Winifred Gray-Johnson Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/winifred-gray-johnson/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Fri, 11 Jul 2025 17:57:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Join international students in celebrating women around the world at the third annual International Education Week /now/news/2015/join-international-students-in-celebrating-women-around-the-world-at-the-third-annual-international-education-week/ Thu, 08 Oct 2015 13:27:08 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=25582 October 12-16 marks a time of education and celebration at 黑料正能量 of 鈥渉ow women around the world have influenced us in one way or another,鈥 says International Education Week coordinator Wael Gamtessa.

This is the third year has hosted the series of events, which includes a theater production on Monday; a 鈥淩emember the Heroines鈥 vigil for women killed in Mexico on Tuesday; and two events on Friday: chapel with Center for Justice and Peacebuilding graduate student Myriam Aziz and Darsheel Sehbi, and the 鈥淭aste of 黑料正能量鈥 cooking contest.

A committee from the International Student Organization chooses a new theme each year. The 2015 committee includes students Gamtessa, Brenda Soka, Winifred Gray-Johnson, Abdel Barry and Emmanuel Kampanga.

鈥楽别惫别苍鈥

International students are the planners of this third annual celebration. From left: Nana Konadu-Ampratwum, Winifred Gray-Johnson, Wael Gamtessa and Gee Paegar.

Monday’s performance of will be in the Studio Theater at 7 p.m. A collaboration of seven female playwrights from around the world, this documentary play is a series of monologues based on interviews with international women leaders. Directed by theater professor , 鈥淪even鈥 chronicles the worldwide struggles for empowerment, peace and well-being in Russia, protecting women from domestic violence; in Cambodia, with victims of human trafficking; in Guatemala, with the poor; in Afghanistan, with rural women; in Nigeria and Pakistan, for women鈥檚 education and rights; and in Northern Ireland, promoting peace and equality, according to the production鈥檚 website.

Olga Baltazar, who reads for the Guatemalan character Annabella de Leon, does not see herself as an actress. However, reading the script convinced her to join the cast. 鈥淭hese women rose from against all odds of their culture to fight for women’s鈥 rights,鈥 says Baltazar, who is from Mexico. 鈥淚 feel connected to to my character because I, for one, represent a culture where women are often put down.鈥

鈥淭hese stories have inspired me,鈥 says Rebekah York, a senior from Romania who plays an Irish woman named Inez McCormack. 鈥淭o see that women have been supporting each other and empowering other women over the years is truly amazing. Sometimes we can feel so alone in our work, but looking at history and reading about some pretty incredible women of the past fills me with hope.鈥

Vogel says the 鈥減owerful piece鈥 will be presented as a concert reading. Baltazar and York are joined by cast members Victoria Gunawan, Adila Wahdat, Dera Nwankwo and Iryna Clamp.

鈥楾aste of 黑料正能量鈥

The ‘Taste of 黑料正能量’ competition on Friday is open to all community members. To participate, contact Susannah Lepley in the Multicultural and International Student Services office. Up to $20 of ingredient expenses can be reimbursed.

鈥淚 was part of the food festival last year as a participant, but this year I’m really happy that I got the chance to help coordinate this event,鈥 says Gamtessa, a sophomore computer engineering major from Ethiopia.

鈥淟ast year, we had to cook [for the contest] as part of my global connections class,鈥 Gamtessa explains. 鈥淭his year, we changed the name from the ‘International Food Festival’ to ‘Taste of 黑料正能量’ because we didn’t want to restrict the food to the international community. We want anyone and everyone who is willing to do it, to prepare something 聽which they believe has meaning to them and people around them and share it with the campus community.We hope this experience will take people down the road and across the globe.鈥

Senior Zoe Parakuo from Kenya competed last year with one of her favorite snacks, samosas 鈥 a savory, fried pastry. Samosas 鈥渨ere adapted by Kenyans when Indians settled there back in the day, so I thought a lot of people would be familiar with it,鈥 says Parakuo. 鈥淚 wanted students to enjoy my food.鈥

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Undergraduate students work, share, learn with peacebuilders from around the world at summer institute /now/news/2015/undergraduate-students-work-share-learn-with-peacebuilders-from-around-the-world-at-summer-institute/ /now/news/2015/undergraduate-students-work-share-learn-with-peacebuilders-from-around-the-world-at-summer-institute/#comments Thu, 23 Jul 2015 20:53:09 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=24935 This summer, four 黑料正能量 undergraduate students worked at the , spending six weeks acting as hosts and ambassadors for approximately 145 international visitors.

