Samson Sorobit (left) and Amina Hassan had not seen each other since 2008, after resolving a conflict in Mandera. The two reconnected at the 2012 Summer Peacebuilding Institute. Photo by Jon Styer.

Surprise! Kenyan Women鈥檚 Leader and Soldier Reconnect at 91短视频

Amina Hassan and Samson Sorobit looked at one another across the room at with a mixture of surprise and recognition. Could it really be?

In 2008, the two had worked together for several months to resolve an armed conflict between rival clans in Mandera, a region in extreme northeastern Kenya along the Somali and Ethiopian borders. After Sorobit, a major in the Kenyan Army, was redeployed elsewhere that fall, Hassan remained in Mandera to work with the women鈥檚 group she founded there. They hadn鈥檛 seen each other since.

And then, there they were, reconnecting with shock and surprise halfway around the world at the 2012 .

Amina Hassan. Photo by James Souder.

鈥淚t was really a blessing to meet him here. I couldn鈥檛 believe it,鈥 said Hassan, who has worked as an advocate for women鈥檚 empowerment, peace and development in her hometown of Mandera for more than a decade.

鈥淚 had no idea she鈥檇 be here,鈥 added Sorobit.

Disputes over access to water and pasture are a recurrent source of armed conflict in the arid region surrounding Mandera. With each new outburst of violence, Hassan became increasingly disturbed at the roles women played in the conflict by encouraging their sons and husbands to fight. At the same time, it became clear to her that the burdens of the repeated violence 鈥 sorrow, poverty, hunger and instability 鈥 were largely borne by women and their children.

In 2000, she founded a group called Women for Peace and Development to address these issues in the region and to advocate for women鈥檚 involvement in community decision-making. Hassan鈥檚 group is now known as the Horn of Africa Women鈥檚 Empowerment Kenya Agency (its acronym means 鈥渨omen鈥 in Somali, the main language spoken in Mandera).

Samson Sorobit. Photo by James Souder.

Sorobit arrived in Mandera in early 2008, assigned command of an army unit charged with providing security for civil authorities in the region. He first met Hassan when she asked to speak on behalf of women in the community before the district鈥檚 security committee. Afterwards, the two collaborated on several related initiatives to resolve the area鈥檚 continuing conflicts. Through her organization, Hassan helped ease tension that existed between the community and Sorobit鈥檚 soldiers, resulting in greater trust and more effective collaboration between them. Sorobit also said Hassan played a key role in a disarmament project, one of their successes in Mandera during the brief time they worked together.

鈥淸Our work] was a milestone in creating peace and stability in that region,鈥 Sorobit said.

Sorobit joined the Kenyan military in 1992 and has been deployed throughout Kenya and on peacekeeping assignments in several other African countries. He said his experience in Mandera made clear to him the importance of cooperation with traditional systems, local leaders and civil authorities while on duty in a new region.

Though not attending SPI on official duty with the Kenyan military, Sorobit鈥檚 commanding officers are supportive. He plans to apply concepts from SPI 鈥 building on his earlier experience in Mandera 鈥 to his future assignments, he said.

Hassan hopes the program will provide her with a new academic perspective on to augment her 12 years of practical work in the field. She is one of 12 women who came to SPI as part of the first cohort in the 鈥檚 new .