The NATO and U.S.-E.U. Summits / Fighting Cholera in Haiti / Persian Poetry in New York

President Obama heads to the NATO and U.S.-E.U. Summits in Lisbon, Portugal. Learn what the United States is doing to help Haiti battle a cholera outbreak. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton releases a study on religious freedom and discusses the importance of protecting Americans traveling overseas. According to a new report, Asian water supplies are at risk. A top U.S. terrorism official says cooperation among nations has been successful in fighting terrorism. A group of African journalists discuss professional issues. And, in New York City, a museum displays linkages between New York and the Spanish world, while a bar showcases Persian poetry.

Upcoming NATO and EU Summits
President Obama, right, will be attending the 2010 NATO and U.S.-European Union Summits in Lisbon on November 19th and 20th. The meetings are intended to demonstrate the central role of the United States’ relationship with Europe and the U.S.-European capability to meet global challenges.



An “Aggressive Campaign” Against Cholera
U.S. officials promise an “aggressive campaign” to help Haitian authorities fight the spread of cholera in their country through prevention techniques such as providing clean, chlorinated drinking water, oral rehydration therapy, education and additional funding to expand cholera treatment centers.

Religious Freedom and U.S. Foreign Policy
Promoting religious freedom is a core element of U.S. diplomacy, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says in releasing the 2010 Annual Report to Congress on International Religious Freedom.

Protecting Americans Overseas
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton says it is important for the State Department and the American private sector to cooperate on protecting Americans who travel overseas.

Asian Water Supplies at Risk
A new report from the U.S. Agency for International Development outlines steps that can help mitigate the impacts of climate-change-induced glacier melt in the greater Himalayas area.

Nations Team Up Against Terror
Cooperation among nations fighting the global war on terror has been remarkable in the nine years since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, says Ambassador Daniel Benjamin, the State Department’s top counterterrorism official.

African Journalists in the U.S.
African journalists visiting the United States as part of the fifth Edward R. Murrow Program for Journalists have a lot to say about professional standards and freedom of the press as they finished their three-week stay in the United States.

Spanish Connections in NY
This fall, the exhibit “Nueva York (1613-1945),” a collaboration of El Museo Del Barrio and the New-York Historical Society, will document four centuries of cross-cultural influence and cooperation between Latin America and Spain and New York.

In NY, New Persian Poetry
Since beginning five years ago, the Persian Arts Festival in New York has grown to offer music, films and other visual arts as well as literary events. Its audience is “very diverse,” says founder Mona Kayhan, including many people with no personal connection to Iran or Persian culture. At right, Sholeh Wolpé reads aloud from her work at the festival. 

Michelle and Sasha tour Spain in style

Shouts of “Obama” and “guapa,” or beautiful, welcomed Michelle Obama and Sasha Obama, 9, to Marbella, a resort city in southern Spain, Wednesday.

The mother and daughter are enjoying a four-day private stay with family friends at the luxurious five-star Hotel Villa Padierna on the Costa del Sol, where elegant villas blending ancient and modern Spanish style boast mountain views and rates range from $499 to $2,028 a night. On vacations such as these, the Obamas pay for personal expenses while government funds cover the costs of Secret Service agents and the round trip on Air Force Two.

According to news reports, Michelle and Sasha’s vacation includes a meeting with King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia, a visit to the historic cathedral in Granada, a flamenco show and a traditional family trip to a local ice cream parlor.

With Michelle and Sasha en España and Malia away at summer camp, family dog Bo was the only one in town to help President Obama celebrate his birthday Wednesday. Watch a video of Bo boarding Air Force One to join the president on his trip to Chicago—so cute!

A Woman’s Power Fuels an Electrical Company

Masooma Habibi is one of many entrepreneurs in Washington this week for the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship. Habibi is a co-founder of Check Up Co., an electrical engineering consulting business in Afghanistan. She shares managing the business with two other executives.

Kenneth P. Morse is founding managing director of the MIT Entrepreneurship Center. He also teaches at ESADE business school in Spain and the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands.

