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One man’s systematic approach to building a healthy society — molded from an idea as old as mankind — may be the one thing that bring us all together.

Social security

One man’s systematic approach to building a healthy society — molded from an idea as old as mankind — may be the one thing that bring us all together.

Mack McCarter ’67 (MDiv ’71) had an idea. It stole his sleep and occupied his days like a virus. For decades he planned and pondered, and slowly his head wrapped around the weight on his shoulders.

His idea centered on a simple question: How many people do you know on your block?

Probably not many. Most of us don’t. We move about and leave behind relationships that seem unimportant — the postman, the store clerk, the kid on the street who used to walk our dog.

You may think it doesn’t matter. But all this disconnectedness, while seemingly innocuous, is an ominous sign. Like global warming, rising crime and decaying neighborhoods, it’s telling us we need to do something.

Simple ideas are famous for being dismissed. They just seem too simple. McCarter’s idea was so straightforward, it’s astounding that we haven’t thought much about it.

He says we just need to make friends. And since we tend to hide in our homes, this former pastor with a permanent smile has built a system to help us reconnect. An approach to creating social networks that benefit every member. A system unconnected to government, religious or business interests — but capable of tapping the resources of each. Something that ignores economic, racial and cultural walls and throws open doors.

McCarter’s make-friends concept for building community has the potential to quench a number of burning issues, from crime and poverty to broken families to disenfranchisement to the pervasive belief that we live in a dangerous world.

Hard to believe one idea might have such a far-reaching impact. But look closely, and you’ll see that McCarter’s system, called Community Renewal, is already making a big difference in a million tiny ways. Allendale garden

Imagine a neighborhood where you know something about almost everyone. Where, (if you lived in the Shreveport, La., Allendale neighborhood) you know Rosie Chaffold (left). She’s the 72-year-old grandmother who turned a drug-heavy corner into the neighborhood garden. And since you know Rosie, you know just about everybody else. row houses

Rosie is only one of many in this 10-block area who seem to know everyone; the ones who somehow tie the whole community together. Yet 10 years ago this small, poverty-ridden enclave — punctuated by decrepit 1930s-era row houses – was the kind of neighborhood taxis refused to visit.

That was before Mack’s idea changed everything.

History Doesn’t Have to Repeat

Historian Arnold Toynbee identified 33 major civilizations. He noted that throughout human history, civilizations have developed, declined, decayed and collapsed. Thirty-two are gone; we are living in the 33rd — the Western European civilization, the first to spread worldwide. But we do not have to repeat history. “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder,” Toynbee said.

McCarter is a student of Toynbee. And Lewis Mumford, the respected social analyst who wrote extensively about civilization. But the man McCarter “walked with” physically and spiritually for 17 years, was D. Elton Trueblood, the 20th century author, educator, philosopher and theologian who taught that society needs a broadly based ecumenical “fellowship of the committed.”

Trueblood and the others sparked a refrain in McCarter’s head as he sought solutions for social disintegration: Only the village has never failed.

Myriad models have come and gone, but the village has remained constant. Why? Because it’s based on a system of relationships, he realized. Close and personal relationships. The sort that allow minds to come together to make good things happen.

Being the save-the-world sort that he is, McCarter’s mind moved to recreating the village within our cities in a systematic, methodical way. He has spent decades just thinking about it and 12 years refining the model, but the end product looks promising.

“Our thesis was this: All society is a system of relationships — it has a relational foundation. We call that foundation social capital. It is a measure of how people are connected together,” McCarter said, characteristically passing on credit by including just about everyone he knows (which is a lot of people), for the 1994 launch of the program he now heads — Shreveport-Bossier Community Renewal.

His thesis, at its most basic, asks, How many people do you know and care about? And how many people do they know and care about?

Today that thesis is a thriving model of community renewal in Louisiana that is quietly exploding onto the world’s stage. With the creation last fall of Africa Community Renewal in Cameroon and the spring announcement of the birth of Greater New Orleans Community Renewal, McCarter’s idea is achieving what he hoped — being embraced by nearly everyone who encounters it.

Shreveport-Bossier Community Renewal (SBCR), which has a $2.5 million annual operating budget and 29 employees, involves nearly 18,000 residents, not including a host of volunteers from universities and communities around the country who come to learn. Eight neighborhood centers, known as Friendship Houses, have injected hope into six Shreveport communities. In the past four years, the program has spread to Austin; Abilene; Baton Rouge, La.; Knoxville, Tenn.; five villages in Cameroon, Africa; and now New Orleans.

