Pushpi Weerakoon Archives - EMU News /now/news/tag/pushpi-weerakoon/ News from the 草莓社区 community. Mon, 27 Jun 2016 19:59:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Professor Carl Stauffer joins former MA students at restorative justice symposium at Harvard Law School /now/news/2015/professor-carl-stauffer-joins-former-ma-students-at-restorative-justice-symposium-at-harvard-law-school/ Tue, 24 Mar 2015 16:19:43 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=23712 A recent symposium on restorative justice at Harvard University gave 草莓社区 (EMU) professor Carl Stauffer an opportunity to speak on lessons learned from the South Africa Truth and Reconciliation Commission and call attention to Sierra Leone for an accomplishment beyond the latest Ebola update.

Stauffer spoke about , a national, grassroots movement that is enabling the country to heal deep psychosocial wounds left by a civil war that lasted from 1991 to 2002. He suggested that this movement had proven to be more effective 鈥 more truly restorative 鈥 than the top-down criminal prosecutions pursued in many countries, including Sierra Leone, after violent conflicts.

Stauffer spoke from first-hand experience. From 2000 to 2009, Stauffer was Mennonite Central Committee鈥檚 Regional Peace Adviser for the Southern Africa region, a role that took him to 20 African countries and 10 other countries in the Caribbean, Middle East, Europe, and the Balkans. He and his family lived in Africa for a total of 16 years; he earned a PhD studying how mythology fueled violence in Zimbabwe.

Carl and Pushpi at Harvard (2)
CJP alumna Pushpi Weerakoon speaks as a panelist 鈥撀燙JP professor Carl Stauffer listens attentively beside her 鈥撀燼t the Harvard Negotiation Law Review symposium in early 2015.

As an invited expert to the , Stauffer was one of three in a panel discussion on 鈥渞estorative principles in transitional justice.鈥 Alongside him was alumna Pushpi Weerakoon, a native of Sri Lanka who earned her master鈥檚 degree from EMU鈥檚 Center for Justice and Peacebuilding in 2010. Today she is a scholar and fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Sierra Leone and Sri Lanka as examples

In keeping with the theme of the Feb. 28 symposium, 鈥淩estorative Justice: Theory Meets Application,鈥 both Stauffer and Weerakoon drew upon examples from specific countries (Sierra Leone for Stauffer; Sri Lanka for Weerakoon) to make the following general points, using words from a paper published previously by Weerakoon:

Restorative justice is about healing, not judgment; about recognizing the uniqueness of a situation and individuals, not blindly following the rule-based system of law; it is about compassion not control; about dialogue not advocacy; about recognition of the harm, and not apportionment of guilt. Restorative justice empowers people who are typically silenced or marginalized; it deals with people, not process and system; it builds rather than fragments communities; and it is cathartic and a legitimate end in itself.

Weerakoon鈥檚 words are universal, but she was writing in reference to Sri Lanka鈥檚 26 years of war and its aftermath, once the government defeated the separatist Tamil fighters in 2009. Now there are thousands of individuals who were formerly child soldiers and who need to be re-integrated into society. Meanwhile, United Nations officials have repeatedly criticized the government for ongoing violations of human rights. During the war, both sides were shown to have acted unconscionably.

From left: Barbara Robbins, Carl Stauffer, Judy Clarke, Pushpi Weerakon and Rebecca Stone.

Weerakoon and Stauffer were surrounded by a sympathetic crowd at Harvard. Three 2011 MA graduates of CJP were among the 85 people in the audience at various points in the day: Barbara Robbins, Judy Clarke, and Rebecca Stone. Among the other invited speakers were a number of restorative justice experts whose writings are studied at CJP, including Harvard law school dean Martha Minow; Daniel Van Ness of Prison Fellowship International; and Mark Umbreit, founding director of the Center for Restorative Justice and Peacemaking at the University of Minnesota.

How Fambul Tok works

The spring-summer 2011 issue of EMU鈥檚 Peacebuilder magazine , who now co-directs EMU鈥檚 Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice, and a summary of the Sierra Leone example cited by him at Harvard. This is that summary, slightly edited:

In 2006, we partnered with John Caulker who had an organization called 鈥楩orum for Conscience鈥 in Sierra Leone. We used some of the same material there as in South Africa, working with entire affected communities — seven to ten thousand had their legs and arms amputated in the civil war in Sierra Leone and so many were blinded, they have their own associations. There were ex-combatants associations. Bush wives associations. Those groups 鈥 we brought them together 鈥 25 to 30 in each of those first workshops in 2006 and 2007.

John helped us to understand the importance of conducting a healing process that would run parallel to the formal Truth and Reconciliation process, which only operated at the upper tip of society. John wanted to start rebuilding his country individual by individual, family by family, village by village, from the base up by simply listening and talking to each other.

