Radio Journalists Honored for Their Efforts

“RFPA winners (from left) E. Maina, SFCG Rwanda National Programs Manager Narcisse Kalisa, S. Guillaume, E. Ojok, and R. Besant
On November 23rd, the winners of the 2011 Radio For Peacebuilding Africa (RFPA) Awards were honoured at a ceremony organised by Search for Common Ground in Kigali, Rwanda! The Awards are given to exemplary radio journalism in three categories: Youth, Gender and a Jury’s Special Prize. The prize recognizes high quality radio programs that contribute to peace in Africa.
RFPA had received a diverse selection of programs both fictional and non-fictional programs in English, French and local languages. Jury members were media and peacebuilding experts from sub-Saharan Africa, as well as from Europe and the United States.
Approximately 40 people, including journalists from the Great Lakes region, representatives of civil society organizations, and Rwandan government officials, attended the ceremony. The winner of the Youth Award is Eunice Maina from Well Told Story in Nairobi, Kenya for his radio show that focuses on political manipulation of youth. For his show Let’s Talk Peace, Ojok Emmanuel from Radio Pacis in Arua, Uganda, won the Jury’s Special Award. The show addresses the conflict between local residents and pastoralists in Uganda. read more…
Search for Common Ground (SFCG) recently celebrated the launch of its new radio program for youth called Karau Dikur ba Dame (‘Buffalo Horn for Peace’). After Babadok Rebenta! (“The Drums of Peace”) this is the second radio program SFCG has launched to help transform the way youth in Timor-Leste deal with conflict, and improve their development prospects through media.
Timor-Leste gained its independence from Indonesia in 2002, the same year it became a UN-member. That transition to independence was marked by violence. Unrest still impedes the country’s progress and the UN has stationed peacekeepers in Timor-Leste until the presidential elections in 2012. Youth is a crucial population of the country, with 33 percent under the age of 14. SFCG is helping youth to participate in civic life, through innovative radio programs, thus contributing to a transition into a peaceful and democratic country.
Featuring a dynamic cast of young local actors, Karau Dikur ba Dame is a 25-episode radio drama that follows the lives of the Barbosa family and their community, as they negotiate everyday challenges common to people across Timor Leste. The Tetun-language production is divided into five sections, each one focused on an issue identified by young people as being important to them and to their communities; namely unemployment, domestic violence, land disputes, martial arts and elections. Promoting practical, non-violent, and cooperative ways to address conflict, the drama aims to break down negative stereotypes and provide examples of cooperative solutions to stimulate social progress.

Secretary of State for the Promotion of Equality, Idelta Maria Rodrigues officially launching the drama series, with SFCG Country Director, Jose De Sousa
Around 80 people came to the auditorium of the National University of Timor Leste in Dili to attend the launch ceremony. Keynote speakers included U.S. Ambassador Judith R. Fergin, the 2011 N-Peace award winner from Timor Leste, Filomena Baros dos Reis (Mana Mena), and the Secretary of State for the Promotion of Equality, Idelta Maria Rodrigues, who formally opened the event by blowing the Karau Dikur (buffalo horn).
The speakers expressed their enthusiasm about the program, praising its contribution to peacebuilding and to the positive development of Timorese youth. Ambassador Fergin said: “This series owes its birth to the desire of Timor-Leste’s youth to serve as peacemakers and nation builders. With their passion, their energy, and their determination, they can be the nation’s strongest agents for peace.”
Music from the program was performed with traditional soruboek dancing. There was also a live theatre performance by members of the Karau Dikur ba Dame cast. Entitled Rai Rohan (“Piece of Land”), the performance was an excerpt from an episode focused on land disputes.
Karau Dikur ba Dame begins broadcasting on 15 Community Radio Stations throughout Timor Leste on November 15, airing at 7pm from Tuesday to Saturday.
The program is produced in cooperation with the Timor Leste Media Development Centre (TLMDC), Conselho Nacional Juventude de Timor Leste (CNJTL), BELUN and the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
By Nick Oatley
I am here at the 3rd Science for Peace Conference in Milan Italy. The Science for Peace initiative was founded by the Umberto Veronesi Foundation to harness the scientific method in the service of peace.
With over 1,000 participants and speakers from across the health, peacebuilding, economics, civil rights and development communities, I am here to present on Search for Common Ground’s education-entertainment or soap operas for social change.
Opened with keynote speakers Shirin Ebadi (Nobel Peace Laureate 2003 Iran) and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend (Vice President Science for Peace), the conference is covering topics such as access to water and food, prevention of major diseases, economic sciences for peace, science and civil rights, the arms trade, and new technology and conflicts.
Since 2009 the Science for Peace initiative has included:
123 speakers form 23 countries
7 Nobel Prize Laureates
5000 attendees
5500 students
550 press and online articles about 19000 people connected to the event through the website of the Foundation
9740 online connections from abroad
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Nick Oatley is SFCG’s Director of Institutional Learning, responsible for managing the leadership and technical support on design, monitoring and evaluation of SFCG programs, promoting learning and knowledge management across the organization, and managing our work on Children & Youth and Women, Peace &Security. He has worked in the field with SFCG programs in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Burundi, Rwanda, Morocco and Nepal.
Legendary Music Producer, Quincy Jones has collaborated with Emirati social entrepreneur Badr Jafar, to jointly Executive Produce the Arabic charity single entitled Bokra (Tomorrow). The song involves 24 leading Arab Artists from 16 nations across the Middle East and North Africa singing with one voice for a better tomorrow.

