Uganda | Summer 2008
EXPOSURE - Aftermath Workshop in Northern Uganda The August 2008 Exposure workshop in Northern Uganda was conducted under the guidance of Sara Terry, of the Aftermath Project, and Stephen Alvarez, of National Geographic magazine. Seven Tufts undergraduates, one EPIIC International alumna from Delhi University in India, and one graduate student from the Fletcher School spent eight days using photography to examine the brutal legacy of conflict in Northern Uganda. Students' photo essay topics ranged from the Pabbo IDP camp, the return home, the legacy of trauma, and focused stories about several different Ugandans. The students each worked with fixer-translators from a Ugandan NGO working with former child soldiers. This is the first workshop conducted under the guidance of Ms. Terry and Mr. Alvarez.
Returning Home Again: Displacement and Renewal in Northern Uganda Jeff Beers The 22-year long conflict with the Lord’s Resistance Army in Northern Uganda has resulted in the displacement of well over a million Acholi people from their homes, forcing them into cramped “protected villages” where many have lived for the duration of the war. Now, with a ceasefire in place, many Acholi are returning home again, and working to restart the cycle of tradition and sustenance farming that has defined their culture for generations. However, after over twenty difficult years away, a question arises: what ‘home’ will the Acholi be returning to?
Forgiveness and Reconciliation after War Kelsey Bell The war in Uganda is notorious for its duration, often called "Africa's longest running war." By the time I learned of this war it had been going on for more than twenty years. On the day I submitted my essay detailing the history of the conflict for this workshop I had just turned twenty years old. While I was growing up, the children fighting in this war were growing up. When I was in grade school children the same age as I was were abducted from their homes and schools and given a new education in murder. During the war there had been many attempts at peace talks, both by individuals and by the government, but most failed miserably. The difference now is that the quell in fighting over that last few years has opened up dialogue on what it means to being justice and lasting peace to this region. Currently there is a large debate surrounding the extent to which raditional methods of justice and western methods of justice should be implemented (if at all) to deal with the conflict. While this discussion has yet to be concluded, many of those living in Acholiland have expressed their preference for the use of the traditional methods which emphasize truth and forgiveness to create restorative rather than retributive justice and lasting peace.
Women of Northern Uganda
Nora Chovanec In an area like northern Uganda where family is the most important part of life and the decades old conflict has in large part centered around the Lord's Resistance Army's destruction of the familial unit, women are the ones who struggled to keep the family and the culture together. Women bear the brunt of domestic labor—the cooking, cleaning, washing, and tending to the home, and take on the majority of child rearing responsibilities—nurturing, shaping, and showing them what it means to be Acholi. Women also share a large portion of the economic stress, as they are the ones who spend more time tending the land, harvesting the crops, and preparing and selling goods at the market. This photo essay explores the daily lives of women in post-conflict Northern Uganda and centers upon one thirteen year old girl from the internally displaced persons camp Palenga.
The evening of our lives: Elegy for Akonyi Bedo
Sam James
Home Grown: A north Ugandan NGO offers home-grown solutions in internationally-dominated reconstruction efforts Sean Smith The Institute for Youth Empowerment Program, or IYEP, is a Gulu NGO created by northern Ugandans. In a reconstruction landscape dominated by heavily-funded international organizations, this small, local NGO finds footing by offering an intimate understanding of Acholi culture and values. From assisting in reconciliation between communities and child soldiers, to providing agricultural supplies to rebuild sustainable villages, to paying tuition fees for promising young Ugandans, IYEP offers Ugandan solutions to Ugandan challenges.
Participating Student bios
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