Friday 8 February 2013

Women for women

The past week I have been attending peacebuilding workshops facilitated by women during which time the men who were attending said they imagined the facilitator would be a white male. I have also been speaking with women who are advocating for other women - trying to make a difference at the grass roots level. And now, I find myself puzzled with my own intellectual and research processes wondering if I am undertaking an investigation into grass roots, structured forms of peacebuilding, or if I am seeking to gain an understanding of more informal peace building/community healing processes that are seen within Kenyan society.

Let me explain. There is much research that reflects organizations that advocate for women's rights and encourages women participants in formal peace building agendas such as Women in Peacebuilding in Liberia, Women for Women, and PeaceWomen. But what happens behind closed doors, in places where there is little access to media or infrastructure. How do women who are working quietly in theri communities, bridging Tribal difference through friendships contribute to peacebuilding in a meaningful way? At the same time, I have also been reflecting on the idea why are there not more women in peacebuilding processes . . what is it that women bring to the peace table and why is their role so different than men's.

Below is a TED talk by Jody Williams: A Realistic Vision for World Peace during which a Nobel Peace Laureate articulates the need for creativity and a new approach to peace. She sees peace as "a sustainable peace for justice and equality" where people "have enough resources to live dignified lives".


I found her talk to be inspiring although it raised so many more questions about my research here in Kenya during this pre-election time when there is uncertainty and fear of a reoccurance of the 2007 post-election violence, that resulted in so much displacement of women, men and families.

I welcome your comments and ideas.

2 comments:

  1. Sarah, Jody Williams is a strong, intelligent woman -- a strong activist who advocates that people take ACTION for the peace they want to see in the world. To bring a sustaining peace takes people who WANT peace and act for peace with others. It means getting up from in front of our TV's, our dinners, and our isolated worlds, to work with others (community) to build the necessary bridges and develop the world we want to see - a secure, equitable world that ensures there are enough resources for all...it's a tall order that the world is challenged by. The old selfish desires for greed and power remain among us. It's up to men AND women to WORK together for human justice.

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  2. BUSINYE JOLLY NALONGO26 March 2013 at 11:03

    Hi Sarah,
    Great work you are doing !!for sure peace building always starts with a woman.When a woman is in conflict ,the family,the community,the nation and the world is in conflict!
    What women do is a big foundation in building a nation.It all begins at conception and the moment the woman is unhappy then the unborn baby grows in a conflicting environment!
    let THE WORLD MAKE A WOMAN HAPPY AND ALL HER ROLES WILL BE OF A PEACE BUILDER
    Hey citizens of this earth,empower women and you will never have a war in your countries!!
    Respect your dear mothers for every creation by God is a blessing through a woman!!
    Thats WHY A WOMAN TAKES ON ALL CHALLENGES ESPECIALLY THE AFRICAN WOMAN

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