Growing up in Israel was rewarding, yet required a certain amount of cynicism, in order to deal with the intense daily situations, which at the time, did not seem like anything out of the ordinary. I have many vivid memories from those times - young school kids carrying gas masks on their way to school along with the mix of excitement and fear when I was drafted to the IDF. I remember a period when I would carefully choose a seat as I boarded a bus, calculating where I would be harmed least if a suicide bomber decided to detonate. No physical object feels heavier than the weight of a wasted life hanging over a fallen soldier’s funeral. I try to go back to my high school for its Memorial Day ceremony to respect those who cannot be there, and I do not feel fear, but acceptance because this situation is regular, therefore normal. I accept not because I agree with it, but because I have no other choice.
Because I want to live a normal life.
Israel is a country surrounded by borders and walls. For many years the Israeli media masterfully painted a picture of our enemies from the other side of the borders, as evil, barely human. When presented with numbers and statistics, you forget that real people actually make up the figures. But walls do come down when people get together and discover their common grounds. Then it is possible to minimize the differences and appreciate a shared sense of community.
Current day technologies such as the web and mobile phone networks give us the ability to leap over the walls, penetrate through political boundaries and connect as human beings. These prevalent ways of communication can accommodate the creation and continuation of dialogue. Politicians have always had a stage from which to speak to the world. Now regular people can tell their own powerful stories to a worldwide audience. These tools carry the potential to empower people to choose to make a difference and not to live with the silent acceptance anymore.
It is my generation’s duty to find a way to help get these stories out. This is not just a dream, but becoming reality. Last summer, Israeli and Lebanese bloggers wrote web-posts together, criticizing the war that tore all of their homes to shreds. When enough Palestinians have the ability to post their thoughts online, maybe then both sides of the wall will be able to realize that everyone has similar wishes: a chance to celebrate family dinners or to go for picnics at the beach.
But technology alone is not a solution, it is a tool.
Standing on this bridge between cultures gives me perspective to see a potential for these walls to come down. I have lived in East Asia for almost half my life, and have been fortunate to travel extensively throughout the area. I am constantly fascinated by this new merger that is happening between culture and technology; the adaptation and creative uses of it. When comparing between access opportunities in the Western World and those in developing countries, the differences are astounding. Most of the world’s population does not enjoy the benefits of having this bottomless pit of information at their disposal. Within a minute we have the ability to create a post that is seen worldwide, describing a physical item or piece of knowledge that we seek. It is significantly harder for people in the third world to express their needs, even just within the boundaries of their own province. Moreover, most online representation of these communities is usually biased, outdated or probably non-existent. Creating possible solutions to alleviate this gap, even in the slightest way, is a true challenge, which I gladly take on for my thesis project.
I believe it is essential to get real stories and information out not via traditional media channels, but with innovative technology based initiatives. Expand the outreach for people who don’t read newspapers, using alternative social networking services like flickr, RSS feeds, myspace, and so on. It is important to put a human face on problems, and not just count numbers. There is a famous Hebrew saying - “for each person there is a name”. It is frequently used in reference to the WWII Holocaust. We say names and not just numbers in search of a more meaningful way to grasp both tragedy and hope.
I hope to continue and explore ways in which my facility with technology and photography can help make more of these connections possible; a grassroots possibility for direct links between people in the developed and the developing, the first and the third worlds. We need to take advantage of available web tools and the mobile networks to eliminate intermediary layers, for this direct contact to be simpler and affordable. I see the potential for local difficulties to be worked through as a result ofthem being shown and known to the world at large.
I have been fortunate to have had many travel opportunities throughout my life, always learning and absorbing as much as I could while on the road. Usually I choose a more independent method of travel, and aim to make as many local connections as I can. Many times I have wondered if there was a true way for exchange to occur, not in a superficial way, but by filling an existing need, using my skills or background.
Travelers are a close community. Even though they span across different people from all over the world, once you visit a foreign location, and meet someone else who has been there, an immediate base-line connection exists.
While traveling, I have witnessed the impact of fast-paced development in these areas, which are trying to catch up with modern technology and the western world. I strongly believe that everyone deserves to have that choice. I choose not to have internet connection at home. That choice is powerful, and I feel lucky to have it, acknowledging that most of the world cannot even understand the importance of that statement.
It is impossible to estimate how and if this project will be useful, until users put it to actual use. Margaret Mead, a renowned anthropologist, once wrote “Never doubt the power of a small group of committed people to change the world. That's about the only way it has ever happened in the past”. Even more so today, with the web, finding this core group of fanatic users is an absolute necessity for the success of a project. That is a challenge that will definitely continue after the period of this thesis project at ITP.