From Freetown, Sierra Leone.
Volume 3b: Chapter 8: National Vision for Sierra Leone
CHAPTER EIGHT
National Vision for Sierra Leone
Introduction
1. Truth and Reconciliation Commissions look to the lessons of the
turbulent past in order to build a peaceful future. Only by doing so
can such commissions develop recommendations to address the problems
that cause conflicts. The Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) decided that looking to the past was not enough to
enable it to make recommendations that were relevant, robust and would
capture the imagination of Sierra Leoneans. The future society that the
recommendations are designed to achieve has to be properly understood
and described; in short, it has to be “envisioned”. This future society
or “vision for a future Sierra Leone” is the prescription. It is the
kind of society we wish to build here in Sierra Leone. It is set out in
this unique chapter of the TRC report in the form of the National
Vision for Sierra Leone. The recommendations in this report aim to help
translate the vision into reality.
BACKGROUND TO THE NATIONAL VISION
2.
Early in its mandate, the TRC decided to facilitate the construction of
a “vision” that would act as a “roadmap” to work towards the needs of
post-conflict Sierra Leone. The question that gave rise to the National
Vision project was: What does the TRC envisage for Sierra Leone after
11 years of war?
3. In particular the TRC set out to gauge the
expectations of Sierra Leoneans in the context of existing initiatives
being undertaken by the Government and the international community. The
TRC would then be in a position to assess whether such initiatives
could fulfil the hopes of the people of Sierra Leone.
4. This
strategy required the Commission to get a sense of the expectations,
hopes and aspirations of the people of Sierra Leone. The TRC would need
to reach out to individuals in all spheres of society – hence the
requirement for a national campaign to gather inputs and contributions
towards a national vision. The TRC would then compare and contrast
these inputs with what was realisable under current plans and
initiatives. Ideally the TRC recommendations would address the lacunas
and fill the gaps.
THE CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
5.
The TRC decided to provide a platform for individual Sierra Leoneans to
express their expectations and aspirations. The Commission saw the
creation of a National Vision as an inspirational project in which all
Sierra Leoneans, young and old from all different backgrounds, could
participate. One means soliciting input was a call to the public for
their ideas and contributions.
6. Judge Laura Marcus-Jones, the
Deputy Chairperson of the TRC, launched the “Call for Contributions to
the National Vision for Sierra Leone” at a press conference at TRC
Headquarters on 17 September 2003. On behalf of the Commission, Judge
Marcus-Jones invited Sierra Leoneans to set out their hopes for a
future conflict-free Sierra Leone.
7. The TRC did not limit the
form or scope of contributions. The public were invited to make their
contributions in any form they wished, including by way of essays,
poems, slogans, songs, drama, paintings or photographs. The TRC
suggested that contributions may:
- Describe the kind of society the contributor would like to live in;
- Suggest how to make Sierra Leone a better place to live in;
- Set out the contributor’s hopes and aspirations for Sierra Leone;
- Describe where the contributor would like to see Sierra Leone in five or ten years; or
- Provide anything creative that inspires peace and unity – and pride in being Sierra Leonean.
8.
The TRC advertised its campaign in newspapers, on the radio and in
leaflets distributed around Freetown and in the provinces. It was also
announced that selected contributions might be included in the final
report of the TRC, displayed nationally and internationally in an
exhibition, or published as part of a collection in a separate book.
RESPONSE TO THE CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
9.
Over the course of two months, the TRC received over 250 contributions
representing the efforts of over 300 individuals. The TRC and its
Commissioners were overwhelmed by the effort, time and resources that
so many Sierra Leoneans devoted to preparing their contributions. Among
the contributors are men and women of all ages, backgrounds, religions
and regions, including adults and children; artists and laymen;
amputees, ex-combatants and prisoners. The contributions include
written and recorded essays, slogans, plays and poems; paintings,
etchings and drawings; sculptures, wood carvings and installations.
10.
The TRC even received a sea-worthy boat called the "Future Boat",
painted in the national colours of green, white and blue. The two
creators described their contribution in the following terms:
“We
built this boat as an inspiration to young people to develop
themselves. This is to let the people of Sierra Leone know that they as
carpenters can do something to develop Sierra Leone.” - Ibrahim Bangura
and Tejan Suma
11. While contributors worked separately, a
number of common themes and forms emerged. Although the TRC asked
Sierra Leoneans to speak about the future, the majority of
contributions addressed the future by making reference to the past.
