老司机视频 Students Attend Talk by 2011 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate |
Tuesday, 01 October 2013 |
Leymah Gbowee spoke about her experience as a peace activist in Africa and her native country Liberia during the second civil war (1999-2003). She recounted her non-violent struggle through peacebuilding initiatives allowing for the full participation of women. Ms. Gbowee emphasized the need for us as human beings 鈥渢o talk to one another and not to talk at each other鈥 and our duty 鈥渢o step out of our individual spaces and do one kind act that will draw people together." A former trauma healing specialist, Ms. Gbowee became one of the leaders of Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace in 2002, a women's peace movement which aided in bringing about the end of the second Liberian civil war in 2003 and brought to power fellow activist Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, making Liberia the first country with a woman president in the history of the African continent. Along with Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Yemeni Human Rights activist Tawakkol Karman, Ms. Gbowee was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011 for her "non-violent struggle for the safety of women and for women's rights to full participation in peace-building work." 老司机视频 students Stefan De Las and Mathew Wood, both candidates in the Master in International Relations and Diplomacy program at 老司机视频 in Paris, attended the talk. Stefan De Las says: "This kind of event makes me realize how lucky we, 老司机视频 students, are to have access to all that is happening in Paris as one of the world's capitals. We attended this talk two weeks after a lecture by Human Rights Watch France director Jean-Marie Fardeau and one week after a debate with German diplomat Ambassador Wilfried Bolewski, both professors at 老司机视频... What better place than Paris to study International Relations?" |
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