We Are Not Invisible: 5 African Women Respond To The Kony 2012 Campaign
2) Rosebell Kagumire
Respect Africa’s Agency, Don’t Paint Us As Voiceless
While the cyberspace heated up with written critique upon written critique, Rosebell Kagumire, a Ugandan blogger and journalist that covered the LRA several years ago, decided to post a video summarizing her thoughts.
In this video, she passionately asserts the danger of a single story to dehumanize a people:
How you tell the stories of Africans is much more important that what the story is; because if you are showing me as voiceless, as hopeless [then] you have no space telling my story. You shouldn’t be telling my story if you don’t believe that I also have the power to change what is going on.
Kagumire also stresses the importance of including African leadership, as well as engaging other political players such as the Ugandan government and other African countries before attempting to implement any solutions.
Visit Kagumire’s blog here, and follow @RosebellK
3) Betty Oyella Bigombe
Historical Context is Necessary for Any Future Solutions
Although Betty isn’t currently directly involved with peace efforts for the LRA, nor has she written a formal response to the Invisible Children campaign, she has been quoted and cited several times as a notable Ugandan peace-seeking activist the Kony2012 video erases by suggesting that there’s been limited attention called to the issue. Not only was Betty previously tasked with convincing the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) guerilla rebels –negotiating with Kony himself over 10 years ago — to lay down their arms, following the failure of military efforts to defeat the rebels, her shared experiences working from all sides of the conflict provide counter to IC’s claim that there are just good guys and bad guys. From CSMonitor.com:
Bigombe has seen the LRA’s brutality first-hand. In 1995, when she was a government minister, she was the first outsider on the scene of one of its bloodiest massacres. Rebels attacked a town and captured about 220 men, women, and children. The villagers were marched several miles to a riverbank and all methodically executed.
Yet sometimes Bigombe sees glimmers of humanity, too. Once, one LRA commander grew pensive during a conversation. He wondered how his fellow northerners would perceive him after all the terrible things the LRA has done. He asked plaintively, “Can I ever go home again?”
Read her full story here, watch a video of Bigombe speaking here, as well as this recent interview with her on Enough Project.
4) Dayo Olopade
Support the Mundane March Towards Progress, Not Just Internet Sensationalism
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