REVIEW

Book Review: Race Against Time by Stephen Lewis

Written by Bonnie
Published January 20, 2006

I've struggled to articulate my thoughts on Race Against Time, Stephen Lewis's discussion of the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals. The book is too important for me to not do it justice. It is a book that everyone should read, that everyone should be frustrated and angered by. It's a book that reminds you of the great gaping chasms between the world we live in and the worlds others live in and the world we want to live in. Every time I sit down to write about this, my words don't seem like enough, or else it seems like I am repeating and rehashing the things that I said before.

Let me start with this: Race Against Time is a devastating and uplifting book. It's a quick read, conversational, and its pleas to the wealthy world are eloquent and righteously angry. People should read this book. It matters.

Now, the context. Every year, the CBC, Canada's public broadcaster, airs the Massey Lectures. In this series of lectures, some issue or idea is examined in detail by a distinguished lecturer. In 2005, Stephen Lewis joined such Massey Lecture alumni as Martin Luther King, Jr, Northrop Frye and Doris Lessing. His series of lectures, collected in Race Against Time, took place and were aired in November 2005. (The first in the series can be heard in Real Audio here.)

In the lectures, Lewis — UN special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, former Ontario MPP, diplomat, feminist, member of the Order of Canada — examines the UN's Millennium Development Goals, eight multinationally agreed upon goals designed to improve millions of lives by the year 2015. They include reducing poverty and hunger by half; providing universal primary education; increasing gender equality; significantly decreasing maternal and early childhood mortality; and halting, then reversing, the spread of AIDS and malaria.

Lewis is not optimistic about the world's ability to achieve these goals. And he is angry. Angry at the inaction of the United Nations, and at the broken promises of wealthy countries, particularly Canada.

Yet we are the only G8 country with successive and continuing budgetary surpluses. And our minister of finance, as a member of Blair's Commission on Africa, endorsed the target of 0.7 percent [of GDP to foreign aid] by 2015. It was the central recommendation of the commission report. How do you sign the report and then repudiate it upon your return to Canada? It's perverse; it lacks integrity.

And:

The prime minister says that there's nothing worse in internationalism than to make promises that are not kept: that's the real immorality, he argues. With respect, he's wrong. The real immorality is for one of the most wealthy and privileged countries in the world to fail to respond adequately to the life and death struggle of hundreds of millions of impoverished people.

As a reader, the sense of Lewis as a man of just outrage is overwhelming. His frustration always seems sincere; it percolates up, every sentence like lava from a sleeping volcano, hot with the threat of explosion. Again and again, he expresses his astonishment at what he has seen in Africa. He talks about a trip with Graça Machel, where she was the first to talk to two teenaged girls about their periods, and about villages where there are whole generations gone, and about visiting an income-generating project in Nambia:

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Bonnie writes about books every Thursday at Fourth-Rate Reader, about everything else at Signifying Nothing, and sometimes she resorts to pictures. She lives in Toronto.
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Book Review: Race Against Time by Stephen Lewis
Published: January 20, 2006
Type: Review
Section: Books
Filed Under: Review, Politics: International, Books: Politics and Affairs, Books: Nonfiction
Writer: Bonnie
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Comments

#1 — January 20, 2006 @ 17:24PM — Eric Olsen

tremendous, powerful, articulate, passionate review Bonnie - thanks so much!

#2 — January 21, 2006 @ 17:40PM — gypsyman [URL]

Bonnie,

I think you have managed to capture the essence of what makes Mr. Lewis such an inspiration. The fact that unlike the rest of us he lets his anger and frustration fuel not sap his energy.

I was sickened by our so called national news magazine in Canada, you know the one, for their hatchet job on Mr. Lewis (along with David Suzuki and Bono) How people can be in such denial that the world is heading down the toilet is beyond me.

Stephen has gone from being the moral conscience of Ontario as leader of the N.D.P. in the seventies to be the moral conscience of the world.

You've give one of the more accurate pictures I've read of him and his passion yet... well done.

(p.s I know what you mean about repeating yourself, I was reviewing my blogs today and realised I had basicly written the same piece twice about Stephen Lewis, two months apart. One was on the foundation, and one was just mentioning him as one of the true heroes in the world. Sometimes though if you keep pounding away people may start to listen...at least that's my hope..

gypsyman

#3 — March 26, 2007 @ 05:18AM — Jochen Jesinghaus [URL]

According to the MDG Dashboard, Swaziland is overall a good performer, for African standards: Pretty high scores for Goal 1 (hunger), 2 (education), and 5 (maternal health). However, they fail completely in fighting HIV/AIDS. In contrast, neighbour Botswana has similar problems with the disease but has started vigorous efforts to handle the problem. Swaziland's gender equality performance is average, while child and infant mortality are indeed worse than the African standard. It might be worth asking why the country has such a specific problem with HIV/AIDS - and to recall that neighbour South Africa denied for a long time the existence of the problem.
Re ODA & Canada: 0.27% of GNI is indeed not particularly impressive. But then, ODA is only part of the story. Most African countries are oil importers. Right now, some of them have to use all of their modest export revenue to pay the oil bill. Nothing left for education, hospitals, technology, ... and guess why the oil price is so high nowadays? If North America had always applied European level fuel taxes, the World oil price would still be 20 US$/barrel. ODA is peanuts compared to the impact of "cheap oil is good for the economy" policies.

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