Categories
Conflict Areas
Blog Series
Our Campaigns & Initiatives
Announcements
Archive
- February, 2012 (17)
- January, 2012 (53)
- December, 2011 (55)
- November, 2011 (69)
- October, 2011 (51)
Blog Roll
- Africa in Transition
- Africa24 Media
- Across the Aisle
- Burning Billboard
- Change.org - Human Rights
- Chris Blattman's Blog
- Condition Critical
- Congo Siasa
- From the Front Line
- Genocide Intervention Network
- Huffington Post
- ICC Observers
- IJCentral
- Impunity Watch
- In Situ
- Institute for War & Peace Reporting
- Opinio Juris
- Meskel Square
- Mia Farrow
- National Security Network Democracy Arsenal
- Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times
- Promise of Engagement
- Pulitzer Center - Untold Stories
- Resolve Uganda
- Save Darfur
- South Sudan Info
- STAND
- SudanReeves.org
- TakePart
- Think Progress
- UN Dispatch
- Voices from the Field
- Voices on Genocide Prevention
- War Crimes
- WITNESS
- Woodrow Wilson Center
- World is Witness
- Wronging Rights
Building a Movement to Help End Rape in Congo

I recently had the chance to go to Asheville, North Carolina, to co-present with actress Andie MacDowell a screening of the film, "The Greatest Silence," which addresses the scourge of sexual violence in the Congo. What I found in Asheville was a community of committed people who are building a mini-movement for Congolese women right there in North Carolina. Andie and others have been holding house screenings of "The Greatest Silence" in their homes for the last few months. Health care workers in particular have rallied around this effort. Grassroots efforts are underway to encourage North Carolina's senators, particularly Senator Kay Hagan (D-NC), to co-sponsor the Congo Conflict Minerals Bill, S. 891. What remains remarkable to me is that folks are rallying together, one community at a time, for people halfway around the world, people they will likely never meet in places they will likely never visit. That is inspiring, the essence of a true movement.
To find out how you can get involved, visit RAISE Hope for Congo.








