Archive for the tag 'war'

Rwanda, Women Leaders, and the Path to Peace

nadim September 29th, 2008

Few people can fail to recall the horrific events that took place in Rwanda in 1994. In three short months, an estimated 800,000 people were killed in a brutal ethnic conflict, while the majority of the world turned and looked the other way. Since then, the sense of shame that has pervaded the international community with respect to this catastrophe  has been immense, to the point where it now serves as a case study highlighting the moral imperative of intervention when events in a country spiral out of control.

In the aftermath of the genocide, a new constitution was adopted, one that ensured that at least 30% of the members of parliament would be female. Billions of dollars from donors and investors have been flowing into the country. There has been steady economic growth driven by a growth in rural agriculture and skills development, as well as improvements in clean water access and primary health care. And, while serious problems remain — such as the growing divide between rich and poor — it is surely heartening to see such significant improvements in such a short span of time.

And now a little piece of history has been made – a news story which very nearly slipped under the radar (hardly surprising with all the coverage of collapsing banks and looming elections). Just over a week ago, Rwanda became the first country ever to have a majority of women in parliament, with at least 55% of MP positions going to women.

Why might this be regarded as historic? Well, let’s start with the words of Bellancilla Nyonawankusi, a Rwandan election official, as quoted on News24:

All Rwandans have a role to play in the reconciliation, but women can do it better than men… They are the ones who were the first to be affected by the genocide and they are the ones who are bringing up the children.

This critical connection between war, motherhood and the raising of children was emphasized in a moving passage from Abdu’l-Baha, while He travelled the Western world expounding the teachings of the Baha’i Faith. It was part of a talk delivered to a Women’s Suffrage gathering in New York, in 1912:

The most momentous question of this day is international peace and arbitration, and universal peace is impossible without universal suffrage. Children are educated by the women. The mother bears the troubles and anxieties of rearing the child, undergoes the ordeal of its birth and training. Therefore, it is most difficult for mothers to send to the battlefield those upon whom they have lavished such love and care. Consider a son reared and trained twenty years by a devoted mother. What sleepless nights and restless, anxious days she has spent! Having brought him through dangers and difficulties to the age of maturity, how agonizing then to sacrifice him upon the battlefield! Therefore, the mothers will not sanction war nor be satisfied with it. So it will come to pass that when women participate fully and equally in the affairs of the world, when they enter confidently and capably the great arena of laws and politics, war will cease; for woman will be the obstacle and hindrance to it. This is true and without doubt.

(Abdu’l-Baha, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 134)

It is clear that the world is still playing catch-up to these words, and women everywhere continue to struggle for an equal voice in the decision-making arena.  But how poignant it is that a small, mountainous country in East Africa — which has endured so much recent agony — should suddenly, and quite unexpectedly, be showing us the way.

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On a Quest for Justice

nadim March 14th, 2008

ouganda-lra-enfant-soldat-1-5.jpgThe refusal this week by the Ugandan government to hand over suspected war crimes perpetrators to the International Criminal Court has highlighted, once again, the frailty of international bodies in enforcing any meaningful authority over individual nations. Ironically, it was the same government who, prior to the commencement of peace negotiations with the Lord’s Resistance Army, requested that the Criminal Court indict these same suspects.

This has placed the Criminal Court in an awkward situation — does the Criminal Court abide by the latest wishes of the Ugandan government and drop the charges, or does it stick to principle and insist on bringing the suspects to trial?

On the most fundamental level, it is unfortunate that this problem should even exist for an institution whose field of operation is, in theory, international.

On the other side of the coin, some might assert that international bodies are controlled by strong nations and thus do not truly represent the best interests of all. This feeling, coupled with the almost obsessive nationalism that plays such a dominating role in human affairs, present formidable obstacles for those who genuinely wish to establish more effective systems of international justice. No one would argue that the world desperately needs these systems in place; the challenge is to break through the self-centeredness and suspicion that are so characteristic of international relations. As Abdu’l-Baha states in “The Secret of Divine Civilization”:

Endeavor, ceaseless endeavor, is required. Nothing short of an indomitable determination can possibly achieve it.

Fortunately, we are also seeing the early signs of a shift in human consciousness. As people travel from place-to-place, settle in foreign locations and encounter common global problems, what follows — almost unwittingly — is a growth in the feeling of world citizenship. This slow and painstaking process will with time, and following a great degree of turmoil, lead to a greater unity of thought in human affairs, and consequently more effective systems of global justice.

The League of Nations, followed by the United Nations, the International Criminal Court, and so on, are evolutionary steps in the right direction. Yet the need still remains for people and governments to think beyond the bounds of national sovereignty. In “The Unfoldment of World Civilization”, Shoghi Effendi describes a future world commonwealth…

…in which all nations, races, creeds and classes are closely and permanently united, and in which the autonomy of its state members and the personal freedom and initiative of the individuals that compose them are definitely and completely safeguarded.

For Baha’is, the question is not whether or not we will get there — we believe that humanity will ultimately be impelled in that direction — it is more a question of how. Do we keep on clinging to those short-sighted and obsolescent doctrines which have hindered our development to this point, and continue to suffer the consequences? Or do we accept the new realities of life and strive to foster the spirit of unity between different people and nations? The choice is ours.

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