Milton Public Library

Jumping into empty space, a reluctant Mennonite businessman serves in Paraguay's presidential cabinet

Label
Jumping into empty space, a reluctant Mennonite businessman serves in Paraguay's presidential cabinet
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Jumping into empty space
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
a reluctant Mennonite businessman serves in Paraguay's presidential cabinet
Summary
Ernst Bergen had good reason to say no when the President of his country asked him to join his cabinet. Massive corruption was considered the ordinary course of business in Paraguay and had driven it to near financial ruin. Bergen, at age 39, was among the most successful men in the country with not an ounce of interest in government politics. What's more, Bergen grew up in a Mennonite colony situated in the inhospitable wilderness of the Paraguayan Chaco. He belongs to a highly industrious religious people who, for reasons of history and theology, are acutely suspicious of being involved in government. Jumping Into Empty Space tells two stories: the beginning of a remarkable economic turn-around in a battered country at the hand of this fearless business strategist; and the emergence of a true leader, told with unusual honesty and wisdom. Not only did Bergen have his own hot temper to control, he had to face extraordinary special interests and decades of despair everywhere, including in the President's own party
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

Incoming Resources