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Positive News was handed the guardianship
of Global Village News and Resources in summer of 2004. Although we would like
to continue to make the archives available to subscribers and readers we would
like to point out that stories published prior to issue 89 were not under our
editorial guidance and would like to make a distinction that these are not
necessarily a reflection of the current opinions of our editorial team.
Peacemakers Create Bridge Over
Troubled WatersNIGERIA - James Wuye was once a
self-described militant Christian youth, and Muhammad Ashafa a radical
Muslim activist - unlikely partners in efforts to bring peace to Kaduna,
the ground zero of religious conflict in Nigeria. But instead of
battling when violence breaks out, Reverend Wuye, a Pentecostal
preacher, and Imam Ashafa, who leads a local mosque, go to the
frontlines to try to calm tempers and find solutions. Some of the worst
communal clashes since democracy returned to Nigeria four years ago have
taken place in Kaduna. The city marks the ostensible border between the
Muslim north and the Christian south and is home to migrants from all
over the country. "Kaduna is like dynamite, and everybody is treading
carefully, because conflict of any form can have a devastating effect on
both communities," says Wuye.
An estimated 2,500 people died in violence triggered when Kaduna
state introduced sharia, a strict form of Islamic law, in early 2000.
The city made headlines internationally last November, when protests
over a newspaper article linking the prophet Muhammed to the Miss World
beauty pageant sparked clashes. But in August 2002, Wuye and Ashafa had
persuaded 10 senior religious leaders from each faith in Kaduna to sign
a peace declaration that mitigated the Miss World violence, says Judith
Asuni, director of Academic Associates PeaceWorks, a think tank and
mediation center in Abuja, the capital. "If the peace declaration had
not been done before, it would have been a lot worse," she says. "James
and Ashafa have done some good work on the ground. They need government
to kick in and do its part."
Observers have criticized the Nigerian government for responding to
communal conflict by simply sending in the often heavy-handed security
forces and not addressing the root causes of the turmoil, such as
poverty and joblessness. Asuni herself has been trying to persuade
President Olusegun Obasanjo to take a more active role in conflict
resolution. Wuye and Ashafa share duties in the Muslim-Christian
Dialogue Forum and the Inter-Faith Mediation Center, organizations they
jointly founded to create better understanding between the communities
and to mediate when violence occurs. They hold workshops on conflict
resolution with vigilante groups and sharia police in Kaduna and nearby
states. They've produced a weekly series on local television, quoting
passages of the Koran and the Bible showing common ground between Islam
and Christianity. They've written a book called "The Pastor and The
Imam: Responding to Conflict." And they meet with both sides in
simmering disputes to try to prevent violence. If clashes do break out,
they rush to the scene to try to quell tensions, at times putting
themselves in danger. During the Miss World clashes, they drove
religious leaders around affected neighborhoods on a bus, and arranged
to have them appear on television to appeal for calm.
The two weren't always peacemakers. Wuye and Ashafa freely admit not
only to taking part in violence in their younger days but also to
fueling it. Each disdained followers of the other faith. "I didn't want
to have anything to do with Muslims," says Wuye. "The concepts of
forgiveness and mercy were far, far away from my conviction," says
Ashafa. During clashes in the town of Zango in 1992, Wuye lost his right
hand and Ashafa saw his spiritual mentor killed, incidents that prompted
a period of soul-searching. Both began to question the cost of the
violence and turned to the Bible and the Koran, where they found
passages showing commonalties between Islam and Christianity and calling
on believers to be peacemakers. "I started feeling there was a need for
me to change my approach," says Ashafa.
Yet when the pair first met face to face in 1995, distrust lingered.
At the urging of a civil-society leader, they agreed to try to work out
some sort of understanding, and they say the resulting dialogue helped
them overcome stereotypes and misconceptions and gain respect for each
other. Ashafa proposed a public debate, which evolved into a forum on
the concepts of salvation in Christianity and Islam. It took a year to
arrange the event and find a venue willing to host two militant youth
groups from different religions. "People came with daggers in their
pockets that day," says Wuye. "Both parties came prepared for the
worst."
But the debate went off peacefully - helped by a decision to take
only written questions from the floor and discard those deemed
inflammatory - and a tentative friendship was born between the two men.
Today, they consider themselves twin brothers. The harshest test of
their collaboration came in 2000, when the riots effectively partitioned
the city and the pair couldn't communicate for three days. Each credits
the other for doing what he could. "Ashafa's life was put in great
danger," says Wuye. "He protected some Christian women in his home, and
some militant Muslim groups wanted to kill him." Wuye himself saved a
Muslim woman, despite insults from some Christians that he wasn't
"fighting like a man."
The pair agrees that religious differences are not at the root of
Nigeria's crises, but that leaders whip up religious fervor for
political gain. Meanwhile, the large numbers of unemployed youth use any
opportunity to loot. Ashafa says the Miss World violence was fueled by
local rivalries in the ruling People's Democratic Party and "was much
more political than religious."
(Adapted from an article by Mike Crawley appearing in the
Christian Science Monitor:
www.csmonitor.com) |