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CAN WOMEN FIND UNIQUE WAYS
OUT OF WAR?
March 8, 2008 (The Christian Science Monitor) Women
leaders from 45 nations meet in India this week to discuss their
role in conflict resolution.
Sakena Yacoobi well knows the hardships of Afghan women, caught
between a war and the hopelessness of poverty and illiteracy.
Yet on International Women's Day Saturday, the Afghan educator will
not ask the world to help Afghan women. Instead, she will ask Afghan
women to help the world.
In a time of growing conflict around the world, she believes the
wisdom and compassion of women can offer a way out. "Women
bring tolerance and patience," she says. "Women can bring
solutions – we cannot accomplish that with weapons."
She is one of several hundred prominent female leaders from 45 countries
who have come to India this week to seek ways to raise women's voices
worldwide, hoping that their ideas – so often ignored –
begin to move the world away from war.
It is a unique approach to International Women's Day – and
intentionally so, says Dena Merriam, who has organized "Making
Way for the Feminine," a five-day conference that began Thursday
in Jaipur.
"This is not about empowering women," says Ms. Merriam,
who also co-chaired the United Nations' Millennium World Peace Summit
in 2000. "It is about how women can transform society to help
us find new ways of addressing conflict."
There are men here, too. The goal, participants say, is not to antagonize
men. Yet each believes that women bring to the issue of conflict
resolution a different perspective. Many liken it to that of a mother,
stern but caring, and more open to finding alternatives to violence.
That perspective is sorely needed, they say, as the path of power
and aggression has led only to more fighting and division. "The
feminine gifts of compassion, empathy, and caring prepare women
for the urgent role as leaders and reconcilers," said the Rev.
Joan Brown Campbell, chairwoman of the Global Peace Initiative for
Women, at the opening press conference.
"This is about whether women, with men as their partners, can
chart a new course," continues Ms. Campbell, who has worked
with leaders such as Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., and
Bill Clinton.
The outlines of that new course can be seen in the lives of those
attending, both men and women.
It is evident in the compassion of Ali Abu Awwad, a Palestinian
who has been imprisoned for his family's political activities and
whose brother was killed in the second intifada, yet started a foundation
for Israelis and Palestinians who have lost relatives in the conflict.
"The idea is to show people that if you are in the peaceful
way, you are not alone," he says. "You do not need to
be afraid."It is evident in the activities of Ms. Yacoobi,
who operated secret schools for girls in Afghanistan during Taliban
rule, and has since expanded her activities to eight provinces.
While other schools have been burned or destroyed, hers have not,
she says, because she is a part of the community and knows their
needs.
"When the people trust you, they will protect you," she
says.
In this is one of the lessons she is bringing to Jaipur. "You
have to listen to the communities – to listen to their needs.
You can't just depend on weapons," she says, suggesting that
connection to the community tends to be a stronger trait among women
than men. "We need people to listen to us, not to order us."
These are the voices that this conference hopes to amplify and inspire.
Organizer Merriam acknowledges that the conference has an enormous
task. The intent is to begin to change how the world thinks about
power – spreading the notion that nonviolent solutions are
practical and not the fruit of weakness.
Her tools, she says, are the participants themselves. With few women
voices in the corridors of power, the hope is to kindle greater
awareness and confidence among women so they become more active
participants in demanding a solution.
"We can start by critiquing the policies that are creating
the pain," said Joan Chittister, a Benedictine nun, at the
press conference. "I might not have all the answers, but I
cannot sit by in silence while the policies are destroying the very
people I care about."
In recognition of the fact that many of the world's conflicts come
from a clash of faiths, the conference has an overtly religious
theme. It is bringing together female spiritual leaders from all
faiths – such as an Islamic scholar, Buddhist nun, Hindu guru,
and members of the Christian clergy.
To this end, Merriam hopes the conference will bring a World Council
of Women Spiritual Leaders, which would be a mechanism to guide
and advance more inclusive solutions to global problems.
Yet many of the attendees say the gathering in itself, regardless
of its outcome, enables them to carry out their work.
Yacoobi needs such spiritual refreshment, she says frankly. "Coming
here allows me to collect myself from all the things going on in
Afghanistan," she says. "This war is destroying our country,
our religion, and our faith, but coming here and seeing these people
gives me a lot of energy to believe."
A psychologist in the West Bank, Laila Atshan, too, sees the worst
of war – wives who have lost husbands and sons in the conflict
with Israel. "I will go back stronger to give them strength,"
she says. For years, she has considered opening an interfaith community
center. "I am hoping this will give me the guts to go do it."
So is Merriam: "The goal is to provide space for people to
have a transformational moment – to have people come away
so moved that they bring it back to their communities."
From:http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0307/p04s01-wogn.html?page=2
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