---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "John Ashworth" <[email protected]>
Date: 6 Jul 2017 11:52
Subject: [sudans-john-ashworth] The peace builders of Northern Kenya
To: "Group" <[email protected]>
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The peace builders of Northern Kenya; Successful research led model
spreads to other African nations

Founded in aftermath of 2007-08's national post-election violence,
Kenya's Shalom Centre pioneers successful, research-led formula for
preventing conflict between rival groups

PUBLIC RELEASE: 2-JUL-2017

An innovative research-led model for building peace has been pioneered
by an Irish Catholic priest and his Shalom Centre colleagues working
in areas of Northern Kenya where assault rifles are as common in
households as cooking pots.

Lawlessness is prevalent in the isolated areas of Kenya bordering
Uganda, South Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia, and family possessions
include, on average, 1.6 AK-47s, the weapon of choice also of
organized cattle-rustling gangs.

Weak institutions, porous borders and climate change, meanwhile,
combine to make conditions harsher, nurturing historic, sometimes
violent competition over scarce resources between the 11 ethnic
communities of Northern Kenya with which the Centre works.

More recently, conflicts over official positions and new
administrative boundaries driven by politics have become commonplace.
Of immediate concern to the peace makers: the Aug. 8 Kenya general
elections. In 2007-08, post-election violence nationwide, fuelled by
political in-fighting, retaliation and power struggles, left roughly
1,300 Kenyans dead, 60,000 maimed and 600,000 displaced.

The Shalom Center for Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation, founded
by Fr. Patrick Devine in 2009, which works as well in the slums of
Nairobi, has cultivated a unique approach to conflict resolution, its
success recognized and celebrated with a host of international awards.

And the model is expanding into other parts of Africa, starting with
Côte d'Ivoire, Tanzania and the Central African Republic, with further
plans to establish centres as well in Ethiopia, South Sudan, Nigeria
and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The model's success is founded on extensive research into areas of
complaint and issues that drive conflict then working with key
community opinion-shapers -- elders, women, youth and influential
chiefs -- to reach a common understanding of both the history and
current definition of a conflict's source, while building trust and
co-operation to reach solutions.

Through workshops, Shalom is creating a legacy of conflict resolution,
training to date more than 9,600 community leaders as peacemakers.

Strategies also include sustainable human development in conflicted
communities through projects. Lasting results include the building of
solar-powered inter-ethnic and inter-religious schools, medical
centres and water projects.

The philosophy of Fr. Devine, a 29-year veteran of African ministry:
Conflicts are created by unmet human needs and the inability of weak
institutions to help people actualize their potential. Shalom's
peaceful coexistence goal is simple: "To help the people become the
architects of their own future."

Shalom's grassroots-based methodology, he says, embraces prevention
and transformation -- "delving deep into the social, economic,
historical, cultural and religious factors that contribute to
extremist behaviours that cause significant destruction and trauma to
individuals and communities. Conjecture and speculation are no basis
for policy making."

Conflict in the region can be linked to several primary causes:
scarcity and mismanagement of core environmental resources,
infrastructure insecurity, weak institutions and the political economy
of governance, historic tribal land and cultural conflict, all
contributing to an unhelpful proliferation of illegal small arms.

"Every conflict has a memory," says Fr. Devine, honoured in 2013 with
the International Caring Award, and recently nominated for Ireland's
prestigious Tipperary International Peace Prize. "When the causes of
conflict are not only identified, but also agreed upon by those
involved, peace-building techniques create a way to look forward to a
constructive future."

Nairobi-based Shalom Centre's international research and field staff
are expert in conflict management theory and practice. All have at
least a masters' level education. "And I have never met a group with
the persistence, commitment and consistency of Shalom staff," says Fr.
Devine.

The goal is not what he calls "negative peace," or just an end to
fighting but rather "positive peace," where both sides in a conflict
see the benefits of protecting the others' security and wellbeing.

"There's more than enough in the environment for everyone's need," he
says, "but not enough for everyone's greed."

Fr. Devine explains why he founded Shalom: "I didn't want to spend
another 25 years just dealing with the symptoms of conflict and
poverty, nor just putting money through a sieve without substantial
endurable results."

