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Beautiful women: exhibit honors 1,000 women who are working every day to bring peace to our world. Though they weren't awarded the Nobel, each woman is herself a prize
National Catholic Reporter, March 7, 2008 by RENEE LaReau
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'Women have their own way of avoiding war and creating peace.' These are the words of Samsidar, an Indonesian activist who was one of 1,000 women collectively nominated for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize.
Samsidar's words also serve as the premise behind a traveling exhibition that pays tribute to the work of women peace activists from 150 countries around the globe.
Currently on display at the Xavier University Women's Center in Cincinnati, "1,000 PeaceWomen Across the Globe" aims to honor and showcase the peacemaking efforts of women worldwide, many of whom often go unnoticed.
Specifically, the exhibit pays tribute to the 1,000 women who were nominated for the 2005 peace prize by PeaceWomen Across the Globe, a Swiss-based nonprofit organization that coordinated the nomination and subsequently launched the exhibit in Zurich in October 2005. The exhibit has since been displayed in more than 25 countries from Canada to Kenya to Mongolia.
"It really captures the many ways women are acting locally and globally to promote peace," said Jennifer Wies, director of the women's center at Xavier.
The exhibit consists of 1,000 multicolored postcards that are grouped and hung from brightly colored ribbons.
Each postcard features a different nominee. In most cases, the postcard includes the woman's photograph, her home country and region, a brief description of her work and a quotation that highlights her personal mission.
"These are women who are working every day internationally for their city, for their nation, for global peace," Wies said.
The cards are color-coded to denote 10 different categories of service: reconciliation and reconstruction; women's rights; human rights on the way to gender democracy; the struggle for survival among minority and indigenous groups; economic rights and livelihood; justice and peace; health issues; peace education; environmental justice and ecological security; and politics and governance.
What emerges is a fascinating and colorful array of peacemaking efforts by journalists, scientists, authors, physicians, attorneys, nurses, activists, scholars and mothers.
"Depending on the day you're having, depending on what you need, there's one woman out there to inspire you," Wies said.
A quotation from an American nominee, Elise Marie Biorn-Hansen Boulding, succinctly captures the display's central message: "The range of human activity that can be retuned to contribute to peace-building is vast." Boulding is a Quaker peace educator and activist.
One literal example of this "re-tuning" is Xiaoying Zheng, China's first female opera and symphony orchestra conductor. In the wake of the country's Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, Zheng rebuilt the country's Central Opera Theater Orchestra from ruin. She has spent her adult life helping to promote the popularization of classical music in China.
"I wish to present wonderful music and peaceful life to the public and popularize exquisite classical music to the best of my ability," Zheng says.
Other "PeaceWomen" featured include individuals such as Binda Pandey of Nepal, an activist who is responsible for helping tradeswomen unionize and who has played a role in the movement for the restoration of democracy in Nepal.
In Jordan, Insaf Arafat, a physician, has been working for more than 30 years to promote health care for mothers and children and to care for displaced survivors of war and disabled land mine victims.
"My motivation to work for peace comes from the tragic conditions that wars cause, leaving behind a large number of disabled land mine survivors, displaced people, widows and orphans," Arafat says.
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The snapshots of women such as Arafat who work amid war and violence are especially remarkable. Another example is Alina Allo of Russia. In war-torn Chechnya in 1998, she organized project "White Dove"--an appeal for mutual forgiveness by Russian parents to Chechen parents who have lost their children as soldiers in the war.
"We have to do all we can to avoid that Russian and Chechen children become enemies," Allo says.
Though the 2005 nomination of these women and their counterparts did garner some publicity, they did not win the prize. That year's honor went to the International Atomic Energy Agency and to its director general, Mohamed El Baradei. Since the Nobel Foundation's inception nearly 107 years ago--in 1901--only 12 women, approximately 10 percent of the winners, have won the peace prize.
The PeaceWomen Across the Globe organization was founded not only to honor specific women, but also to lobby for wider roles for women in peace negotiations and policy development and to "challenge narrow definitions of peace."
"Peace-building is often thought of as something heroic or spectacular, or as something carried out by heads of state," a statement on the organization's Web site explains. "In reality, peace-building is rarely spectacular, although it does require courage and endurance. Effective peace-building is the long-term pursuit of justice and human security. This is the criteria we use to identify women who are peace builders."