Giving Birth to the Unexpected

Giving Birth to the Unexpected
"Let's show that life-giving ethics created through genuine dialogue and strategic partnership is capable of absorbing and preventing the virus of violence."

For 20 years I have worked as a mediator in violent situations – from Northern Ireland to Somalia, from Colombia to Nicaragua, from the Basque country and Tajikistan to the Philippines – where cycles of revenge seem hell-bent on perpetuating themselves and those involved find ways of justifying their part in the cycle. Some lessons emerge from these settings for the challenges of terror.

First, recognize that cycles of violent anger are built on perceived threat to survival and direct experiences of exclusion over time. Stopping the cycle requires one guidepost: Avoid doing what they expect. They expect us to lash out. They need disenfranchised people to perpetrate the myth that they are fighting a mad system. We need to destroy the myth, not their people…

Lederach, John Paul. “Giving Birth to the Unexpected.” Sojourners, December 2001.

read

Once downloaded, PDFs can be translated via Google Translate

connect

situate this material in the web of John Paul's vocational reflections

explore

related items you might be interested in

The Challenge of Terror: A Traveling Essay

Written while stranded in Guatemala after September 11, an essay suggesting a number of lessons learned from peace initiatives where terrorism was employed as a tool of struggle and calling for new approaches to combating the challenge.

A Wish For The Future

An article imagining a courageous alternative to the then pending U.S. war with Iraq.

Conflict Transformation

An abridged version of the book, The Little Book of Conflict Transformation.