Chernor Bah, Minister of Information and Civic Education in Sierra Leone
The Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies honours this year’s International Day of Peace with a special presentation from one of its own, The Honorable Chernor Bah (M.A. ‘11), Minister of Information and Civic Education in Sierra Leone, who will also receive this year’s Distinguished Alumni Award.
Each year the Kroc Institute pays heed to the International Day of Peace (IDOP), established in 1981 by the United Nations General Assembly, by way of an event or panel discussion. The Institute also honours a Notre Dame graduate in peace studies annually, with the Distinguished Alumni Award – someone whose career and life exemplify the ideas of international peacebuilding.
This year, the two events will merge. Using the 2024 IDOP theme “Cultivating a Culture of Peace” as a framework, Minister Bah will speak to his professional trajectory since graduating from the University of Notre Dame with a master’s degree in international peace studies. He will also address his current ministerial work with civic education related to cultural renaissance and decolonization, and the mindset shift necessary to rediscover our sense of identity and to see each other’s humanity.
Minister Bah’s talk, “Intentional National Consciousness as Critical Tool for longterm Peacebuilding – A Sierra Leone Case Study,” will discuss how national consciousness, the shared sense of identity among citizens, is essential for uniting a diverse nation like Sierra Leone. By examining the historical challenges stemming from colonial legacies, which fragment our national identity and contribute to social and political instability, this lecture will explore the crucial role of constructing and socializing an intentional national consciousness in long-term peacebuilding for Sierra Leone. In his lecture, Minister Bah will demonstrate how reconstructing these narratives purposefully and in citizen voices, is critical to building a cohesive and peaceful society.
Drawing lessons from countries including Rwanda, Germany, South Korea, Singapore, Sweden, and the United States, strategies emerge for reconstructing Sierra Leone’s national consciousness through national dialogue, civic education reform, cultural revitalization, inclusive governance, youth engagement, and international collaboration. By embracing these strategies, Sierra Leone can build a more united, peaceful, and prosperous society. Just as a chain is only as strong as its weakest link, the strength (and positive peace) of a state is based on the power of its fictional narrative and the sense of ownership and pride that the citizens carry with them in their hearts.