They were often the first on campus to greet weary travelers arriving from the airport in the wee hours of the night, and they were integral members of the SPI community: interpreting cultural differences during casual conversations in Hillside Lounge, sharing field trips to Valley attractions and meals at the weekly international potluck dinners, and escorting guests to activities like Salsa Night and into downtown Harrisonburg for dinner.

鈥淥ur community assistants are a great addition to the SPI community in so many ways,鈥 said director . 鈥淭hey were willing workers and cultural ambassadors, of course, but also representatives to the global peacebuilding community of the socially conscious, thoughtful young people who are attracted to and thrive at 黑料正能量.鈥

Tyler Eshleman: practicing the art of hospitality

Tyler Eshleman

Tyler, a senior major from Harrisonburg, works with the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding鈥檚 (STAR) program during the school year. Tyler has taken (STAR) Level 1 training and a graduate course in Transforming Trauma, and plans on earning a . At 黑料正能量, he is the student leader of the , which works to promote sustainability and social responsibility in food production and stewardship.

My most memorable experience at SPI is being part of the informal gatherings that people put together: going on a hike or making a meal or putting on a presentation for cultural night. I had a chance to see people from different backgrounds and cultures having a good time together, getting to know each other and teach each other, and breaking down cultural norms in the process.

Being hospitable means something different in every culture, and we had to learn to read people and be attentive to their needs, even when we are exhausted. The people who I meet at bizarre times of the night are often the people who I remained connected with throughout SPI. At first having to do this was kind of a shock and then I realized it was a great opportunity.

The opening ceremonies that started each session were really special. The participants introduced themselves and shared about themselves to the group. I found those moments to be a testament to the recognition of how we鈥檝e shaped this community and how people are willing to share with intimacy and vulnerability.

Winifred Gray-Johnson: inspired by the dedicated work of others

Winifred Gray-Johnson, left, with Rachel Smucker and Bethany Chupp

Winifred is a junior economics major from Liberia. Her father Wilfred Gray-Johnson, executive director of the , first came to SPI several years ago and Winifred eventually found her way to 黑料正能量 from that family connection (read about ). She had heard stories about SPI from her father but this was her first summer of experiencing it herself. Winifred is president of the .

Participants of SPI are very interested and curious about other cultures and want to share about their own culture. When you鈥檙e checking them in, the conversation starts right there. They want to know what 黑料正能量 is like, what it鈥檚 like to be a student at 黑料正能量, and when they catch up on my accent, they ask where I was from. It鈥檚 not just with me. They will start a conversation with whoever is in the lodging.

To hear the amount of passion and determination is really amazing. So many people come to SPI from war zones or from situations with disasters or refugees in camps, and they have such interest and drive and hope. To see the hope they carry is really good.

It makes me very eager to do something, to work on something. All these people from all these different organizations who are doing such amazing things. There was this one man, , working with young girls in Zimbabwe and one day, I said, 鈥淥h, I envy you, I want to do what you are doing.鈥 There is so much variety. Anybody and everybody can impact change. It gives you that eagerness to help in whatever way you can, not just sit back.

At university, you are modeling yourself to become this person who can help society in the future. SPI has definitely helped me model myself in that kind of way. In this job, we are asked to be accommodating and helpful. I have learned how to work with all kinds of people here, both in my education at 黑料正能量, but especially at SPI. It鈥檚 one thing to say that I like everybody, but it鈥檚 another to really have to practice what you preach. I鈥檝e left a couple of situations where I said to myself, 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know I had it in me,鈥 or 鈥淚 handled it well.鈥 I definitely surprised myself sometimes.

