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New Kru Town Association Brings Civil
Rights Leader
to Philadelphia on October 24, 2009
October 19, 2009
Philadelphia,
10/05/09 (SIS) -
Yes, it is confirmed. It is true. He is coming to Philadelphia from
Liberia to address Liberians in the United States. Liberia's
international civil rights leader, Mr. Samuel Kofi Woods, II, has
gracefully accepted the invitation of the New Kru Town Association in
the Americas (NEKTAA) to serve as keynote speaker at its 4th annual
convention, expected to pull hundreds of Liberians into Philadelphia on
Saturday, October 24, 2009.
"Brother Woods, a son
of the Borough of New Kru Town, has accepted my invitation to speak to
hundreds of Liberians expected to grace our 4th annual convention, and
we eagerly look forward to that fiery speech from that eloquent boy I am
proud to call my brother," said Jay Nagbe Sloh, NEKTAA's retiring
national president, immediately after receiving a firm and written
commitment from Mr. Woods.
Minister Samuel Kofi Woods, II
Mr. Woods will speak on "The Challenges and opportunities in post-war
New Kru Town."
In a September 16,
2009 invitation to Minister Woods, President Sloh said,
"Our choice of you
is based on the unwavering support you have demonstrated for political,
social, economic development in poverty-stricken Liberian communities,
such as the great Borough of New Krutown, over the years as a student
leader, an iconic human rights campaigner, Minister of Labor, and (now)
Minister of Public Works." Sloh added, " Our choice is also informed by
the fact that you are one of the brightest sons and daughters New
Krutown can proudly boast of."
Mr. Woods is the
founding director of the famous Justice and Peace Commission of the
Catholic Church of Liberia. He served as Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf's labor
minister from the Sirleaf Government's inception until recently when he
was transferred to the public works ministry to restore some sanity to
the system of management and financial irregularities there.
About Samuel Kofi Woods, II
Founding director of
the foremost human rights organization in Liberia, the Catholic Justice
and Peace Commission, Sam Woods managed on a shoestring budget to write
and distribute to the international community reliable reports of abuses
in the midst of a brutal civil war. His work led to the liberation of
more than fifty inmates at the Central Prison in Monrovia, many of whom
were held without charges after arbitrary arrests. The human rights
radio program he established broadcasts reports of arrests and
extrajudicial executions, and educated tens of thousands of Liberians
about their rights. Woods, his family, and his staff were under threat
from government authorities, and he was forced into hiding and exile on
several occasions. Though many of his colleagues were murdered, Woods
returned again and again to his work for justice and peace.
Woods’s lifelong commitment to human rights began with student activism
leading to his first arrest in 1981. In 1986, as a member of the
National Student Union, he was forced into hiding, then banned from
employment and travel. He later became director of the YMCA, where he
organized citizens. After civil war broke out in 1989, he fled to Ghana,
but returned to work with the Catholic Church and in 1991, with the
support of the courageous Archbishop Michael Francis, he founded the
Justice and Peace Commission. At the height of the war in 1996, Woods
was evacuated by the U.S. embassy, only to return to Liberia a few
months later. In 1998, he was declared an antigovernment activist and
was threatened with sedition for exposing forced child labor in the
country. Today Samuel Kofi Woods continues to fight for justice in the
face of terror.
I was born in a zinc shack in a suburb of Monrovia; a place called
Bushrod Island. It is a place of squalor as a result of migrants from
the rural areas coming to seek job opportunities. I was one of twenty or
so children of my father—that alone created difficulties—no educational
opportunities, no housing. And those conditions imposed upon me a
perception of the world—the perpetual conflict between good and evil as
expressed through political, social, and economic systems.
Liberia comes from the word "Liberty." Our capital city is Monrovia,
named after one of the American presidents, James Monroe. Our first
president was Joseph Jenkins Roberts. I am told he has a monument in
Virginia. There is a deep link between the United States and our
country.