Masooma Habibi

Masooma Habibi

Masooma Habibi:
My family lived in a refugee camp in Iran when I was born. My father earned only little, so my mother, I and all my brothers and sisters wove carpets to survive. Our hands cracked and bled from the work.

When we returned to Afghanistan in 2008, I had hoped to study at university, but had to postpone my plans to help support my family. Yet, as a woman, I couldn’t get a job in the traditional community of Herat, where we settled. It wasn’t because of Islam – I am a Muslim – but because men look down upon women.

When all doors shut for me, Allah helped me.

From Herat, I went to Kabul and learned from people there of an international business-plan competition. The experience gave me self-confidence that many Afghan women, who are frequently ridiculed, lack.

I knew that no electrical power was a major issue in the country, so with my two brothers I started a firm providing consulting services in electrical engineering. It is called Check Up Company. Check Up provides consulting services to large customers, including international companies, and employs 22 people. We haven’t broken even yet, but eventually we want to be the Number 1 power company in Afghanistan and create more jobs.

At the beginning, we didn’t have money and were hampered by Afghani businessmen who didn’t want to work with me. But I have a strong will to achieve something better for myself, my community and my country. Today I am 23 and co-run Check Up with three male executives. I study international trade at the Dunya Institute of Higher Education. I run a nonprofit called My Hope, which aims to create jobs for 1,000 women in the provinces and help their children in the process.

My dream is to see fewer children with hands bleeding from weaving.

See also Habbibi’s profile.

Kenneth P. Morse

Kenneth P. Morse

Kenneth P. Morse:
Throughout the Middle East and South Asia, outstanding women such as Masooma see entrepreneurship as a great way forward.

Over the last five years, roughly 20 percent of the startup chief executives I have trained in Pakistan, Jordan, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia were women. By contrast, less than 1 percent of my trainees in the Netherlands were female. (My experience is that women In the Middle East are smarter, harder working, more focused and more effective than their peers in parts of the Western world.)

In Pakistan and the Pan-Arab region, the MIT enterprise forum’s business acceleration contest took off like a rocket because entrepreneurship is a message of hope for creating jobs and accelerating development. Entrepreneurs want to have the best possible people on their teams, so it is no surprise that all the finalist teams in each of the last three years have included women.

For entrepreneurs there is no glass ceiling. Although in some places, women can be hampered by prejudice, they will do well starting businesses in garages no matter where they are.

But they need more than a garage and money to get their businesses off the ground on a proper footing. Angel investor networks bring access to markets, management know-how and assistance in recruiting top-notch staff and customers.

In the developing world, the lack of technology infrastructure can be an impediment. The situation could improve if governments and large companies were more likely to buy from startups. It’s very helpful to develop an “ecosystem” that supports entrepreneurship by serving as a customer: Startups need customers more than funding.

Must Be Something Else We Say, Somehow to Defend this Place

(I’m currently listening to “The Soft Parade” by The Doors)

Bienvenidos from Spain!  Well, more accurately, I should say “Benvinguts,” because I’m in Catalonya and Catalan is the primary language here.

If you studied Spanish, you will find when talking with locals in places such as Barcelona and Girona and listening to the radio and television, your language skills may seem a little “off.” For example, “chocolate” on a menu will say “xiocolate”.

Catalan children study Spanish only two hours a week, “and all the time Catalan,” explained an employee at my Barcelona hotel.  She was born a native Spanish speaker in Argentina, but had to learn Catalan in order to get around.  Under General Franco’s rule, the language was officially banned, “but people still spoke it,” she said.

The situation got me thinking about federalism, and how much having a different language and culture can lend themselves to the desire for self rule.  Barcelona hosts the Catalonian parliament, and the Catalan flag flies alongside the Spanish flag, or in some cases, separately.

But opinion polls suggest the relative autonomy Catalonya enjoys since the end of military rule in 1978 is sufficient.  Most (51 percent) express satisfaction with the status quo and only five percent want full independence from the government in Madrid.  After all, there are economic benefits to being part of Spain.

Are there lessons here for some national liberation movements and national unity advocates alike?  From my admittedly limited viewpoint, it seems a delicate balance has been struck between Catalonya and the rest of Spain that preserves the uniqueness of the region.