Bethany Chupp: transitioning through cultures

Bethany Chupp

Bethany, a junior major with minors in and , is from Canby, Oregon. Bethany spent last year as a community assistant in Residential Life on campus and also worked several summers at a camp on the Oregon seashore: in both positions, she helped to acclimate sometimes disoriented and bewildered newcomers. Bethany plans to pursue a degree in counseling, with the goal of specializing in art therapy with children who have experienced trauma in foster care and adoption.

When people would find that I鈥檓 not from Virginia, I would tell them I was from 鈥淥regon, which is by California,鈥 because most people know where California is. And then we had something to talk about right from the start, because with my seven-hour flight [from California to Virginia], we had travelled about the same distance to get to SPI.

I was on my cross-cultural semester to the Middle East in the spring before SPI, so I really hoped that SPI would help with the transition back to the U.S. and to campus. And it did.聽 At SPI, there was first a professor from Palestine and then later a woman from Jerusalem. Talking to them, it was amazing how familiar they felt, even though I didn鈥檛 know them personally. The woman from Jerusalem knew the people in the town I stayed in during my cross-cultural. She knew my host family and the places we visited, and that was really helpful.

One thing that struck me was that these people have all accomplished a lot, yet when coming into a new situation, they all have fears 鈥 they鈥檙e all new here and vulnerable. But they all found ways to relate beyond language and culture, especially I think because they are people striving for the same common goals.

It can be overwhelming to learn about so many issues that need work, but it鈥檚 inspiring seeing people working in these areas. Many are coming to the US for the first time, and English isn鈥檛 their first language, and they are struggling, but because they鈥檙e so passionate about what they鈥檙e working for, they鈥檙e willing to cross all those spaces to learn skills to help bring peace.

Rebekah York

Rebekah York: SPI community is a source of energy, hope

Rebekah is a senior majoring in peacebuilding and development and with minors in psychology and theater. Raised in Bucharest, Romania, Rebekah聽 worked this summer at SPI and also as an intern with the Washington D.C. office of , a South-Africa human-rights focused development organization.

Being a part of the SPI family was an incredibly life-giving experience. There is something so unique and special about people from all over the world sharing the same space, classrooms, lunch tables and even dorm rooms. It makes me feel at home.

What I always think of when I reflect on SPI are the potluck dinners and the many one-on-one conversations. During these gatherings, people opened up and shared details about their lives. Nothing can take the place of those moments in which we sit together — sometimes in silence, sometimes just as a listener –in which the human heart is open and exposed for a short time.

I was also able to take the class with one of my most admired professors. That is not something every college student gets to experience and it was fascinating to interact with my professor in that environment. We even worked on a project together and presented it in class with another SPI participant.

If you’re looking for a place to rejuvenate your sense of hope in the world, SPI is the place for you. Solving conflict is difficult and it is easy to become cynical and apathetic. You may feel like nothing good is happening today. But during SPI, people with life experience and a true desire to bring lasting change and peace to the world gather together to learn from each other, lighting the fire of hope for a peaceful world in the hearts and minds of everyone.

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Winifred Gray-Johnson and her father Wilfred share the 黑料正能量 and Summer Peacebuilding Institute experience /now/news/2015/winifred-gray-johnson-and-her-father-wilfred-share-the-emu-and-summer-peacebuilding-institute-experience/ /now/news/2015/winifred-gray-johnson-and-her-father-wilfred-share-the-emu-and-summer-peacebuilding-institute-experience/#comments Thu, 16 Jul 2015 18:09:59 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=24876 Like most children, Winifred Gray-Johnson didn鈥檛 pay much attention to what her father did for a living. She knew he often traveled from their home in Monrovia, Liberia, to the United States. She knew he occasionally visited a place in Virginia called 黑料正能量.

But she never imagined her father鈥檚 participation in the 2009 (SPI) would so directly impact her own future. Winifred, a junior economics major, spent the summer as a community assistant at SPI the very program that first brought her father to 黑料正能量.

