Overview
In Conversation with Peace Strategist Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, Part Two: Examples of Grassroots Peacebuilding Success
“A compelling example comes from Sierra Leone in the 1990s, during the war between an armed group, the RUF, and a predatory government. Both sides were committing horrific acts against civilians. Even after a peace agreement was signed, the RUF continued to abuse the local population. In response, elderly women from the church decided to march in protest. They didn’t just protest using their identities as older women and the status that comes with being the grandmothers of society; they drew upon deeply indigenous traditions. When they reached the RUF’s barricades, these women bared their bottoms, an act that, in their culture, was a profound dishonor to the men. This action shamed the men into stopping their abuses, ultimately changing the course and ending the war.”
In Conversation with Peace Strategist Sanam Naraghi Anderlini, Part One: The Foundations of Peacebuilding and Bridging Divides
Sanam Naraghi Anderlini’s journey as a peace strategist is deeply rooted in her experiences growing up in Iran, where, at just 11 years old, she witnessed the Iranian Revolution and the upheaval it brought to her family and community. These early experiences of conflict and displacement propelled her to dedicate her life to peacebuilding, advocating for frameworks to prevent similar suffering.
"In my twenties, I realized how painful it is when your own country splits apart or experiences turmoil. This pain is multi-generational; even 40 years later, it still affects us all, including generations that weren’t even born at the time. I was driven by the desire to prevent others from experiencing this kind of trauma. I kept asking myself, how can I stop others from going through what we went through?”