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Mission in Action
Burundi
Giving Hope
AN ENCOURAGING
INITIATIVE IN WAR-SCARRED BURUNDI
In 1990, Burundian Roman Catholic Bishop Simon Ntamwana conceived
the idea of a center in the capital, Bujumbura, to cater for young people
living in the city's troubled northern districts.
By bringing together the young people, the Roman Catholic
Church hoped to shape a new generation of Burundians who would rise above
their ethnic, religious and political differences and work for the good
of the country. The idea was simple. Anyone aged between 16 and 30 years
was welcome to participate in the activities of the center, which opened
with little fanfare in September 1993. However, a month later Burundi's
first democratically elected president, Melchior Ndadaye, was assassinated
in a coup that plunged the country into civil war. The UN estimates that
at least 300,000 people have been killed and at least 500,000 more made
homeless as refugees or internally displaced persons.
Important project
"With the war, the project became more important than
ever," Father Claudio Marano, the Italian priest who has been running
the center since its inception, said recently. "In a war where Hutus were
killing Tutsis and Tutsis were killing Hutus, the center had to continue
promoting the idea that we must live together."
The center found itself caught up in some of the bloodiest scenes of the
fighting as it was trapped between the ethnically divided and troubled
northern city suburbs. It was used as a field hospital but attacked by
different armed groups that accused it, in turn, of being pro-Tutsi or
pro-Hutu. Eventually, Marano said, the killings became too much, and around
February 1994 staff was evacuated in an armed convoy.
Chilling reminder
Now at least 180 identity cards belonging to the young
people who used to frequent the center are pinned on a wall outside Marano's
office. The identity cards belonged to those who had died in the war,
and serve as a chilling reminder of the years when the battle raged.
Marano said that people eventually realized that extremists were behind
the ethnic violence in the area and, in reality, the people were happy
to live together. "The center was a place where young people could meet
and share their experiences. Once together, they realized that whatever
their ethnic, social or religious background, the war was a disaster for
everyone," Marano said.
Growing center
Despite the war, the center has grown gradually. Its
21,000 members frequent the facility to play football, volleyball, basketball
and tennis. They also have access to the library, a chance to learn languages,
surf the Internet, watch films, or just relax.
In a noisy room, above the racket of young boys playing ping-pong and
table football, Shila Baonganda, 16, explained how much of a difference
the center had made to the lives of northern Bujumbura young people.
"I come here two or three times a week," he said. "Mostly it's to take
part in the activities, watch a film or play table football. But I also
know that if I come here, I have much more of a chance of making friends
from all over town."
The non-residential center, mainly staffed by volunteers, is supported
by various organizations, including the French, Belgium, and Italian cooperation
agencies; as well as the EU, the Italian Episcopal Conference, Misereor,
Careme Suisse, and Manos Unidas.
Since worried community leaders complained that many young people were
choosing to go to the center rather than stay in their neighborhoods,
the center's managers have broadened its activities and begun working
with civil society groups, schools and churches - reaching at least 200,000
people.
Volunteer facilitators at the center said that having overcome the challenges,
the benefits of activities offered at the facility were gradually becoming
noticeable.
From grassroots
Marano has also said that signatories of the Burundi peace process, agreed
upon in August 2000 in Arusha, Tanzania, and the subsequent political
changes experienced in the country were one thing, but the real changes
must come from the grassroots, which had been "robbed" of a chance to
take part in the real dialogue.
"The fact that most Burundians have kept on working their land despite
the war, the bombings and the injustices, shows that Burundians are prepared
to work to resolve their problems. Burundians need a chance to develop
and resolve the problems within their society," he said.
Becoming aware
Few doubt that the center deserved to win the
2002 Right Livelihood Prize, awarded by the Swedish Parliament for outstanding
vision and work on behalf of the planet and people. This award is also
known as the alternative Nobel prize. It was established in 1980 and now
has more than 100 laureates from 48 countries. The winners, usually about
four each year, share out the prize money of US $230,000.
But, more important for Burundians, Marano said, was the setting up of
more centers such as the one at Kamenge, where young people could meet,
become conscious of their position, and find out what they could do to
improve their lot.
IRIN
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