We have always been an American protégé. Back in 1821, a group of freed
slaves entered Liberia’s shores and settled on a place called Providence
Island. Most of those people were mulattos, products of relationships
between slave masters and slaves of the households sent back to Liberia
by a group called the American Colonization Society, a philanthropic
organization in the abolitionist movement. Our constitution, our laws,
our way of life, everything that we attempted was modeled after American
society. The hope of these freed slaves was to create a paradise in
Africa for all people seeking freedom and liberty. As a result, we’ve
had a number of different settlers in Liberia, which in fact is part of
the problem. Those from North America were considered skilled
politicians, because they were related to the slave master and had the
opportunity to be close to the family. Those from South America were
basically unskilled plantation workers. There were those from the West
Indies, from the Congo, and others recaptured by the British warships
and American ships when the abolitionist movement was very strong.
Within that group there were contests for power while at the same time
erecting a political and social system that marginalized the vast
majority, who were indigenous. Add this to the racial crisis: if you had
lighter skin you were considered superior to those of darker skin, which
was reflected in the social relationships and in the political
relations.
Not until the 1870s did the first dark-skinned black president emerge in
Liberia. His name was Edwin James Roye. After a few years he was
overthrown and allegedly murdered. The Liberian crisis has roots in the
problem of identity, of those who came into the country, those whom they
met in the country, and those who felt marginalized by the legal,
political, and social processes. Legitimacy was an issue and the
government tried to assert its authority in the rural areas by imposing
rule by force. In that process, a lot of violations occurred: a lot of
internecine wars where so-called indigenous people were killed. This
division grew over the next century.
In 1980 there was a coup in which the president was killed, and a
leadership of the so-called indigenous came to power. Those who carried
out the coup were from the army. The military in our country was
generally illiterate, and for ten brutal years Liberia submerged into
violence, chaos, and anarchy.
When the coup occurred I was still in high school, agitating for change.
We thought it had finally come. Within a year, we students called for
the government to establish a timetable to return the country to
democratic elections—we became the enemy. In time, student leaders were
arrested. A campaign of intimidation, harassment, and arrests followed
that period. We also began a campaign for academic freedom and social
justice. I personally participated in a number of demonstrations between
1981 and 1985, until I was elected student president of the university,
and a leader of the national student organization in 1986. I was hunted
on many occasions for my position on national issues. I went into hiding
many times for my life. In November 1995, the first military invasion of
Liberia occurred. It was brutally crushed by the late Samuel K. Doe. An
orgy of killings and disappearances ensued. He used the opportunity to
pursue his perceived enemies. A group of armed men stormed my home in
search of me. I miraculously escaped. When I completed my university
degree in economics and management, I was arrested two days after
graduation. The government unofficially banned me from employment and
travel. I couldn’t find a job. I was denied the right to travel. I was
virtually a noncitizen. It was difficult to get jobs from the private
organizations, because they were all afraid. My documents from the
university were censured. I remained in Liberia in spite of repeated
calls to leave the country for exile. I totally rejected this idea.
I decided to take the government to court. I felt that my situation
should be pursued in the court of law. I consulted many law firms. No
one wanted to represent me. Everyone was afraid. I was compelled to
enroll at the law school with the intent to defend those who would face
a similar predicament in the future. In March of 1986, I got arrested
and went to prison. That experience opened my eyes to the horrible
situation in the prison. I encountered people who were detained
illegally, without charge, without due process, without the right to
lawyers, with nobody to represent them. I was seriously motivated. When
I got out, I went right to law school. By 1989, we had a civil war on
our hands, and I was continuously harassed to join one of the many
factions because I was a student activist. I refused to believe that
violence was the solution.
In November 1991, I met Mike Posner of the Lawyers’ Committee for Human
Rights. He had just had a discussion with the archbishop, Michael
Francis, who is a very committed man, about trying to institutionalize
the idea of respect for human rights. He asked me to start the Justice
and Peace Office of the archdiocese. I had no road map, no training,
just a desk and a typewriter. It was a difficult situation. Liberia was
experiencing war, and the concept of human rights was new to the
population in general.
