When I saw her picture my first thought was, “there is no way that is her…”
Saturday night as I was wrapping up my work, I stopped to check my twitter feed. As I opened my favorite twitter client I saw at the top of the list a tweet from Nicholas Kristof. If you don’t know who Nicholas is, he is one of the few international journalists today that is championing the cause of the Congolese people in his writings and work. He is a voice laboring to fill the knowledge gap of the uninformed about the terrible things facing the DR Congo. I had started following Kirstof on twitter after I saw that he was the subject of the Ben Affleck produced film on the DR Congo called “The Reporter” last year.
His tweet said: “The World Capital of Killing, Congo, and a heroic doctor and patient there: my Sun column, http://nyti.ms/aIutFe“
So I clicked…
A FAMILIAR FACE
As Kristof’s NYT article began to load, I noticed it was about Panzi Hospital. He had interviewed a rape survivor named Jeanne Mukuninwa along with Dr. Denis Mukwege, the doctor working to help put her life back together. The story was similar to what we saw in Episode 7 of the podcast. But, as I looked at the picture of the woman at the top of Kristof’s article, something seemed familiar. Was she one of the women we interviewed at the Panzi hospital in 2007? But what would she still be doing there 3 years later? Maybe it wasn’t her? She looked a bit happier. Her hair was done, it had been straightened. She was different, more put together. I knew that in Episode 8 of our video podcast we had shown part of an interview we shot at the Panzi Hospital with a woman we thought was named Jan. But could this be her?

Jeanne Mukuninwa in Kristof's 2010 Interview
So I went back to the original interview we had shot. I scrubbed the clips and found the one where our translator asked the young woman’s name. Sure enough, she stated it was Jeanne Mukuninwa (I had mis-spelled the name as my french is bad).

Jeanne in our 2007 Interview for the Congocast.org Podcast
If you read the New York Times article by Kristof, you will notice two things about Jeanne that have happened over time. 1) She looks like she is doing better than she was in our interview in 2007. 2) She is back at Panzi hospital because she was raped again after she returned to her village.
Nothing makes me more angry than that last statement. How could that happen–again?
ALIVE AS COMPARED TO LIVING
As exciting as it was to see that she appeared to be doing better, I am reminded that this conflict is seemingly far from over. Many of these women, once their surgeries are complete, return to their villages only to be raped again. It is unsafe. And yet, they go back. Why? Because their families are there. Their lives are there. They grew up there. So they return – only to revisit the horrors they had escaped by coming to Panzi.
I know I’ve said it over and over again, but you can help.
- PRAY: Pray for this conflict to end. The evil perpetrating this madness is more than a group of men. Maybe you don’t pray…
- DONATE: Find a charity that is making a difference and give what you can (Some are listed under our links here). But maybe you don’t have any money…
- EDUCATE: Yourself, your family, your friends, your facebook buddies & your twitter followers – you don’t have an excuse to not update your status and tell people what is happening.
If you would like to find out more ways you can get involved – visit http://www.enoughproject.org. They are an incredible resource on activism and can provide a great way for you to learn more about how you can make a difference and educate yourself on the issues.
Hearing what has happened to Jeanne in this article was devastating. It could inspire a sense of hopelessness. But I don’t think that is what the Congolese people would want from you or me. It was a huge encouragement to see her face again. To see that she is still alive. To see that her hair is straitened and cut. That is a simple thing, but is speaks to me that she is not just alive but she is living. Could I do the same in the face of such obstacles? Could you?
Jeanne’s story, past and present, reminds me that the spirit of the Congolese people is strong.
It reminds me that many of these rape victims are not just alive,
They are living.
They are fighters.
And that the living are worth fighting for.
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