Mark Hanis (class of 05) to speak at the 29th Annual Governors Holocaust Remembrance Program

Genocide seems to be the topic of the week.

ADL Announces 2010 Governor’s Holocaust Remembrance Program

Date: March 5, 2010

The Mountain States Office of the Anti-Defamation League announced that the 29th Annual Governor’s Holocaust Remembrance Program will take place on Wednesday, April 7, 2010, when Mark Hanis, the grandson of four Holocaust survivors, will tell his story of fighting genocide worldwide, and Gov. Bill Ritter, Jr., and the Colorado community will honor all those whose lives reflect the legacy of the Holocaust.  Read the full story …

General Romeo A. Dallaire on Humanitarian Intervention and films at Haverford this week

Talk by Lieutenant General The Honourable Roméo A. Dallaire, (Ret’d), and Canadian Senator

April 8, 4:30PM; KINSC Sharpless Auditorium

Dallaire’s talk will address genocide prevention in terms of “The Responsibility to Protect (R2P)” and a new initiative, “The Will To Intervene” (W2i).

Lieutenant General The Honourable Roméo A. Dallaire, (Ret’d), and Canadian Senator, has had a distinguished career in the Canadian military, achieving the rank of Lieutenant General and becoming Assistant Deputy Minister (Human Resources) in the Department of National Defence in 1998. In 1994, General Dallaire commanded the United Nations Assistance Mission for Rwanda (UNAMIR). His book on his experiences in Rwanda, entitled Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda, met with international acclaim as a statement on the need for enhanced powers for the UN and the international community in dealing with cases of genocide. … read more …

Sunday April 4, 7:30pm Sharpless Auditorium: Ghosts of Rwanda (2004)

A PBS Frontline/BBC documentary to mark the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide — a state-sponsored massacre in which some 800,000 Rwandans were methodically hunted down and murdered by Hutu extremists as the U.S. and international community refused to intervene – examine the social, political and diplomatic failures that converged to enable the genocide to occur.

Wednesday, April 7, 7pm Chase Auditorium: Icyizere: Hope

Kenyan filmmaker Patrick Mureithi spent three years filming this documentary on the process of community reconciliation in Rwanda. The film focuses on a “Healing and Rebuilding our Communities” workshop (a Quaker initiated program run by the African Great Lakes Initiative), and was an official selection of the 2009 Rwanda Film Festival. This event brings Patrick Mureithi to Haverford’s campus to screen the film and hold a discussion on the themes of forgiveness, peacebuilding, justice and war.  View film trailer.

Friday, April 9, 7:30 Stokes Multicultural Center: Hotel Rwanda

(2004, dir. Terry George, starring Don Cheadle, Sophie Okonedo, Nick Nolte – runtime 2hrs)

Some of the worst atrocities in the history of mankind took place in Rwanda and in an era of high-speed communication and round the clock news, the events went almost unnoticed by the rest of the world. In only three months, 800,000 people were brutally murdered. In the face of these unspeakable actions, inspired by his love for his family, an ordinary man summons extraordinary courage to save the lives of over a thousand helpless refugees, by granting them shelter in the hotel he manages. Please alert your students to this series of events that will enable them to learn and to reflect on one of the worst instances of genocide in recent history, and one that is prompting a reconsideration of the ways the international community reacts to conflicts across the globe.

Murphy and Tierney speak on transitional justice and the American way of war

On March 31, 2010, Matt Murphy (Political Science and member of the Peace and Conflict Studies committee) gave a faculty lunch talk on “Confronting the past in new democracies: Problems, tradeoffs, and opportunities”.  Matt spoke in detail about the importance of the process of transitional justice efforts that is perhaps often overlooked in favor of more tangible outcomes, such as prosecutions.  As it turns out, some states are better equipped to manage the process of considering cases of human rights violations and thus facilitating the public work of dealing with the past.

