Conclusion
Friends, I am very pleased to be with you here today to share
the sense of commitment to the idea that, indeed, we need to think less
linearly. We have to recognize that, frequently, the linear paradigm is
contributing to the destruction of a valuable patrimony, not just of our
environment, our forests, our rivers, but of our heritage, our cultural
dimensions.
Mamadou Dia referred to an international conference that we held
here in April 1992 on culture and development. It highlighted the project
philosophy that we are talking about here - that, ultimately, the whole purpose
of development is to improve the well-being of people. Today, after all the
efforts toward development, we have to recognize that about a billion people are
still living on less than $1 a day, that close to a billion people (mostly in
Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia but also in other parts of the world) - about
one in five members of humanity - go hungry every day. We cannot accept the view
that this is somehow an acceptable cost.
Neither can we turn our backs on the very real basis of
solidarity that cultural identity provides, that gives people a sense of being
and self-worth. We have to think about the philosophical aspects of development
in terms of giving people rights. Rights to clean water, clean air, and fertile
soil are one way of looking at environmental protection issues. We must not
think only of protecting the natural resource base, but we must give people
these basic rights. Today these rights are being denied to many people. These
rights are being denied to the 1 billion people who have no access to clean
water and to the 1.7 billion who have no access to sanitation. These rights are
being denied to their children, of whom 2 to 3 million die annually from causes
related to this pollution. They die from eminently avoidable diseases that are
associated with the lack of access to clean water and sanitation.
We have 1.3 billion people, primarily in the developing cities
of the world, who are breathing air that the World Health Organization says is
unfit for human beings. Seven hundred million people, mostly women and children,
breathe indoor air polluted by biomass-burning stoves that is the equivalent of
smoking three packs of cigarettes a day. Not to mention the hundreds of millions
of farmers who are unable to maintain the fertility of the soils from which they
eke out a meager living.
Against this backlog of problems, at least 90 to 100 million
people a year are being added to the world's population, most of them in those
very same weak states and poor countries in which the problems are the worst.
The development paradigm that is being pursued by many of these governments has
not been able to address these problems. It can neither respond adequately to
the past stock of problems nor is it likely to meet the challenges of the
future.
In this paradigm these governments are also ignoring the wealth
that indigenous knowledge brings, the wealth of indigenous peoples and their
cultures. Indeed, we have to recognize that, by and large, everywhere in the
world indigenous peoples have been victimized in the name of "progress." They
have been persecuted by that which should have empowered. They have been
oppressed by that which should have liberated. We must recognize that the
post-colonial independence of many states has not translated into respect for
the individual rights of indigenous peoples or indigenous communities. For
indigenous peoples, I want to speak of other rights, not just rights to clean
water and clean air. I want to speak of the right of a people to be themselves,
the inalienable right of each and every people to self-determination.
Here the issue of culture and cultural identity takes on a
different manifestation. I speak of it not just as something interesting that
might be lost, but as an inalienable right, a central core of being human, as
part of human rights. We need to recognize that culture and cultural identity
are not just things to be studied and written about in anthropological
monographs. Cultural identity is very much the core of what makes a society
tick. To understand this, we must come to the notion of empowerment. In
answering the question that Whaimutu Dewes mentioned in his talk, "Who am I?" I
think the answer comes from with whom I relate and my ability to act.
A radical, more dynamic view of cultural identity removes it
from links with artifacts and objects of a past heritage, from past paintings,
sculptures, and places. Such a view sees cultural identity as the ability of
individuals, groups, and communities to act and, by their actions, to manifest
their identities in the society of which they are a part. They must be social
actors, not objectified artifacts. In this way we find the definition of
cultural identity and authenticity rooted in action. In this way we bring
cultural identity to a living people, to the meaning of well-being and
development.
When we talk about unitary societies and unitary nation states,
we have to understand that within these societies and nation states there must
be room for diversity. Mamadou Dia just reminded us of the artificiality of
certain legal constructs such as state boundaries when compared to the
authenticity of peoples and cultures in Africa. He reminded us of many other
fallacies that we need to set aside, but the one I would like to emphasize is
the link between unity and diversity. As Aimire said, "The universal is
enriched by all its various particularisms." Empowerment and recognition of the
rights of people to be themselves do not lead to disintegration into many
cultural groups. It is the denial of people to be themselves that leads to the
disasters we see in the former Yugoslavia, the former Soviet Union, and parts of
Somalia. It is empowerment that is needed to enable each community to define
itself, not at the expense of its neighbors or even at the expense of its weaker
members. It is these groups' capacity to define their destinies and themselves
in concord with the broader society that allows a broader unity to be
constructed. The broader society is enriched by the presence and well-being of
indigenous peoples, by the traditional knowledge and the cultural variety they
bring. As Jacques Cousteau said at the 1993 First Annual International
Conference on Environmentally Sustainable Development:
We now have to make sure that there will be an awakening of
global public opinion to save the mixed borders and the flowering profusion of
our motley cultural jungle.... We have only one way to keep our proud
civilization flourishing: we must protect its diversity.
To the exponents of that broader society who speak with a
certain degree of arrogance of the modernism and advancement that they
contribute, I think we should remind them of the precarious reality of the human
condition in most of these societies, the vulnerability of unskilled labor, the
soul-destroying impact of poverty and homelessness, and the ease with which the
rich and powerful subvert law enforcement to their own ends.
This scenario of empowerment will be feasible if, and only if,
development strategies are truly human-centered in the broadest sense.
Strategies that invest in people in terms of health and education are essential.
However, we must also devise strategies that recognize the importance of
capacity building, governance, legitimacy, participation, priorities, and
expression of people. An enabling environment must be at the center of all
development strategies.
Again, Mamadou Dia reminded us of this in terms of the crises of
institutions in Africa. This takes me into the domain of human and civil rights,
participation, empowerment, accountability, and decision-making. For these, I
would advocate that all societies think in terms of creating a space of freedom
in which people can express themselves, in which those who are concerned can
reappropriate the formulation of their own future communities and societies.
This space of freedom must not be the monopoly of certain academic scholars in
Western universities. In fact, these indigenous groups must take charge of their
own destinies.
It is important that we move in this direction quickly. Maritta
Koch-Weser rightly reminded us of the urgency of getting things done. As
difficult and complex as these issues are, I believe there is a crushing and
compelling urgency manifested by the numbers I mentioned earlier in my talk.
Every passing day of misguided policies contributes to the misery of millions of
human beings. Every incomplete package of reforms and projects that various
donor groups agree to finance is another missed opportunity to reach out to
those kindred souls.
We in the World Bank would like to work with all those dedicated
to provide this better future, be they nongovernmental organizations, academics,
local community groups, reformers, committed governments, intellectuals,
international agencies, or national organizations. I stretch out my hand to each
and every one.
We do not claim to have the answers and, indeed, we need to be
humble about the scope of possible intervention that we can have. But I know
that we must dare to be bold, we must dare to be imaginative. For I do believe
that imagination is stronger than knowledge, that myth is more potent than
history, that dreams are more powerful than facts, that hopes always triumph
over experience. I think that with this kind of vision we can empower the people
of the world to take charge of their own destinies. For, ultimately, real
progress lies in enabling the weak and the marginalized to become the producers
of their own bounty and welfare, not the beneficiaries of aid or the recipients
of
charity.