SPI director knows both father and daughter. 鈥淲ilfred fills up the room,鈥 said Goldberg. 鈥淗e is very outgoing … and tall. Winifred is quieter, but there is definitely a presence that they both share.鈥

Winifred Gray-Johnson with her father Wilfred, who works in the Liberia Peacebuilding Office of the United Nations Peacebuilding Fund Secretariat. (Courtesy photo)

As a community assistant, Winifred has offered support and information to the many international citizens who stayed on campus this summer. SPI employees accompanied participants to the grocery store, and on trips and tours over the weekend. The assistants were also available around the clock should someone need help or advice.

鈥淭hey are incredibly dedicated to the participants,鈥 said Goldberg. 鈥淭hey are always willing to answer questions and provide help whether they are working or supposed to be off.鈥

Her experience at SPI this summer has further solidified her commitment to follow in her father鈥檚 path of peacebuilding work, Winifred says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 blown my mind how great everyone has been. Watching the dynamics between people from all over the world, the way they connect with each other 鈥 it makes me want to do good things.鈥

SPI plays 鈥榓 critical role鈥

Wilfred Gray-Johnson, executive director of the (LPBO), attended SPI in 2009 and 2014.

鈥淪PI has enormously enhanced my theoretical knowledge and application in peacebuilding, which has contributed to the level of success of the LPBO,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are responsible for coordinating the Government of Liberia peace and reconciliation programs, and lead the development of various peace and reconciliation strategic policy frameworks. SPI, having built our skills in the areas of conflict and context analysis, as well as restorative and other forms of justice, continues to play a critical role in our work.鈥

Gray-Johnson has also sent members of his office to SPI every year since 2009. Participants from the LPBO include Sunny A. George, training and conflict sensitivity officer; Togar S. Tarpeh, national early warning and early response program officer; John R. Dennis, national monitor and evaluation officer; Matthew B. Kollie, who now works with the Governance Commission; and Victor Smith, who currently heads a USAID project in Liberia.

Tough transition

It wasn鈥檛 always apparent that Gray-Johnson was bound for Virginia. Soon after she graduated from high school, her mother passed away. Wanting to remain close to her father, two younger siblings and 10 extended family members, she attended a local college in Liberia for two years, after which she sat down with her father and had a long conversation.

鈥淚t seemed like the best thing, for my education,鈥 she said. 鈥淎t that point I needed to get away, to focus.鈥

Her father agreed. 鈥満诹险芰库檚 campus environment is conducive to focus and learning, par excellence,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 applaud the school for its multicultural environment that encourages respect for diversity, while remaining distinct in championing moral and ethical values.鈥

Winifred says her father鈥檚 familiarity with聽鈥 and affection for 鈥 the campus made a hard decision a little easier. 鈥淢y father loves 黑料正能量. He has so many friends here,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e wasn鈥檛 afraid to leave me here on my own.鈥

Wilfred Gray-Johnson attended Summer Peacebuilding Institute twice; this summer his daughter Winifred, an 黑料正能量 student, worked as a community assistant for the program. (Courtesy photo)

While her father鈥檚 connections to the campus drew her to 黑料正能量, they didn鈥檛 smooth her transition from Liberia to Virginia. The cultural transition, food and the winter weather proved the highest hurdle.

鈥淚 had a keen sense of being alone,鈥 she emphasized. Furthering this feeling was a discomfort with certain social norms. 鈥淭he hardest thing to adjust to was addressing my professors and supervisors on a first-name basis. I probably went for two months without saying their names. It just wasn鈥檛 comfortable for me.鈥

But frequent Skype conversations with her father helped ease her. 鈥樷淲e weren鈥檛 always close,鈥 Gray-Johnson said. 鈥淣ow we are close. We have become good friends.鈥

They are, however, good friends who haven鈥檛 seen each other for the past year. Though Wilfred Gray-Johnson was able to visit his daughter in Maryland last summer, where she was staying with her aunt, the two haven鈥檛 been on campus together since he dropped her off at the start of her first year. 鈥淚鈥檇 love it if he was on campus with me. Then he could introduce me to everyone he knows,鈥 she said.