SFCG's new poster campaign against sexual violence: Translation: TOP - Who of these women deserved to be raped? BOTTOM - Nothing, and no one, can justify rape.
Our Chief Program Officer, Lena Slachmuijlder, was recently interviewed by Men Can Stop Rape (MCSR) regarding SFCG’s strategy to prevent sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) in the DRC which engages men as equal partners and stakeholders.
Men Can Stop Rape aims to mobilize men to create cultures free from violence, especially against women. They support and initiate programs that generate positive role models which reinforce their vision. Lena’s interview is part of MCSR’s masculinity conversation series and is published in two parts.
Lena spoke of her experience leading SFCG DRC, where she was Country Director. SFCG uses a number of tools to address different populations about how they can prevent violence against women and lessen the stigma that so often surrounds survivors of rape. SFCG has a multi-pronged approach to preventing SGBV in DRC that includes mobile cinema, participatory theater, radio and television call-in shows and dramas and even comic books. Our famous character, Mopila the taxi driver got his start on a radio show that has since spawned a comic book series. The sixth and most recent editions, Mopila on the Avenue of Love, explores the specific challenges women face and presents solutions to how women and girls can be respected, paying special attention to pupil-teacher relationships and sexual harassment based on “dress.” In the scene below, the character Julienne accepts an invitation for extra math tutoring from her teacher, but he has ulterior motives:
Our Vrai Djo campaign shows positive examples of male behavior and depicts them as having a role to play in preventing violence. As Lena told MCSR, “The Vrai Djo video spots were also not about showing a man doing something wrong. Instead, we showed a man in a series of situations resembling common interactions with women, and doing the right thing, doing it naturally, doing it confidently, doing it strongly.”
One of our most recent initiatives is a poster campaign (above) that tackles the stigma and consequences of rape, for women but also for wider society. It emphasizes that rape is not a “women’s issue” but a societal issue.
See the rest of the posters here.
Lena speaks about balances of power and attitudes that make rape so pervasive and grant impunity to its perpetrators, as well as ways SFCG has included men and male perspectives in the discussion:
I think what was important for us was what we learned from doing a couple years of trying to prevent sexual violence and reaching out to a mass population – through radio programs, through taking a film out and showing it in village after village, by doing comic books, by doing participatory theater. We felt as though we were raising awareness around certain things – that rape is illegal, what constitutes rape, you know, the basics, because some of those definitions have been mixed up with cultures and traditions. But we often found that these sensitizations were creating another reaction on behalf of the men in the audiences. They felt as though they were not getting attention; they invariably stood up and said that they, men, had been raped. But that was coming largely from feeling disempowered. They would often use this phrase, “Women are raping us” referring to the way that women dress or the fact that they have money, giving the impression that the men are unable to resist, and the women are able do whatever they want….
…We were running into a wall telling men what they shouldn’t do. And so we said there aren’t enough efforts to give them a model, an ideal. We wanted them to feel attracted to being confident and powerful and cool and good looking, while they were respecting women.
Read the rest of the interview…
50 years ago, brave men and women of diverse racial background rode interstate buses into America’s Deep South, to protest and bring attention to the injustices of segregation. We honored the Freedom Riders this October with a Common Ground Award, for their commitment to nonviolent action and their daring to make change. Their movement continues to inspire others, most recently a group of Palestinians in the West Bank.
A group of about six Palestinians gathered at a bus stop in the West Bank on Tuesday. They attempted to board a bus for Jewish settlers that would bring them to East Jerusalem. Palestinians are not allowed to cross into Jerusalem without Israeli permission. Just like the Freedom Riders 50 years ago, the Palestinians were arrested by police. According to the San Francisco Chronicle they were later released in the West Bank. The Washington Post writes that they were using civil disobedience as a means to overcome the status quo. The inspiration drawn from the actions of the US Freedom Riders were not just seen in the non-violent action, but one of the activists also wore a T-shirt saying “we shall overcome” – relating tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.
In Washington DC a group of students planned a solidarity action boarding buses around the city educating the public on actions happening simultaneously in the Occupied West Bank in a show of solidarity with Palestinian Freedom Riders.
Maybe they “heard” original Freedom Rider, Diane Nash at the CG ceremony call out to everyone to take action and step up for their rights and help change the world. What the original Freedom Riders proved, she said, was that anybody can make change, everyone can contribute.






