Ahmed Tarik was 15 and barely out of ninth grade when his family fled Baghdad for Syria. It was 2006, and no longer safe to remain in the city where he’d been born and raised. After finishing high school in Syria, Tarik went on to Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland, where he majored peace studies and was inspired by the writings of John Paul Lederach, founding director of Eastern Mennonite University’s Center for Justice and Peacebuilding. He soon followed that interest to CJP itself, where he completed his MA in Conflict Transformation in 2016.
Shortly thereafter, Tarik jumped on a dream opportunity to consult for CJP on a peacebuilding project in Iraq, which he hasn’t been back to since leaving a decade ago.
“My entire trajectory up to this point has been to do something with peacebuilding and conflict resolution in Iraq,” he said.
Tarik is one of several CJP alumni working on the project, intended to establish a dialogue center at Kufa University in the Iraqi city of Najaf and train dozens of young people in peacebuilding. The $700,000 initiative is funded by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and is being jointly implemented by CJP, Kufa University and two NGOs, the Iraqi Al-Amal Association and the Imam Al-Khoei Foundation.
Iraqis ‘hungry’ for training, self-expression through peacebuilding
Central to the effort are six trainings led by Dr. Alma Abdul-Hadi Jadallah, a consultant and professor who regularly teaches at CJP’s Summer Peacebuilding Institute. Three of the trainings are for academics and three are for youth from across Iraq.
Jadallah led the first youth training in September 2016 and the first academic training in October 2016, with about 25 participants in each. Afterwards, she said participants from both groups were engaged and eager to learn.
“They were hungry for this, really looking for something to give them a way to speak about what they are experiencing, and also to address it,” she said.
While the academic trainings will lead to the establishment of the dialogue center at Kufa University, the youth trainings will culminate in a series of community peacebuilding project proposals from participants, 42 of which will be funded by the grant.
The year-long project runs through June 30, 2017.
From his home in Baltimore, Tarik is supporting Jadallah’s trainings by translating curriculum materials into Arabic and writing new, culturally relevant material for the Iraqi participants. One of the aspects that most excites him is the opportunity to support peacebuilding among young Iraqis, many of them around the same age at which violence forced him from the country.
“Peacebuilding work is just planting seeds and hoping that they’ll grow, and this project is nothing but that,” he said. “It gives me hope. I don’t know what’s going to come out of it, but you keep pulling one thread and hope something comes out of it.”
Other alumni involved
Also involved are Cynthia Nassif ’14 and Najla Mangoush ’15, from Lebanon and Libya, respectively. After studying at CJP on Fulbright scholarships, both are pursuing doctorates at George Mason University. They will evaluate the project proposals that will be submitted by participants in the youth trainings, recommending the ones that should receive funding.
Another key supporter of the project is Ala Ali, a 2014 CJP graduate who works for the UNDP in Iraq. She said that Kufa University’s dialogue center and the newly developed Arabic-language peacebuilding materials developed for the trainings will enable the project to remain relevant after the grant period ends.
According to Jadallah, the longstanding connections that CJP has in the region through Ali and others involved on the project provide important credibility to the effort.
“That’s such a critical point in peacebuilding,” Jadallah said. “That was in my favor as the lead facilitator. People came in ready to trust us.”
“We’re extremely excited about this project because of its use of alumni,” says CJP executive director Daryl Byler. “It’s something that we’ve wanted to do for a long time, and it’s something that seems to be making the best use of the skills that alumni bring.”
What is needed the most in Iraq is the message of salvation in Jesus Christ. The church in Iraq was doing fine until George Bush did his ill advised invasion of that country. Now the country is overrun by devoted Islamists, severely persecuting believers in Christ there. EMU cares nothing about that, they are too busy pushing left wing agendas. People in Iraq need to turn from false religions like Islam which is anti Christ, and turn to Christ who is eternal life and only in Him is there salvation from sins. Acts 4:12, John 14:6, Matthew 4:10, Exodus 20:1-4, John 8:32,36
We’ll pleased that readers of all views and perspectives are interested in our work here at EMU. CJP Executive Director Daryl Byler offers the following response to your comment: Yes, the 2003 war was ill-advised, leading to the mass uprooting of Iraqis, including the emigration of up to 75 percent of the Christian community. If we care about the Christian community in Iraq, it is important to work at reducing the violence that is causing them to leave. These workshops are aimed at doing exactly that. These workshops include participants from a broad spectrum of religious persuasions, including Christians.