{"id":7095,"date":"2015-07-28T13:18:13","date_gmt":"2015-07-28T17:18:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/?p=7095"},"modified":"2016-10-06T15:06:07","modified_gmt":"2016-10-06T19:06:07","slug":"api-2000-birthing-peace-clubs-in-african-schools-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/2015\/07\/api-2000-birthing-peace-clubs-in-african-schools-2\/","title":{"rendered":"API, 2000: Birthing Peace Clubs in African Schools"},"content":{"rendered":"<figure id=\"attachment_7097\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7097\" style=\"width: 660px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><a href=\"http:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/is\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Stauffer-Juma-e1437690048348.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-7097\" src=\"\/\/emu.edu\/now\/is\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Stauffer-Juma-e1437690048348.jpg\" alt=\"Carl Stauffer and Mulanda Jimmy Juma\" width=\"660\" height=\"440\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7097\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Carl Stauffer (left), currently on the faculty of CJP and co-director of the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice, was MCC\u2019s regional peace advisor from 2000 to 2009. Mulanda Jimmy Juma was Stauffer&#8217;s successor in the MCC role and in leading the Africa Peacebuilding Institute. <small><i>(Photo by Michael Sheeler)<\/i><\/small><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Weeks of xenophobic attacks in spring 2015 on migrants living in South Africa deeply affected <strong>Mulanda Jimmy Juma<\/strong>, though he was not threatened personally. Not this time.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[1]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Juma is a migrant to South Africa from elsewhere on the continent, like many of those attacked in the Johannesburg township of Alexandra and in Durban in March and April. In the 1990s, Juma had fled thousands of miles from his violence-torn home country, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to arrive in South Africa.<\/p>\n<p>But this time, as a trained and experienced peacebuilder, Juma knew some methods to address the violence rather than to simply flee from it.<\/p>\n<p>First, after the attacks began, Juma phoned the prime minister of the Zulu kingdom, whom Juma calls \u201cInyosi,\u201d and asked him to urge the Zulu king to publicly call for an end to the attacks on foreigners. Juma had been a guest at the king\u2019s recent wedding. Moreover, Juma was friends with Inyosi, who had participated in the 2014 session of the Africa Peacebuilding Institute alongside Juma. Being an advisor to the king, Inyosi acted upon Juma\u2019s phone call.<\/p>\n<p>Second, Juma headed to the violence-affected areas of Johannesburg to \u201cget first-hand information and see what was going on.\u201d He then wrote a widely disseminated opinion piece where he called for a country-wide education campaign on how South Africans have benefited from their ties to other Africans. He also called for South Africa to lead the way in addressing factors underlying huge refugee populations across the continent and the victimization of refugees.<\/p>\n<p>A month after the attacks had subsided, Juma held a day-long training workshop on \u201cpractical responses to xenophobia\u201d at St. Augustine College in Johannesburg. Juma came with his own successful response nine years earlier to xenophobia in Lusaka, Zambia.<\/p>\n<p>In that year (2006), after increasingly vicious actions against migrant refugees in Lusaka, Juma and two others associated with the Dag Hammarskj\u00d6ld Peace Centre at the Mindolo Ecumenical Foundation reached out to Zambians living alongside refugees and persuaded some of them to sit with representative refugees to \u201ctalk about issues affecting the community as a whole,\u201d said Juma.<\/p>\n<p>The Zambians spoke of feeling displaced and disrespected by those who had moved in. \u201cThey\u2019re boastful, they don\u2019t respect our culture, they\u2019re crooks, they bring disease,\u201d were some of the comments Juma and his co-facilitators heard.<\/p>\n<p>From the refugees, they heard that Zambians \u201cbehave like whites and are not welcoming, treating us like crooks.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The peace facilitators led the two groups to listen to each other\u2019s stories and then, eventually, to do some activities together, such as making and sharing peanut butter. The effort was hugely successful \u2013 destructive conflicts subsided in that community. The group grew from 10 people to 20. In the group were some \u201cring leaders,\u201d who went and shared what they had learned and experienced with their followers. \u201cIn an African context, when you are able to convince the leaders and when those leaders speak, people listen,\u201d said Juma.