Monday 20 February 2017

My Model United Nations Story...........so far

"The purpose of our lives is to be happy".

Dalai Lama

When we are younger, there is undoubtedly  pressure to conform,  to behave a certain way,  to hang out with the right people.  But as we get older, or at least as I do, those pressures seem to become less and less.  It is not that those pressures are no longer there, it is that I simply do not feel a need to live up to them.  My current involvement with Model United Nations is a case in point.  Here I am, going to regular Tuesday night meetings with a bunch of students, a few years after I have graduated.  And then on some weekends I trot off to some city to pretend to be a country at a conference  for a weekend and if I am lucky I get an award for it.  The path I have chosen is an unusual one.  But it is one I cherish.

My first year of involvement with Model United Nations did not start off on an especially exciting note.  For one it was clear that the current President at the Bristol club clearly did not like me.  I happily reciprocated this attitude by choosing to play the small island nation of Tuvalu every week.  We could of been discussing the Syrian Civil War and I would choose to be Tuvalu just to annoy her.  MUN conferences were very weakly advertised so I went to my first one at UCL.  To be honest I wasn't overly impressed.  I was Togo on the UN Security Council and we discussed drug trafficking.  Togo is too small and poor to have much of a drugs problem.

I was starting to wonder what the big deal was about MUN conferences when I went to the Bath MUN conference of 2014.  I was Egypt on the Disarmament Committee where the main topic that was being discussed was nuclear disarmament.  Egypt didn't have much to say on the matter.  Egypt's nuclear ambitions pretty much died when Israeli intelligence assassinated all of it's missile scientists many years ago.  Early on, the debate seemed to sway towards the established nuclear powers who talked down the rest of us, literally (they were on the higher seats in the lecture theatre) and in terms of tone.  They dictated what they wanted, pretty much their continued dominance of nuclear matters and then went out of the room for a smugly congratulatory smoke break.  In the last hour a delegate arrived who helped kindle my love affair with Model United Nations.  He had a cheeky grin and he was here as Pakistan.  He asked me if I wanted to wipe the smile off the faces of the nuclear powers.  I nodded in approval and watched with wonder as he darted around the room with some furious lobbying.  In no time at all he came back an sat next to me rubbing his hands with glee.   When it came to voting time I could see why he was so happy.  One clause after the other we shredded the resolution that was dictated to us by the nuclear powers.  The developing world cheered at it's successful rebellion.
At the end of my Masters degree I watched the changing of the guard as the despised President of our Model United Nations Society left.  As I turned to leave the door the new President, Mark, asked me what I would do upon my graduation and whether I would still attend the club sessions.  I expressed doubt, after all I was no longer a student and now a mere civilian.  Mark replied that I should consider coming back to MUN and if I did I would be most welcome.   Something touched me about what he said.  I thought back to the strange little debates on a Tuesday evening in a cold room of the University of Bristol's Students Union and of course of that eye opening encounter with the delegate of Pakistan.  I wanted to stay, and so I did.

My civilian career in Model United Nations is when it really took off for me.  One of my first conferences after graduation was Reading MUN.  On this I was Russia on the Security Council and we were discussing Syria.  Needless to say things got heated very quickly.  I wielded my veto like a serial killer wields a bloody machete in a horror film.  I met Western horror with standard Russian Government lack of concern and disdain.  I even got to make a guy's life hell who was deliberately rude to me before sessions began.  All in all I was having a lot of fun.  It was also a fulfilling conference on a personal level since I met a good friend of mine who will now be a Stag Do attendee and friends from Israel and Palestine on the same committee.  The formula appeared to be set; dead end job during the week and vulgar displays of power at the weekend.

