Jimmy Carter Ethiopia, Jimmy Carter Liberia, The Carter Center, the Giving Life
Jimmy Carter Ethiopia, Jimmy Carter Liberia, The Carter Center, the Giving Life

Jimmy Carter On Giving: "I Got A Lot More Out Of It Than I Put Into It"

NEED Magazine   |  Matthew Pritchard   |   January 13, 2008 04:37 PM


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This article originally ran in NEED Magazine.

FORMER US PRESIDENT JIMMY CARTER IN SOUTHERN ETHIOPIA IN 1997. PHOTO | ROBERT GROSSMAN/THE CARTER CENTER


"In every case when I thought I was doing somebody else a favor by building a house or something like that, I found that I got a lot more out of it than I put into it."


Q: President Carter, what initially inspired you to become involved in humanitarian issues?

A: When I became a state senator, then later governor and ultimately president, I realized that all public officials have a great responsibility and duty to analyze the needs of the people that they have been elected to serve.

When I was a state senator, we were still in the midst of 100 years of racial segregation in this country, based on the fact that we were supposed to have separate but equal facilities. I saw in my own early life the need for equality of treatment between black and white American citizens; that was the first introduction I had to alleviating suffering and discrimination and giving people some hope that their lives would be equal to others as citizens of this country.


Q: One of the themes that emerges throughout the work associated with the Carter Center is hope. Why should people be hopeful in regards to humanitarian assistance, peace and human rights?

A: First of all, we have to be aware of what's going on in the rest of the world. You know we just finished helping with an election in Liberia. It's very disturbing to know that over half of the people in Liberia are living on less than 50 cents a day, and over half the people in the whole world live on less than two dollars a day. That's almost inconceivable to rich, prosperous, safe and satisfied Americans. If you just stop for a few minutes and think how [you] would survive if [you] only had that much money to pay for a place to live and to pay for food and clothing, you can see that there's nothing left over for health care, education, self-respect or hope that the future will be better than you've already known it. The absence of opportunities [along with] human suffering, persecution, being in the midst of war and suffering from unnecessary diseases [are] all factors [that] eliminate hope among many people in the world, and to give them a better opportunity provides hope.

PHOTO CAPTION: PRESIDENT CARTER LOOKS AS ELECTION OFFICIALS BEGIN THE VOTE-COUNTING PROCESS DURING LIBERIA'S PRESIDENTIAL AND LEGISLATIVE ELECTIONS IN OCTOBER 2005. PHOTO | DEBORAH HAKES/TCC


Q: Within the realm of humanitarianism, is there one issue or project that really inspires you?

A: There are a lot of them. The Carter Center has programs in 65 nations, and 35 of those countries are in Africa. We deal with diseases that have been completely eliminated in all of the industrialized world. These are diseases, though, that still afflict millions and millions of people. So we go into local villages in the jungle or in the desert areas in Africa and sometimes in Latin America and try to alleviate this suffering. To see the dramatic transformation that takes place in the lives of those people when they never have to suffer from a terrible and preventable disease is the type of thing that really inspires me.

For instance, we began working on a disease called dracunculiasis or Guinea worm a number of years ago. We found 3.5 million cases in over 23,000 villages in more [than] 20 nations. We've been in all those villages now and taught the people what causes the disease and how to prevent it. We've reduced the number of Guinea worm cases in the world by more than 99.7 percent. We still have .3 percent of those original cases primarily in Ghana and southern Sudan, which have been afflicted with wars. This is the kind of experience that we've had that has been inspirational to me.

I would say that the biggest surprise for me has been to see the quality of these people's lives. Because they are poor and suffering and uneducated, we often tend to underestimate them. I found that these same people are just as intelligent, ambitious and hard working, and their family values are just as good as mine. If they're just given a chance to improve themselves, they are very enthusiastic and capable of doing it.


Q: Through your individual work as well as projects undertaken by the Carter Center, you have become a great figurehead of strength and support for issues of peace, health and human rights. As such, whom do you admire within the humanitarian realm?

A: We work with a lot of people. I would say one of the more generic admirations I have is for all the volunteers who join Habitat for Humanity. We sometimes have as many as 10,000 volunteers that join Rosalynn and me in the annual Jimmy Carter Work Project. It's where we go into a community or country and build a large number of Habitat for Humanity homes for poor people in need over a five-year period. To see the dedication of these volunteers who pay their own way, for instance, from [the US] to the Philippines, South Korea, Mexico or to South Africa [sic]. They provide their own tools, they dedicate a full week or 10 days of their lives and they work side-by-side with families who have never had a decent home but who join in the work and will own their own house. This is the kind of dedication that's just one example of the hundreds of different ways that folks around the world volunteer to help their neighbors.

