Readers write: Do we need a Peace Corps anymore?
Letters to the editor for the November 8, 2021 weekly magazine. Readers discuss early memories of race and their Peace Corps experience.
Staff
Early memories of race
I had several thoughts while reading the Oct. 8 article 鈥A risk that worked: Talking about race head-on with neighbors.鈥 My earliest conversation about race that I remember was of my mother showing me a tiny album of African American Civil War soldiers and explaining that these men had saved my great-grandfather鈥檚 life. He was the white captain of their regiment, and fell ill during the Civil War. The soldiers were described to me as selfless heroes. That album is now in the Smithsonian鈥檚 National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Probably about the same time, the Supreme Court handed down a ruling integrating public schools. We lived in Virginia at the time and my best friend鈥檚 family talked of moving to Texas to escape integration. I was puzzled by their reaction.
I went to Central Senior High School in Champaign, Illinois, in the early 1960s. A Black friend in school complained that her family was building a new home, but the only land they could buy was by the tracks. I was shocked! So I don鈥檛 know if the author could have lived in her community in the 1980s, but it would have been even harder in the 1960s.
Aneita Gates
Petersburg, Illinois
Role of Peace Corps聽
The Oct. 4 cover story, 鈥Looking for a new Peace Corps,鈥 was excellent.聽
I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Brazil from 1973 to 1976. The Peace Corps took me because I could already speak Portuguese, so I didn鈥檛 have some of the communication problems discussed in the story, and was able to be productive from day one. I worked in the state orphanage in Sergipe, a small state in the Brazilian northeast, and my work was rather like that of some described in the piece: small projects that didn鈥檛 change the world, but I hope did change the lives of several hundred children for the better.
There are no longer Peace Corps volunteers in Brazil, nor should there be; the country has developed far beyond the point where idealistic recent college graduates with lots of enthusiasm but few marketable skills can contribute much. Even in my time, I felt that some of our programs, despite helping many individual Brazilians, also reduced pressure on Brazil鈥檚 government to redirect health resources out of the rich southeast, where they were over-concentrated, and into the poorer regions of the country.
I wonder now whether there鈥檚 still much of a role for the Peace Corps, outside of the countries left in the world that are so聽under-resourced in both material and human capital that any help will add something. This article didn鈥檛 answer that question, but it still provided some data. Thank you.
Al Brown
Manaus, Brazil
Lingering EV questions聽
I appreciate the Monitor writing about electric cars in the Aug. 30 cover story, 鈥The electric car age: When will it arrive?鈥 But I was really looking forward to a more thorough explanation of the answer.
How will we make them appreciably cheaper? What are the technologies to do that? When will they get here? How much cheaper will the electric vehicles become? So much left out. I feel that the Monitor 鈥減owder puffed鈥 it a bit.
Chris Johnson
Boston