By: Anne Ralte, USAID Senior Advisor

Anne Ralte, aged 10 years old, of Calcutta, West Bengal, India, in a photo sent to her Christian Children’s Fund sponsors, Drs. Sally and Donald Hoople.
I was born in Mizoram (“land of the Mizo people”), a remote, mountainous part of north-eastern India, with our own language and culture. During my early childhood in the 1950’s, we were a marginalized tribal group with most families, like mine, making a living by farming. We lived in simple one-room wooden houses built on stilts along the hill slopes – with no running water or electricity. Our everyday life centered on work in our family rice farm. My mother, older sister and I had the additional burden of fetching water from mountain springs, washing the family laundry in rivers, gathering firewood and cooking. Since there was no public transportation, we walked everywhere – up and down hills and valleys. When I was able to make the four-mile trek, I sometimes joined my older siblings in attending a small missionary school. With no television or radio, our universe revolved around our close-knit community, with occasional stories by those adventurous enough to walk across the border into Myanmar (then known as Burma).
After my father died, when I was five years old, my mother struggled to take care of the farm and the small home bakery that my father had started. Although illiterate, she intuitively knew that for us to do better in life, we would have to be placed in an English-speaking boarding school in Calcutta, West Bengal. In those days, widows automatically lost their social standing in the community, with their role relegated to the upbringing of children and menial duties assigned by in-laws. Traveling outside the community (or having an independent life) was frowned upon by the elders, so her decision led to her being ostracized. Now, forty plus years later, my mother’s vision has become widely accepted.
This is how I ended up in a small school that served the poor with a Title II food aid and a children sponsorship program. The Welland Gouldsmith School, connected to the Old Mission Church, was a charitable institution founded in 1870 to impart European education. My mother was able to get my older sister and myself enrolled by paying a small amount of monthly fees. However, she died about a year after we were enrolled as boarders. My older brother, who stepped in to take care of us at age 16, also died within a year. Fortunately, a family from New York participating in the Christian Children’s Fund sponsorship program took a special interest in me as they were school teachers pursuing doctoral degrees and just like them, I loved to learn. Besides excelling in my studies, I learned to play the piano and violin, and also tried learning the sitar. My early years of trekking up and down the hills of Mizoram prepared me well for competitive track races, basketball and other sports — so my life, while there was deep sadness, was full.
My final years in school were fully immersed in preparing for the Senior Cambridge (later known as the Indian School Certificate) examination, a requirement for entering college. I was the first boarder (i.e., disadvantaged child) that represented my school, finishing in the first division. This brought new opportunities. My sponsors (now my parents) offered to bring me to the U.S. for further studies and be part of their family. I arrived on June 4, 1971. That same day and time, my husband Joe Connors, was at the same airport departing for his Peace Corps assignment, and noticed me. His search for me ended almost eight years later on July 17, 1979, when he amazingly saw me again in the revolving door of Bloomingdales, New York. We became instant friends over a cup of tea. Over the following 32 years, he has witnessed and supported my work in Asia, Africa, and now at USAID/Washington DC.
My USAID work brings me full circle to my humble beginnings — and not a single day passes without me thinking how fortunate I am. Without U.S. food aid, the school could not have fed me and other disadvantaged children, most of us without parents or a stable home. We received bulgur wheat and milk (for our breakfast porridge), milk and bread for our mid-morning snack, and rice – a staple for lunch and dinner along with dhal (lentil soup). Nourishment led to scholastic achievements which led to opportunities and a career in international development – and, purely by coincidence, working for USAID’s Office of Food for Peace in 1996. I helped Food for Peace establish its results management framework. Partnering with NGO implementers such as CARE (that over forty-eight years earlier had provided me milk, bread and other food), we were able to provide tangible, aggregated evidence, for the first time in history, that our emergency food aid provided significant benefits to people in need.
The Bureau for Policy and Program Coordination (PPC) recruited me to develop Agency-wide goals and performance measurements in Humanitarian Assistance to meet the Government Performance Results Act (GPRA) requirements. Realizing that USAID alone could not meet increasing global humanitarian needs nor report on progress without mobilizing other humanitarian actors, the work evolved into the global Standardized Monitoring and Assessment of Relief and Transitions (SMART) initiative that brought together the world’s experts in emergency nutrition and food security, such as Professor Michael Golden and Dr. John Seaman, who shared my commitment to helping beneficiaries.
