Leymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace...
Illustration
Object:
Leymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, writes in her book Mighty Be Our Powers how prayer changed a nation at war. The notorious and ruthless Charles Taylor (who has since been convicted in the Hague by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity) was once in power in Liberia, West Africa. Leymah Gbowee organized Christian and Muslim women, rich and poor, to pray for peace. Day after day, all day long, the women would meet on a soccer field on Tubman Boulevard under the relentless tropical sun to protest the civil war and Taylor's rule. He had to drive by that field every day on his way from his house to his office in the capital city Monrovia. Leymah Gbowee's army of praying women eventually compelled Taylor and the warlords to come to the peace table, and finally led to Taylor's surrender of office. Persistence in prayer paid dividends for peace in Liberia.

