universal. They came from all walks of life: professors, students,<br />
writers, business owners, volunteers and social activists.</p>
<p>The PAR methodology enabled the Proutists to learn about each other and the surrounding community<br />
in a hands-on setting. This action/research modality contrasts with other Prout workshops that focus<br />
almost exclusively on theoretical study. PAR was chosen to provide an opportunity for Prout activists<br />
to work together on a collective enterprise. The PAR workshop also allowed the Prout activists, who<br />
were simultaneously attending the Ananda Marga Yoga Society’s summer retreat, to begin to learn about<br />
the community and culture in and around Willow Springs, West Plains, and the South Central Missouri<br />
Ozarks.</p>
<p>By learning about the community and the local issues, and especially making connections with local<br />
activists and service providers, it is now expected that Proutists will maintain and expand these<br />
relationships, as well as become more committed to social service in the Missouri Ozarks, as part of<br />
their annual retreat experience. An additional goal was to introduce the participants to an effective<br />
methodology for doing action research when returning to their local community. Hopefully this summer’s<br />
workshop will be the first of many such local and regional PAR workshops sponsored by the Prout<br />
Research Institute in North and Central America.</p>
<p>Before reporting on the details of this workshop, a brief overview of the PAR model is warranted. In<br />
its simplest terms, the PAR model can be described in five steps: 1) participants form action teams, 2)<br />
the teams investigate community issues and the experiences of local residents, 3) an action strategy<br />
is developed for addressing the important community issues, 4) the action is implemented, and 5) the<br />
team reflects upon what has been learned about the issue, the community, and the team dynamics.<br />
In this particular workshop the traditional model was modified because the participants are not<br />
permanent residents of the local community. Hence, at this workshop, the participants focused on<br />
steps 1, 2 and 5.</p>
<p>During the introductory session Oppenheim presented an overview of PAR theory. He introduced the work<br />
of Paulo Freire with quotes from “Pedagogy of the Oppressed.” Freire created a process of<br />
consciousness-raising and activism, helping oppressed factory workers to reflect upon the dominant<br />
themes of their daily lives, and then to take action to create a better future.</p>
<p>Freire was concerned that the oppressed could easily act through anger and recreate the oppression<br />
of their oppressors. He emphasized activism based on love, and the ability to transcend the mental<br />
colonization of the oppressor. PAR has evolved to become a way for communities to develop authentic<br />
knowledge based on real world experiences and to develop goals for improving communities based on an<br />
intimate relationship and partnerships amongst community members. PAR places an importance on<br />
creating knowledge through experience and relationship rather than through so-called “experts.” It<br />
is strikingly similar to Neo-humanist principles and the process that P.R. Sarkar advises for<br />
establishing self-sufficient economic regions.</p>
<p>After this, the group went through team-building exercises to build a sense of unity and common<br />
purpose. Several exercises developed an appreciation of individual strengths and talents as well<br />
as ways of working in groups that would help the participants support each other and work more<br />
effectively as a diverse team. It was emphasized that each person may value a different way or<br />
style of gaining knowledge about the community, and that all these styles are essential for an<br />
integrated understanding of a community. One person may prefer to interview someone for most of<br />
the time instead of gathering data, while another may learn more from drawing a polluted creek bed.<br />
Some prefer to understand a small neighborhood before looking at the overall region, whereas others<br />
need a regional overview before focusing on local businesses.</p>
<p>In the second session, Rosen presented an overview of the Ozarks bio-region. The settlement patterns<br />
and cultural legacy of the Native Americans and original European-American settlers were noted, as<br />
was the economic development history of subsistence agriculture, natural resource (minerals, timber)<br />
exploitation, and environmental degradation.</p>
<p>The current socio-economic condition was reviewed, highlighting the extreme rural isolation of the<br />
area, its cultural, religious, and ethnic homogeneity, and the South Central Missouri Ozarks’<br />
continuing isolation from the Ozarks&#8217; regional economic growth centers of the Springfield/Branson<br />
and Fayetteville, AR areas.</p>
<p>Important recent trends that were highlighted included the growth of West Plains as the regional<br />
economic trade center, the emerging satellite campus of Southwest Missouri State in West Plains,<br />
and the increasing settlement of middle-class, suburban retirees into the Ozarks, and how that is<br />
creating tension in the region. A highlight of this session included artist Michael McClure’s<br />
personal story of living at Ananda Kanan for the past twenty years, and his impressions of the<br />
people and the local culture and mores. McClure has gained rich personal experiences by painting<br />
the natural landscape and murals in the local communities, and playing basketball with local<br />
residents. His personal story reinforced many of the themes outlined by Rosen. Notably the strong<br />
family values and social networks, the fundamentalist Protestant Christian worldview, the slowness<br />
to accept change, and the intensity of the Missouri “Show- Me” attitude. History of how the<br />
introduction of the cash economy during the Great Depression public work’s programs began to weaken<br />
the settler’s cultural legacy was particularly moving and revealing.</p>
<p>The third session was devoted to fieldwork preparation. The participants were divided into four<br />