Many of the contributions included common motifs, such as: the map or
outline of Sierra Leone; the scales of justice; the colours of the
national flag; the words “peace”, “unity” and “love”; references to
Sierra Leone’s natural resources; and images of houses. Some of the
contributions set out prerequisites for a peaceful and prosperous
Sierra Leone in the years ahead, while others point to the severe
problems facing our society today. They serve as signposts for the
future; signposts that we ignore at our peril.
12. Most of all,
the contributions show what Sierra Leone can be. They show the enormous
potential that exists in this country – potential that must be
harnessed positively and productively. They point to the need for basic
respect and tolerance amongst all human beings. The contributions amply
demonstrate that Sierra Leone can and must reach for new heights.
13.
The National Vision has provided an exciting opportunity for individual
Sierra Leoneans to contribute their ideas and talent to the process of
peace and reconciliation. Through the National Vision, Sierra Leoneans
of all ages and backgrounds can claim their own citizenship space in
the new Sierra Leone and make their contributions to the country’s
cultural and national heritage.
THE LAUNCH OF THE NATIONAL VISION EXHIBIT
14.
The National Vision Exhibit was launched on 10 December 2003 at the
National Stadium in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The Chairperson of the TRC,
Bishop Joseph Humper, officially opened the Exhibit with these words:
“The
Vision should not stop with this Exhibition. In fact it must live
beyond the life of the TRC. Each contributor, as indeed each Sierra
Leonean, has a role to play in his or her own sphere in advancing the
causes of peace and unity. Each one of you has shown your love for your
country. You have demonstrated your courage and your energy to bring
peace and unity to all corners of the land. Each one of you gives me
enormous hope that the future of Sierra Leone is indeed a bright one…
There is much work to be done to build this country. We must start this
work now.”
15. Over 400 individuals, many of them
contributors, attended the launch. The event featured selected
contributions and each contributor received a “Recognition of
Contribution” certificate. When the TRC first decided to award prizes
to the National Vision contributions, the TRC projected one overall
winner and two runners-up, but the excellence of so many contributions
in many different forms demanded that there be winners and runners-up
in a variety of categories. The TRC awarded winners and runners-up in
six categories and 30 certificates of Honourable Mention were issued.
For a full list of contributors, winners, runners-up and recipients of
honourable mention awards, please see the Appendix.
THE NATIONAL VISION EXHIBIT AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM
16.
The National Vision Exhibit opened at the National Museum in Freetown,
Sierra Leone on 15 December 2003. To satisfy the momentum that the
Exhibit had generated, a voluntary National Vision Team, comprised of
nationals and internationals, was established. The Team conducted
guided tours of the Exhibit at the National Museum every weekday during
January and February 2004. Members of the Team promoted awareness of
the National Vision through leaflets, presentations, meetings and radio
shows. An article published in The Democrat on 17 December 2003 wrote
of the National Vision: “This is crucial to our quest for lasting peace
and sustainable development”.
17. On 22 December 2003, the
President of the Republic of Sierra Leone, Alhaji Dr. Ahmad Tejan
Kabbah and the Minister of Education, Dr. Alpha Wurie, undertook a
televised tour of the Exhibit and publicly pledged their support for
the National Vision and the prospect of a national tour. Between 20
December 2003 and early February 2004, more than 1,000 people signed
their names and wrote their comments in a register of visitors to the
Exhibit. Comments and excerpts from this “National Vision Guest Book”
are reproduced below:
Rajiv Bendre, Director, British Council "A moving and uplifting exhibition"
Mary Margaret Dineen, National Democratic Institute “Inspirational
representation of the positive human potential for peace, harmony and
development Sierra Leone deserves. Bravo and thank you”
Honourable Chief Hindowa from Bo “Congratulations
to the Vision. I think this is what Sierra Leoneans need. I support
that the vision move to the provinces so that every Sierra Leonean will
include in the Vision for Sierra Leone”
Edmund Makiu, UNICEF “This is the best Sierra Leone has ever had. Sierra Leoneans need to work hard to meet the wonderful vision”
Moisia Kawa “I
wish to see this programme included in the school curriculum of Sierra
Leone in order to educate our young students about their role in the
development of our beloved country”
Claudine A. E. Davies, Lemount College “I’m amazed at the terribly exceptional talent our country possesses in people. Sierra Leone, indeed, has a bright future”
David Minah, Sierra Leone Government “The
exhibits are highly moving and they depict what we’ve been through.
