I read this story and I ask
myself if people like this still exist. Read and …be inspired I guess!
Source: news.bbc.co.uk
Meet the Uruguayan president –
who lives on a ramshackle farm and gives away most of his pay.
Jose Mujica’s lifestyle clearly
differs sharply from that of most other world leaders.
President Mujica has shunned the
luxurious house that the Uruguayan state provides for its leaders and opted to
stay at his wife’s farmhouse, off a dirt road outside the capital, Montevideo.
Laundry is strung outside the
house. The water comes from a well in a yard, overgrown with weeds. Only two
police officers and Manuela, a three-legged dog, keep watch outside.
The president and his wife work
the land themselves, growing flowers.
This austere lifestyle – and the
fact that Mujica donates about 90% of his monthly salary, equivalent to $12,000
(£7,500), to charity – has led him to be labelled the poorest president in the
world.
In 2010, his annual personal
wealth declaration – mandatory for officials in Uruguay – was $1,800 (£1,100),
the value of his 1987 Volkswagen Beetle.
This year, he added half of his
wife’s assets – land, tractors and a house – reaching $215,000 (£135,000).
That’s still only about
two-thirds of Vice-President Danilo Astori’s declared wealth, and a third of
the figure declared by Mujica’s predecessor as president, Tabare Vasquez.
“I may appear to be an eccentric
old man … But this is a free choice.”
His charitable donations – which
benefit poor people and small entrepreneurs – mean his salary is roughly in
line with the average Uruguayan income of $775 (£485) a month.
Elected in 2009, Mujica spent the
1960s and 1970s as part of the Uruguayan guerrilla Tupamaros, a leftist armed
group inspired by the Cuban revolution.
He was shot six times and spent
14 years in jail. Most of his detention was spent in harsh conditions and
isolation, until he was freed in 1985 when Uruguay returned to democracy.
Those years in jail, Mujica says,
helped shape his outlook on life.
“I’m called ‘the poorest
president’, but I don’t feel poor. Poor people are those who only work to try
to keep an expensive lifestyle, and always want more and more,” he says.
“This is a matter of freedom. If
you don’t have many possessions then you don’t need to work all your life like
a slave to sustain them, and therefore you have more time for yourself,” he
says.
The Uruguayan leader made a
similar point when he addressed the Rio+20 summit in June this year: “We’ve
been talking all afternoon about sustainable development. To get the masses out
of poverty.
“But what are we thinking? Do we
want the model of development and consumption of the rich countries? I ask you
now: what would happen to this planet if Indians would have the same proportion
of cars per household than Germans? How much oxygen would we have left?
#Dear reader abi, what do you think?
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