<\/p>\n<h3>Peace Clubs<\/h3>\n<p>One Zambian, a participant in the original group, was a schoolteacher who took the idea of facilitated storytelling and shared activities into his high school, where the initiative was called the \u201cPeace Club.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Peace clubs have now spread to 40 schools in Lusaka and adjacent Livingstone Province and are in schools in other countries, including South Africa, South Sudan, Nigeria, Kenya, Mozambique, Botswana and Uganda. \u201cIn our experience, the peace club children grow to become the leaders in their schools,\u201d Juma said. Funding from Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) has permitted the clubs to develop a curriculum, train adult mentors, and promote themselves.<\/p>\n<p>At the 2014 session of the Africa Peacebuilding Institute (API), three peace club mentors \u2013 <strong>Issa Sadi <\/strong>of Zambia, <strong>Zamani Ndlovu <\/strong>of Zimbabwe, and <strong>Joan Alty<\/strong>, who works for MCC in South Africa \u2013 led a popular five-day module on how to set up and run peace clubs, including how to attract a broad spectrum of students and address bullying. It was the fourth consecutive year that API offered this module, preparing a total of 102 people to be trainers in their own contexts.<\/p>\n<p>The 2015 session of API (its 15th consecutive year) is expected to attract nearly 50 participants representing nearly 20 nationalities (mostly from Africa) for intensive educational modules on seven topics, including \u201cIntroduction to Conflict Transformation,\u201d taught explicitly from an African perspective, and \u201cTrauma Awareness, Healing and Reconciliation,\u201d offering skills that can be applied immediately.<\/p>\n<p>Juma has led API since 2011. When Juma first attended API in 2002 (after meeting <strong>Carl Stauffer<\/strong>, MA \u201902, then a MCC worker who led API), most of its facilitators were still coming from North America, usually from EMU. Founded in 2000 by Stauffer and other MCC workers from the U.S. and Canada, API was initially held annually at the Mindola Ecumenical Foundation\u00a0in Kitwe, a city in northern Zambia that is not readily accessible for travelers from other countries. Zambia also required \u201cstudy visas\u201d that added to participants\u2019 costs. As the leadership of API gradually shifted to experienced peacebuilders from various parts of Africa, they began to ponder where to locate API to make it more sustainable.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe wanted to ensure API\u2019s future stability, ideally housed in an institution that would \u2018own\u2019 it,\u201d said Juma. \u201cWe needed access to conference rooms, housing and catering [food].\u201d The organizers also hoped to attract some participants who could pay for their own studies, instead of almost all participants being subsidized by MCC, limiting API\u2019s potential size and reach.<\/p>\n<h3>Shifting to Johannesburg<\/h3>\n<p>South Africa\u2019s relatively stable economy, inspiring history of overturning the apartheid regime, and extensive airline, train and bus services \u2013 plus the strong interest of St. Augustine College in Johannesburg to host API \u2013 all factored into API\u2019s move from Kitwe to Johannesburg in 2013. The cost of API remained modest in 2014 \u2013 $400 (U.S.) for five days of training, all meals and six nights\u2019 accommodation.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAPI is really a no-brainer for us,\u201d said <strong>Nicholas Rowe<\/strong>, St. Augustine\u2019s academic dean and acting president, who taught at API when it was in Zambia in 2006 and 2007. \u201cAPI is the perfect fit for St. Augustine.\u201d As a Catholic-founded college (the only one in South Africa), its mission is to promote \u201cethical leadership, dignity of the human person and the common good.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>At St. Augustine, Rowe and Juma started a BA (honors) program in peace studies in 2014-15, with view of adding degree programs in peace studies that will eventually go through the doctoral level. Rowe said they hope to retain the practice-based ethos of API.<\/p>\n<p>API has close links with a number of other peacebuilding institutes in Africa. The Great Lakes Peacebuilding Institute in Burundi was started in 2004 by alumni of API, as was the Reconcile Peace Institute in South Sudan in 2009.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[2]<\/sup><\/a> Juma shaped the curricula for both institutes.<\/p>\n<h3>Violence against migrants<\/h3>\n<p>Looking at the South African context in the spring of 2015, overt violence erupted in areas where unemployment is particularly high (up to 80% unemployed or underemployed, according to some statisticians) and street-crime is rampant. As Juma knows from experience, it doesn\u2019t take much for frustrated people (particularly male young adults) to seek scapegoats, especially if someone in a leadership position gives them an excuse to do so. On March 20, the Zulu monarch in South Africa, Goodwill Zwelithini, criticized foreign workers, using these words, according to Al Jazeera: \u201cLet us pop our head lice,\u201d he said. \u201cWe must remove ticks and place them outside in the sun. We ask foreign nationals to pack their belongings and be sent back.