Liberians see signs of hope, restoration
May 1, 2004
By Kathleen LaCamera*
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A UMNS photo by Joni Goheen.
The Bishop Judith Craig Children’s Village outside Monrovia,
Liberia, is home to 84 children left orphaned by war. |
PITTSBURGH (UMNS) — Liberian United
Methodists say they are daring to hope that their war-torn country
is moving away from destruction and violence.
Hopeful signs include the April 14 reopening of the Ganta Hospital,
which suffered near-total destruction in fighting between government
and rebel forces in mid-July 2003. Founded in 1926 by Methodist
medical missionaries, the hospital and mission compound serves a
population of 450,000 in Liberia and the surrounding border regions
of Guinea and the Ivory Coast.
The ratio of doctors to the general population in Liberia is 1 to
1,000; that translates into 3,000 doctors serving the health needs
of the country’s 3 million inhabitants. Some sources estimate as
many as 60 percent of children do not reach age 5.
“When the hospital was destroyed, the people were completely
depressed,” reported Liberia United Methodist Bishop John Innis from
the 2004 General Conference of the United Methodist Church in
Pittsburgh. “Its reopening symbolizes hope, restoration, peace and
the aliveness of the church who is the custodian of God’s creation
and God’s people.”
In addition to the hospital, the mission compound includes a primary
school, nursing and vocational training facilities, agricultural
production, homes and a church. The hospital had just undergone a
major renovation with the help of funding from the Board of Global
Ministries before the last attacks in summer 2003. Almost every part
of the hospital compound, with the exception of the leprosy unit,
was destroyed or rendered inoperable.
Today, with the help of funds from numerous groups — including
United Methodist churches in Germany and the United Methodist
Committee on Relief — 37 hospital staff are back at Ganta providing
outpatient care, prenatal, maternity and child care, eye clinics,
emergency surgical procedures and short-stay ward care. The
hospital’s prosthesis and orthopedic workshop is not yet able to
resume its work.
Only eight months after ferocious attacks on the Ganta compound,
Innis says local people have the confidence to begin rebuilding
because the political landscape has changed and now peace and
stability are real possibilities for Liberia.
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A UMNS photo by Joni Goheen.
A young girl paints her toenails at a camp for displaced persons
at the Samuel Doe Sports Complex in Monrovia, Liberia.
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What has changed is the departure of former
Liberian President Charles Taylor last August and a peace process
that includes a 7,500-strong United Nations peace-keeping force
helping to disarm nearly 45,000 soldiers — as many as half of them
children. The exiled Taylor, whose militia is blamed for starting
Liberia’s 14 years of civil unrest, has been indicted for crimes
against humanity by a U.N. tribunal.
The Rev. Erlene Thompson, senior pastor at the oldest United
Methodist church in West Africa, says she too sees a confidence in
Liberia’s future she has not witnessed in years. Thompson has been a
part of Monrovia’s First United Methodist Church congregation all
her life.
“Lots (of people) are beginning to come home. Some who went away
years ago come to me and say, ‘I’ve come back to help rebuild the
church,’” said Thompson, who also is serving as a General Conference
delegate. “People are rebuilding their homes. … There is more hope
now that the U.N. has started disarming. Our citizens are relieved
they are taking the guns away. And soldiers are happy to give guns
up.”
In partnership with the United Nations, the United Methodist
Committee on Relief is opening a demobilization, rehabilitation,
disarmament and reintegration camp in Liberia. Soldiers come to the
camp voluntarily, give up their weapons and begin a process of
stepping away from the violence and fighting that has so defined
and, ironically, sustained their lives.
Once U.N. officials have disarmed soldiers, they are fed, given a
place to sleep and receive counselling and vocational training,
including literacy training. The UMCOR camp has a full-time
recreation director who organizes activities for soldiers undergoing
the reintegration process. They also receive $300 and an official
U.N. “demobilization certification,” which can help smooth the way
for their return to communities and lives left behind during combat.
“Soldiers want to leave but are afraid without proper documentation
someone will come after them and arrest them and worse,” said relief
agency head Paul Dirdak.
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A UMNS photo by Joni Goheen.
The Bishop Judith Craig Children’s Village outside Monrovia,
Liberia, is home to 84 children left orphaned by war. |
While the relief agency has a proven track
record with “demobilization” work, this is the first camp it has
undertaken to manage. Its success will help shape similar efforts
the agency has been invited to take on in Central Asia and Congo in
the future. A previous UMCOR literacy demobilization project in
Liberia’s Gbazon Town saw more than 360 demobilized child soldiers
graduate from high school and receive vocational training. Some
13,000 soldiers are expected to be processed at this new camp.
The United Methodist Committee on Relief is acutely aware of the
complex needs of child soldiers. According to a recent Human Rights
Watch Report, “How to Fight, How to Kill: Child Soldiers in
Liberia,” the use of children as soldiers dates to the start of
Liberia’s conflict in 1989. Charles Taylor’s militia became infamous
for the abduction and use of boys in war, and others factions soon
adopted this practice. In many cases, children as young as 9 were
kidnapped, sexually abused and forced to kill or be killed. The use
of child soldiers under the age of 15 is a violation of the Geneva
Convention.
In the UMCOR camp, child soldiers are separated from adults when
they arrive. In addition to the standard care and reintegration
support, they also receive assistance in reuniting with family
members. Many of these children are eager to return to education,
but the cost of school fees can make such a move difficult, if
nearly impossible. This situation is one that Innis feels the
Liberian United Methodist Church could help change. He hopes that
fees at United Methodist-sponsored schools can be reduced or
eliminated through scholarships so child soldiers and others can get
the education they need to keep them from drifting into militia
activities. According to the Human Rights Watch report quoted above,
children with an education are more difficult to recruit.
“The church is the extension of Christ. Wherever Christ was, people
were healed, fed, clothed, redeemed from imprisonment, had demons
driven out of them,” Innis said. “We must continue to be the
extension of the love of Jesus Christ so that people’s lives can be
made whole.”
*LaCamera
is a United Methodist News Service correspondent.
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