In 2006, as part of the PPC team that established State Department’s Office of the Director of Foreign Assistance, I led the development of the Humanitarian Assistance program hierarchy for the Foreign Assistance Strategic Framework. In late 2006, I joined USAID’s Office of the Chief Operating Officer, Office of the Administrator, to rebuild USAID’s policy functions, focusing on crisis, stabilization, and civilian-military cooperation.
My life experiences prepared me well for hardships along the way, and, in particular, in being comfortable in taking risks to pioneer new concepts or developing new partnerships. A lesson from my mother is that one courageous person can make a huge difference – to change a community, an entire way of life and the future. As I embraced my new life in U.S., I made a conscientious decision early on to maintain a balance of values from my origins, including kindness and self-sacrifice for the service of others — a traditional core value of the Mizos — also shared by my American parents who sacrificed to support me.
I am fortunate to be in a line of work that connects to my traditional values and inspires me to help move USAID forward to transform more lives, and to work with some great people at USAID – too many to mention.


It’s a privilege to read the powerful and compelling life story by/about an extraordinarily thoughtful, articulate and caring person. Importantly for all of us, Anne is not only an analyst with great vision, she is an activist, a doer.
Thanks, Anne!
Anne,
I am humbled by your story.
You are a truly remarkable woman in so many ways and this story is just the beginning.
I will be forwarding this story to several of my grandchildren and plan to talk with them about your life and what you have done for yourself and the contributions that you continue to make in our world through USAID.
Thank you.
Warm regards,
Carolyn Walkup
It has been a pleasure working with Anne over the years and asking her, piecemeal, about her story. I really appreciate reading this fascinating account, putting the pieces together. I want to see the sequel. She’s not finished yet.
The cutting edge issues that Anne has taken on are important, particularly with respect to crisis management. Growing USAID into a full participant in the 3D, Whole of Government, approach to addressing crisis issues is a key task of USAID’s new policy office. I look forward to continuing contacts with Anne as part of this process.
Anne,
Your amazing life has obviously inspired the amazing person you are today. USAID is so lucky to still have your amazing contributions to our work everyday. I was so lucky that you were one of the first people I met at USAID, you helped me understand our impact in ways that others could not fathom.
Thank you for all you do!
Anne:
I beleive even those who will read this & do not know you, can see the little girl in the mountians and feel a part of your journey.
Your parents are & would have been so proud of your accomplishments & the wonderful & exciting life you are living.
Love,
Judy
What an incredible story. I agree with the comment before that it seems your story is just beginning, Anne. Thanks so much for sharing and I look forward to reading more about you and the work you inspire in the future!
I just received this e-mail. It is, so, nice that you are sharing your story, even though there are several more paragraphs, you would need, to, tell the world of all your acomplishments. The story of you and Joe, while a romantic one, would also, make good reading. Ha!Ha! Anne, you are truly inspirational, and, your story is one, that I will be proud to share with our soon to be born new grandchild. Love Janie 4/4/11
What a wonderful, heartwarming and heartwhelming story!
I am a member of the Board of Dirctors of Pearl S. Buck International (PSBI) which continues Pearl S. Buck legacy of caring for disadvantaged children in Asian countries. PSBI used to have contacts with USAID and was given several grants in the last two decades. I am on a board committee to make contact with USAID to find grants that we may qualify for that will help us in our work with children in Vietnam, Thailand and the Phillipines. Can you help me get started? I am appealing to you since you know what aid to disadvantaged children can do.
Anne,
This is truly inspirational. I do appreciate everything you do for our nation and for others. It has been an honor working with you.
Cheers
Elmer Roman
wow!!!! i’m amazed
) keep up the good work…
Dear Annie,
Your story and work is truly inspirational. I feel very proud that we have such a great person from our own soil. thumbs up the for good samaritan work. Do visit Mizoram when you have time, there are also many underprivileged children who need better education and quality of life.
Touching and Inspiring!!
Keep going and be a great advocate of “Mizo Tlawmngaihna”
Pi Anne Ralte… You are truly exceptional – Ka va ngaisang che em!