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Zwelithini later said his words were taken out of context and mistranslated, but within days South Africans in impoverished communities were attacking stores and street stands owned by those they perceived as foreigners, accusing them of taking jobs away from South Africans and engaging in criminal activities.<\/p>\n<p>Sandra Ngwanya, a chicken seller from Zimbabwe living in Alexandra, said her neighbors told her (as reported on the Pan-African News Wire): \u2018\u2019We are going to go door to door, taking your stuff and beating you. So we want you to go back to your country.\u2019\u2019 Though she was married to a South African miner, away on a job site outside Johannesburg, and had lived in South Africa since 2006, she fled with thousands of others to one of a half-dozen camps run by a disaster-response NGO.<\/p>\n<p>This violence echoed a similar period in 2008, when anti-immigrant riots in South Africa took the lives of about 60 people. In both situations, church and government leaders pleaded for restraint and tolerance.<\/p>\n<h3>Lessons to be drawn<\/h3>\n<p>Pondering the reasons for the violence, Juma pointed to structural problems in South Africa. \u201cThe big gap between the rich and the poor doesn\u2019t really allow South Africa to heal from the past. Poverty is one of the major sources of violence in this country. The concept of reconciliation needs to be stretched to cover the empowerment of the weak and the poor, especially with improved education.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Juma\u2019s pastor \u2013 who is also an API advisor and an alumnus of SPI 2010 \u2013 is <strong>Simon Lerefolo<\/strong>, whose \u201cHis People Church\u201d has grown from 25 people a decade ago to 3,000 people in his mixed-race, mixed-income congregation in Johannesburg.<\/p>\n<p>Lerefolo, Juma and Stauffer all firmly believe and teach that if personal relationships are formed, if people from all walks of life come to view each other as brothers and sisters under God \u2013 or at least as something other than enemies \u2013 they will naturally turn their attention to mutually solving destructive structural issues. This is API\u2019s underlying philosophy.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_7096\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7096\" style=\"width: 267px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"http:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/is\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Lerefolo-Juma.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-large wp-image-7096\" src=\"\/\/emu.edu\/now\/is\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Lerefolo-Juma-534x400.jpg\" alt=\"Simon Lerefolo and Mulanda Jimmy Juma\" width=\"267\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Lerefolo-Juma-534x400.jpg 534w, https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/51\/2015\/07\/Lerefolo-Juma-300x225.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 267px) 100vw, 267px\" \/><\/a><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-7096\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">&#8220;His People Church&#8221; pastor Simon Lerefolo, SPI &#8217;10, and Mulanda Jimmy Juma, director of the Africa Peacebuilding Institute (API), pose on the grounds of St. Augustine College in Johannesburg, a Catholic institution which has hosted API since 2013. <small><i>(Photo by Bonnie Price Lofton)<\/i><\/small><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>These men point to the long, mostly unknown history of quiet meetings that helped end the apartheid regime.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[3]<\/sup><\/a> The famous talks are those involving Nelson Mandela in his final year as a prisoner in 1989-90. But, actually, church and other civil society organizations had been facilitating meetings since the early 1980s between representatives of Mandela\u2019s African National Congress (labeled by the United States and Britain as a terrorist group in those days) and leading Afrikaners (including those in the white-supremacy ruling party, the National Party). These meetings were often held outside of South Africa. By the count of one historian, there were 167 meetings held in foreign venues from 1983 to 2000.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[4]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>H.W. van der Merwe, an Afrikaner raised in the Dutch Reformed Church who became a Quaker as an adult, is an excellent example of someone in civil society who worked assiduously, largely behind-the-scenes, to end apartheid. In 1968, he founded what became known as The Centre for Conflict Resolution at the University of Cape Town.