Reconciliation is the way forward and we should all join in it so that
Sierra Leone can move forward to a brighter future”
Mark S. Koroma “I
really find it beyond comprehension why I was so late in partaking of
such things as a Sierra Leonean. But to be justice, I am very much
grateful of what I saw my brothers and sisters did and I hope to see
more.”
Mrs. Florence Okrap-Smart, Lemount College “A laudable venture which needs to come to fruition with the help of everyone”
AR Hassan-King “I congratulate the TRC and all the contributors. The nation has spoken”
18.
By the end of January 2004, more than 600 school children had visited
the Exhibit and taken part in group discussions on the significance of
the National Vision to Sierra Leone’s future. The National Vision Team
also arranged tours for Members of Parliament, government officials,
ex-combatants and amputees. Many UNAMSIL peacekeeping troops also
visited the exhibit.
THE NATIONAL VISION AND TRANSITIONAL SIERRA LEONE
19.
The National Vision has added considerably to debates around Sierra
Leone’s future. The National Vision can continue to have a positive
influence on the key areas of development described in the following
paragraphs:
• Artistic and scholarly expression: The National
Vision offers an interactive forum for traditional and contemporary
expression. It encourages artistic and scholarly drive and talent
through individual recognition.
• Awareness and acknowledgement
of the war: The National Vision is a forum for all voices to be heard,
engaged with and preserved. It emphasises that the war occurred because
of specific problems in society that must be addressed for change to
take place and peace to become permanent. The National Visions has made
these important messages uniquely accessible to all, including
vulnerable groups such as children, the illiterate and those
traumatised by the war.
• Self-empowerment: By displaying
individual contributions to Sierra Leoneans and the international
community, the National Vision affirms and validates the voices and
talents of individual Sierra Leoneans. The Vision affirms the claim
expressed in the contributions that Sierra Leone is capable of moving
towards a peaceful and democratic future. It reiterates the need for
individual Sierra Leoneans to participate in this process.
•
Unity: The National Vision unites victims, ex-combatants, prisoners and
free citizens of all ages, backgrounds, religions and regions under one
common purpose: to ensure a better future for Sierra Leone. In this
way, the National Vision fosters a new unified pride in being Sierra
Leonean.
• Healing: The National Vision provides a space for
personal and communal healing for its contributors and for those
engaging with the contributions, in a country where conventional forms
of therapy are largely inaccessible and unfamiliar.
•
Democracy-building: The National Vision is a uniquely democratic, non
partisan and interactive civic space representing individuals
regardless of age, background, region or religion. It serves as forum
for open and active dialogue in Sierra Leone on political and social
issues of the past, present and future.
• Reconciliation: As a
public space, the National Vision Exhibit physically brings together
different stakeholders in the same room, thus initiating the process of
reconciliation through dialogue. Many contributions serve as acts of
reconciliation on the part of contributors, as they express
contributors’ willingness to reconcile and invite others to do the same.
•
Reparation: By “memorialising” the harsh realities of the past, the
National Vision serves as a form of symbolic reparation to Sierra
Leoneans, to whom public forms of acknowledgement reinforce community
bonds.
• Never Again: By examining the pre-conflict and conflict
periods in Sierra Leone and envisioning a better future, the
contributions argue publicly that one cannot look forward without
looking back. They express the desire of Sierra Leoneans that the past
should not be repeated and that every Sierra Leonean should participate
in ensuring this culture of “never again”.
SIERRA LEONE VISION 2025: “SWEET SALONE”
20.
“No lasting achievement is possible without a vision and no vision can
become real without action and responsibility.” With these words, the
President of Sierra Leone, Alhaji Dr. Ahmad Tejan Kabbah, launched
“Vision 2025” on 15 March 2001 in the face of the human, institutional
and financial challenges that have confronted Sierra Leone after the
eleven-year war. A government venture, Vision 2025 was initiated by the
Ministry of Development and Economic Planning and implemented by a
National Core Team of Experts including leaders from the areas of
culture, tourism, industry, gender, the economy, agriculture and
political science. The UN Development Programme Sierra Leone provided
financial and institutional backing while Africa Futures, a regional
project of UNDP, provided technical support.
