December 22. On this date in 2002, the Bahá’í World News Service
reported the
Club of Budapest's honoring
FUNDAEC with a Change the World -- Best Practice Award. FUNDAEC's current program director is Bita Correa, niece
Farzam Arbab and daughter of
Haleh Arbab and
Gustavo Correa.
Haleh Arbab Correa
is currently director of the Institute for Studies in Global
Prosperity, a non-profit educational and research organization
"dedicated to building capacity in individuals, groups and institutions
to contribute to prevalent discourses concerned with the betterment of
society" through "working in collaboration with the Bahá'í International
Community." Born in Iran and educated in the United States, Haleh Arbab
previously lived in Colombia from 1982 to 2005 where she worked with
the FUNDAEC.
Haleh Arbab is married to
Gustavo Correa.
Since 2008, Gustavo Correa has been a member of the Universal House of
Justice. Before his election to the Universal House of Justice, in
2005, he was appointed to the International Teaching Centre. Along with
his brother-in-law, Farzam Arbab, Gustavo Correa was one of the
founders of FUNDAEC and later served as its Director, the position
currently held by his daughter,
Bita Correa.
Aside from being FUNDAEC's current program director, Bita Correa participated as a member of the
Bahá'í International Community’s delegation to the 55th United Nations
Commission for Social Development.
A recent graduate of Bryn Mawr College, Bita Correa is the daughter of
Haleh Arbab, Farzam Arbab's sister, and Gustavo Correa.
Haleh Arbab is the sister of
Farzam Arbab. Initially elected in 1993 to the
Universal House of Justice, the supreme governing institution of the
Bahá'í Faith,
Farzam Arbab retired from that body in 2013. Before his election to
the Universal House of Justice, in 1988, he was appointed to the
International Teaching Center. The International Teaching Centre, whose seat is at the
Bahá'í World Centre in Haifa, Israel, is composed of nine
Counsellors appointed by the Universal House of Justice and tasked with duties to stimulate and coordinate the
Continental Board of Counselors
and assist the Universal House of Justice in matters relating to the
teaching and protection of the faith. All of the current members of the
Universal House of Justice previously served as members of the
International Teaching Centre. In 1980 he was appointed to the
Continental Board of Counsellors for the Protection and Propagation of
the Faith in the Americas, on which he served for eight years. From 1970
until 1980 he served as the Chairman for the
National Spiritual Assembly of the
Bahá’ís of Colombia.
While in Colombia, Farzam Arbab was one of the founders of
FUNDAEC (Foundation for the Application and Teaching of the Sciences).
He served as its Director from 1974 through 1988 and continues to serve
on its board. FUNDAEC was established in 1974 by a group in Colombia
who were looking for new strategies to develop the capacities of people
and to generate knowledge in isolated regions of the country. The
model, known as SAT (for "Sistema de Aprendizaje Tutorial, Spanish for
"System for Tutorial Learning") started in 1980 and centers on the use
of interactive workbooks facilitated by a tutor. In Colombia, these
tutors are trained at the Center for Rural Education.
The SAT techniques Arbab helped develop at FUNDAEC have been applied to the Bahá'í community in the form of the
Ruhi Institute, which was named after Arbab's father. Centered on
Bahá'í study circles,
the goal of the Ruhi Institute courses is to "evoke a transformative
learning experience through a learner-centered, experiential, and
collaborative approach facilitated by a tutor rather than an instructor,
a teacher, or an expert." Among the principles of the Ruhi curriculum
is the utilization of service projects to implement learning into
tangible action. The Universal House of Justice has encouraged the
emulation of the Ruhi model throughout the global Bahá'í community.
According to one researcher, the Ruhi Institute's method has resulted in
"nonhierarchical, self-initiated, self-organized small groups engaged
in study, teaching, and action" and is "becoming the core of Bahá’í
community life worldwide as the outcome of a process that has sought to
nurture the spiritual life of individuals and families and to establish
social foundations for the vision and practice of religious world
citizenship." Paul Lample, another member of the Universal Hose of
Justice, has stated "Doubtless the institute and its curriculum will
continue to evolve, both in content and form, to a level of greater
complexity in regions and nations within the framework of the
administrative order throughout the various stages of the
Divine Plan in the second century of the
Formative Age."
Farzam Arbab's son is
Paul Arbab.
"Born in the US, Paul grew up in Colombia. He holds an MBA and joined
the board of Unity Foundation in January 2007. Since then he has been
able to provide valuable input to the strategic direction of the
Foundation. He is a proud father of two toddlers and strongly believes
in the power of education." Paul Arab is the Administrator of Unity
Foundation.
Unity Foundation,
which works with Luxembourg's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and "a
network of local development agencies assisting them in their efforts to
build capacity amongst populations to take charge of their own social
and economic development" is "governed by a board of directors which
regularly meets to consult on the strategic direction of the
organization. The day-to-day work is being carried out by the office
team. Our external consultancy body, the
Office of Social and Economic Development (OSED)
in Haifa, Israel connects us to grass-root development agencies which
have the capacity to work with external funding organization. OSED and
the [Luxembourg] Ministry of Foreign Affairs act as two filters ensuring
the quality and integrity of our projects."
Baha'i-inspired educational system for the poor of the world honored by the Club of Budapest
22 December 2002
FRANKFURT, Germany — The Club of Budapest has honored FUNDAEC, a
Baha'i-inspired development organization in Colombia, with a "Change the
World -- Best Practice Award" for its achievements in providing high
school education and training to more than 50,000 people living in rural
areas in Latin America.
In his speech at the award ceremony, Peter Spiegel, the Secretary
General of the Club of Budapest, characterized the project as "the most
considerable revolution of education in the twentieth century."