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[5]<\/sup><\/a> By the 1980s, van der Merwe was traveling regularly to Zambia, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Sweden and England to meet in-exile African National Congress (ANC) leaders to assess their openness to talking with those opposing them.<\/p>\n<p>In 1984, for example, van der Merwe began meeting with members of the ANC executive committee in Lusaka, Zambia, leading to meetings between them and Afrikaner newspaper editors, according to his memoir, <em>Peacemaking in South Africa: A Life in Conflict Resolution<\/em>. Van der Merwe also met Mandela in prison that year, four years before secret talks began between Mandela and representatives of the ruling regime.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWell over 1,200 diverse South Africans&#8230;went on an outward mission to enter dialogue with the ANC in exile in a search to overcome the escalating conflict inside South Africa,\u201d wrote Michael Savage in his online chronology of the meetings.<a href=\"#footnotes\"><sup>[6]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>These \u201cdiverse South Africans\u201d included business people, students and academics from universities, lawyers, women\u2019s and writers\u2019 groups, soccer and rugby associations, and charitable foundations.<\/p>\n<p>In those meetings on foreign soil, South Africans of all shades came to know each other as humans \u2013 seeking to put aside differences, fears and bitterness in order to find ways to make peace with each other. In some cases, they engaged in a kind of dress rehearsal for the future formal negotiations.<\/p>\n<p>Inside the country, \u201cchurch leaders quietly facilitated retreat gatherings for the three years of national peace talks [1991-94], bringing together public leaders from all political parties,\u201d said Carl Stauffer. \u201cThese interactions were strictly for the purposes of personal storytelling and relationship-building across all political divides.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cKept out of the glaring lights of the media, many of us believe these behind-the-scenes encounters had a powerful staying effect in keeping the otherwise divisive peace negotiations from splintering into civil war,\u201d he added.<\/p>\n<p>Now that API is in South Africa, Juma hopes to gather these lessons into a practical pedagogy that can be applied more widely. In essence, API is trying to live out Nelson Mandela\u2019s well-known saying, \u201cIf you want to make peace with your enemy, you have to work with your enemy. Then he becomes your partner.\u201d<\/p>\n<h3>Juma\u2019s journey to peacebuilding<\/h3>\n<p>Mulanda Jimmy Juma knows what it\u2019s like to be attacked, to hide and to flee, as have hundreds of thousands of fellow migrants in the face of possible death across Africa.<\/p>\n<p>Juma\u2019s father, Juma Lubambo M\u2019smbya III, was a respected, enlightened chief of a Congolese village within a region that was a colony of Belgium until independence in 1960. The region then became part of the \u201cR\u00e9publique du Congo,\u201d renamed \u201cZaire\u201d (1971 to 1997), and now named the Democratic Republic of the Congo.<\/p>\n<p>For generations \u2013 long, long before Juma\u2019s birth in 1973 \u2013 armed militias, rebels and soldiers of various stripes have swept through his family\u2019s home region on the eastern border of Congo near Burundi. Sometimes these troops belonged to whatever entity was functioning as a government at the time, usually a dictatorship. Oftentimes, the militias and rebels were proxies of neighboring countries \u2013 Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda and Angola \u2013 seeking to control Congo\u2019s rich resources.<\/p>\n<p>Juma recalls three brushes with genocide at the hands of one of these armed groups in his home country.<\/p>\n<p>His first was when he was 4 years old, walking with his 6-year-old sister to visit an uncle in a neighboring village. \u201cWe reached a place where rebels used to kill people, and we saw government soldiers coming on a big military vehicle.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhen the vehicle stopped, we ran toward the lake and hid under a rock. They came looking for us. They walked all over the rocks calling us \u2018insects\u2019 in Lingala and saying, \u2018If we see them, we\u2019ll kill them.\u2019<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe were hunched over with our arms crossed, and we tried to stop breathing. They looked for almost an hour, but there were many rocks.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe heard their vehicle going away, but we waited and waited and waited almost another hour, until it was getting dark. Then we ran back home.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cAs children, it was really tough. There were many other smaller events when the rebels came and we\u2019d go hide in the bush and they would take our chickens and cattle. Whether rebels or government soldiers, they took whatever they wanted. That\u2019s the kind of environment we grew up in.