Monday 11 February 2013

Kibera Women peacebuilders

Yesterday I ran my first workshop with seven women who had suffered during the 2007 post-election violence. Hosted at the Kenyan office of Interchange, the women arrived at 8:30 and remained until 3pm when they had to pick their children up from school. They are doing a lot to build peace in their homes and in their communities in the hopes of avoiding a repeat in the coming weeks. I asked them to consider what their idea of peace was, how they knew when there is peace in their homes/community and what they do individually to promote peace within their community. They wrote their answers on pieces of paper and placed them in a basket for discussion later.

We spent the day together, talking about their experiences, the concept of peace and what is means to them individually and what they are doing in their homes and communities to promote peace. We worked on a group project that reflected their perceptions of their community before 2007, during the violence of 2007/08, what things had changed from 2008 - 2012 (perhaps the calm before the election of 2013 when they feel tribal tensions are rising again) and their hopes and dreams for the future after the election.  These women are all from different tribes, had never met before and are courageous! They worked as a group and individually.





Using Lederach's concept of Expanded Framework for Peacebuilding we considered re-storying the past and "the past that lies before us" and explored the break in their personal narratives brought on by the post-election violence. (The felt model of the framework is by Jaqui Jesso, Interchange)


At the end of the day, I supplied them with pieces of white cotton, fabric markers and embroidery thread and they were invited to re-explore the concept of peace and to create something that symbolized either the stories that they shared earlier in the day, or reflected peace in some way.  They decided they would take these individual works home with them and they said they would put them on the walls of their Kibera homes.


3 comments:

  1. WOW, the work has begun. I am so excited for you and your group. It must have felt wonderful to have started your workshop and play with them. What were your impressions about their approach and attitude toward you you are doing vs. what they've been through, etc.?

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  2. This sounds really exciting, Sarah. I'd be interested to hear more about the symbols the women chose--it seems like the Kenyan flag is quite prominent in a few of the pieces and this seems to connect with what Patricia Nyundai discussed in her lecture in Toronto.

    It's also so exciting to see peacebuilding models at work in such an organic way. I'd like to hear more about how the women related to the concepts of restorying, narratives, shared visions of the future etc.

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  3. The workshop looks great Sarah. How lucky these women in Kenya are to have youh working with them as I know how very privaliged you feel to have this amazing opportunity to work with these women.

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