21. Key
questions driving Vision 2025 included: What kind of nation do Sierra
Leoneans want their country to be? What challenges must be confronted?
What are the most appropriate policies and programs? Vision 2025’s
motto sums up the goals of the initiative: “United People, Progressive
Nation, Attractive Country”. Vision 2025 aims to replace poverty and
underdevelopment with peace, stability and wealth creation in Sierra
Leone. To prepare a vision for long-term development that ensures
national ownership of the development agenda and promotes a democratic
and participatory process, Vision 2025 engaged national and
international stakeholders in consultations. A national Steering
Committee, headed by the Minister for Development and Economic
Planning, organised consultations with students, refugees, internally
displaced persons, private institutions, members of government,
combatants, paramount chiefs, the national security forces, NGOs and
civil society. Methods for soliciting input included radio phone-in
conversations, questionnaires, essay competitions, workshops, regional
consultations and interviews.
22. The August 2003 publication of
Vision 2025 included: a report on the conclusions reached among
stakeholders for the way forward; a strategic diagnosis of the
country’s past and present situation; alternative possibilities for
Sierra Leone’s future; and suggestions for a national focus and
individual and collective responsibility in the national vision. Vision
2025 is to be a “guidepost” for Sierra Leone’s future development.
Additionally, it is to be a “living document that will be continuously
reviewed and adapted to changing scenarios” at home and abroad. The
2003 document proposes the creation of a national “Vision Council”,
made up of visionary leaders from different sectors, to ensure the
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the activities of Vision
2025.
The National Vision for Sierra Leone and its Complementarity with Vision 2025
23.
The TRC’s National Vision for Sierra Leone uniquely and effectively
complements the Vision 2025 initiative. Vision 2025 is a government
policy document that outlines implementing strategies for the
development of Sierra Leone over the next 20 years. As the National
Vision for Sierra Leone serves as a non-partisan, inter-generational
forum for dialogue, it raises awareness around the existence of
processes like the one steered by Vision 2025. Indeed, the National
Vision encourages individual Sierra Leoneans, especially the youth, to
contribute to the dialogue entailed in such processes. The National
Vision therefore has great potential to serve as a vehicle for
continuing popular input into Vision 2025.
THE WAY FORWARD FOR THE NATIONAL VISION
24.
The National Vision for Sierra Leone has gathered increasing momentum
nationally and internationally as a nation-building programme. It has
attracted the attention of representatives from different sectors of
society including human rights activists, politicians, representatives
of arts and culture, government, the business community and people in
the provinces. Its diverse appeal lies in the fact that it is a
peoples’ project, not a political project. Moreover it is not time
bound.
25. The Commission is of the view that participation in
the National Vision project should be expanded. The Commission
accordingly recommends to government and civil society stakeholders
that the National Vision should become a permanent open, interactive
civic space for all stakeholders in Sierra Leone to engage in dialogue
through artistic and scholarly expression on political, moral and
social issues of the past, present and future.
26. To ensure
maximum exposure for the National Vision contributions, the Commission
recommends that the following activities should take place:
•
Further Freetown Exhibits: In order to access as many groups as
possible, the Exhibit should be put on display in diverse locations
around the capital. Eventually, the National Vision Exhibit should be
housed in an appropriate, permanent location that will be an active and
interactive site of workshops for different interest groups (women,
children, youth, political leaders, etc.) around issues addressed in
the contributions.
• A National Tour: To ensure the visible
accessibility of the Exhibit to as many Sierra Leoneans as possible,
the National Vision should travel outside of the capital. The National
Tour should bring the Exhibit to selected cities and towns in all
provinces, where workshops could be held and the continued submission
of contributions could be encouraged.
• An International Tour: An
international tour would raise awareness around Sierra Leone and the
issues discussed in the contributions. It would encourage others to
consider applying this paradigm of a National Vision to their own
contexts. It would further bring international exposure to the wealth
of creative talent in Sierra Leone.
• A Publication: A possible
publication would be a book containing photographs of contributions,
biographies of contributors and essays by different leaders on
reconciliation, national healing and related topics.
27. In
order to realise the four activities described above, the Commission
recommends that the National Vision fall under the wing of the TRC’s
successor body, the proposed National Human Rights Commission (HRC); or
alternatively that the National Vision work in close collaboration with
the HRC. Pending the formation of the HRC, the Commission recommends
that civil society and government commit to keep the National Vision
alive and establish a provisional vehicle or structure under which its
activities can continue. 28. The Commission accordingly
recommends the establishment of an independent Trust to oversee the
activities of the project. The National Vision Trust should have
independent trustees, representative of the different sectors of
society, serving on the body.