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The violence rendered Juma unable to start school until age 9, and then he did so as a child sponsored by a U.S. nonprofit, International Compassion.<\/p>\n<p>In 1996, when Juma was a university student doing a development internship in a small town, he was coming out of his aunt\u2019s house on a Sunday when he saw armed men on foot. (Later Juma realized these were Tutsi rebels backed by Burundi and Rwanda on a quest to overthrow the Mobutu regime.)<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThey started shooting randomly. I ran behind the house into the coffee trees, toward the lake. I found two uncles and one of my brothers and was going away with them, when I met a child I knew. His siblings were already killed. I picked him up and took him with me to where my uncles were hiding.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhen it was dark, we got into a small boat to cross to the other side of the lake. There were about 15 of us, two uncles, my brother, wives, kids. It was windy and we nearly drowned. We had to throw a lot of things into the water.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Juma was not entirely successful at avoiding the rebels. Two of them found him and pointed their guns, ready to shoot. One screamed, \u201cWho are you?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Juma, who had the tall, slim appearance of a Tutsi, replied: \u201cI\u2019m the son of the chief of I\u2019amba-Makobola Village.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The rebels lowered their guns and said, \u201cWe know your family.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile (though Juma didn\u2019t know this until later), both the government forces and rebels were decimating his home village \u2013 bombing, shooting, burning houses, and killing children by drowning them in rivers, cutting them, and disposing of them in toilets. Juma\u2019s father and mother hid and survived, as did three of his brothers and two of his sisters. His youngest brother, age 6, was caught in the village and killed.<\/p>\n<p>Two years after this, his elderly father was arrested \u2013 on charges of having a gun hidden in his toilet (it was planted, as explained later) \u2013 and was imprisoned and subjected to prolonged torture, along with other traditional chiefs. One of Juma\u2019s sisters was raped, which caused her husband to reject her and their two children. She&#8217;s never since functioned normally.<\/p>\n<h3>Sponsored by MCC<\/h3>\n<p>This is the background to Juma\u2019s desperate 2,500-mile journey in 1998 from the eastern border of the Congo south to Zambia. Going further, he arrived in South Africa in 1999 at age 26 and applied for refugee status. \u201cI didn\u2019t know where my father and mother were,\u201d he said. \u201cI was told by some people, \u2018Your father was killed.\u2019 I lived with that thought for almost four years.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>By 2000, Juma had landed IT work with a Catholic diocese and had helped the diocese develop a program for assisting a refugee community in Durban. That work led him to cross paths with MCC representative <strong>Suzanne Lind<\/strong>, who offered to help Juma study peace. Juma began writing to Carl Stauffer, then MCC\u2019s regional peace advisor for southern Africa. Stauffer replied, \u201cYes, we will give you a scholarship to go to Zambia and you can join API in 2002.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In those days, API\u2019s trainings lasted two months, which meant Juma needed to stop working with the Catholic diocese in order to do the API trainings. It also meant he needed to ride in an airplane for the first time. After much prayer, Juma decided to accept the MCC scholarship to API.<\/p>\n<p>The API trainings led to work with the Great Lakes Peacebuilding Institute in Burundi (which led to meeting the woman he would marry) and to this wonderful discovery: his father had survived the torture (though it had claimed the lives of other chiefs) and was living again with his mother in their home village.<\/p>\n<p>In 2004, Juma had another miraculous experience: a cousin invited him to meet the soldier who had planted the gun in the toilet to frame his father. \u201cHe was from my tribe, but he was acting as a kind of spy when he did this. He apologized for what he did. He said he was misled.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Juma forgave him. He could not do otherwise, after all the trainings and teachings he had done on reconciliation and on reintegrating ex-soldiers into their home communities.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cOur culture has resources that we don\u2019t value enough. We have love and support from our family members and from the community in general. Despite all the bad things that have happened, there is always something positive that remains. People capitalize on the little that remains. That is how they cope. There is usually hope within them. They say, \u2018I have to live because tomorrow will come, and it will be better.