In Pursuit of Democracy

Resource for Grades 9-12

In Pursuit of Democracy

Media Type:
Video

Running Time: 3m 24s
Size: 19.8 MB

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Learn more about the documentary Women, War & Peace: Pray the Devil Back to Hell.

Resource Produced by:

WNET

Collection Developed by:

WNET

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

Major funding for Women, War & Peace is provided by the 40x50, a group of visionary donors who have provided key support for this initiative; Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Foundation to Promote Open Society; Ford Foundation; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; Swanee Hunt Family Fund of the Denver Foundation; Starry Night, an Anne Delaney Charitable Fund; The Atlantic Philanthropies; Dobkin Family Foundation; Cheryl and Philip Milstein Family; Bill Haney; Pierre N. Hauser; Susan Disney Lord; Partridge Foundation, a John and Polly Guth Charitable Fund; Vital Projects Fund; Elizabeth H. Weatherman and The Warburg Pincus Foundation; The Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation; Barbara H. Zuckerberg; Sigrid Rausing Trust; more than 1,500 Members of THIRTEEN; and Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Major funding for I Came to Testify is also provided by National Endowment for the Humanities, and for Peace Unveiled by The David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Funding for the online Education Guide is provided by The Overbrook Foundation.

This video from Women War & Peace shows the Liberian women’s commitment to maintaining peace in their country. Despite their victory in Accra, Ghana, when they return home they vow to stay active. The first step is to forgive the rebels who brought so much violence to their country. Many of these rebels were child soldiers, and were victims as much as the civilians in Liberia. The women also began fighting for an elected democracy in hopes of maintaining peace. In January 2006 their persistence paid off—Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was elected president.

open Transcript

LEYMAH: Now what? What do we do? Do we just go back home and sit and dance and celebrate? And it was like all of us just turned to that answer no, we have to be involved.

SUGARS at Accra: Peace is a process. It’s not an event. When the guns are put down, we have to continue to build the peace. We have to accept our combatants into our midst. We cannot hold it against them.

VAIBA: Sometimes I’m the opposite side to forgive these guys. But again I say to myself, "How can we move on if we do not forgive?" But really I tell you no lie, with the stories from the women, I find it hard.

LEYMAH: I was angry with the perpetrators. These ex-child soldiers. But when I started working with them, I realized that a lot of them were as much victim as we were.

LEYMAH: We believed that until we had elected democracy, Liberia would not know true peace. We decided to keep working and going to the field until that day came.

VAIBA: We all got involved one way or the other. We campaigned till we campaigned in the night. We campaigned till we forgot that we could even be raped.

SIRLEAF INAUGURATION SPEECH: I want to here now gratefully acknowledge the powerful voice of women from all walks of life whose votes brought us the victory. They defended me, they worked with me, they prayed for me. It is the women who labored and advocated for peace throughout our region.

LEYMAH: There’s no way that the history of Madam Sirleaf can be written without the history of the women’s peace work. It was the cake, and then her election was the icing.

LEYMAH: After two and half years, we officially ended the mass action campaign and left the field. But Liberians knew that if things ever got bad again, we would be back.


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