Journey With Jesus

A Weekly Webzine for the Global Church, since 2004.


Journey With Jesus
A weekly webzine for the global church, since 2004

Lisa J. Shannon, Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen; An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (New York: Public Affairs, 2015), 213pp.

The most under-reported humanitarian disaster of our time has been the conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire). Since the start of conflicts there in 1996, five million people have perished out of a population of fifty million — a staggering 10% of the population. Over half of those deaths occurred since the wars "ended" in July 2003. The overwhelming majority of the victims were civilians; about half of them were children. Millions more Congolese have fled to neighboring countries. Hundreds of thousands of women have been raped. Peace accords officially ended the wars, although continued hostilities and the social, economic and political consequences of the wars make for a fragile peace.

Stalin once said that whereas a million deaths is a statistic, one death is a tragedy.  Lisa Shannon, a humans rights activist, speaker and author, moves beyond Congo's mind-numbing numbers and focuses on a single extended family in order to shine a light onto the Congolese darkness.  In 2010, she returned to the Congo with the expatriate Francisca Thelin for a five-week visit with the latter's extended Congolese family, and in particular Thelin's mother and matriarch of the family, Mama Koko.

In addition to two wars, the Congo has suffered at the hands of a mad man named Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army.   Based upon interviews with Mama Koko's extended family, Shannon describes what has happened in their village of Dungu—a town of about 25,000 people that has swollen to 125,000 because of refugees fleeing the LRA.

In addition to the savagery of the LRA, the people of Dungu have suffered at the hands of drunken Congolese soldiers, a hapless United Nations, and local militias.   Shannon's book belongs to the literature of witness, as does her earlier book about the Congo called A Thousand Sisters (2010).  The single best book on the Congo is the one by Jason Stearns, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters (2011).

Journey with Jesus - Book Review of "Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen" for the October 4, 2015 RCL

Journey With Jesus

A Weekly Webzine for the Global Church, since 2004.


Journey With Jesus
A weekly webzine for the global church, since 2004

Lisa J. Shannon, Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen; An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (New York: Public Affairs, 2015), 213pp.

The most under-reported humanitarian disaster of our time has been the conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire). Since the start of conflicts there in 1996, five million people have perished out of a population of fifty million — a staggering 10% of the population. Over half of those deaths occurred since the wars "ended" in July 2003. The overwhelming majority of the victims were civilians; about half of them were children. Millions more Congolese have fled to neighboring countries. Hundreds of thousands of women have been raped. Peace accords officially ended the wars, although continued hostilities and the social, economic and political consequences of the wars make for a fragile peace.

Stalin once said that whereas a million deaths is a statistic, one death is a tragedy.  Lisa Shannon, a humans rights activist, speaker and author, moves beyond Congo's mind-numbing numbers and focuses on a single extended family in order to shine a light onto the Congolese darkness.  In 2010, she returned to the Congo with the expatriate Francisca Thelin for a five-week visit with the latter's extended Congolese family, and in particular Thelin's mother and matriarch of the family, Mama Koko.

In addition to two wars, the Congo has suffered at the hands of a mad man named Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army.   Based upon interviews with Mama Koko's extended family, Shannon describes what has happened in their village of Dungu—a town of about 25,000 people that has swollen to 125,000 because of refugees fleeing the LRA.

In addition to the savagery of the LRA, the people of Dungu have suffered at the hands of drunken Congolese soldiers, a hapless United Nations, and local militias.   Shannon's book belongs to the literature of witness, as does her earlier book about the Congo called A Thousand Sisters (2010).  The single best book on the Congo is the one by Jason Stearns, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters (2011).

Journey with Jesus - Book Review of "Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen" for the October 4, 2015 RCL

Journey With Jesus

A Weekly Webzine for the Global Church, since 2004.


Journey With Jesus
A weekly webzine for the global church, since 2004

Lisa J. Shannon, Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen; An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (New York: Public Affairs, 2015), 213pp.

The most under-reported humanitarian disaster of our time has been the conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire). Since the start of conflicts there in 1996, five million people have perished out of a population of fifty million — a staggering 10% of the population. Over half of those deaths occurred since the wars "ended" in July 2003. The overwhelming majority of the victims were civilians; about half of them were children. Millions more Congolese have fled to neighboring countries. Hundreds of thousands of women have been raped. Peace accords officially ended the wars, although continued hostilities and the social, economic and political consequences of the wars make for a fragile peace.