From a distance, there would be a person like Mother Theresa, whom I was lucky enough to meet before she passed away. I think what makes her contribution so notable is the fact that she did it in almost total obscurity, without any self-promoting publicity. Obviously, there are tens of thousands of people like that around the world who are devoted to humanitarian causes but are never recognized in any way. I've been recognized for the few things I've done because I used to be President of the United States, and I have the image and fame that comes from that exalted position.

I think that the ones that I admire most are the ones that Mother Theresa exemplifies. The Habitat volunteers I just mentioned to you that go year after year or day after day under sometimes the most difficult and private circumstances, and devote their lives or a portion of their lives to helping other people.

The point is that if you're a lawyer, a teacher, a reporter, an editor, a farmer or a builder, obviously your primary duty is to pursue your own profession and to earn a living and take care of your family; that's part of your responsibility. But all of us, including all of those I just mentioned, [and] many others, have an opportunity and an obligation, maybe a duty, to take a portion of our good fortune and invest it in helping others. This is a chance to have a much more exciting, challenging, adventurous, unpredictable and gratifying life. And when we embark on projects that encompass people whom we would otherwise not ever know, the result is always a greater benefit to us than we anticipate, and the benefits always exceed whatever sacrifice of finances, time or effort we invest.


Q: What would you say to inspire others to become involved in humanitarianism?

A: First of all, each one of us has to analyze our inventory--our own talents, abilities and opportunities of influence--and see how it is that we can utilize what we have been given by God for the benefit of others. Secondly, I would say we need to be ambitious about it and not dormant; we need to search for opportunities to help other people have better lives. The third thing is that in my own experience in this realm, when I've [volunteered], I never have found it to be a sacrifice; it's always been a blessing to me--a very gratifying experience.

In every case when I thought I was doing somebody else a favor by building a house or something like that, I found that I got a lot more out of it than I put into it.



In just one year of Carter Center trachoma control activities in the 2000-member village of Mosebo, Ethiopia, 251 people have been treated for active trachoma, which causes blindness. Forty-one patients have received surgery to treat trichiasis, which can cause visual impairment and severe infections, and 367 households have built latrines to lessen infection risks.

The Carter Center provides the tools and means to help farmers in sub-saharan Africa increase their crop yields through agricultural development, sometimes two or even threefold. By increasing the amount of quality food produced, Third World hunger and poverty will be lessened, food security enhanced and national resources protected.

For the full interview and to subscribe to NEED Magazine, please click here.

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Jimmy Carter is a great humanitarian. As a former United States President, he could have easily stepped back and rested on his laurels. But he chose to help those who had no voice- the poor, the disenfranchised, the sick, the oppressed. Those individuals, in this country or abroad, who had no advocate to stand up for them. He firmly believes in the dignity and the well being of his fellow human being. For a politician, this man is unequivocally unique.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 01/15/2008
- loki I'm a Fan of loki permalink
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Carter was a good president who was scammed out of a second term by Reagan and head of CIA G WH Bush when they made the deal to have the Iranians hold the hostages until after the election.

If only others would contribute 1/10th the real charitable work that Mr. Carter has.

Or you could be a pessimistic downer like my X wife was and wave it all off insisting that the only reason people are charitable at all is because by giving they get personal satisfaction and happiness. I think that was also the philosophy of Kant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 PM on 01/14/2008

carter was and still is a shinning light, compare him to the mental retard occupying space in the current day white house.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 01/14/2008

Jimmy Carter and his wife, Roselyn, have such integrity. Jimmy Carter was the leader of the group that build homes in many of the Islands of PI. One of my church members went on that project trip. He tells the story about Carter and his wife NOT being above grabbing a hammer and going to work on the building projects. His presence and sweet spirit gave our church member such a boost that he came back home changed forever. This sort of story, told about many of the Carter Projects encourage great changes in the volunteers on these projects. It is good for us to remember the peaceful times we enjoyed while Carter was President. And remember, in the end, he brought the Iranian hostages home and avoided an all-out war. Imagine if GW were president during that incident. His cowboy mentality would have started WW3. Instead of a war, the patience and diplomacy of Carter saved all of those hostages.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 01/13/2008

http://www.theonion.com/content/opinion/i_got_what_america_needs_right

I Got What America Needs Right Here

By Jimmy Carter

January 9, 2008 | Issue 44¢02

"You got a global warming problem? Boo-fucking-hoo! I was telling you morons to turn off your lights and unplug all your shit at night to conserve energy in 19-fuckin'-75, for chrissake. Gee, I wonder what woulda happened if we'd all switched to solar power like I fucking did back when we had a fucking chance to do something about it. Think we'd still be sucking Saudi Arabia's dick like a five-dollar whore?"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 PM on 01/13/2008

a popular Tibetan lama (Lama Yeshe) once said that Carter should have sent a stealth bombers flying over Tehran to send a message about the seriousness of the U.S. about returning the hostages from the captivity of the Iranian Revolution (however natural it may have been as an historical outcome).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 PM on 01/13/2008
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When you see true Christians like Jimmy Carter and hear the words of JFK, it only serves to make me realize how pathetic the shrub is.