Upon reflection, after seven years, I am proud to say that ours has
become one of the strongest Catholic Justice and Peace Commissions in
Africa and probably internationally. We have been able to provide free
legal service to indigents—people who cannot afford legal fees for their
defense. We represented journalists and political prisoners. We
represented factional leaders who were detained illegally, people who
were killed or reported missing. We ran radio programs on human rights
and reconciliation. We have now been able to conduct training for
journalists on conflict resolution, human rights, and peace building. We
have been able to do it for youth, for women’s organizations, the
police, and the law enforcement institutions. And more than that, we
have served as a central link in civil society. Because of that I have
suffered a lot of attempts on my life.
In April 1996 during street battles among factions for the city, I was
pursued by some of them. My hideout was ransacked twice one night. By
God’s guidance, I was not in. The American marines subsequently
evacuated me from Liberia. A month later, after fighting subsided, I
returned—much to the astonishment of many. I had been warned by friends
and relatives not to return. For the past ten years, I have slept in a
different place every night, for security reasons. I have been moving
from place to place, often sleeping only two hours at a time for well
over a decade.
It doesn’t feel good because it doesn’t make you a normal person. But
you are propelled because you are doing a good deed. You are trying to
sacrifice so that other people can survive, so they see hope and meaning
in living. In June 1998, last year, the Liberian Information Ministry
declared me an antigovernment agent while on a visit to Europe, and I
was told by my European friends not to go home. I went back. And
strangely enough, when I arrived at the airport, there were citizens
waiting for me to work on their cases and to stop any attempt to have me
arrested. It was said that the government intended to charge me with
sedition for statements that I have made against forced child labor in
the southeastern parts of our country. The purported charge was never
effected.
In September, government troops reportedly killed some people while
attempting to arrest a former warlord. I condemned it and called for an
investigation. The statement was issued on October 9, 1998. I had to
travel for a three-day meeting in Brussels. While I was away, the police
impounded my office vehicle and the driver was flogged. It was reported
that I would be arrested for treason upon my return based on official
allegations levied against me by some officials of government. Everyone
advised me not to return again. I said I would return and plead my case
if there was any. And I went back to Liberia after about a month. When I
went home, my mother (my father died a few years ago) was shocked to see
me. She couldn’t believe I was in the country—she had written me a
letter saying not to return, that even if she died, I should not return
for her funeral. My office, the entire leadership, wrote me a letter
too, also urging me not to return to Liberia. My colleagues, my friends,
everyone wrote to advise of the potential danger of my return.
But I saw a society yearning to be convinced about the essence of
conviction. I saw a society where there was a vacuum. I saw a society
that required more sacrifice and understanding of my conviction. I
wasn’t frightened because I believe that life means nothing if the
pursuit of the truth cannot be achieved. We don’t want to be heroes or
to be foolish. We want to be normal people. And to be normal people is
to pursue the truth, though it’s very difficult. There is always a
universal contest between good and evil. And I believe that eventually
good will triumph over evil. But good cannot triumph over evil by
retreating from evil—good must confront evil.
At some point in your life you are confronted with the fear of death.
You walk into the corridor of death and you know this moment might be
your last. And everything about life leaves your body—yet you survive.
It takes time but then life returns and you see how meaningless you are
as a human being—how much you can gain by sacrificing for others. I went
through this.
I went to prison one time and while in prison one of the guards came to
me and threatened my life. He pulled out his gun and put it in my mouth.
And he said to me, "Who do you think you are?" It was late and this guy
was drunk. I didn’t have clothes on. I was powerless. The gun was
already in my mouth. I could have died and each time I reflect on it,
it’s like—I was gone, gone.
My life has always been, at every moment of the day, every moment, a
surprise. I walk to different places and people hold my hands and can’t
believe that I am still living. Because all that was heard about me was
that I would be killed in a moment. Society needs people who can help by
their sacrifice, by their conviction. Because when you confront evil you
provide a moral alternative for society. When a nation is so consumed in
evil, it’s difficult to see alternatives, unless people of conviction
stand up! Sometimes you can even convince other people to join the
struggle. You can even convert those of evil heart to good. I have seen
that happen.
