Buchzusammenfassung
Leymah Gbowee is a peace activist and recipient of the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts in empowering Liberian women and putting an end to her nation’s civil war. She is also a cofounder of the Women Peace and Security Network Africa, as well as president of the Gbowee Peace Foundation, in Africa.
In the summer of 1995, Charles Taylor and other factions signed a peace agreement, but the violence soon resumed, forcing Leymah Gbowee to flee Liberia in April 1996. Pregnant and with her two children, she endured harrowing conditions aboard an overcrowded Nigerian freighter before eventually reaching Ghana, where she gave birth prematurely to her son, Arthur, under dire circumstances. Returning to Liberia in 1997 without her abusive partner, Daniel, Gbowee found her once-promising future in ruins due to the war. Her dreams of becoming a doctor were replaced by a new path as she joined a UNICEF program to assist war trauma victims, marking the beginning of her social work career. Despite personal struggles, including raising four children under challenging conditions, Gbowee pursued education and became deeply involved in peacebuilding efforts. Founding the Liberian chapter of WIPNET, she mobilized women across religious lines to demand peace, leading to the eventual resignation of Charles Taylor and a peace agreement in 2003. Her efforts gained international recognition, culminating in the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011. Today, Gbowee continues her activism, emphasizing that lasting peace requires ongoing commitment, as demonstrated through her work reintegrating former child soldiers, disarming combatants, and empowering women in Liberia’s democratic processes.
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