Stalin once said that whereas a million deaths is a statistic, one death is a tragedy.  Lisa Shannon, a humans rights activist, speaker and author, moves beyond Congo's mind-numbing numbers and focuses on a single extended family in order to shine a light onto the Congolese darkness.  In 2010, she returned to the Congo with the expatriate Francisca Thelin for a five-week visit with the latter's extended Congolese family, and in particular Thelin's mother and matriarch of the family, Mama Koko.

In addition to two wars, the Congo has suffered at the hands of a mad man named Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army.   Based upon interviews with Mama Koko's extended family, Shannon describes what has happened in their village of Dungu—a town of about 25,000 people that has swollen to 125,000 because of refugees fleeing the LRA.

In addition to the savagery of the LRA, the people of Dungu have suffered at the hands of drunken Congolese soldiers, a hapless United Nations, and local militias.   Shannon's book belongs to the literature of witness, as does her earlier book about the Congo called A Thousand Sisters (2010).  The single best book on the Congo is the one by Jason Stearns, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters (2011).

The Journey with Jesus: Film Reviews

Film Reviews by Dan Clendenin

3:10 to Yuma (2007)3:10 to Yuma (2007)

Star power shines in this remake of the 1957 film of the same title. The plot epitomizes simplicity, but it twists and turns for 90 minutes, and only in the last minute does it find resolution—of a sort. Dan Evans (Christian Bale) is a down-on-his-luck rancher who's not only losing his ranch and the respect of his two boys but even his own self-respect. He seeks to redeem himself, and earn a handsome $200, by joining a posse to take a truly bad outlaw, Ben Wade (Russell Crowe), to the 3:10 train in Contention that will take Wade to Yuma and deposit him in the federal slammer. Redemption for himself, justice for Wade, a man who has robbed 21 stagecoaches. It sounds simple enough, but there are Apache Indians before them, Wade's truly bad gang behind them, and the wily Wade with them. Spooky campfires, rampaging stagecoaches, harsh landscape, saloons with pretty women, whiskey-gulping, way too much gratuitous violence, and non-stop trash-talking make this a cowboy classic. Directed by James Mangold who made Girl, Interrupted and the Johnny Cash bio Walk the Line.


 
Journey with Jesus - Book Review of "Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen" for the October 4, 2015 RCL

Journey With Jesus

A Weekly Webzine for the Global Church, since 2004.


Journey With Jesus
A weekly webzine for the global church, since 2004

Lisa J. Shannon, Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen; An Ordinary Family's Extraordinary Tale of Love, Loss, and Survival in Congo (New York: Public Affairs, 2015), 213pp.

The most under-reported humanitarian disaster of our time has been the conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (former Zaire). Since the start of conflicts there in 1996, five million people have perished out of a population of fifty million — a staggering 10% of the population. Over half of those deaths occurred since the wars "ended" in July 2003. The overwhelming majority of the victims were civilians; about half of them were children. Millions more Congolese have fled to neighboring countries. Hundreds of thousands of women have been raped. Peace accords officially ended the wars, although continued hostilities and the social, economic and political consequences of the wars make for a fragile peace.

Stalin once said that whereas a million deaths is a statistic, one death is a tragedy.  Lisa Shannon, a humans rights activist, speaker and author, moves beyond Congo's mind-numbing numbers and focuses on a single extended family in order to shine a light onto the Congolese darkness.  In 2010, she returned to the Congo with the expatriate Francisca Thelin for a five-week visit with the latter's extended Congolese family, and in particular Thelin's mother and matriarch of the family, Mama Koko.

In addition to two wars, the Congo has suffered at the hands of a mad man named Joseph Kony and his Lord's Resistance Army.   Based upon interviews with Mama Koko's extended family, Shannon describes what has happened in their village of Dungu—a town of about 25,000 people that has swollen to 125,000 because of refugees fleeing the LRA.

In addition to the savagery of the LRA, the people of Dungu have suffered at the hands of drunken Congolese soldiers, a hapless United Nations, and local militias.   Shannon's book belongs to the literature of witness, as does her earlier book about the Congo called A Thousand Sisters (2010).  The single best book on the Congo is the one by Jason Stearns, Dancing in the Glory of Monsters (2011).