Jean Claude’s story

 

The healing spaces/groups created in Bugesera District, eastern Rwanda, as part of Interpeace’s Societal Healing Programme have positively changed the lives of individuals and communities. For example, Jean Claude Rugambage was healed of his trauma related to the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi, and he is now helping members of his community heal and reconcile.

My son is a hero

 

Valens Nsanzineza’s story is an inspiration to many young people. As the descendent of a perpetrator of the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda, he used to live in constant shame, guilt, rejection, and trauma because of his father’s crimes. He found healing and solace after voluntarily joining a community-based sociotherapy healing space created by Interpeace in Bugesera District, eastern Rwanda. As a result, he regained his inner peace and confidence. The healing dialogues have encouraged him to take the bold initiative to reconcile his family and the families his father wronged.

Rwanda – Healing the invisible wounds

 

From October 2020 – September 2022, Interpeace implemented a holistic peacebuilding pilot programme focused on mental health, social cohesion,reconciliation, and collaborative livelihoods in Bugesera District, eastern Rwanda. The programme supported the government’s efforts to build a resilient, cohesive, and inclusive Rwandan society close to 29 years after the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi. The programme contributed to reducing trauma and strengthening mental resilience, social cohesion, and collaborative economic livelihoods. This video highlights the programme’s impact at individual, community, and country levels.

Sustaining Peace in Practice: building peace is everyone’s responsibility

 

This video was developed by Interpeace, with contributions from its partners the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the International Labour Organization (ILO), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF),  the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). A preview was first screened at Geneva Peace Week 2022.

We live in an era of uncertainty and risk. Finding the means to build peace is as challenging as it is necessary, and it is incumbent upon all of us, not just peacebuilders, to ensure our activities and policies play positive roles in both preventing new conflicts and permanently ending those already underway. That is the essence of Peace Responsiveness: it calls for integrated approaches that harness the respective strengths of actors from multiple different sectors to deliberately contribute to peace. Building peace is everyone’s responsibility - we cannot deliver on our global promises of healthy, safe, and resilient societies without it.

Why is the Rethinking Stability initiative important?

 

Jerome Mellon, Rule of Law Officer at the UN Department of Peace Operations, shares a message about the importance of the Rethinking Stability initiative.

Introducing the Rethinking Stability initiative

 

Interpeace's Director of Policy, Learning and Advisory Services, Dr. Rebecca Brubaker, shares the key messages, recommendations and next steps for the Rethinking Stability initiative.