29. The Commission notes that the
National Vision for Sierra Leone as a project of the TRC must remain
true to the founding principles underlying the TRC. As such all future
National Vision activities must:
- serve the preservation of peace, strive for unity and promote healing and reconciliation; and
- Remain independent and non-partisan. The National Vision should always
represent the collective visions of its contributors. It should never
be the vision of a particular NGO or the vision of Government or any
particular interest group.
30. The Commission notes that the
contributors to the National Vision project have handed their
contributions to the TRC in trust. The TRC advertisement that called
for contributions stated that contributors were entitled to have their
contributions returned to them. However the TRC stated publicly (in the
advertisement and in its public announcements) that the contributions
would be taken on provincial and public tours; and that the
contributions would form part of a publication. On this basis the vast
majority of contributors have entrusted their works to the TRC in order
that such pledges may be realised. The Commission accordingly calls on
the TRC’s successor body or any provisional National Vision structure
to take steps to fulfil these objectives and in particular to ensure
that works of the contributors to the National Vision for Sierra Leone:
- receive maximum public exposure and are not kept out of the public eye;
- are used to further the causes set out in the founding principles;
- are not used to further any political or commercial interests; and
- become part of a permanent exhibit in Sierra Leone.
31.
The Commission further calls on the TRC’s successor body or provisional
National Vision structure to strive towards the following objectives:
- promote artistic and scholarly expression in Sierra Leone and recognise artistic and scholarly drive and talent;
- complement and support the work of like-minded bodies, in particular
Vision 2025, and collaborate with such bodies in joint projects;
- promote awareness and acknowledgement of the war by displaying Sierra
Leoneans’ visions for the future and encouraging audiences to engage
with them and the issues they address;
- promote unity and
reconciliation by encouraging different stakeholders to gather together
to discuss the contributions’ themes and possible ways to address
problems raised;
- broaden discourse on how to implement, through
individual and group actions, solutions to issues raised in the
contributions by arranging workshops and conferences;
- empower individual Sierra Leoneans by serving as a vehicle for individual voices to be heard and engaged with;
- promote personal and communal healing by continuing to encourage the submission of contributions around the country;
- ensure that the National Vision for Sierra Leone remains a democratic,
non-partisan, interactive and civic space representing all individuals
regardless of age, background, region and religion; and
- encourage the National Vision to serve as a form of symbolic reparation through its status as a memorial.
CONCLUSION
32.
The TRC cannot claim to have developed a complete vision for a future
Sierra Leone. Such a vision must be an ongoing project for all
concerned Sierra Leoneans, to which the National Vision for Sierra
Leone aims to contribute, as a developing record of the evolution of
thoughts on the past and present and on vision for the future. A clear
vision for the future of the country provides the objectives towards
which we all must strive. It also provides the yardstick for the
measurement of our progress.
33. The TRC campaign for a National
Vision for Sierra Leone has produced a collection of contributions that
form part of Sierra Leone’s national heritage. The contributions stand
as testimony to what is possible in Sierra Leone. They speak of
struggle and hope. The contributions inspire and challenge all of us to
rise above the past and to build a better future. Their messages must
be taken seriously.
34. Perhaps most importantly, the National
Vision has emphasised the significance of each individual contributor
to Sierra Leone. The work of building a new and better Sierra Leone
belongs to every stakeholder in Sierra Leone. The individuals who have
lent their hopes and dreams for Sierra Leone to this exhibit are actors
in the process – as is each visitor to the Exhibit – and as such they
are all vehicles for change. The Exhibit is a catalyst and it is up to
each individual to ensure that it maximises its potential to effect
day-to-day change. In the words of one National Vision contributor,
Wurie Mamadu Tamba Barrie:
“The inspiration is let’s sprint; if we can’t sprint, let’s run;
if we can’t run, let’s walk; if we also can’t walk, then let’s crawl; but in any way possible, let’s keep on moving”.
(All of these Exhibits and Submissions can be seen in the PDF Format of this Volume 3B of the TRC Report)
© 2002 - 2007, Sierra Leone Truth & Reconciliation Commission
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