Monday, January 21, 2013

Teaching Peace through Sports


We didn’t take much time to orient ourselves to the city of Kigali before diving into interviews…we were too excited to get going with our work! After a day or two of learning our way around the city, we set off to a cafĂ© restaurant to meet with Jean de Dieu Basabose for our first interview. We were anxious to learn about the work he and his organization, Shalom Educating for Peace, have been doing in Rwanda and the Great Lakes Region.

Founded in 2007, Shalom Educating for Peace focuses on educating young people on how to resolve conflict in non-violent ways. Although their traditional education and peer mediation programs are remarkable, the part of their work that truly piqued my interest was Shalom’s sports programming. Shalom runs sports camps as a way of bringing students together to play and learn as a group. What is unique about their method, though, is that they do not use referees for the sports games. As they teach the children conflict resolution skills, the students are encouraged to put these skills into practice as they must be their own referees for the games. Shalom’s success with this program is promising for the future of Rwanda as young people learn resolve conflict without violence.


I’m so excited to share portions of our interview with Jean de Dieu with you all, but our media isn’t quite ready to post yet. Until then, you can check out more about Shalom Educating for Peace on their website!

Sunday, January 13, 2013

“Beauty to Broken Places”


Confession: I’m a history nerd.

Yep, it’s true. Nerd to the core. And as a self-proclaimed history nerd, I have this weird obsession with remembering and commemorating everything. To me, it’s utterly important to remember our history and where we came from in order to move confidently toward our future. But while I was in Rwanda, I realized that the constant commemoration of tragic events can make it difficult to move forward, especially when these commemorations and memorial sites reflect death.

In the years immediately following the genocide, Rwandans built makeshift memorials and mass graves to bury their loved ones. However, these memorials were poorly constructed and did not serve as a life-giving place for survivors to mourn. The photo below shows the genocide memorial near Gisenyi several years ago.

Rugerero Genocide Memorial, circa 2004 (photo courtesy Barefoot Artists)

However, thanks to Lily Yeh and her project, Barefoot Artists, this memorial looks nothing like that today. In 2004, after hearing about the situation in Rwanda ten years after the genocide from Jean Bosco Rukirande, a Red Cross Regional Coordinator from Rwanda, she decided to travel to Rwanda to see how she could help. Over the past nine years, Lily has been working with the locals to revitalize their community and their memorial, honoring the genocide victims with a beautiful memorial and bringing life, color, and a renewed economy to a traumatized community. (To learn more about all the ways that Lily and Barefoot Artists has been assisting the Rugerero community, please visit their beautiful new website here.)

Rugerero Genocide Memorial, July 2012

Don’t get me wrong: it’s still absolutely heart-wrenching to visit these genocide memorials, regardless of how beautiful they may be. They still speak to the unfathomable loss that Rwandans experienced and the pain that continues to be felt as a result of the genocide. But to be witness to the remarkable transformation of a community that has been so scarred by tragedy – to see that beauty has been brought to such broken places – is truly an honor and brings such hope to my soul.