In July 1997, Charles Taylor was elected president. In November, a
former ally who had broken away from him (along with his wife, his
cousin, and his bodyguard) was killed on the highway. Everyone was
afraid. It happened on a Friday when he disappeared. This man had been
one of the most serious critics of the Justice and Peace Commission, of
my work, and of the archbishop. And his family could go nowhere else but
to me. His children were afraid to say that he was arrested and
subsequently killed by agents of the government. They needed a voice.
And I became their voice. We filed a case against the government to
produce the bodies. We provided evidence that it was the security forces
that arrested this man. We launched a sustained international campaign.
We insisted on investigation. We went to court. I personally led the
defense until President Taylor was forced to admit that the man was
actually killed at the hands of the security forces. In this man’s
death, he was confronted with the truth: in his grave he was confronted
with a reality that we have no malice against anyone.
We also sent a signal that we will stand up for anyone’s right to due
process. And this is what motivated us. This is what keeps us going. We
do it with a clear conscience. President Taylor didn’t understand why I
would take the government to court. I told him, "Mr. President, I am
doing this because I want you and many others to know that human rights
are universal. Everyone is entitled to them, no matter how high or low
she or he is. And we must be here to ensure that those guarantees exist.
So even you, Mr. President, if you are arrested in this country, we will
defend you." Taylor couldn’t understand it. He offered me a job on the
National Human Rights Commission set up by the government. In some
cases, I was offered money. I said no. I have said to many people that
he has been able to defeat a lot of people because they have sold their
souls, they have compromised their convictions.
I became Catholic in 1992. But I have never been a good churchgoing
Catholic. I have seen religion as my relationship with God and my fellow
man—for me this is religion. And I believe that the divine mystery is
how I have been delivered many times. How I have decided to sleep in one
place one night, and I stayed until about midnight and decided to change
all of a sudden. And then that very night it was attacked. There’s no
answer. I don’t have any special powers that lead me to understand how I
survive these things without arms, without violence, without security
protection. But I have a deep and abiding confidence and faith in God.
My life has a toll in terms of keeping the family going. At some moments
you almost feel that you are sacrificing them in pursuit of your
conviction. Sometimes it appears as if you are being very selfish, for
these young children have not developed enough to have convictions of
their own. The instability in their lives, the movement from one country
to another: they were in Ghana and they went back to Liberia and now
they are in The Hague. They had to leave Liberia, using different travel
documents. My daughter had to deny that she was my daughter. A young
girl of about eleven had to say, "I don’t know that man." How painful it
is for children to go through this! And you call your son on the phone
and he says, "Don’t come home, the police are looking for you."
My fiancée has been with me for a long time. She suffered a similar
fate. She has been a driving force in trying to propel me in what I have
to do. She is convinced that it is right. She has motivated me in that
direction. She has been helping me to understand where the children are
involved. They are growing in understanding and are helping me, too.
They have been so molded by this experience that, rightly or wrongly,
they too have been consumed by this conviction. There were times that we
were not able to be so close because I was always on the run, always
away from them. But we have become very close and even closer now. My
friends, coworkers, relatives, Liberian people, and the international
community have been of great inspiration, too.
You are not motivated because you are a decent person, no. Sometimes it
is a calling. And when there is a calling, there is no explanation for
what motivates you. There is no explanation for your action, or what
propels you. It has to be a vocation. Every one of us has been born into
this world with a mission. It has to be fulfilled. Whether I like it or
not God intended to use me in society in this way. I hold no malice
against anyone. I believe hatred blurs the human sensibilities and
diminishes the spirit. Those who hate me, criticize me, and vilify me,
purify my conviction and strengthen my courage.
We all live in different societies. We all have to face our different
circumstances and challenges. But we must find our common ground. We
must work together. And I think we can all make this world a better
place. When I attend funeral ceremonies and have to say something, this
is my favorite quote by Etienne de Grellet: "I know I shall pass this
way but once. And if there is anything I can do, any kindness I show,
any good thing I can do, let me do it now, for I shall not pass this way
again."
Courtesy:
http://www.speaktruth.org/defend/profiles/profile_25.asp
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