That same day, Dominic Tierney (Political Science and member of the Peace and Conflict Studies committee) spoke to the campus community about “The American Way of War” and in particular about the United States’ “allergic reaction” to democracy building efforts that tend to become difficult quagmires. Shorter more clearly-defined wars aimed at overthrowing opposing regimes are more popular and produce warrior heroes and opportunities to frame the nation in traditional ways. Some of the discussion after the talk revolved around how and why Americans tend to forget how allergic they are to militarized democracy building projects.

Upcoming Productions in the Department of Theater

The Department of Theater will treat the campus community and public to three more productions this Spring. We hope you can join us for one or all!

  • Bodas de sangre (Blood Wedding) by Federico Garcia Lorca, directed by McFeely Sam Goodman ’10. April 16-18. A tale of a bloody family feud – love, passion, revenge and murder – this production is set in a bizarre Las Vegas wedding chapel. For more info click here.
  • The Cure at Troy by Seamus Heaney, directed by Niccolo Aeed Moretti ’10. April 30-May 2. Adapted from Sophocles’ Philoctete, The Cure at Troy explores themes of loyalty and abandonment and war and peace, through the story of Philoctetes’ ill-treatment at the hand of the Greeks, left to fend for himself on an unpopulated island, until he is needed to win the Trojan war. For more info click here.
  • Nights of Scenes II.  Scenes by students of the Directing II Workshop.  May 5-6.  More information coming soon.

Celia Osowski’s placement with the Old Library Trust during her Northern Ireland Semester

Celia Osowski ’10 participated in the Northern Ireland semester during the spring 2009 semester and described her community placement in Derry / Londonderry.

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A central part of my semester in Northern Ireland has been my placement with a community organization. The purpose of this placement has been to give me first-hand experience working with a community group. This has been a very important element of my learning process because it has allowed me to experience the practical side of the theory-based learning I have experienced up to this point, and during this semester.

Historical Perspective and Current Realities

The OLT was founded in 2001 on the site of the former Creggan Public library. Throughout the troubles this library was never damaged by the community, the property was respected as a space not to be harmed. When the OLT began as a community health initiative on the site leased from the Derry City Council, they began to think about a name for themselves, but realized that the term “Old Library” had already stuck, and so the Old Library Trust was born. The beautiful new community health centre was completed in 2005. It contains the offices of the OLT staff as well as offices for the head start program, a crèche, a café, program rooms in several shapes and sizes to accommodate different program needs, a workout room, a dental suite, a therapy suite, and science classrooms. The building includes three shops on the street level that are rented by a local butcher, a hairdresser, and SureStart. The athletics hall was completed in 2008, and is stocked with various types of sport equipment as well as large locker room facilities. The OLT also oversees the use of a large all-weather pitch with floodlights.

Programmes

The Old Library Trust runs most of its programs on a season-by-season basis. George and Tommy run the athletic programmes, which include exercise classes such as kick-boxing and aerobics, as well as programs that teach healthy lifestyles in supportive groups (the ACES program) or in a one-on-one format (the Step Up program).

Relaxation programmes are an important component of the Trust’s offerings. Oasis is a women’s mental health support group. A meditation and relaxation class helps to teach relaxation techniques, as does a yoga class. Stress Busters is a stress management program that helps people to look at the causes of stress and teaches them ways to combat it. The Old Library Trust will also help people get in contact with the Lifeline program.

Health programs include a foot clinic, food hygiene classes, ante natal classes for parents-to-be, breast-feeding classes, a support group for people with respiratory conditions.

Continuing education courses include NVQ childcare certification, counselling workshops, community health educators training, and first aid.

Finally, recreations classes include a 50+ Dance Hour, Flower arranging, arts and crafts, recreational art, and a Chat’n’Chew Luncheon Club.

The work that I am doing deals mostly with a program called the Community Healing Programme, which operated from 2003-2005. The main part of this programme was a large research project on the effect of the Troubles on the health of the Creggan community. Other elements of the program included different support groups, creative writing and story-telling workshops, and healing of memories workshops.

