Sunday, February 19, 2012

Adam Swartzbaugh at Kenyon


Adam Swartzbaugh delivered a presentation this week on his work with the GENESIS Network and the US Army.

From The Kenyon Collegian:
Swartzbaugh started the GENESIS Network (which stands for Global Empowerment Networking to Enlighten Social Improvement and Sustainability) after doing relief work with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Thailand. His sister, Lauren Swartzbaugh, explained that the trip went longer than expected. "His stint was going to be brief, but he ended up falling in love with the people and was inspired by the level of community there," she said. "He was there for over a year, and over the course of the year you end up seeing a lot of things you wouldn't see. [Thailand is] one of the epicenters of [child prostitution], and that angered him to the point where he came back a different person, saying, ‘There has to be something I can do.'"

The GENESIS branch in Thailand, Kid Launch, has built three schools and currently educates 300 students, according to Lauren Swartzbaugh. The organization also just received a grant from the Australian Embassy for $17,000, which "is exciting because it helps us break ground for a new school in Thailand. … The most motivating factor [for our volunteers] is that success is measured in terms of schools built, or kids helped, and quite honestly their lives are saved because of it," Lauren Swartzbaugh said.

One of her brother's best qualities is his ability to inspire others, Lauren Swartzbaugh said. "After a conversation with him, you find yourself walking away all giddy and excited to make something impossible happen," she said. "He is truly one of the most remarkable human beings I've ever met, and I've traveled a bit and met some pretty profound people, but he takes the cake."

The title of Swartzbaugh's talk is "Getting into the Right Kind of Trouble and Back Out Again," apt for someone so young who has done so much. "This month I'm jumping out of planes and training with Italian special forces, in a couple months I'll be in Thailand building a school and in a couple after that I'll be in Afghanistan conducting long-range surveillance operations to disable an insurgent network," Swartzbaugh said in an email. "After that, who knows? We can change the world in any way we see fit — taking the first step and tripping a couple times is a part of the process. That's the message I hope to convey."
Video of the event will be available shortly.

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