Call to Action

It’s easy to walk through the first world unaware of the struggles of those across the sea. Our shopping malls, grocery stores, and public education keep us satisfied that the world is at equilibrium. If we have so many resources at our finger tips how could it be that anyone in the world is going out with food, water, or toilets?

And then one day it hits you – the world is at a critical imbalance. The abundance we have in the U.S. is the devastating scarcity abroad. At that moment you realize you can no longer stand idly by while others in the world suffer. This is your call to action.



For me, I always knew I wanted to help people. I even had the foresight in high school to know I wanted to go into nonprofit management; however, I was only passively taking action. I would volunteer at galas, vote on Election Day, and buy Tom Shoes.

Then, in my senior year in college, I took a class called Service and Social Justice. The class was designed so to give us real world experience through volunteer work while we learned about social justice in the classroom. It was here that I learned more than I ever thought there was to know about the pervasiveness of systematic oppression.

Poverty is not an accident. Race and gender are socially constructed for no other purpose than to separate “us” from “them”? We use this system of us vs. them to decide who is “worthy” of wealth and success. 

This was my call to action.

It was then that I realized if I really wanted to help people it was going to take more than passive action. In that moment I knew I needed to make my all decisions and habits contribute to the betterment of the world.


That thought has led me to the Oxfam Action Corps, where I now spend my time working to right the wrongs of poverty, hunger, and injustice.