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Leymah Gbowee thought that she was the wrong person for the job, but that there was no other person to do it. The impulse had come to this young Liberian woman in a dream in which she was told to get women to pray for peace. In the midst of a 14-year civil war that seemed like a modest self-assignment, but Gbowee's relentless persistence transformed these private Christian and Muslim missives into a nationwide peace movement that brought an end to the Second Liberian Civil War in 2003, leading to the election of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Africa's first female president. In this singular memoir, she describes how sisterhood, prayer, protest, and even a sex strike helped achieve what negotiators could not. An unconventional, empowering feminist statement.
Overview
As a young woman growing up in Africa, seventeen-year-old Leymah Gbowee was crushed by a savage war when violence reached her native Monrovia, depriving her of the education she yearned for and claiming the lives of relatives and friends. As war continued to ravage Liberia, Gbowee's bitterness turned to rage-fueled action as she realized that women bear the greatest burden in prolonged conflicts. Passionate and charismatic, Gbowee was instrumental in galvanizing hundreds, if not thousands, of women in Liberia in ...