Interview with Jim Shultz: An Activist's View of Bolivia and Life

Here in Bolivia things happen in front of my eyes and it sometimes takes a long time to figure out what it is that is going on. One of those things that happened in front of my eyes was Black February, 2003. Later, I figured out what was going on, based on Jim Shultz, Executive Director of the Democracy Center, in his book, Deadly Consequenses - The International Monetary Fund And Bolivia's "Black February."  I described it in my novel, Lucy Plays Panpipes for Peace,

In the novel, I cite Jim Shultz in the footnotes, so I was delighted to be able to speak to him.

LYNETTE: Jim, when did you first get interested in Bolivia? What inspired you to live here and dedicate your life to Democracy in the poorest country in the Southern Hemisphere?JIM: While many people assume that I moved to Bolivia to be an activist, in fact the truth is the opposite. I moved to Bolivia to take a break from activism and circumstances caught up with me. My wife Lynn and I first moved to Bolivia as newlyweds in 1991, to spend the first year of our marriage away from the U.S., away from our mutuial work as social justice activisits, and to be volunteers in an orphanage. A friend of a friend had started a program for orphanded children in Bolivia, so off to Cochabamba we went.

What wove Bolivia into the fabric of our lives forever was a surprise, our adoption at the end of that year of one of our students, a five-year-old named Elly. Two years later on a return visit to Bolivia we adopted a second of our students (we had founded a school at the orphanage) Miguel. Both are now young adults. We later adopted a third child, a glorious girl who is now 7.

In 1998 we returned to Bolivia as a family for what was supposed to be a year. I had a grant to write a book about U.S. activism, The Democracy Owners' Manual (Rutgers University Press, 2003). Right around the time I was finishing the book the Cochabamba Water Revolt happened and I ended up square in the middle of it, writing the only international coverage from the streets. That helped make the story a global one and later The Democracy Center led, with others, the winning campaign to force Bechtel, the powerful US corporation behind the water privatization, to drop its $50 million legal case against the people of Cochabamba. So 12 years later here I still am in Bolivia and happy to be here.

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Article Author: Lynette Yetter

Author of the novel, Lucy Plays Panpipes for Peace. Played panpipes on the opening title credits of the Academy Award Nominated documentary, Recycled Life. A native Californian and SGI Buddhist, Lynette followed the sound of the panpipes to Peru and …

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  • 1 - Carolina

    Feb 02, 2010 at 10:23 pm

    great story...

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