*Matching Grant Drive Through Dec 31st – Thanks to Action Kivu’s board + friends, every dollar you give before Dec 31 2021 will be doubled ‘til we reach $10,500.00 – giving us a year-end goal of $21,000.00.*
It's late November, the time of year in the U.S. when we focus on gratitude and giving thanks, and as I sit writing this outside on a late November day in Southern California, I am grateful for the warm sun, the still chilly air in spots of shade, and the Wi-Fi that reaches from our living room to the small back patio behind our apartment. As I work from home, fully vaccinated and wary as we wait to learn about the new variant of Covid-19 being examined and tracked, I’m acutely aware of how privileged these written words show me to be.
Tomorrow is Giving Tuesday – and as you consider your connectedness with our sisters and brothers around the world, never more evident than over the last two years of this pandemic, we ask that you consider giving to Action Kivu to support projects that are daily making a difference in female equality and equity, trauma healing through therapy, education, play, and the arts, peace-informed traditional education, alternative livelihoods / entrepreneurial training, and combating hunger and climate change through regenerative community farming.
We are excited to share that Amani, our visionary leader and Action Kivu’s Founding Director, finally received his first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, and will receive his second this week! The vaccine is not easily accessible to most in eastern Congo, and it’s one more reminder of the inequality we are constantly working to overcome as we partner with communities in Congo.
Life in eastern Congo can be constant trauma – from the trauma of survival in an area of extreme poverty exacerbated by the pandemic, and the trauma of whether the violence of a conflict zone will strike close to home. We are heartbroken to share the news that Pascaline, one of the new teachers at the Congo Peace School’s pre-school program that is hosted and supported by PILA Global, was shot in an armed attack on a matatu (mini-bus) she was riding in as she returned home from picking up medicine for her mother. She survived, but is still in the hospital weeks later being monitored for the gunshot injury to her face and hand.
In the midst of this, the students at the Congo Peace School must grapple with the reality of violence in their country, in their communities, while studying and putting into practice in their own lives the principles of Martin Luther King Jr.’s practical nonviolence. And we witness their transformation, and what it means for them to have a safe space to be kids – playing, exploring, laughing, dancing.
Part of the school’s curriculum to teach nonviolence and peace and heal trauma includes guided imagery. As the students are encouraged to express themselves, and the teachers and students to view each other as equals, asking questions and fostering curiosity to combat the colonization-era education format of recitation and corporal punishment, they are also guided in healing the trauma of living in a conflict zone.
Amani writes: Guided imagery is one of the mental health interventions that I learned from CMBM (Center for Mind Body Medicine) by Dr Sean Gordon. I have found it to be a great technique in people’s lives, taking a moment to think about the trauma people are going through and imagine a better world, the world we dream about.
Daniel is a Congo Peace School student who drew this image of Congo in violence when he first heard of guided imagery. Daniel describes his drawing as showing the level of trauma the country is confronted with: shootings, people forced to flee, rape, trees being cut down and the environment destroyed. As for the feelings this brings up for Daniel, he said: fear, despair.