The Dawn of a New Day for the Niger Delta
We are excited to announce the launch of the website for an innovative and trend-setting project we are leading in the Niger Delta. ‘Tomorrow is a New Day‘, funded by the European Union, is promoting stability in the Niger Delta through community reconciliation and the peaceful reintegration of ex-militants.
The project works with local partners and uses radio programs, trauma healing sessions, town hall meetings, and other replicable tools to build stronger communities in this post-conflict region.
Check it out here: www.tomorrowisanewday.org
And be sure to ‘like’ the Tomorrow is a New Day Facebook Page where you can watch videos, see pictures, and stay up to date on exciting developments as the project continues!
By Matt Medved
“Welcome to Naija,” my driver Thomas says as I reach the end of the customs maze at Abuja’s Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport. After a warm handshake, we depart immediately for Jos to avoid the dreaded rush hour traffic jams that gridlock highways for hours on end.
My maiden impressions of Nigeria come in fleeting moments through passing glass. Hawkers carrying wares as varied as eggs, belts, and board games slink from car to car seeking eye contact. Brightly clad women balance oversized cargo on their heads and swaddled babies on their backs. Gaggles of waving children greet my pale skin with nervous smiles and cries of “Bature!” More churches than convenience stores. The stoic visage of President Goodluck Jonathan gazes from a billboard screaming “Let’s shun all violence!”
The Plateau State security presence is stifling. read more…
By Simon Gladman and Laode Arham
A scene from Tim Bui in which an inmate snarls at another prisoner and refuses to share a cigarette struck more than a chord with the viewers of a special screening of the drama series in June 2012.
Laughter broke out among a group of 26 prisoners at Tangerang Prison in Jakarta during the scene. It was an insignificant scene in the story’s plot, but it was one which resonated strongly with them.
The attention of the prisoners of Tangerang –most of who were convicted on drug dealing charges– was fixated on the projector screen at the front of the small room during the viewing of the TV drama. read more…
By Kiran Peter, Pakistan (Cross-posted from the IPSI Institute)
The IPSI symposium started yesterday with Michael Shipler, the Asia Director at Search for Common Ground and Rajendra Mulmi, the Director of Programs at Search for Common Ground Nepal, facilitating various sessions on the topic ‘Facilitating a Dialogue Process’. The purpose of the sessions was to orient participants to Conflict Analysis, Consensus Building and Mediation skills.
The first session covered the importance of identities and how its manipulation could lead to various types of conflicts. read more…
American History Gives Insight on Governance in the Middle East

Tour poses before the African American Civil War Memorial. Pictured: Jeanne Isler, Program Director for SFCG on Race (far right); Dala Ghandour, Leaders for Democracy Fellow and Intern for SFCG on Race (second from right); Dr. Frank Smith, Director of the Museum; Emna Ben-Yedder, Leaders for Democracy Fellow and Intern for Partners in Humanity (far left) with other Fellows.
By: Christopher White
Race and International Relations
Recently I had the opportunity to join what wound up being a very productive cross-cultural meeting. Dala Ghandour, one of our visiting Leaders for Democracy Fellows (LDF), organized a trip to the African American Civil War Memorial & Museum for her LDF colleagues (for more information, you can read a recent SFCG blog post about Dala and the State Department’s LDF program and an article by The Examiner on the museum visit). Jeanné Isler, Project Director for SFCG on Race, was able to get Dr. Frank Smith, Director of the Museum and former City Councilman, to lead the visiting Fellows on a comprehensive tour chronicling the African American experience. This facet of American history opened up an opportunity for Middle Eastern political entrepreneurs to draw lessons on community development from the experiences of an American civil rights activist.