"Our centre helps people in this region emerge from patterns of
ongoing conflict, an environment in which people are persistently
killed, maimed and displaced, preventing social and religious values,
such as truth, justice, peace, mercy and reconciliation, from taking
deep root. Nor can development be sustained if schools, hospitals,
programs, and religious centres are regularly made inoperable due to
conflict."

Fr. Devine underlines the non-sectarian nature of the centre's work.
"Shalom should not be owned by any one religious tradition," he says.
"If we can bring about peace in the world, we can all find our path to
God."

At a May EU meeting in Brussels to address the humanitarian situation
in Africa, Yemen and Syria, Joe McHugh, Ireland's Minister of State
for the Diaspora and Overseas Development, noted the impossibility of
sustainable development without peace.

He singled out Shalom's "great work" and lauded the centre for making
inroads in "interethnic conflict reconciliation where, for the first
time in a particular region even with drought and massive challenges,
the peace is holding."

"If there are examples working we should look to them and support them."

Dr. Laura Basell, a professor at Queen's University, Belfast, and an
archaeologist in Africa for 20 years, praises Shalom's diverse, highly
qualified international team.

"What particularly impresses me is Shalom's theoretical underpinning
focused on education, empowerment, and transcending ethnic and
religious boundaries in order to address the root causes of conflict,"
she says.

"Rev. Dr. Devine has demonstrated that Shalom is an institution that
speaks not only through the verbal articulation of its guiding
principles but predominantly through its deeds. While much remains to
be done, their work is clearly making a difference from individuals to
entire communities - a wonderful achievement."

Says Dr. Michael Comerford, a South Sudan-based board director of Shalom:

"From the beginning, I was struck by the Shalom Centre's methodology
to resolve conflict and promote peace, which avoided quick fixes to
problems that had existed for years, if not generations. There was
something about 'taking time to work with people' that struck me as
new. The approach involved working directly with local communities and
their leaders, taking time to build relationships between communities,
taking time to build peace."

________________________________

The Shalom Centre for Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation is
supported by partner organizations and a network of visionary donors,
primarily from the United States, United Kingdom and Ireland.

With a budget of less than $1M US per year and low (7%) overhead
costs, Shalom leverages the donations of its supporters to maximize
its work on the ground in tribal areas, particularly in the semi-arid
terrains, and in the largest slum settlements in urban centres of
Eastern Africa.

The Center focuses on the root cause of violence in the tribal lands
of eastern Africa. It was created in 2009 in the wake of persistent
widespread violence and dislocation across Northern Kenya, and in the
aftermath of the disputed Kenyan elections. Shalom has made a major
impact on peace initiatives in this vital strategic area of Africa.

The Centre's work is strictly non-sectarian and closely aligned with
civil society organisations. Fr. Patrick Devine serves as the
organization's executive director, leading an international team of
conflict resolution experts from various religious backgrounds and
disciplines who are based in Kenya and neighboring countries.

________________________________

Shalom's approach to peace-building:

- Deliver quality conflict management training consistently to local
communities.
- Conduct research among local communities into the causes of violence.
- Work with local leaders and influential opinion shapers to ensure
they are part of the long-term solution to preventing conflict;
engaging them in problem-solving workshops.
- Promote the construction and development of projects that benefit
multiple groups in a community, including those on opposite sides of a
conflict.
- Conduct peace education in primary and secondary schools and with
groups of influential opinion shapers in conflict environments, aimed
at delegitimizing the use of force in solving conflicts.

________________________________

Shalom benefits from Memoranda of Understanding with the governments
of eastern Africa that comprise the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (IGAD). The Centre also partners with international and
regional colleges and universities on peace-building courses, as well
as religious association and councils in Africa.

Shalom makes its findings available to partners, relevant governments,
ethnic representatives and United Nation and regional organizations.

High-profile speaking engagements help raise awareness of this
successful peace-development model so it can be implemented in other
conflict environments. Last year, Fr. Patrick lectured at Harvard Law
School, and in January gave a presentation to a group of Washington
D.C. diplomats, academics and peace practitioners on preventing
radicalization and extremism.

https://eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-07/tca-tpb062617.php

END
______________________
John Ashworth

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