“Peace is indeed harder than war.” - Colum McCann
This blog is a collaborative space for networking and sharing best practices in peacebuilding. As part of my graduate work, I will be conducting qualitative interviews of practitioners in the field of peacebuilding, and will post here periodically throughout the course of my research. I hope that you will feel free to comment on my work, ask questions, and share your own findings of best practices in peacebuilding.
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
The power of forgiveness
Ray Norman recently spoke at a World Vision conference about the assassination attempt he and his daughter faced while living in Mauritania just after September 11, 2001. Their story is an amazing testament to the power of and the need for true forgiveness.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
How long is too long?
I had a great interview this weekend with Shadia
Qubti, who works with Musalaha. Musalaha is a non-profit
organization that seeks to promote reconciliation between Israelis and
Palestinians. Since the interview I have been thinking about the effects of
time on a conflict. If a conflict has been going on for a certain number of
years/decades/centuries does that make it harder to end? How long is too
long?
When I was in the former Yugoslavia, several
people told me that there would always be conflict between the people/countries
in the region: that's the way it had always been, and that's the way it would
always be. Similarly, Shadia told me that in her work it is hard to get buy-in from
people because they believe the conflict is so deeply rooted that nothing will
change. But she also said that she has personally seen change in herself and in
the participants of Musalaha programs. And she noted that in other conflicts,
such as those in South Africa or Ireland/Northern Ireland, there came a point
at which people simply decided to try to change things. Of course these
conflicts have not completely gone away, but certainly the situation in
both of these places has become more peaceful over the past two decades.
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