"Ododo Wa" Community DialoguesMain MenuAboutPage: offers information about funding bodies, the project's purpose, and its contributors.NavigationPage: this page includes the 4 navigation options the platform supports."Ododo Wa" means "Our Stories"Page: contains an introduction to Ododo Wa: Stories of Girls in War. It covers the background of the exhibit and its development and features annotated photos and audio recordings in English and Acholi.StoryMapStoryMapJS is a free open access tool developed by Northwestern University's Knight Lab to support online storytelling that highlights the locations of a series of events.The Traveling ExhibitPage: this page contains a photo of the traveling exhibit, audio recordings and text paired with artefacts in the exhibit.Perspectives and ResponsesThe beginning of the path through the perspectives and responses to the exhibit. This page includes place-based perspectives visualized by original illustrations paired with audio recordings in Acholi and EnglishYouTube: "Advocating for Justice and Reparations in Uganda"Video: This is an annotated YouTube video documenting a discussion panel in which Evelyn Amony, Grace Acan, and Isabelle Masson discuss the exhibit and advocating for justice and reparations in Uganda. The panel was held 24 October 2019 at the Moot Courtroom of Robson Hall, Faculty of Law building at the University of ManitobaMemoirsPage: an annotated YouTube video clip shows Grace Acan and Evelyn Amony discussing why they wrote their books. This page also includes external links to their memoirs.Sarah York-Bertram79c90f81cbadbcee036c97b91365eec227a9fa16Andrea Gonzáleze5fa090b1575dd90f2a290cf95178e9bea9f56baZhi Ming Sim557159ad867444cf6dde5f57a7a385a91bfaab8dhttp://csiw-ectg.org/
Isabelle Masson explains the decision to use survivors' drawings depicting life in the LRA camps
12021-04-16T15:35:11-04:00Sarah York-Bertram79c90f81cbadbcee036c97b91365eec227a9fa16851Audio: in this recording, CMHR curator Isabelle Masson explains the decision to feature survivor's drawings in the exhibit.plain2021-04-16T15:35:11-04:00Sarah York-Bertram79c90f81cbadbcee036c97b91365eec227a9fa16
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12021-04-22T17:41:40-04:00Survivors' Drawings4Annotation: CMHR curator Isabelle Masson explains the use of survivor's drawings in the exhibit design. Transcript (by Patricia Trudel): "As you see, the design is made of drawings, and drawings that were made by survivors, including Grace and Evelyn, a small group of survivors in Northern Uganda who had this experience of being kidnapped in war and enslaved by the Lord’s Resistance Army. And those drawings were the first few steps of a much longer and ongoing healing process, a process of sharing their stories and finding healing to this, and to years of this, also finding a voice and finding that they wanted to share their stories and memoirs, and now, wanting to share their stories which is quite courageous in an exhibition that you see today. So, we were quite influenced in the decision making about that and made the drawings part of the design by combining different elements of the drawings in the exhibition [...]"plain2022-08-29T15:01:26-04:00