Catalyst for Peace, a private foundation in Maine, has committed to funding the Fambul Tok process for 15 years, an impressive, long-term commitment without a lot of strings attached. And it鈥檚 working!

Our current international justice system needs to recognize initiatives such as Fambul Tok as significant community healing and justice processes. I鈥檓 convinced with appropriate research we could make a solid argument that this form of community-level justice is actually more satisfying and more effective for the rebuilding of Sierra Leone than the singular use of a Truth Commission or the International Criminal Court. The Criminal Court 鈥 for instance 鈥 built a building in the capital of Sierra Leone that cost millions. And then the court took four years to try nine people.

The reason it took four years to do nine cases is because they were trying to establish all of the details of the atrocities that these nine leaders did during the civil war. While these factors are important, they are certainly not all that the country needs in order to resolve its pain. As is the case in so many war-torn regions, Sierra Leone needs to be restored, justly, which is a long-term process that can only be done by the people themselves, one day at a time.

Stauffer is in his third year of a research project that assesses the value of community-level justice and reconciliation efforts through the study of Fambul Tok.

For more information on restorative justice, including studying the subject at EMU, visit this .

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Everyone invited to celebrate Howard Zehr by attending his May 23 鈥渞oast” /now/news/2015/everyone-invited-to-celebrate-howard-zehr-by-attending-his-may-23-roast/ /now/news/2015/everyone-invited-to-celebrate-howard-zehr-by-attending-his-may-23-roast/#comments Wed, 18 Mar 2015 15:15:24 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=23664 草莓社区 is spotlighting restorative justice pioneer on May 23, 2015, a date chosen to coincide with the 25th anniversary of his groundbreaking work, , and his retirement as a full-time faculty member.

In deference to Zehr鈥檚 wishes not to be praised, a 鈥渞oast鈥 has been planned for Zehr, along with a sit-down dinner for anyone who wishes to attend 鈥 in fact, the more, the merrier, say organizers.

鈥淚f you know Howard, you know that he would not enjoy being the center of attention at a formal gala,鈥 says , executive director of EMU鈥檚 . 鈥淲e鈥檒l honor Howard and his work in the field of restorative justice by sharing a meal and telling humorous and heartfelt stories celebrating his work and the many ways he has touched our lives.鈥 (To attend this limited-seating event, make your reservation by emailing hzroast@emu.edu.)

When writing Changing Lenses, Zehr had no intention of altering the global framework of criminal justice. In the preface to the upcoming edition of the book, Zehr writes that his aim was to create 鈥渁 book that would encourage us to identify and rethink some of the assumptions we rarely examine and that would help us to begin to dream of other possibilities.鈥

Changing Lenses has been translated into seven languages; a fresh edition is appearing in June, adding to the 26,000 copies circulating since 1990. Another of his books on the subject, The Little Book of Restorative Justice, has been a bestseller, exceeding 110,000 sold, with more than a dozen translations (often adapted to the local context) circulating internationally.

鈥淗is work in restorative justice is seminal,鈥 said , dean of the (UAB) in announcing a new award for Zehr, the . 鈥淥ver the course of his career he has had an international impact, changing our perception of crime and violations. His work has shifted thinking from the older perception of crime as an act against the state to a more humanistic understanding of crime as a violation of the rights of individuals.鈥

Australian criminologist offered these words in anticipation of the roast: 鈥淣o person has done more to inspire the restorative imaginations of citizens of this planet than Howard Zehr. He has been the great teacher who has invited us to sit beside him to see what he can see through his restorative lens.鈥

As a teacher of restorative justice, Zehr was popular with the 600 enrollees in his CJP courses 鈥 with some of them already making plans to come to the roast. (Zehr will be a guest lecturer in the restorative justice classes scheduled for the 2015 .) In his characteristically modest manner, Zehr wrote a last year in which he asked any and all readers for their input on the direction, strengths, weaknesses, and needs of the restorative justice field. If someone sends him an email, he responds personally.

The event will begin with a silent auction and book signing at 4:30 p.m. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m., and the roast will begin at 7 p.m. Proceeds from the silent auction and donations will go toward the at CJP. 鈥淥ur goal is to raise $50,000 for the Zehr Institute,鈥 said Byler.

All are welcome to this limited-seating event. Reservations will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis, with a May 8 final deadline (email hzroast@emu.edu to reserve). To set the tongue-in-cheek tone, guests are encouraged to dress in 鈥淗oward Zehr-styled formal wear,鈥 which translates as the clothing that one would wear to photograph wildflowers or rivers in the Shenandoah Valley. To donate an item to the silent auction, send information about the item to hzroast@emu.edu.

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