For his part, her father plans to attend an SPI session next summer. 鈥淗opefully my daughter will be an SPI community assistant once again, and we can spend time together then,鈥 he said.

Help for home

International Student Organization members (from left): Brenda Soka, Gee Paegar, Sun Ju Lee, Marcus Ekman, Kaltuma Noorow, Wael Gamtessa (back row), Norah Alobikan, Zoe Parakuo and Winifred Gray-Johnson. (Photo by Michael Sheeler)

Nor has Gray-Johnson been able to return to Liberia, due to the Ebola outbreak in the summer of 2014. Watching from afar while the disease threatened her family and her father worked on the front lines of the crisis in Liberia, Gray-Johnson to supply aid and raise awareness of the devastation in her home country.

The group reached out to Nobel Laureate , MA 鈥07 (conflict transformation), a fellow native of Liberia, and who knows and has worked with Wilfred Gray-Johnson. Winifred first met Gbowee when she was the 2014 commencement speaker (her son Joshua Mensah graduated with the class of 2014), and was eager to bring her back to campus.

To the group鈥檚 surprise, Gbowee accepted their invitation, donating her time and services to the cause, waiving even travel fees. Bolstered by Gbowee鈥檚 attendance, ISO raised over $4,000 to assist in fighting the Ebola epidemic. In addition, student participation in ISO events rose significantly over the remainder of the semester. 鈥淲e had so much involvement,鈥 Gray-Johnson said. 鈥淚t was really wonderful.”

And when Liberia was declared Ebola-free earlier this summer, Gray-Johnson offered a prayer of thanks. 鈥淲hen I heard that, I gave a long exhale,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was so relieved.鈥

Daily meetings with other staff, including Aaron Erb (foreground) and Rachel Smucker, brought some levity to the daily intensity of SPI sessions. (Photo by Michael Sheeler)

Future peacebuilder

Her summer experience has contributed to a long-term plan that she hopes one day leads back to Liberia. In the meantime, she鈥檒l spend the next year as president of a newly invigorated International Students Organization.

Following graduation from 黑料正能量 in 2017, she鈥檇 like to spend a year interning or volunteering in a French-speaking country, to learn the language. And after that?

Gray-Johnson contemplates graduate school, maybe even at 黑料正能量鈥檚. That thought gives her pause, though. 鈥淢y father is so well known there, I am worried the level of expectation will be too high,鈥 she said, a momentary frown crossing her face. Then she shrugged and smiled. 鈥淭he apple doesn鈥檛 fall far from the tree.鈥

Pausing, she reflected for a moment on her father鈥檚 love for SPI and 黑料正能量, and his eagerness to share both with her. She nodded. 鈥淣ow I see what caught his attention.鈥

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Nobel winner headlines 黑料正能量 international student fundraiser for Ebola orphans /now/news/2015/nobel-winner-headlines-emu-international-student-fundraiser-for-ebola-orphans/ /now/news/2015/nobel-winner-headlines-emu-international-student-fundraiser-for-ebola-orphans/#comments Tue, 10 Feb 2015 21:21:52 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=23143 , co-winner of the , loves small local initiatives that fight the problems of the world. So when she heard that a group of international students at a college in Virginia were raising funds for orphans of the Ebola plague in her native Liberia, she agreed to come to campus and even pay her own travel expenses.

It also helped that Gbowee knew 黑料正能量 well. She had earned a in 2007.

Gbowee, a social worker who led a women鈥檚 peace movement that helped end Liberia鈥檚 civil war 10 years ago, addressed a fundraising dinner for over 100 people at 黑料正能量 on Feb. 7. Organized by the school鈥檚 International Student Organization, the event was followed by a public address to about 200 attendees, who put contributions into baskets passed by the students.

The events raised over $4,000 after expenses for the care of children whose parents died from Ebola. The funds will go to the Nobel winner鈥檚 in the Liberian capital of Monrovia. The foundation makes grants to grassroots groups, including two Liberian organizations founded by graduates of .