My Involvement

My work at the OLT hasn’t been directly involved with the programmes being offered currently. I have been working on bringing together research done several years ago by OLT in the Creggan community into a cohesive, usable report. So my time at work has been split between shadowing Seamus and other members in meetings with funding bodies, steering groups, and program providers—and sorting through all the old research, transcribing interviews, researching the historical background for the events described in those interviews, and picking out the main themes to be discussed in the report.

Conclusion

Working at the Old Library Trust in Creggan allowed me to get to know a particular community of Derry in great detail. Through speaking to people who live and work in the Creggan, researching their history, and even just talking to the taxi drivers on the way home about their memories and perceptions of Creggan (many of them were born there), I was granted a deeper look at the particular history of the Troubles as they related to this small community, the current realities the community faces, the strengths and weaknesses in the community today, and it’s place in the larger picture of Derry in general.

Faculty Lecture by Prof. Allen Kuharski Provides Critical Overview of Pig Iron Theater Company

Professor of Theater Allen Kuharski offers a critical overview of Pig Iron Theatre Company’s history and relationship to contemporary theater in the U.S. and beyond. First launched by a group of Swarthmore College theater alumni in 1995, Pig Iron Theatre Company is now in its 15th season as a critically-acclaimed and growing part of Philadelphia’s professional theater community. Though strongly rooted in Philadelphia, Pig Iron’s cosmopolitan, unpredictable, and highly mobile work (consisting of almost two dozen original works to date) has earned it a national and international profile. The company’s unique character and success reveal a continuation and dialog with certain aspects of the American avant-garde as well as a significant departure from much contemporary theater practice in the United States.

To listen to Prof. Kuharski’s lecture or watch a clip of the work of Pig Iron Theater Company, click here.

Congolese activist Zawadi Nikuze on reconciliation in North Kivu

Zawadi NikuzeSwarthmore Friends Meeting is honored to host a forum for Swarthmore students, faculty, staff, and members of surrounding communities to meet Congolese activist Zawadi Nikuze. Ms. Nikuze coordinates reconciliation work in the eastern province of North Kivu, Democratic Republic of the Congo. As part of the African Great Lakes Initiative on peace and reconciliation, her work includes facilitating workshops on healing from violence, rape, and the trauma of displacement. Ms. Nikuze’s fluency in French, English, Swahili, and three regional languages have been essential to her powerful work. Come and be inspired by the far-reaching effects of Zawadi Nikuze’s embodiment of the Quaker Peace Testimony.

You may sample personal narratives (compiled by Zawadi Nikuze) of displaced families, 2007-2009, and their experiences with reconciliation.

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

7:00pm

Whittier Room

Swarthmore Friends Meeting (on the campus of Swarthmore College)

Directions to Swarthmore College

Getting serious about changing conflict rhetoric

PEACE LOGUES

In print | Published March 25, 2010

It’s time to put my money where my mouth is. I didn’t think I could traipse through the whole semester spouting platitudes, did you? Between you and me, it was getting a little old.

Have I been all too vague about what I think we should do? I think we should start the [Israel/Palestine] club to end all [Israel/Palestine] clubs. It sounds a bit catchier and more apocalyptic without the modifiers, but you also lose some of the specificity.

Read the full opinion piece in The Phoenix …

[Jessa Deutsch ’10 is a minor in Peace and Conflict Studies.]

Boots memorialize Iraq War’s soldiers

BY LILY GOODSPEED

In print | Published March 25, 2010

Nick Brown | Phoenix Staff - Also on display inside the boots were mementos and notes from family members.

Sergeant Jennifer Hartman of New Ringgold, Pennsylvania entered the military when she was 17 years old. Four years later a suicide bombing killed her and two fellow soldiers near an electrical substation at her barracks in Baghdad.

On Monday, a pair of boots stood alongside 18 others on the second floor of McCabe Library as memorials to Hartman and other soldiers of Eastern Pennsylvania who died in Iraq.

Read the full story in The Phoenix…