A city-block-sized National Center for Community Renewal, which will be the city’s first environmentally friendly “green” building, is under development in downtown Shreveport. When finished, community leaders from around the world will come for training and certification in community renewal.

A partnership with Infopoverty, a communications technology program in a charter office within the United Nations, was signed this year designating SBCR a community-building model for the world. At an international Infopoverty conference on the New Village at the U.N. in April, it was announced that a remote community in Cameroon will be the inaugural site for the merging of Infopoverty’s communications technology and McCarter’s social technology.

Since 1996 more than $6 million in personnel, programs and capital has flooded Shreveport-Bossier’s most needy neighborhoods. A partnership with the Fuller Center for Housing, run by Habitat for Humanity founder Millard Fuller, is bringing a sea of volunteers from around the country to build 60 homes for Katrina evacuees in the Allendale neighborhood. Corporate partners like 84 Lumber and Jeldwen donated truckloads of building materials for a Friendship House in the Queensboro Neighborhood.

City officials are on board, as are pastors, service organizations and other nonprofits. The program has been recognized by the Pew Partnership for Civic Change as being a “Solution for America,” and the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research gave SBCR its Social Entrepreneurship Award in 2005. Last year the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University produced a comprehensive case study on SBCR, giving it the seal of approval.

Pretty good showing for such a simple idea.

Not Just Another Program

McCarter is fond of analogies. He likens community renewal to cleaning a dirty swimming pool — we can’t clean it one cup at a time; we need an industrial filter.

To fix a disintegrating society, he said, a similar system is needed — one that can pull entire communities through a “filter” that will systematically develop relationships across every strata.

“Friendship is the most powerful force of transformation in the universe and the agent through which power is transferred and appropriated,” he said. “So we’re measurably, concretely, scientifically and methodically growing this foundation by building friendships.”

Sometimes the naturally optimistic McCarter sounds more like a professor than the former preacher that he is, but not when he’s out making friends. And certainly not in 1991 when he and wife Judy Keator McCarter ’67 left the Texas congregation he led and moved (with three years of financial backing from a friend) to their hometown of Shreveport, to see if his long-percolating “solution” would work in the real world.

Today he admits he was terrified the first time he stepped into the dangerous Allendale neighborhood and knocked on a door. “Hi, I’m Mack McCarter, and I’m here to be your friend,” he announced to the startled resident. He went back to Allendale every Saturday morning at 10:30 for months and knocked on doors. Eventually, people began to wait for him on their porches.

“It was an astonishing transformation for me,” he recalled. “I was set free by being a friend. And I realized, What if we can do this where we live, too?”

That moment was the dawning of McCarter’s revolution against “societal breakdown.”

“Of the 300,000 people in Shreveport-Bossier, about 1,000 want to hurt each other. The rest want to help each other,” he noted. “Overwhelmingly, our base is made up of people who care for other people. But the city can still collapse, because the key is not individual acts of caring; the key is connecting caring people.

“This is the reality of every city in the world. The vast majority are caring. But we are invisible to each other.”

So, McCarter reasons, practicing intentional acts to develop friendships can connect caring people.

“We are here to make visible what is already there,” he said of SBCR. “Then we help in the connection.”

One. Two. Three.

The organizational side of SBCR consists of three components: the We Care Team, Haven Houses and Friendship Houses.

The first level, the We Care Team, is more than 16,000 strong in Shreveport-Bossier. Residents simply fill out a card and identify themselves as “a caring person.” They get a small We Care button and sticker for their car. They are now a visible part of the caring majority. SBCR hopes to have 50,000 signed up by 2007.

Haven House utilizes volunteer block leaders who agree to spend one hour, three weeks a month getting to know the people on their block. They get a wooden We Care sign to put out front. Several times a year the Haven House leaders meet to chat and swap ideas. Shreveport now sports nearly 700 signs in yards representing both ends of the economic strata and everything between.

Wade Shemwell is a Haven House leader. Until he got involved, he said he felt alone in the neighborhood he grew up in. “I could come and go, and I saw people and never knew their names. My neighbors later said they had the same feeling. It was almost like we thought we needed permission to go out and meet each other.”

Now the sense of isolation is gone. “I definitely feel safer in my neighborhood because I know that we each care for each other and look out for each other,” he said. “When I walk through the neighborhood with my dog, Cody, people know what my name is, and we stop and talk like old friends.”