The countries hardest hit by Ebola, which started in March 2014, were Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, said Gbowee in her public address. The 3.4 million people of her country had only 51 doctors. 鈥淲e were not prepared for Ebola, but Liberian civil society rose to the occasion,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 wait around for the international community to come and help us.鈥

Leymah Gbowee held a follow-up session聽in 黑料正能量’s Common Grounds Coffeehouse where students and community聽members could hear more about the impact and what is being done to combat Ebola. (Photo by Michael Sheeler)

Gbowee told the stories of three Liberian heroes 鈥 a doctor who cared for Ebola victims in his humble clinic at the risk of his own life, a taxi driver who transported dangerously infectious patients to the hospital, and a young man with a full-time job who provides care for orphans in his off hours.

The epidemic has finally abated in Africa, she said. The Ebola clinics are emptying and students are going back to school. But, she added, the people still live in fear, the economy is ruined and orphans abound.

鈥淲e appreciate the help of international organizations,鈥 Gbowee said. 鈥淏ut sometimes they didn鈥檛 bother to consult with the local people about how to fight Ebola. They thought they had the expertise, but if you don鈥檛 really listen to what the people want, then it鈥檚 not much use.鈥

Gbowee has a reputation for speaking truth to power, most notably when she publicly confronted the president of Liberia during the country鈥檚 civil war. Most recently she criticized the United Nations鈥 humanitarian aid efforts during a meeting of the UN Security Council.

During a question-and-answer session at the conclusion of her speech, Gbowee praised young people for their idealism and gave advice on how to start on the path to activism. 鈥淚deas that are ground-breaking and keep you awake at night might seem like crazy ideas,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut write them down, tell a friend and step out boldly. Getting angry about an unjust situation is not only okay, she added, but a good thing.

The students who organized the fundraiser represented five continents: Kaltuma Noorow and Nandi Onetu of Kenya, Winifred Gray-Johnson and Gee Paegar of Liberia, Sun Ju Lee of South Korea, Wael Gamtessa of Ethiopia, Brenda Soka of Tanzania, Zoe Parakuo of the United States, Norah Alobikan of Saudi Arabia, Danika Saucedo of Bolivia, Victoria Gunawan of Indonesia, and Marcus Ekman of Sweden. , 黑料正能量鈥檚 director of , is the advisor for the International Student Organization.

Gbowee鈥檚 last trip to 黑料正能量 was in April 2014, when she was the that included her son, Joshua Mensah. Before that she came to campus in . Just prior to her arrival, the was announced, and thus her appearance made for a frenzied weekend.

Editor’s note: Kara Lofton, a 2014 黑料正能量 grad, reported on Gbowee’s appearance at the Ebola fundraiser for local public radio station WMRA; her four-minute report can be heard.

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For fight against Ebola, international students plan fundraising event with Nobel laureate Leymah Gbowee /now/news/2015/for-fight-against-ebola-international-students-plan-fundraising-event-with-nobel-laureate-leymah-gbowee/ Thu, 15 Jan 2015 15:58:16 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=22853 After spending the summer thousands of miles from her native Liberia and watching nervously from afar as Ebola swept through her country, sophomore Winifred Gray-Johnson wanted to take action when she returned to the 黑料正能量 campus.

She never imagined that desire, born from hours of long-distance conversation with her family members and prayer over the sufferings of fellow West Africans, would draw the attention and support of her university community 鈥 and a .

鈥淒oing something was a way to help myself with the panic of thinking about my family and what was going on in my country,鈥 said the economics major. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to be silent and just sit on my hands, so I started thinking, 鈥榃hat could I do?鈥欌

That question quickly became 鈥淲hat can we do?鈥 when shared with fellow members of 黑料正能量鈥檚 International Students Organization (ISO).

To Gray-Johnson鈥檚 surprise and delight, Liberian peace activist and ( ’07) learned of the fledging movement and enthusiastically agreed to headline a fundraising dinner.

at 黑料正能量鈥檚 Martin Chapel, with a seating capacity of 140, are $100, with $80 of that a tax-deductible donation to the Africa. Dinner guests will receive preferred seating at a public lecture later in the evening in Lehman Auditorium.

