Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Leymah Gbowee to Speak at Otterbein on October 23


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Leymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, will speak at Otterbein University at 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 23. The event will take place in Cowan Hall at 30 S. Grove St. Tickets can be purchased online at www.librariesforliberiafoundation.com or at www.ticketleap.com.

Her visit will kick off the 1.2 million Libraries for Liberia Foundation fund drive. Libraries for Liberia was founded by Zuulu Cooper, who was born in Liberia and has worked in the IT Department at Westerville City Schools for 15 years. His group is dedicated to empowering and engaging individuals and organizations in the United States to collect educational materials and technologies for schools and communities in Liberia. Libraries for Liberia is driven by the need for books in schools to ensure that each child has the opportunity to develop intellectually and socially. Its objective is to help Liberian children escape the bonds of poverty and hopelessness by providing educational materials and technologies and to set up libraries for schools and communities so that every young person in Liberia is able to fulfill their potential and to make a difference.

Leymah Gbowee won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011 for her part in ending Liberia's civil wars, and for her efforts to promote peace, democracy and women's rights in Africa. She grew up in Monrovia, Liberia's capital, and was a witness to the horrors of war as a teenager and young mother. She was a social worker in Liberia in the late 1990s, but fled to Ghana and in 2001 earned a degree from Mother Patern College of Health and Sciences. While in Ghana, Gbowee got involved with peace activists, and by 2002 she was a leading member of the Women in Peacebuilding Program (WIPNET) and the West African Network for Peacebuilding (WANEP). A Christian who reached out to the Muslim community, Gbowee helped organize widespread non-violent prayer protests that in 2003 helped bring an end to Liberia's 14 years of civil war. She gained fame for leading a "sex strike" -- urging Liberian women to refuse relations until the war stopped -- and even forced a meeting with then-president Charles Taylor. The reforms that followed brought about the election of Liberia's President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in 2005, and earned international awards for Gbowee. Over the next few years, she spoke at the U.N. (2006), earned a graduate degree in Conflict Transformation (2007, from Virginia's Eastern Mennonite University), hobnobbed with American philanthropists, and starred in the documentary Pray the Devil Back to Hell (2008). Gbowee is the director of Women Peace and Security Network Africa (based in Ghana) and the author of the 2011 memoir Mighty Be Our Powers: How Sisterhood, Prayer and Sex Changed a Nation at War. She shared her 2011 Nobel Prize with President Sirleaf and Yemen's Tawakkol Karman.