My time with MUN became a big confidence booster when I started to win awards at conferences.  The first time I did was during one of my most emotional MUN battles.  This was at the Bath conference a few years ago when I was New Zealand on the Historical Security Council where we were discussing the 1994 Rwandan Genocide and the Bosnian War.  I felt determined to make this performance a spirited one so I invested in purchasing the book "Shake Hands with the Devil" by Romeo Dallaire, the former UN Force Commander of the UN mission.  While this book was incredibly helpful for debate research it was extremely harrowing.  Dallaire, who had a nervous breakdown after the mission, threw all of his tortured guilt and anger at the UN hierarchy into the pages he wrote.  It was impossible to not get emotionally invested.  So I was pretty hyped up when it came to the actual debate, since New Zealand was one of the few countries who at the time who wanted to intervene to stop the killing.  The next debate was interesting too with a sinister visiting speaker from the Republic of Srpska claiming to have not ethnically cleansed any of their Muslim citizens, who seemed to have vanished.  "You can't make us prosecute our generals and politicians!" they cried.  "What kind of country does that?" she wailed.  "Germany", I responded.

The debates can get especially emotionally exhausting if you are playing a country whose views you are completely opposed to your own.  I remember the eyes boring into me with discomfort and alarm when as the Pakistani representative (always a troublemaker it seems) I announced to the Human Rights Council at Belfast MUN that all gay people are basically born criminals.  At a recent debate I felt pretty dirty inside articulating Russia's views in the South Sudanese War.  This basically cast me as a merchant of death with a veto preventing an arms embargo at all cost.  My political brief prevented me from admitting that I was arming pretty much everyone in the region including the parties to the conflict and would probably ignore any arms embargoes if any were set up anyway.  At the same time a very confident and determined British delegate called me on pretty much all of the bloody lies I was spreading.  I had maximum respect for him and yet my position made me root for the bad guy in this Blofeld versus Bond scenario.  This was also the first time after years of trying that I won a Best Delegate award at UCL MUN, which meant a lot.

But winning isn't everything and it usually takes losing to remind people of that.  My winning streak this year came to an abrupt pause at South West MUN.  I admit my ego was riding high at this point.  I had expected to walk away with something, but stiff competition prevented me from doing so.  Despite walking away empty handed awards wise I had a fun weekend and yet again met some lovely people.

Not winning at South West MUN made me reflect on my unusual situation philosophically.  Here I am, a graduate, some years older than my colleagues due to my large study gap between my respective degrees.  I tend to use MUN conference weekends as an escape from whatever humdrum job I tend to have.  I reflected on whether I should act my age, but then I remember a piece of advice my soon -to-be wife gave to me; "life is too short for you not to do things you enjoy".  I also wondered about how I used to attend clubs during my undergraduate degree in which , no matter how hard I tried, I never felt accepted.  I never felt that way at MUN, there this strange wanderer has always been welcomed.  And my rude interruption in my winning streak taught me something else, despite my MUN experience I still have much to learn.  But I am fine with that.  My philosophical musings also revealed something interesting and slightly disturbing; that I tend to win awards when representing illiberal countries.  Does that mean if I represent the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) I can go the distance?  Well there is only one way to find out I suppose.


And so I carry on with my rock and roll time with Model United Nations.  My weekends going to conferences have a certain rhythm.  I come to some interesting (usually) city or town, find vital utilities like a Wetherspoons or late night take-away outlets and then go in search of my lodgings.  Belfast is probably the most interesting city I went to with interesting tours of former paramilitary occupied areas, and yes a Wetherspoons.  My lodgings tend to vary from hostels of varying quality to Airbnb rooms with similar hazards, although at the last one I was spoiled rotten by my hosts.  I usually walk into conference each morning listening to my music to make me determined, or angry up my blood if I am playing a particularly hard-line or brutal country.  Then there are the debates which are such a hive of activity that ours go by feeling like minutes.  But the traditional farewell at the end of MUN conferences is one thing that I find the most touching.  Traditionally delegates write messages of congratulations or good wishes on their colleagues' country placards. That way in the future one can look back on these messages and smile.  I have kept most of my placards and yes they do still keep me smiling.