What are you doing for Haiti? We are the specialists of solidarity aren’t we?

di Filippo Addarii

We in civil society are good at preaching denouncing misdid of politicians and businessp people but too often are afraid of gettign our hands dirty. What’s civil society is doing beyong circulating appeals, donating money, and leaving the work to NGOs specialised in emergency?

I’m not a specialist in emergency but my president reminded me that we must do something becuase solidarity is our field!

Thierry, Euclid Network’s president, called this morning. he never does it. he’s very respectful of other’s free time. not like me. I call my kids and friends at any time of day and night.

He called after a meeting in Brussels with civil society crowd. Almost nobody raised the issue and proposed to act. It’s unconcivable for people who pledge to represent people and work for them.

However, Thierry is not the kind of person who criticizes the others. He just called me to mobilize our members across Europe and act togehter to tackle the disaster.

he got the right angle: the third sector is good at strenghtening society, not building streets and houses. let’s leave governaments and companies to raise monehy to rebuild the hardware: bricks and walls. We should focus on the software: people’s associations.

Perhpas we won’t act immediately. Our contribution will be made in the post emergency when society has to be rebuilt. This won’t be another Catrina neither Tsunami. People need help but more than money. They need our solidariety.

Just a couple of notes to share with you.

17 centesimi al giorno sono troppi?

Poco più di un euro a settimana, un caffè al bar o forse meno. 60 euro l’anno per tutti i contenuti di VITA, gli articoli online senza pubblicità, i magazine, le newsletter, i podcast, le infografiche e i libri digitali. Ma soprattutto per aiutarci a raccontare il sociale con sempre maggiore forza e incisività.