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Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen - An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (Hardcover)
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Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen - An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (Hardcover)
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International human rights activist Lisa Shannon spent many
afternoons at the kitchen table having tea with her friend
Francisca Thelin, who often spoke of her childhood in Congo. Thelin
would conjure vivid images of lush flower gardens, fish the size of
small children, and of children running barefoot through her
family's coffee plantation, gorging on fruit from the robust and
plentiful mango trees. She urged Shannon to visit her family in
Dungu, to get a taste of "real" Congo, "peaceful" Congo; a place so
different than the conflict-ravaged places Shannon knew from her
activism work.
But then the nightly phone calls from Congo began: static-filled,
hasty reports from Francisca's mother, "Mama Koko," of
gunmen--Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army-- who had infested
Dungu and began launching attacks. Night after night for a year,
Mama Koko delivered the devastating news of Fransisca's cousins,
nieces, nephews, friends, and neighbors, who had been killed,
abducted, burned alive on Christmas Day.
In an unlikely journey, Shannon and Thelin decided to travel from
Portland, Oregon to Dungu, to witness first-hand the devastation
unfolding at Joseph Kony's hands. Masquerading as Francisca's
American sister-in-law, Shannon tucked herself into Mama Koko's raw
cement living room and listened to the stories of Mama Koko and her
husband, Papa Alexander--as well as those from dozens of other
friends and neighbors ("Mama Koko's War Tribunal")--who lined up
outside the house and waited for hours, eager to offer their
testimony.
In "Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen," Shannon weaves together the
family's tragic stories of LRA encounters with tales from the
family's history: we hear of Mama Koko's early life as a
gap-toothed beauty plotting to escape her inevitable fate of wife
and motherhood; Papa Alexander's empire of wives he married because
they cooked and cleaned and made good coffee; and Francisca's
childhood at the family "castle" and coffee plantation. These
lively stories transport Shannon from the chaos of the violence
around her and bring to life Fransisca's kitchen-table stories of
the peaceful Congo.
Yet, as the LRA camp out on the edge of town grew, tensions inside
the house reach a fever pitch and Shannon and Thelin's friendship
was fiercely tested. Shannon was forced to confront her limitations
as an activist and reconcile her vision of what it means to affect
meaningful change in the lives of others.
"Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen" is at once an illuminating piece
of storytelling and an exploration of what it means to truly make a
difference. It is an exquisite testimony to the beauty of human
connection and the strength of the human spirit in times of
unimaginable tragedy.
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