Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
PovertyCure’ and ‘Call of the Entrepreneur’ Screened to Central and Eastern Europeans
PovertyCure’ and ‘Call of the Entrepreneur’ Screened to Central and Eastern Europeans
Jan 30, 2026 7:17 AM

Rome Office director Kishore Jayabalan presents PoveryCure at the Sorrento “Liberty Camp”

On October 8-9, the director of Acton’s Rome office, Kishore Jayabalan, and its operations manager, Michael Severance, traveled to southern Italy to present PovertyCure and The Call of the Entrepreneur, the original and latest of the Institute’s popular educational DVD films.

About thirty university students and young business professionals gathered near the resort town of Sorrento to attend a week-long “Liberty Camp”, organized by Glenn Cripe of the Phoenix-based Language of Liberty Institute and co-sponsored by the Freedom and Entrepreneurship Foundation whose founder, Jacek Spendel, is a two-time Acton University alumnus. Liberty Camp is a traveling educational course, recruiting participants mainly from Eastern and Central European youth. The classical liberal curriculum in conducted entirely in English and focuses seminars on the foundations of economic and political liberty.

Countries represented at the Liberty Camp in Sorrento included the Ukraine, Albania, Poland, Georgia, Russia, Armenia, Hungary and the Czech Republic.

Led by San Francisco’s charismatic IT entrepreneur and TEDx speaker, John Chisholm, the camp included workshops on entrepreneurship as a calling and lifestyle with practical seminars on how to launch panies and leverageviable assets. Acton’s inspiring films were shown between Chisholm’s seminars.

Chisholm taught his STAARRS system (Skills, Technologies, Assets, Achievements, Relationships, Reputation, [Inner] Strengths) as his core counsel on discerning and setting up new business ventures while also highlighting chapters from his ingbookUnleash Your Inner Business.

Kishore Jayabalan hosted and guided discussion on the fourth episode of PovertyCure “Circles of Exchange”, the most technical, economically speaking, of the 6-part DVD series.

In this particular episode, the theme of exclusion mercial exchange and networks of productivity is discussed as a major hindrance to economic development in poor nations. As the president of Partners Worldwide,Doug Seebeck, says in this episode: We can teach a men how to fish and they eat for a lifetime; the problem is not that they “don’t know how to fish…[but that] they don’t have access to the pond.”

Camp attendees from former Soviet-bloc countries talked about the tragic effects of economic isolation in their own regions and the need to have freer, less mercial exchange in Europe and in overseas tradeto alleviate stagnation in their homelands. Many said they related best to the part about Ireland (once known as the “sick man of Europe”) whose Celtic Tiger success story echoed South Korea’s miraculous growth in Asia. This was in direct contrast to Nicaragua which, while demographically and economically identical to Ireland only 60 years ago, has never experienced serious exponential growth because of its policies of protectionism.

“We have the facts on our side”, Jayabalan told the participants, reinforcing the point that countries which escheweconomic isolation develop at the fastest rates.

Michael Severance screened the Call of the Entrepreneur in its entirety and led a post-viewing seminar on virtue, vocation and entrepreneurship. Reaction mostly centered on the inspiring perseverance and “e-variables” of faith and brainy innovation entrepreneurs must show while facingextremely difficult circumstances.

Attendees said they particularly appreciated Jimmy Lai’s story of risk and noble determination as an escapee from Maoist China, who later became one of Hong Kong’s most successful magnates in the media and fashion industries. Finally, much discussion ensued on why many religious leaders tend to demonize or at least do not encourage business as a serious vocation and how a sense of calling mitigates risk aversion, strengthens perseverance and inspires creativity.

The PovertyCure DVD series began its roll out in Rome on September 29-30 with a private screening forseminarians and staff of the Pontifical Urban College, the Vatican’s seminary for developing world nations. The Call of the Entrepreneur, released internationally in 2008, has shown numerous times in Romeand throughout Europe.

The Call of the Entrepreneur“has proved to have long shelf-life”, said Severance, “due to its timeless and ever-urgent appeal in support of the vocation to business leadership, economic freedom, and innovation to reignite struggling economies across the world.”

“The fact it has screened and continues to screen in so many countries, and in so many languages in the last 7 years really speaks for itself”, he said.

