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Hope Over Fate

Fazle Hasan Abed and the Science of Ending Global Poverty

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times called him &ldquo;one of the unsung heroes of modern times.&rdquo; Fazle Hasan Abed was a mild-mannered accountant who may be the most influential man most people have never even heard of. As the founder of BRAC, his work had a profound impact on the lives of millions. A former finance executive with almost no experience in relief aid, he founded BRAC, originally the Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee, in 1972, aiming to help a few thousand war refugees. A half century later, BRAC is by many measures the largest nongovernmental organization in the world&mdash;and by many accounts, the most effective anti-poverty program ever.<br>BRAC seems to stand apart from countless failed development ventures. Its scale is massive, with 100,000 employees reaching more than 100 million people in Asia and Africa. In Bangladesh, where it began, Abed&rsquo;s work gave rise to &ldquo;some of the biggest gains in the basic condition of people&rsquo;s lives ever seen anywhere,&rdquo; according to The Economist. His methods changed the way global policymakers think about poverty. By the time of his death at eighty-three in December 2019, he was revered in international development circles. Yet among the wider public he remained largely unknown. His story has never been told&mdash;until now.<br>Abed avoided the limelight. He thought his own story was of little consequence compared to the millions of women who rose from poverty with BRAC&rsquo;s help, bending the arc of history through their own tenacity and grit. The challenges he faced often seemed insurmountable. Abed&rsquo;s personal life was a tapestry of love and grief&mdash;a lover&rsquo;s suicide, a wife who died in his arms. He was a taciturn man with a short temper that erupted on rare occasions. Many of his ventures failed, but Abed persevered. <br>This book is also the biography of an idea&mdash;the idea that hope itself has the power to overcome poverty. &ldquo;For too long, people thought poverty was something ordained by a higher power, as immutable as the sun and the moon,&rdquo; Abed wrote in 2018. His life&rsquo;s mission was to put that myth to rest. This is the story of a man who lived a life of complexity, blemishes and all, driven by the conviction that in the dominion of human lives, hope will ultimately triumph over fate.
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    • Booklist

      June 1, 2022
      MacMillan will move readers with this biography of Fazle Hassan Abed and BRAC, the charitable action organization originally known as the Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee, which Abed founded. As an accountant with a love of language and the arts, Abed became a revolutionary philanthropist after seeing the devastation in the newly formed Bangladesh. Abed, who died in 2019, assisted hundreds of thousands of people through BRAC, eventually expanding the charity to provide aid to a dozen countries in Africa and Asia. MacMillan, an executive with BRAC USA and former speechwriter for Abed, elegantly weaves the inspiring story of BRAC with the tragedy of Abed's personal struggles, creating a compelling picture of a complicated man. Abed's story is undoubtedly an uplifting one, and the author clearly idolizes his subject, which, combined with his talented writing, offers much hope to be found here.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 27, 2022
      This inspirational account credits Fazle Hasan Abed (1936–2019) and his Bangladesh Rehabilitation Assistance Committee, now called BRAC, with helping to “upend the traditions of misery and poverty in Bangladesh.” MacMillan, a director at BRAC USA, traces the organization’s roots to 1970, when Abed, then working as the finance executive at Shell Pakistan, witnessed the devastation a cyclone brought to his native Bangladesh (then known as East Pakistan). At the time of its independence in 1971, Bangladesh was the second poorest nation in the world. “One in four children died before their fifth birthday,” MacMillan notes, but by 2013, the under-five mortality had fallen to 4%. The turnaround came in large part thanks to BRAC’s incentive-based training program, which taught mothers how to mix a home remedy of water, sugar, and salt to treat life-threatening diarrhea. Other BRAC initiatives, based on Abed’s business background and conviction that people need to feel “a sense of self-worth,” included microloans and the creation of small schools where children and adults were taught by someone from their own village. Though the narrative gets bogged down somewhat in the technical details of how Abed built BRAC into one of the largest nongovernmental organizations in the world, what emerges is an exhaustive portrait of advocacy in action. This is a detailed study of how change happens.

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