"The genius of this new educational model," Mr. Spiegel explained,
"lies in the fact that it teaches people living in Third World Countries
to take charge of their own development processes and begin to interact
as equals with the rest of the world."
Known as SAT (for "Sistema de Aprendizaje Tutorial, which means
"System for Tutorial Learning" in Spanish), the tutorial learning
program is built around a series of highly interactive workbooks, which
enable specially trained tutors, who may themselves have little formal
education, to offer a high quality secondary educational program in
rural areas with minimal overhead cost.
The ceremony, held at the historic St. Paul's Church in Frankfurt on 6
October, was attended by honorary members of the Club of Budapest Sir
Peter Ustinov and Paulo Coelho, who were granted the Club's Planetary
Consciousness Award. Also at the event was Istvan Hiller, personal
assistant to the Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Medgyessy, whose
presence reinforced the support of the Hungarian government for the
Club's efforts in promoting the emergence of planetary consciousness and
supporting exemplary, like-minded projects. In all, some 1,000 people
were present.
The Change the World -- Best Practice Award was given to four
international educational projects that aim at empowering people through
learning and enabling them to take full control of their economic
development.
Other "Change the World" recipients this year were Aguida Zanol,
representing Reciclar-Institut in Brazil, which seeks to connect art,
ecology and social development; Nina Kostina of the Frank Foundation,
which has sought to help orphans from former countries of the Soviet
Union; and Marcia Odell, representing the Women's Empowerment Program in
Nepal, which has developed an innovative approach to microfinance and
the empowerment of women. The WEP program has reached more than 130,000
women in Nepal and has also received considerable support from the
Baha'i community of Nepal.
Gustavo Correa, Director of FUNDAEC and one of the founders of the
project, represented the Foundation at the ceremony. He said the award
this was a big step in the recognition of the FUNDAEC program. "Although
our initial efforts started out very small and humble, as time went by,
more experience and confidence were gained and in 1980 SAT, the
Tutorial Learning System, was born," Dr. Correa said. "While our first
materials were developed and tested only in the North Cauca Region of
Colombia, with the official recognition of the Ministry of Education in
Colombia SAT has been implemented in other parts of South and Central
America as well. At present the SAT program is used for secondary
education in Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador, Venezuela, Panama, Costa
Rica, Brazil, and Colombia. At the same time the first phases of the
implementation of the program have started in Zambia, too," said Dr.
Correa.
FUNDAEC (Foundation for the Application and Teaching of the Sciences)
was established in 1974 by a group of professors at the University of
Valle in Colombia who were looking for new strategies to develop the
capacities of people and to generate knowledge in isolated regions of
the country.
The program is rooted in rural reality, based upon the needs of the
local residents with the aim of strengthening local economies and
communal identity. SAT offers students a high school education that not
only provides them with theoretical knowledge, as most traditional
educational practices do, but also allows them to become independent and
to serve their own communities.
"When started this project, we were originally inspired by a
quotation from Baha'u'llah, the prophet founder of the Baha'i Faith,"
said Dr. Correa. "Baha'u'llah talks about man as 'a mine rich in gems of
inestimable value.' He says that 'education can, alone, cause it to
reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom'. In
FUNDAEC we firmly believe that there is significant hidden potential
within every individual, a potential which, if nurtured, may foster the
spirit of service and contribute to the well-being of the whole
community."
SAT is open to, and in most countries free for, everyone. Students
usually pay only for their textbooks. To date, the six-year study
program has been completed by 50,000 students, and there are currently
about 30,000 youth attending various levels of SAT courses. Participants
are not only strengthening their own sense of identity and purpose but
are also starting to realize the importance of the community and are
gaining a sense of unity.
"The basic idea behind FUNDAEC is a sense of spiritual
transformation," said Dr. Correa. "In the course of their studies the
students discover the spirit of service and begin to consciously nurture
their spiritual qualities. One of our students, for example, used to be
a thief, and in the lapse of six months he became a useful member of
his community, while one of the graduates was actually elected the mayor
of his locality."
Each SAT course is facilitated by a tutor from the same locality as
his or her students. Tutors are trained at the Center for Rural
Education, the university founded by FUNDAEC in 1992. The five-year
degree program offered there has also been officially approved by the
government of Colombia and offers training in education.
Local SAT groups, guided by their tutor, apply the principles learned
in the program, use their knowledge to become active in strengthening a
sense of community identity where they live. Their activities
demonstrate a wide range of diversity, from the implementation of
sustainable productions systems to artistic and sporting events, and
from educational activities for children to environmental projects.
Dietmar Schonherr, a well-known actor and the initiator of a
development project in Nicaragua, presented the award to Dr. Correa.
"FUNDAEC is based upon the need for a new concept of development aid,"
he said. "It is to be carried by the population itself, by its
experiences of their daily reality."
Founded in 1993 by scientist and Club of Rome member Ervin Laszlo,
the Club of Budapest was formed on the idea that the enormous challenges
facing humanity today can only be dealt with through the widespread
development of a cultural, cosmopolitan and global consciousness. The
Club seeks to build bridges between cultures and generations through a
variety of activities, including the recognition of significant
accomplishments by individuals and organizations, such as through the
"Change the World" award.
The Club of Budapest sees the Change the World -- Best Practice Award
as the first step leading to long-term cooperation between the Club and
FUNDAEC. "As a first step we are consulting with one of the German TV
channels about the establishment of a new kind of talk show that would
promote the mission of visionary projects such as FUNDAEC," explained
Mr. Spiegel who has been observing the work of the Foundation for
several years.