With emerging leaders from the Middle East and North Africa learning about the politics of race in America, this event showcased how our SFCG on Race and Partners in Humanity programs can dovetail. SFCG’s Partners in Humanity program centers around efforts to promote cross-cultural dialogue between the Muslim and Western worlds while SFCG on Race seeks to foster dialogue that will heal the wounds of racism in America. Reflecting on her work on the Congressional Conversations on Race, Jeanné noted that “part of the reason why the discourse on race and conflict around race is [so] entrenched is because we are not in the habit of sharing and listening to a range of stories about people’s American experiences.” Bringing this narrative approach to Muslim-Western relations was one of the motivations for this event.
The Importance of Inclusive Development
When Dr. Smith opened his tour, he presented us with a stark reminder that civil rights and racial equality are not simply museum pieces. During a recent conference on racial reconciliation in Georgia, Dr. Smith told us about a KKK demonstration that was occurring at the same time. It was something that many wouldn’t expect in 2012 but, he pointed out, it served to demonstrate that America is still wrestling with this issue.
Taking us through displays of shackles, uniforms, and bills of sale for human beings, Dr. Smith detailed how the Emancipation Proclamation came about and how African Americans helped bolster the forces of the Union during the American Civil War. Dr. Smith explained how the antagonisms over the political economy of slavery had led to a deep and far-reaching debate over what kind of country America would be. Would sentiments of national unity win out over the desire for two Americas? What would be the fate of freed slaves? Would they be regarded as second-class or full citizens? This kind of debate over competing visions of the future, he suggested, may be similar to what is going on in the Fellows’ home countries right now.
African Americans were granted legal rights in the aftermath of the war, but, as the armed regiments pulled out of Southern territory, old prejudices re-emerged as laws were made to systematically exclude them. Requirements for voter registration such as poll taxes and exams were used to prevent the full enfranchisement of African Americans. Thus, the Civil War had led to a merely formal national unity. It took the twentieth century civil rights movement to enable legislation (e.g., the Voting Rights Act and the Fair Housing Act) aimed at realizing the country’s ideals of equal protection under the law.
Dr. Smith related his own efforts to bring the lessons of the movement to the forefront in everyday politics during his tenure with DC’s City Council. He told a story about how developers had bought buildings in the city, and attempted to evict renters so they could sell the property. There was a law that, if housing was to be sold, it had to be offered to the tenants first. Organizing the people from the neighborhood, he was able to orchestrate sit-ins and take over the street, thus leading to support from the city for the tenants to buy back their housing. Grassroots organizing, coupled with efforts to enact good rent control laws that would prevent tenants from being evicted by indirect means enabled the residents to retain influence over how the town was to develop.
Lessons for an International Audience
Dr. Smith told the visiting Fellows this because he said he wanted to “embolden” them. Everyday politics, while perfectly legal, can sometimes lead to socially unjust policy. He told the Fellows that, as they help shape the future of their home countries, it will be important to spread economic development so that it benefits the whole, not just a particular group. Otherwise, Dr. Smith noted, they might wake up one day and realize they had not built what they had originally intended.
Crossing the street to show us the Memorial, Dr. Smith told the Fellows that if they want to have a just society, it is important to “keep the people involved in the discussion.” He gestured to the figures in the Memorial he helped establish and said that, to galvanize their people, they should “find something like this that brings everyone together and tells a real story.”
Dala told me that the things Dr. Smith had to say really resonated for her. Indeed, reflecting on sectarian issues in her home country of Lebanon, she told me that, “It’s important for me to heal the wounds of my people…because if you don’t acknowledge that something’s wrong, then you cannot build something…you cannot bring people to acknowledge that there has been mourning and grief.” This was exactly why Jeanné had been supportive of the trip in the first place. She suggested that perhaps DC’s grassroots history, rather than just its federal agencies, could contribute to the goals of developing knowledge in the field of peacebuilding:
I think that ethnic conflict is a challenge around the world and I definitely consider conflict about race in America to be one facet of ethnic conflict. I think that…we as a country have things to learn but we also have some best practices that we can share.
Christopher White, Communications Consultant at SFCG, is a social media strategist and freelance writer with a focus on international relations and philosophy.











