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Liberian Bullet Crosses

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Liberian Bullet Crosses

SKU: L Cross

Availability: In stock.

$6.00
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Quick Overview

Cross made out of bullet shell. Made in Liberia. About 1.5 inches.

This small cross stands as a powerful symbol of hope and peace. It was handcrafted from the very instrument of death used during the civil war. The bullet shell was left intact to help people understand this transformation from hate to hope.

Jonathan Worlobah makes the crosses. He and his wife, Yassah grew up in Monrovia with their uncle and aunt respectively. They met at the Christian Revival Church on 12th Street. During the war they lived together on Fandell campus, the science college where people who ran from the war went for refuge. They survived on palm cabbages and the small fish they caught when fishing. Like everyone in Liberia, they each had family members killed in the war, including the uncle with whom Jonathan had lived. When the war was over, Jonathan started to work for a private security firm on the Lutheran compound. While working there, the director asked him if he could make a cross from an emptied shell. Since then, Jonathan has made many more crosses, enabling him to buy food for his family and send his children to school. Jonathan has gone back to school, too. Yassah works with the women at the church, and their children, Cathrine and Vivian, sing in the church's choir.

Product Description

Liberia was involved in a 14 year civil war that left around 250,000 people dead and thousands homeless. The violence left the country in economic ruin and overrun with weapons. The capital remains without electricity and running water. Unemployment and illiteracy are endemic. The GNI per capita is US $150 (World Bank, 2007). Life expectancy is 45 years for men and 47 years from women (UN).

Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf became Africa’s first elected woman head of state when she became President in January 2006. She was Finance Minister under President William Tolbert in the late 1970s but fled the country when he was overthrown. She also worked for the UN and the World Bank. Known as the “Iron Lady” she is trying to rebuild the country and foster reconciliation. One of her top priorities is to reintegrate former child soldiers into society.

This small cross stands as a powerful symbol of hope and peace. It was handcrafted from the very instrument of death used during the civil war. The bullet shell was left intact to help people understand this transformation from hate to hope.
 

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