This was such an inspirational post! Being from Mizoram myself and having studied in an English medium boarding school in Calcutta since class 3, there was a lot I could relate to with your story. At the same time, it fills me with such deep shame because I went through all that because my parents could afford it, while it was different in your case. And the struggle you have faced, guarantee that you really deserve to be where you are right now. I am not afraid to admit I shed a few tears as I lived through your journey. You are truly an admirable woman, Anne. And your mother is really amazing and strong!
- A fellow Mizo.
Good Work and Keep it up, sis!!!!!
Do visit Mizoram….
When is your last visit to Mizoram?
What an amazing and inspirational story that is, Anne. I feel like all of a sudden I know my lifetime friend’s (your husband, Joe) wife very well, even though I’ve never met you. Guess I’ll have to add that to my bucket list. Congratulations to you for all the work you’ve done to make a difference in this world…and please say “hi” to Joe!
Dear Anne -
I am very proud to know you (through Joe, who I knew in the Philippines when he was in the Peace Corps). Your story is so compelling – thank you for sharing it! Your accomplishments and all the good you have done in the world are a testament to your courage, vision and a great big heart.
Audi
Hello Pi Sawmpui,
I am so touched…will let my mom, Dingtei read it too. We are proud of you. Do visit sometime.
Anne — I was searching for SMART background for something I was writing and was glad to have come across this. Thanks so much for sharing. I have to say, I thought I knew a lot about how you and Joe connected, but didn’t take it back to its roots. What a story! It’s been an honor to know you and work with you over the years.
Salute from one Ralte to another…Ralte Lelhchhun i ni ve mial em?
I have always seen the arts as part of employment even in my early days at the department. I do appreciate everything you do for our nation and for others. It has been an honor working with you. I was working with at-risk youth programs and I wanted to ensure that there were arts programs involved with that. I worked with a large number of talented young people to help develop their arts participation through choirs, art and poetry contests, poetry slams, and video contests. Even if these programs were not always explicitly developing their careers they helped them develop their soft skills and the things that they needed to become successful in the workplace. And for some it does help them to start their careers as professional artists.
Many of the children read and write in school and they have expert in the study. He was bright student in his study and when the complete his study he is big business man.I like the shine students.
Dear Anne, please get intouch.
esther (chianghnuna)
Thank you so much for posting your amazing and inspirational story. Definitely one to share, and I hope we hear more from you!
Dear Anne,
Although I have not yet met you in person, I have known your husband Joseph for 35 years and have benefited immensely by the patience, kindness, and generosity you have both shown me throughout the years. When I hear others complain about their life circumstances, I tell them about your incredible journey to give them perspective. If we all took a page from your book by embracing the philosophy of gratitude and using our innate talents to serve others–even in small ways–we could collectively create a more joyous, peaceful world.
Peace, love, joy,
Beanie
Anne,
This is such an amazing story! I guess I knew but didn’t know and I’m so glad I know now! It is wonderful that you have chosen to share this; its an inspiration to everyone who reads it….thank you for sharing!
love
Kim
Wow..amazing story. Thank you for sharing your amazing story. I am sure it took a lot of courage to share all these personal details. You are a strong woman and so was your mother. I’m sharing this with my Dad (Charles Sykes)who was Country Director for CARE in India 69-73.
Best regards,
Agnieszka Sykes
Anne, thanks for sharing your life experience. While I come from a middle class US family, that certainly had no hardships around access to food and water, my wife Justina has a similar history to yours. Raised in wartime Mozambique, Justina was raised by her Mom, Faida, who took care of 11 children on her own most of her life. They did not have support from USAID Title II food, as that was not an option in the country which was in a socialist revolution during Justina’s upbringing. USAID was not here then. People survived the best they could, and Dona Faida made simple confections which the kids sold on corners, while Faida prioritized keeping all 11 kids in school, and inspired dreams of living lives far more prosperous than her own. Now, years later, I’m implementing Title II programming as IRD Country Director, improving the lives of the most disadvantaged communities in Mozambique. Justina is a humanitarian, now with the World Bank, who never loses sight of her humble beginnings, and the strength and commitment of of her dear Mom Faida, who passed three years ago. And she is a role model for many young Mozambican women, many of which never really suffered in life, having too, like myself, being born into an emerging middle class in a country which is still largely impoverished, with many struggling daily to have access to basic needs-basic health care, and the minimum of somewhat safe water and food. We’re united in the fight against poverty in Mozambique, and we’re winning, a step at a time. Mark