teams and trained in how to conduct their fieldwork. Each team was given a fieldwork kit with<br />
Polaroid camera, drawing pens and paper, maps, information about their topic, and interview forms<br />
with initial questions. Each team had three basic tasks: to develop interview questions and then<br />
hold interviews about their topics, to visit a site that would give them valuable experiences<br />
about their topic (for example the environment group visited a local creek where townspeople were<br />
dumping rubbish), and to visit a local expert. Teams spent times brainstorming ways to introduce<br />
themselves and to ask questions. Then each team assigned roles and developed a timeline to carry<br />
out their activities the following day.</p>
<p>Monday morning and afternoon, July 1, the four teams conducted their field work. Twelve participants<br />
focused on Native American issues and met with representatives of two Native tribes at their<br />
respective community centers in West Plains. Eight participants met with the Executive Director of<br />
the regional community action agency, Ozark Action, Inc. This group focused on family and poverty<br />
issues. The third group, seven in all, went to the regional office of the Missouri Department of<br />
Conservation in West Plains and met with the office manager and a field conservationist. The fourth<br />
and smallest group, four persons, met with the Community Development specialist of the local<br />
University of Missouri County Extension service, as well as the Executive Director of the Mountain<br />
View, MO Chamber of Commerce. Each group spent at least two hours meeting with their respective<br />
“expert” contact, leaving an hour or two for each team to conduct some “person on the street”<br />
interviews.</p>
<p>At the final session Monday afternoon, each group presented their findings and answered questions<br />
from other participants. Special guests at this session included McClure, Dada IK, the rector at<br />
Ananda Kanan, and long-time Ananda Kanan resident Dharma Putra.</p>
<p>After this, each team came up with four or five key themes that arose from their fieldwork. Each<br />
team then came up with four or five over-arching themes that characterized their experience of the<br />
Ozarks, as well as key problem areas for us to focus on in the future. Some common themes that<br />
emerged from each team’s community study included the love of family, place and home, the clash<br />
between old and new, the stress on local government resources, the persistent relationship between<br />
poverty and environmental damage, the lack of widespread economic opportunity, and the ambivalent<br />
attitudes toward education. One goal was to relate fieldwork experiences to principles of Prout,<br />
and to begin to brainstorm a Proutist vision for the future of the Ozarks. Rather than prescribing<br />
solutions, these principles were meant as tools to look at problems and their causes and to better<br />
understand the dynamics of the Ozarks. For example, the group briefly discussed Sarkar’s principle<br />
of balanced economic planning, comparing the suggested model for economic prama (balance) with<br />
employment statistics from the local region. It was obvious that retail trade and the service<br />
economy were rapidly outpacing the manufacturing and agricultural sectors, which would clearly lead<br />
to a dependency on resources from outside the region &#8211; evidenced by the rapid takeover of locally<br />
owned businesses by a Wal-Mart. A lecture on the nature of Prout movements by Dada Vimalananda also<br />
helped participants begin to think about how local farmers, laborers and youths, students and<br />
intellectuals could unite in a common regional movement. However, lack of time did not allow<br />
participants to connect Prout theory to their experiences of the community in any great depth.</p>
<p>This last session concluded with a brief exercise where participants were asked to reflect on the<br />
workshop and provide feedback on the process. Many positive comments were voiced, including the<br />
following constructive criticisms: 1) It was difficult to condense so much material into a total<br />
of 15 contact hours (24 hours over a three day period would have been better), 2) most participants<br />
would have preferred more time to work with their team and their own trained facilitator; and 3)<br />
more time should have been devoted to fieldwork preparations, particularly the interview protocols,<br />
notetaking, and reporting back to the group. Still, the participants were inspired by the PAR<br />
workshop and would like to stay connected to the groups they met with.</p>
<p>Several members mentioned that their assumptions about the local community changed after the<br />
exercise. One participant, for example, assumed that local residents would not be supportive of<br />
Native American causes, while several residents mentioned that they had strong support for their<br />
rights. Many also mentioned that they learned much more about their fellow Prout activists through<br />
the fieldwork exercise, as well as learning, for the first time, how to be a Proutist in a<br />
supportive, non-invasive way. Some mentioned that local residents naturally symphatized with<br />
Prout principles, because of the values they held for their community, for the environment, and<br />
for the Ozarks region.</p>
<p>When asked how they might increase their involvement in the community while attending retreats at<br />
Ananda Kanan, participants suggested working with public education programs, going to community<br />
fairs, and co-sponsoring town meetings, as well as seeking volunteer opportunities at the various<br />
agencies they learned about.</p>
<p>Overall, the workshop was considered a great success and a good omen for future Prout training<br />
endeavors, including next summer’s Global Prout Convention to be held at Ananda Kanan. Oppenheim<br />
and Rosen are already collaborating with residents of the Ananda Marga Master Unit, Ananda<br />
Aeshvarya, in Urbana-Champaign, IL, about holding PAR workshop there this fall.</p>
<p>Volume 9, No. 2, Summer 2002 [Exact date not known ]</p>
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