| U.S.-born
Jiway Tung gets along easily with teenage
boys who previously roamed the streets of
Jakarta or provincial towns as he works
side by side with them on a two-hectare
organic farm in Bogor’s Puncak area.
Aged 13 years on average,
the boys are participating in an organic
farming program designed to help them become
independent persons with the necessary skills
to live in society. They were taken off
the streets by non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) who provide shelter for street children.
“We want to give them the
skill necessary to work as a team member,
take responsibility and make plans. Ere
they learn mathematics, language and computer
skill,” says Jiway, who works fir Boston-based
NGO World Education.
Under the organic farming
program designed by World Education, 27
street children are undergoing training
for six months, which will possibly be extended
for up to a year. Growing up on the streets
of big cities and towns and facing a harsh
life, it required great effort on the part
if the children to adjust to their new situation.
“My palms have abrasions because
I am not used to farming as I grew up in
Jakarta,” saya Jaya, who is being sponsored
in the program by Rumah Kita Foundation,
which provides shelter for street children
in Jakarta.
The cool mountain weather
certainly poses a challenge for Jaya and
the other boys, aside from the tough farming
schedule of 7 a.m. to 12 p.m., followed
by various activities including drama, handicraft-making
and music recitals up to 4 p.m.
Brought to Jakarta when he
was barely six months old by his mother
and father from Sumatra’s Lampung region,
Jaya did not enjoy the warmth of a family
for too long as his father and mother separated
not long after. After his mother’s house
in East Jakarta was demolished, aya has
to face the harsh reality of life at an
all too young age.
“I like being here in this
organic farming program because I love plants.
I hope tp have my own farm somewhere in
Lampung when I finished this program,” says
Jaya.
Jaya and his friends may have
found new hope for the future, which otherwise
had only gloomy prospects. Jiway and his
team are able to rum the program due to
the financial support of not a big multinational
corporation such as Freeport Indonesia or
LG Electronics Indonesia, but fast-growing
serviced-office operator CEO Suite.
Korea-born CEO president Mee
Kim underlines that what matters most are
good intentions and concrete action, not
the amount or appropriated time to start
sharing.
“There will never be a perfect time for
sharing, not if we wait until we have enough
ourselves,” says Mee Kim, whose company
has two serviced office facilities in Jakarta
and is expanding services to China.
Following the worldwide trend
among companies to enhance their role as
part of the community surrounding their
facilities, Indonesian corporations have
also started to experiment with Corporate
Social Responsibility (CSR) programs.
This phenomenon has been welcomed
by NGOs that ware more than willing to help
in the planning and implementation of CSR
projects. Hendro Suwito, communication manager
fo World Vision International – Indonesia,
appreciates this trend.
“The government has very limited
financial and human resources. Meanwhile,
many NGOs in Indonesia cannot implement
significant programs because of very limited
access to financial or other resources.
Growing CSR awareness can play a significant
role in filling these gaps,” says Hendro.
Hendro was touched by Citibank’s
initiative when scores of the bank’s employees
started to regularly teach street children
in Jakarta. Also, he once saw all the employees
of Schneider here calculate how much they
earned in an hour and donate that amount
to a humanitarian program in Papua.
In December last year, the
Matahari Group invited its business partners
to jointly donate funds for social purposes,
Hendro said. They collected a substantial
sum of money and donated it through scores
of charity and development institutions
to help fight poverty and backwardness.
However, a successful and
sustainable CSR program certainly goes beyond
collection donations. In fact, companies
need to do their homework, including carrying
out feasibility studies of projects in terms
of their own resources and expertise.
“When it entails more complex
social-humanitarian initiatives, especially
when the sites are far from the corporations’
offices, it would be much more effective
and efficient to channel the funds through
NGOs working in the targeted areas,” says
Hendro.
Corporations still need to
monitor everything so that implementation
and schedule are carefully followed and
the program has the expected impact on the
community.
Some people are still skeptical
and suspect the motives of corporations
in carrying out such programs. They doubt
whether the programs really benefit the
people, saying most programs tend to serve
as camouflage for the corporations’ darker
activities, such as spoiling the environment
and exploiting workers.
In fact, some giant multinational
mining companies that have bragged about
heir good CSR programs have turned out to
be polluters of rivers and destroyers of
the environment. No wonder some are suspicious
of their CSR programs.
However, well-intentioned
programs that are designed around the understanding
of the community’s needs often prove to
be helpful. Even established NGOs welcome
corporations’ CSR programs and readily assist
in accordance with their respective fields.
“I have no objection to CSR
programs as long as they have clear objectives
and really understand and meet the needs
of the community,” says Jiway, who serves
as the organic farm project manger.
On the side of corporations,
running CSR programs is not only a matter
of carrying out their responsibilities as
good corporate citizens but is also a form
of investment. In the words of then chairman
and representative director of Omron Corporation
Nobuo Tateisi in his book Good Corporate
Citizenship: Community-minded Management
for the 21st Century, it is a way of boosting
a company’s stature within a community and
widening business prospects for the futures.
Then vice president of Honda
Toshikata Amino was quoted by Tateisi in
his book as saying that community activities
are actually something done not for the
community, but for yourself, for you received
as much as you give.
Indeed, far from viewing CSR
programs as simply a costly obligation,
some corporations realize that the programs
benefit their companies. CEO’s Mee Kim says
her team’s life more fulfilling.
“This involvement has also
mad a small difference in someone’s life,”
said Mee Kim.
The CSR program carried out
by Mee Kim through her financial support
and staff’s involvement will certainly boost
the morale of all CEO employees. The awareness
that they work for a socially responsible
company not only gives them a sense of pride
but will also make them loyal to the company.
CEO’s involvement in
organic farming in the company’s CSR can
help other companies realize that CSR is
not just for giant and multinational corporations.
A well-intentioned and sustainable program
may prove to be beneficial for both the
recipient as well as those who are willing
to share their recources.
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