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em>\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<h4 id=\"footnotes\">Footnotes<\/h4>\n<ol>\n<li><small>Dr. <strong>Mulanda Jimmy Juma <\/strong>coordinates the Peace Studies Programme at St. Augustine College in Johannesburg, South Africa, and directs the Africa Peacebuilding Institute, an SPI-like initiative based at St. Augustine and funded by Mennonite Central Committee (MCC). Juma holds a PhD in politics, human rights and sustainability from Scuola Superiore Sant\u2019Anna in Italy and a master of commerce in peace studies and conflict resolution from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa. Previously, he coor- dinated the Dag Hammarskj\u00f6ld Centre for Peace, Good Governance and Human Rights in Zambia. He also worked for MCC as its regional peace advisor for southern Africa from 2009 through 2012. In this last role, he followed Dr. <strong>Carl Stauffer<\/strong>, currently on the faculty of CJP and co-director\u00a0of the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice, who was MCC\u2019s regional peace advisor from 2000 to 2009. Juma and Stauffer are co-teaching \u201cJustice in Transition: Restorative and Indigenous Applications in Post-war Contexts\u201d\u00a0at SPI 2015.<\/small><\/li>\n<li><small>These institutes receive funding from MCC, as well as from other faith-based\u00a0organizations. These institutes, plus the Nairobi Peace Institute (also\u00a0a beneficiary of MCC support), often use the same instructors rotationally.\u00a0CJP faculty who have taught or consulted at more than one peacebuilding\u00a0center in Africa are Barry Hart, Vernon Jantzi, Lisa Schirch and Carl\u00a0Stauffer. CJP alumni who have taught at more than one include: Babu\u00a0Ayindo of Kenya, MA \u201998; Alfiado Zunguza of Mozambique, MA \u201999;\u00a0Fidele Lumeya of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, MA \u201900; Krista\u00a0Rigalo, MA \u201900, of the United States; Gopar Tapkida of Nigeria, MA \u201901;\u00a0Emmanuel Bombande of Ghana, MA \u201902; and John Katunga Murhula of\u00a0Kenya, MA \u201905. Two SPI alumni work with Reconcile, which is under the\u00a0New Sudan Council of Churches: Milcah Lalam and Dele Emmanuel.<\/small><\/li>\n<li><small>Other factors that contributed to ending apartheid included international boycotts of South Africa that worsened its economy, and threats and fears of worsening internal violence leading to a nationwide bloodbath.<\/small><\/li>\n<li><small>From <a href=\"http:\/\/www.sahistory.org.za\/article\/chronology-meetings-between-south-africans-and-anc-exile-1983-2000-michael-savage\">www.sahistory.org.za\/article\/chronology-meetings-between-south-africans-and-anc-exile-1983-2000-michael-savage<\/a>.<\/small><\/li>\n<li><small><strong>R<\/strong><strong>on Kraybill<\/strong>, a founding faculty member of CJP, was the director of training at the Centre for Conflict Resolution from 1989 to 1995 (called the Centre for Intergroup Studies until 1991) in a supportive role to H.W. van der Merwe until the latter stepped down as executive director in 1992, fully\u00a0retiring in 1994.<\/small><\/li>\n<li><small>See footnote #4.<\/small><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Weeks of xenophobic attacks in spring 2015 on migrants living in South Africa deeply affected Mulanda Jimmy Juma, though he was not threatened personally. Not&hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/2015\/07\/api-2000-birthing-peace-clubs-in-african-schools-2\/\" target=\"_self\" class=\"more-link\">Read more <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">about API, 2000: Birthing Peace Clubs in African Schools<\/span><\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"author":196,"featured_media":7097,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1073],"tags":[33,806,434,1328],"issues":[1275],"class_list":["post-7095","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-magazine","tag-african-peacebuilding-institute","tag-carl-stauffer","tag-mennonite-central-committee","tag-mulanda-jimmy-juma","issues-2014-15"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7095","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/196"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7095"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7095\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7187,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7095\/revisions\/7187"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/7097"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7095"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=7095"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7095"},{"taxonomy":"issues","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/peacebuilder\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issues?post=7095"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}