Plans for further European screenings of the Institute’s two films are ongoing and continue to gather interest as clashes over labor and regulation e to a height in the crisis-strickenOld Continent. Momentum is also building on Pope Francis’s exhortationthat we must show concern for the poor and struggling workers, butmust not treat them as mere “objects” ofour charity andpublic welfare recipients, but as dignified “subjects” who can be creative protagonists of their own destinies.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Fighting Human Trafficking Through Technology
For those fighting human trafficking, the battle is frustrating. Traffickers are typically one step ahead of law enforcement, and they are quite tech-savvy. Microsoft, along with other panies, is trying to change that. According to Microsoft’s A. T. Ball: Human trafficking is one of the largest, best-organized and most profitable types of crime, ranking behind only the illegal weapons and drug trades. It violates numerous national and international laws and has ensnared more than 25 million people around the world....
How Much Profit Do You Think Corporations Earn?
“Someday this will all be yours,” I said, waving my hand across the aisles of the Piggly Wiggly. I was trying to ingratiate myself with my boss, the general manager for the biggest grocery store in Clarksville, Texas. He just smirked and shook his head. “For every dollar in sales, how much do you think this stores earns in profit?” At the time I was taking high school economics and considered myself something of a financial savant because I knew...
How Minimum Wage Laws Are Like Geocentrism
Geocentrism was the belief that the sun, the planets, and all the stars revolve around the Earth. The alternative view—heliocentricism—had been around since the 3 BC but was not taken seriously until the 16th century AD. What seems obvious to us now was a matter of heated debated for almost two thousand years. EconomistDon Boudreaux says theminimum-wage debate in economics is rather like the reverse of this debate that took place centuries ago among astronomers. In astronomy, the standard, mistaken...
David Cameron’s Easter Message
David Cameron, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, had an Easter message for the British people. It is worth sharing. ...
Pizza, Pluralism, and the Rise of the Conformity Mob
Amidst the hubbub surrounding Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act, the owners of Memories Pizza, a local family-owned restaurant, have been the first to bear the wrath of the latest conformity mob. We knew e, of course. “They” being fresh off the sport of strong-arming boutique bakeries and shuttering the shop doors of grandmother florists(all in the name of “social justice,” mind you). The outrage is rather predictable these days, and not just on issuesas hot and contentious as this. pany...
Music Box: A Parable on Finding Joy at Work (and in Life)
When struggling with “work that wounds”— work that’s “cross-bearing, self-denying, and life-sacrificing,” as Lester DeKoster describes it — we can content ourselves by remembering that God is with us in the workplace and our work has meaning. But althoughthese truths are powerful, God has not left us withonlyhead knowledge andphilosophical upgrades. When we give our lives to Christ and choose a path of transformation and obedience, the fruits of the Spirit will manifest in real and tangible ways, despite our...
The Moral Importance of Profits
Yesterday I noted how Americans tend to overestimate the amount of profit earned by corporations. The actual profit margins are so thin that, as Mark J. Perry points out, for the pany all sales revenue from January 1 to December 7 would go to cover the firm’s expenses for the year, and its sales on roughly the last 24 days of December from December 8 to December 31 would represent its profits. For the other industries displayed in the table...
University Of Hawaii Risks Teen Lives In Abortion ‘Study’
The Kapiolani Medical Center for Women and Children at the University of Hawaii is recruiting teens and women to study the effects of second trimester abortions. Girls as young as 14 are being sought so that researchers can carry out a ‘randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trials,’ to determine the effect of oxytocin’s use on uterine bleeding, meaning that they will either provide or deny intravenous oxytocin to the women. Reports suggest that some doctors are concerned that withholding oxytocin during surgery...
Sustainability and Anarchy
The fossil-fuel sustainability and divestment movements began with colleges and universities. Over the past two years, the movements have gained momentum from faith-based activists intent on stranding oil, coal and natural gas in the ground. At the same time, they’re pressing their munities to endorse impossible fossil fuel reduction goals. Progressives in the sustainability and divestment movements must assume that if Big Oil is brought to heel, then Big Renewable will immediately fill the void. Never mind that there exists...
Video: Rev. Robert A. Sirico Discusses Religion and Demographics on Cavuto
Acton Institute President and Co-Founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico was a guest this afternoon on Your World With Neil Cavuto on the Fox News Channel to discuss new research that indicates declining mitment in the United States and growing Muslim populations worldwide, with the projection that Muslims will outnumber Christians by 2100. The full interview is available via the video player below. ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved