Born in central Liberia in 1972,
Leymah Gbowee’s teenage years were disrupted when war broke out in 1989,
lasting until 2003. The first civil war left over 200,000 dead, and like many
political struggles in Africa, was the effect of attempted coup d'états and
fraudulently elected leaders. Charles Taylor, a former government minister,
invaded Liberia in 1989 to overthrow the Samuel Doe regime that had been forced
on the Liberian people since 1980. The civil war lasted until a short-lived
ceasefire was called in 1995. War broke out again but a peace agreement was
reached in 1997 and Charles Taylor was elected as the President for Liberia. However,
a second civil war soon followed from 1999 to 2003 with the re-emergence of
rebel groups contesting for control of the country. In all, some 250,000
Liberians lost their lives due to wartime activities; many of these were
children, shamelessly used as soldiers by Taylor’s government.
During the first war, Leymah fled on
foot to Ghana, with an abusive partner and three young children. She eventually
returned back to Liberia with her children having nearly starved in poverty in
Accra. It was during this time that she joined the Trauma Healing and
Reconciliation Programme (THRP) connected with the Christian faith in Liberia. She
began to rehabilitate some of the former child soldiers used by Charles
Taylor’s army through this programme. Leymah also made connections with West
Africa Network for Peacebuilding (WANEP) leaders trained in the Eastern
Mennonite University (EMU), a Christian university in the US specialising in
peace-building and restorative justice.
In partnership with Nigerian lawyer
and peace leader, Thelma Ekiyor, Leymah started Women in Peacebuilding Network
(WIPNET), a women’s organisation focused solely on securing peace through the
collective action of women across all ethnic and religious divides. It is this
group of women that made history by securing peace and bringing an end to the
14-year civil war that nearly destroyed the country of Liberia.


Leymah Gbowee went on to complete a
Master’s degree in Conflict Transformation and Peacebuilding in 2007 at EMU’s Centre for Justice and
Peacebuilding. In doing so she overcame a long
battle with poor self-image and low self-esteem. She was also called on to
address international UN panels and write papers on the areas of peacebuilding
and justice. With the support of Abigail Disney, feminist philanthropist and
descendant of Walt Disney company founders, Gbowee started WIPSEN (Women in
Peace and Security Network) an organisation fully owned and run by women, after
the new head of WANEP would not grant WIPNET its autonomy.
Gbowee’s work through her women’s
organisations continues to run in line with her firm belief in the power of
African women.

Her work, supported by thousands of
women, has brought her many accolades including 2007 Blue Ribbon for Peace from
the John F. Kennedy
School of Government at Havard
University, 2011 Alumna of the Year, Eastern Mennonite University and the high
honors of 2011 Nobel Peace Prize, jointly won
with Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Yemen’s Tawakkol Karman, another woman
peace activist.
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