International Student Organization members (from left): Brenda Soka, Gee Paegar, Sun Ju Lee, Marcus Ekman, Kaltuma Noorow, Wael Gamtessa (back row), Norah Alobikan, Zoe Parakuo and Winifred Gray-Johnson. (Photo by Michael Sheeler)

A freewill offering will be taken at the lecture, with an for those who cannot attend.

To those who need most help

鈥淪he is helping us raise awareness, but at the same time, we know that this money will go through her organization to those who most need it, [to] the children who have lost family members or been displaced,鈥 Gray-Johnson said.

Gbowee, who received the 2011 prize for her work in ending Liberia鈥檚 civil war, says that her country鈥檚 decade-long peace is threatened by Ebola.

鈥淲e must face another enemy from within,鈥 she wrote in an in Britain. 鈥溾bola is resurrecting old traumas from those who survived the war.鈥

Since the Ebola outbreak began, Gbowee鈥檚 Monrovia-based non-profit has contributed to community-based, . Donations from the 黑料正能量 fundraiser will be shared by the foundation with two Liberian organizations founded by alumnae of : GSA Rock Hill Community Women in Monrovia, founded by Vaiba Flomo (CJP Grad. Cert. ’13), and Messengers of Peace, a youth outreach group founded by Gwendolyn Myers (CJP Grad. Cert. ’14).

Gbowee鈥檚 visit kicks off a series of events planned by the in March, including a color run, chapel talk, and movie showing.

Kaltuma Noorow, ISO co-president, said students have rallied to the cause, inspired first by Gray-Johnson鈥檚 willingness to share how she and her family were personally affected by the outbreak.

Wilfred Gray-Johnson, Winifred鈥檚 father, is executive director of the . During the outbreak, he and his team travelled frequently to rural areas 鈥渢o work on an early warning and response mechanism to ensure that Ebola did not lead to a national conflict,鈥 Gray-Johnson said. 鈥淲hile in the field, he could see firsthand what was happening.鈥

At later ISO planning meetings, student organizers discussed 鈥渢he stigma of disease and who was getting aid and who wasn鈥檛, which led to conversations about who needed help who wasn鈥檛 getting it. We鈥檝e all seen that in our own countries,鈥 said Noorow, a junior peacebuilding and development major from Kenya.

Learning from action-taking

Winifred Gray-Johnson (left) and Kaltuma Noorow. (Photo by Jon Styer)

In a year of new leadership and transition for the organization, Noorow credits ISO members for pulling together and taking on 鈥渉uge responsibilities鈥 to work on this fundraiser and the upcoming events in March, she said, adding that she鈥檚 reluctant for any one member of the group to be singled out for attention. 鈥淲e鈥檝e all learned a great deal from the process. It鈥檚 important that every member be recognized for their thoughts and all the time spent deliberating and processing.鈥

Her own involvement with the project has been empowering, Noorow added. 鈥淚n class, we learn a lot of theory and just reading about it is great, but I鈥檓 interested in change. I鈥檓 a doer. This event shows that we students can actually do something given the platform. We never imagined it to reach this magnitude. It鈥檚 been a lot of work and a lot of time, but we鈥檙e all really excited.鈥

From following appropriate fundraising protocols to parsing out the correct wording for public relations releases and invitations, Gray-Johnson says the hands-on experience has taught her about the complex realities of fundraising for international causes.

鈥淚鈥檝e learned a lot about professionalism and credibility, about raising money for a cause,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is important to me that the money raised here go through the right channels鈥 [It helps that] Leymah鈥檚 giving us her credibility and that of her foundation.鈥

Noorow and Gray-Johnson both met Gbowee briefly when she came to campus in spring 2014 to deliver the commencement speech and celebrate the graduation of her son, Joshua Mensah, a major. They are looking forward to learning more about Gbowee鈥檚 peacebuilding experiences from the woman herself.

Gray-Johnson hopes to share the experience with her 14-year-old sister, Addy, who moved from Liberia this summer to Maryland, where she鈥檚 living with an aunt.

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