Ilwad Elman is a Somali-Canadian social activist. She works at the Elman Peace and Human Rights Center in Mogadishu alongside her mother Fartuun Adan, the NGO's founder.
Peacebuilding is a long-term investment, and we’re just at the beginning
A society that holds governments to account, and preaches and advocates for its own peace, is what gives me the most hope, and we're starting to see that.
The concept of mental health and wellbeing are not ones that are mainstreamed, and that's what we are trying to make a culture around – not just for beneficiaries of the different services and programmes that we offer but also for frontline workers
Instead, people are encouraged to be thankful to have survived and are expected to simply move on
[In Somalia] it’s considered weak or even ungrateful to ‘complain’ or speak of the trauma that one has encountered.
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It's encouraging to see that women are fighting against so many different barriers to participate because they know what their participation means for other girls that are marginalised.
And with more and more women present in these spaces, it is creating an atmosphere and acceptance for more to join as well.
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There are a lot of young women now occupying spaces and challenging stereotypes every single day, from sport to technology to business to leadership, and all of this is necessary.
When considering how to engage and empower women for countering violent extremism, policy makers must understand the varied roles women play in this space.
So if you want to change the world, you need to first know and search within yourself with deep humility, zero egos, and profound clarity.
Human rights, now more than ever, are very much on the political agenda in Somalia. However moving beyond the proverbial international commitments and declarations has not yet been realized.
Over the years it has become very clear to me that a range of actors in Somali society want to sweep sexual and gender-based violence issues under the rug.
Women human rights defenders in Somalia are reprised against, threatened, unlawfully arrested, privy to sexual and gender-based violence, kidnapped and even killed as a result of their work.