The Telos Channel cover logo

S2 | Ishmael Beah: Child Soldier to Peacemaker

44m · The Telos Channel · 10 Jun 10:00

At the age of 13, Ishmael Beah was recruited to fight in a bloody civil war in Sierra Leone as a child soldier, forever reshaping the story of his life. 

Against all odds, he survived and came to the US as a refugee. But not everyone in the US was ready for his story, or for the realities of the world he came from. So he began to write, sharing his story in his memoir, A Long Way Gone, detailing the horrors, triumphs, and hopes of his life as a survivor. 

Today, Ishmael continues to write award winning books, works with the UN as a Goodwill Ambassador, and enlightens us with his incredible insight into the human condition, an insight he says could've only been fashioned by the fires of war.

In this episode, we hear some of Ishmael's remarkable story, reminding us that people are almost never who we think they might be at first glance. He challenges us to listen for the story behind the story we perceive on the surface. As Ishmael says, listening to understand is the start of peacemaking.

Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking

Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter for more news analysis and peacemaking resources: http://eepurl.com/cG1LGH

Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!

Resources from this episode:

  • A Long Way Gone, Ishmael Beah

The episode S2 | Ishmael Beah: Child Soldier to Peacemaker from the podcast The Telos Channel has a duration of 44:13. It was first published 10 Jun 10:00. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

More episodes from The Telos Channel

The Check-in: Campus Protests, Antisemitism, and Advocacy

With the nation embroiled in debates over the campus protest movement, we sat down with a few experts and eye witnesses to discuss: what are our misconceptions about the protests, how can we become better advocates for the flourishing of all (including our local neighbors), and how might we respond to our own communities’ divisions while keeping our focus on what’s happening in the region?

This episode has two parts: In the first, we speak with internationally renowned expert Rabbi Jill Jacobs, CEO of T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights. Rabbi Jacobs provides an important perspective on understanding Zionism from the Jewish context, and how to identify and resist antisemitism in our communities. It is a helpful conversation to ground us as we discuss the protests.

The second part is a conversation with Greg Khalil, Sarah Sturm, and Marina Klimchuk, a former Telos team member who’s spent time living in Israel and journalist who reported from the encampments at Columbia and UCLA. We discuss misconceptions of the protests, inclusive and exclusive language, discursive policing, and how we might keep our focus on the very urgent matter of the events in Gaza today.

It’s a long one, but we think you’ll enjoy the extra time to dive into the topics of today’s episode.
--

Leave a rating and review on Apple podcasts or Spotify

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!

Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter

Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking

Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

Learn more about T'ruah

The Learning Corps: The Descendants Project

Welcome to the Learning Corps podcast, the newest show on the Telos Channel! Together, we’ll excavate the core issues of conflict with experts from around the world, to uncover the path forward toward creative action in our communities.

In this Learning Corps conversation, we were joined by Dr. Joy Banner, the Co-Founder and Co-Director of The Descendants Project. The Descendants Project is a nonprofit foundation founded to preserve and protect the health, land, and lives of the Black descendant community located in Louisiana’s River Parishes. Many of the folks on our ReStory US experience visit these parishes and hear from Dr. Joy Banner, who is the former Director of Communications and descendant of people enslaved at Whitney Plantation, the only plantation museum in Louisiana that centers the lives of the enslaved.

We explore who these descendant communities are, as well as how they’ve been disproportionately impacted by environmental policies that have their legacies in slavery. But we also center the resilience and resources of this community, the strategic actions they are taking to advocate for themselves, and how we can come alongside them in their healing and flourishing.

Links:

Leave a rating and review on Apple podcasts or Spotify

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!

Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter

Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking

Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

Join the Telos Learning Corps for more of these conversations and community collaboration calls with the Telos network

--

Learn more about The Descendants Project

Read about the Wallace Grain Elevator

Financially Support The Descendants Project

Follow the Descendants Project on Instagram

The Check-in: What’s Happening at Columbia?

Massive student protests at Columbia University in solidarity with Gaza were met with swift and intense repression by university administrators and NYPD over the weekend, leading to the arrests of more than 100 students.

Greg Khalil, President and Co-founder of Telos, was present for some of the events over the weekend as an adjunct professor at Columbia. He shares what he saw, what he has heard from students leading and participating in the protests, and what it means for our nation as we struggle to reckon with our part of what’s happening in Gaza.

*Note: This conversation was recorded on Tuesday, April 23—the situation on college campuses across the country is evolving quickly. Protests and student encampments have grown on dozens of campuses. Police on campuses at the University of Texas, Cal-Poly University, Emerson College, and others have cracked down on these protests with violent measures, arresting hundreds of students. Our conversation hopefully offers a way forward to know how to engage these protests with a vision of mutual flourishing.

Leave a rating and review on Apple podcasts or Spotify

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!
Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter
Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking
Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

The Check-in: What's Iran Got To Do With It...Part 2

After Israel’s strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus, Iran launched a barrage of 300 missiles at Israel from sites around the Middle East. While around 99% of the projectiles were intercepted before landing, the retaliatory response represented an escalation in a moment already fraught with risk of greater war. Then, overnight last Friday, Israel responded with a strike near an Iranian nuclear site, raising concerns that the region could be on the brink of massive violence.

In this episode, we explore the complex relationship between Israel and Iran, how the recent strikes factor into Washington’s relationship to the actors and what’s happening in Gaza, and what it all means for us—those of us who care to see the human rights of all people honored in the region.

In order to provide a range of perspectives on the issue, we brought on guest expert Joe Cirincione to discuss. Joe is the Former Director for Non Proliferation at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace where he closely tracked Iran’s nuclear program and then, as the President of Ploughshares Fund, played a key role in the campaign for the Iran Deal, which rolled back Iran’s nuclear weapons development program. Joe is an internationally recognized expert on the issue and offered invaluable insights for us on this episode.

Leave a rating and review on Apple podcasts or Spotify

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!

Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter

Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking

Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

Read Joe’s substack

Read Nicholas Kristoff in the New York Times, as mentioned by Joe: Gaza is Biden’s War Now

The Check-in: What’s Iran got to do with it?

After an Israeli strike killed IRGC leaders in Syria, the region has waited with baited breath for a response from the Iranian regime. Could regional war be on the horizon?

We explore:

  • What (and who) is a proxy?
  • How does the US-Israel alliance shape Iran’s engagement in the region?
  • What does the strike mean for the ongoing negotiations to end the war?

We hear the perspectives of two accomplished guest experts from DAWN: Democracy for the Arab World Now, a human rights organization founded by the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 to promote the rule of law and democracy across the Middle East, just before his murder in Turkey.

Joining us were Sarah Leah Whitson, DAWN’s Executive Director, and Omid Memarian, DAWN’s Director of Communications and an Iranian journalist. Both have impressive resumes in human rights work in the region and offer a helpful perspective on the current moment.

There’s more to explore on Iran, so stay tuned for further conversations with more perspectives, and send us your questions from this episode to address in a follow-up conversation coming soon.

Leave a rating and review on Apple podcasts or Spotify

If you’re enjoying the podcast, become a monthly donor to Telos!

Subscribe to the Telos Newsletter

Read and share the Principles and Practices of Peacemaking

Follow Telos on Instagram @thetelosgroup

Read more about DAWN’s work

Every Podcast » The Telos Channel » S2 | Ishmael Beah: Child Soldier to Peacemaker