FEATURE: In Ukraine, a ‘Living Library’ helps ease tensions between displaced persons and hosts
From the beginning at UNDP, we have understood that post conflict programming is not only about physical recovery but it is also about psychological and social recovery
The Library is “therapeutic” and contains stories of different communities, particularly “stories of displacement, feeling at home, feeling not at home, prejudice, social exclusion,” Hiemstra added in an interview with the UN News Centre ahead of the World Humanitarian Summit to be held in Istanbul, Turkey, on 23 and 24 May 2016.
The stories were collected from throughout the country, including from communities in the provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk, which are de facto divided between areas controlled by the Government and those under the control of rebels.
As a result of fighting during the past two years, nearly 10,000 people have been killed and over 21,000 wounded.
Hundreds of thousands of people have fled conflict-affected areas and found refuge in other regions, putting pressure on the resources and infrastructure of host communities, changing the lives of people who live there, and contributing to tensions between communities.
The ”Living Library is one the activities supported by UNDP in these conflict areas to promote dialogue and reconciliation between communities.
“From the very beginning at UNDP, we have understood that post conflict programming is not only about physical recovery but it is also about psychological and social recovery,” he noted.
As a result, people who participate in the Living Library “start to recognize that being an internally displaced person is very difficult, but also being host community is very difficult, and living together is actually something that can be learned and that can be promoted,” said Hiemstra.
The goal is to ensure everyone starts “feeling a little bit more comfortable with each other.”
Promoting dialogue and mutual understanding
Present in Ukraine for more than two decades, UNDP’s priorities in the country shifted two years ago when the conflict erupted, with a greater focus now on activities to achieve reconciliation.
This focus is in line with the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Agenda for Humanity, which includes a responsibility on preventing conflicts and finding political solutions to resolve them. The Agenda for Humanity comprise five core responsibilities, which also includes respecting the rule of war, leaving no one behind, working differently to end need, and investing in humanity.
Among its activities to promote dialogue and mutual understanding, UNDP also supports an online platform that allows Ukrainians to constructively discuss the future of their country. It brings together people participating already in various dialogues in progress at the local level.
“It is an innovative way of stimulating dialogue,” Hiemstra said. About 40 Ukrainians facilitators have been trained to record the results of dialogues and post them on the platform.
This project is implemented in partnership with the European Forum for international Mediation and Dialogue (MediatEUr).
The idea is that the mediators can play a role in guiding the dialogue in a peaceful and useful direction for the country. The platform helps facilitators to get in touch with each other and with foreign counterparts to share information and experience and to improve their capacity for dialogue.
Photo: UNICEF Ukraine/Aleksey Filippov
Source: www.justearthnews.com
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