UN AWARDS NUN - SISTER NAMAIKA - REFUGEE AWARD IN AFRICA

Ind. Cath. News report:
 
Nun wins major award for work with women refugees in DR Congo | The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,UNHCR, Nansen Refugee Award, NRC, Sister Angelique Namaika, Augustinian nun, DR Congo, Lord’s Resistance Army,LRA, Centre for Reintegration and Development (CRAD)
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) announced today that this year’s Nansen Refugee Award (NRC) goes to Sister Angelique Namaika, an Augustinian nun who works in the remote north east region of DR Congo with survivors of displacement and abuse by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA). The award ceremony will take place in Geneva on 30 September.
Through her Centre for Reintegration and Development (CRAD) the Sister has helped transform the lives of more than 2000 displaced women and girls who have been forced from their homes by armed groups – including LRA. The brutality of the Ugandan rebel group is well-known and the testimonials of the women and girls whom Sister Angélique has helped are heart-wrenching.
Many of the women Sister Angélique helps recount stories of abduction, forced labour, beatings, murder, rape and other human rights abuses. The Sister’s one-on-one approach helps them recover. On top of the abuse they have suffered, these vulnerable women and girls are often ostracized by their own families and communities because of their ordeal. It takes a special kind of care and nurturing to help them heal and to pick up the pieces of their lives. She does this by giving them the possibility to learn a trade, start a small business or go back to school. Testimonies from these women show the remarkable affect she has had on helping turn around their lives with many affectionately calling her “mother”.
The announcement of the winner coincides with the release of a report which gives insight on the realities of life for those displaced by LRA violence. Since 2008 an estimated 320,000 people have been forced to flee in the Province – in some cases several times. The report highlights why LRA violence created such severe and long lasting trauma for not only the abductees but hundreds of thousands of internally displaced who are still too afraid to return home - despite a marked reduction in attacks.
"I have been fortunate to already meet with the Sister and I am very impressed with the work she is doing. Faced with brutal violence by armed groups in north-eastern Congo, she has not given up. Instead she has struggled to provide victims of rape, violence and abuse new hope," said Secretary General of NRC, Jan Egeland.
"The LRA have a long history of extreme violence and have committed some of the most horrendous mass atrocities in the world’ says Egeland. ‘The deeply entrenched fear that this long history of violence has inspired means that today, the mere rumor of perceived ‘LRA’ activity is enough to cause whole villages to flee in fear of their lives’".
Sister Angélique herself was displaced by the violence in 2009 whilst living in Dungu. She knows the pain of fleeing one’s home. It is part of what drives her to work day in and day out – logging many kilometers on her bicycle over rutted roads – to reach all those in need.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres commended this year’s laureate, saying: “Sister Angélique works tirelessly to help women and girls who are extremely vulnerable due to their trauma, poverty and displacement. The challenges are massive, which makes her work all the more remarkable – she doesn’t allow anything to stand in her way.”

Working in a location where electricity, running water and paved roads are scarce, Sister Angélique’s work is exceptional. Although she lacks proper tools and her resources are almost non-existent Sister Angélique does not allow herself to be deterred. She has made it her life’s work to ease the suffering of these uprooted women and girls – to give them renewed hope for the future.
Guterres continued: “These women’s lives have been shattered by brutal violence and displacement. Sister Angélique has proven that even one person can make a huge difference in the lives of families torn apart by war. She is a true humanitarian heroine.”
Responding to the announcement, the new laureate said: “It is difficult to imagine how much the women and girls abused by the LRA have suffered. They will bear the scars of this violence for their whole lives. This award will mean more displaced people in Dungu can get the help they need to restart their lives. I will never stop doing all I can to give them hope, and the chance to live again.”
Sister Angelique will receive the Award, which consists of a medal and a monetary prize, at the ceremony in Geneva. The event will feature a keynote speech from best-selling author Paulo Coelho and musical
performances by acclaimed British singer-songwriter Dido, Malaysian singer-songwriter Yuna and Grammy-nominated Malian musicians Amadou and Mariam.

Following the Nansen Refugee Award ceremony Sister Angelique will be received at the Vatican by Pope Francis at a private audience on October 2nd and afterwards she will proceed to Paris and Brussels, before visiting Oslo on 10 October.
Source: UNHCR/NRC
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