The speeches that JFK gave and the good works of Jimmy Carter compared to a dry drunk, schoolyard bully C-student.

The US had the ENTIRE WORLD on our side on September 12, 2001. Truly an historic event that could have galvanized the world against terrorism......what does the shrub do? He uses it for political gain and does nothing to solidify the world's sentiment and commitment to the US.

Will someone please blow him so we can get on with impeachment?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 PM on 01/13/2008
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There is something drastically wrong with a country where a man of this calaber is not revered. As a lifelong atheist, I look at this man as the best kind of Christian - a man who lives his faith. He doesn't just give lip service to the best principles of Christianity.

I think "The Man" wore the idealist in many of us down. I started college in 1974, right after Nixon resigned. That was when my peers stopped majoring in poli sci or social work and started majoring in accounting to get the big bucks. I have held onto the progressive ideals of the 50s, 60s, and 70s and await the rest of the world to wake up. I became a math teacher because I wanted to be a humanist scientist. If the country never returns to me, I will die with my integrity in tact. So will Jimmy Carter.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 01/13/2008
- rini I'm a Fan of rini permalink
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I remember 1980. I was 14 and arguing with my father. II felt that Reagan wanted to accelerate the nuclear arms race and that Carter should be re-elected.

I knew that the momentum was going in the other direction and that Reagan would win. It was palpable.

I still have a stupid hope that the momentum will shift back again. Obama's win in Iowa was a real tease.

Reality is that we are going you-know-where in a handbasket. Reagan was just the beginning.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:45 PM on 01/13/2008

Jimmy Carter is a rightful presidential icon. The regean legacy rewrite is just that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 01/13/2008

how can an anti-semite do ANYTHING good

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 01/13/2008
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He may not have been the most brilliant president ever but I have a hard time pointing to a finer human being.
When I think about George Bush Sr and Ron Reagan and Ford and Nixon and.... I can't see a single example of dedication to humanity that comes anywhere close to President Carter's.
They talk, sit around, do business deals, manipulate people and politics.... He picks up a hammer and puts a roof over someones head - literally.
I bet Dubya won't even live in the US when he finally leaves office (if he leaves office).... Got a nice ranch down in Paraguay to move to, maybe some nice old NAZI neighbors to hang out with... should feel right at home.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:31 PM on 01/13/2008
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Jimmy Carter - the last true People's President

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 01/13/2008
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My daughter got involved with Habitat in high school. She, along with the rest of her high school organization, built 4 homes in 4 years. She learned construction techniques and craft skills, leadership, and the value of hard work. She enjoyed the camaraderie of her fellow students, the pride of completion for 4 amazing projects. She learned about the families who moved into each of those homes and got to know each on a personal level.

Dad got the pleasure of watching his daughter run roofing crews, and boast about driving 16 penny nails with 3 strokes.

We only had to put in a few weekends of work. Get out more than you put in? It wasn't even close.

and... oh yeah... 4 families got a home they wouldn't have otherwise been able to afford.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 01/13/2008

Jimmy is the last Pres we ever had with Integrity.
He has proven his honor though his tireless work since his defeat. SAd. Where would we have been had he won- over the corporate sponsored Ronny. When did the Hippies become Yuppies- the '80's (jag driving, coke snortin', stock market rigging sell outs)
WE gave these 'Bommer' the chance to do it right an dthey feel in love with the money and frogot their supposed principles. Of course theri were many co artists during the 60's just working the movement- they have reared their real ugly heads and now it is time for the rest of US to take them down. Of course you didn't inhale Bill your were working for the Man even then.
Your parents wee right.Good for nothing spoiled slackers (my mother even refers to the boomers as 'spoiled'). Your younger siblings and your children have had enough. You not only failed your mission (which apparently you had no intention of fulfilling), but you have created a Cluster F*ck for the rest of US to clean up. When I know you are all in the midst of retirement age, and money's getting tight - don't look to US to hand you life on a silver platter again- plan on getting a job as a greeter at Walmarts at 80, likje you've done the the retiree at this time. LOL LOL LOL!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:30 AM on 01/13/2008
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