Friendship Houses, also known as “Internal Care Units” or ICUs, are probably the most dramatic aspect of the program and certainly require the greatest resources. But that also raises the rewards. mpm with kids

Two of SBCR’s eight Friendship Houses are in Allendale, and they are the center of the 10-block community. A colorful playground rests beside one. Each is home to a family hired by SBCR to be ambassadors to the community. They live in half of the first floor. A large community room fills the other half   of the house. With a small kitchen and half-bath, the spacious area is occupied daily by teens, children and adults from the neighborhood. After-school programs, adult education classes and friendly visits from church groups, health care workers, firemen and police keep the lights on long into the night.

McCarter compares the Friendship Houses to a landing pad — a place for service organizations to connect with those who need help.

“We train and send families in the neighborhood to build MERs (mutually enhancing relationships),” he said. “We first have to win trust, so we start by serving the children and youth. Eventually those relationships are transformed into a means for a massive delivery system to begin to occur.”

kidsShreveport has the nation’s highest infant mortality rate. Forty percent of the residents are under served medically — sometimes because they don’t know how to get to a doctor. And, until now, health care workers didn’t know how to get into the impoverished neighborhoods.

“Now they have a place to land — at our Friendship Houses,” McCarter said. “We are the intercession. We hook the two ends together.”

The Friendship House is the town square — the place where people come together to solve problems and, well, to care for each other. When that happens, caring acts tend to grow exponentially and everyone is better for it. Just like in a village.

Shreveport Mayor Keith Hightower is amazed by what’s happened in his city.

“We’ve seen the crime rates change dramatically,” he said. “If a group had come into one of these neighborhoods 10 years ago and left the lumber for a house out overnight, it might not be there in the morning. But there’s such respect now from the neighbors that when one of these is going up, they are the security guards. There are no problems.”

It’s been good to have a group outside the government do the heavy lifting, Hightower said. “Mack’s been able to rally the neighbors, rally the churches, rally the community groups to get something done. And he’s done it in neighborhood after neighborhood.

“It’s a new model not only for this community, but hopefully for the country and possibly the world.”

Brothers

Mack in AfricaA continent away, five African chiefs, representing 150,000 people worldwide, are building a We Care Team. Haven House leaders soon will be trained, and plans for a Friendship House are underway.

In April the chiefs spent a week in Louisiana, seeing how the program works. Allendale threw a block party, complete with music and dancing and an abundance of food, which drew more than 300 residents.

Through a translator, Chief Ngatsi Celestin, speaking for all five chiefs, told those gathered they are now “brother and sister.”

“We are in your community because you and we now form one family,” he said to loud applause. “We believe in friendship. We believe in the community of people, and we believe in a world where life is better for every human being.”

chiefNgatsi, leader of the Bawouwoua tribe, said in a deep, purposeful voice that his people now call their five villages Doumbouo, which in their traditional language means a meeting place; where people come together.

“It’s a place to think about solutions for the community, to share our joy and our sorrow,” he said. “We have the same objectives as you, and that’s why we believe the model of community renewal here in Shreveport can be replicated in our community. Our population is ready to make this happen over there.”

It’s a population rich in history and ritual born centuries ago. In Duombouo, a chief is the keeper of tradition and, as such, is most revered. Valentin Miafo-Donfack, a member of one of the tribes and SBCR’s director of international relations, said that when the chiefs boarded the plane in the capital city, Yaoundi, 10,000 people came to see them off. The majority traveled more than 300 miles to be there.

On the plane, the chiefs carried a traditional gift for the residents of Allendale. During his speech at the block party, Ngatsi held up a switch of leaves hanging on a stalk. The roots drooped below. Street party

“We the five chiefs of Duombouo, on behalf of the entire community of Duombouo, would like to plant in Shreveport this plant,” he said. “In our tradition, this is the tree of peace. It is a symbol of love and a symbol of peace. We would like to see this grow in Shreveport and extend its peace throughout the world.”

He then walked down the steps and poked a hole in a small garden with his elaborately carved chieftain’s staff. In it he placed the Peace Plant, and two children packed dirt around. Someone poured a bottle of water on it.

Ngatsi said this tree never dies.

Albert Schweitzer said the more moral a man is, the more sophisticated he is, not the more tools he has. McCarter says we’ve been measuring society by the advance of technology, not by the advance of humanity.

“We need to have skills to live together,” he said. “And we need to understand those skills, measure those skills and grow those skills.”

As McCarter watched the Allendale neighbors crowd around the chiefs, he noted that even though there are millions of caring people, we haven’t figured out how to stop the disintegration.

“You have to connect caring people,” he said. “That’s the critical equation.”

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