Peace and Conflict Studies Gallery

Victim's Clothing
Clothing belonging to the victims of the Rwandan genocide is shown hanging on a clothesline at the Murambi Genocide Memorial Site outside of Gikongoro, Rwanda.
Unionist Mural
Protestant paramilitary mural in Northern Ireland showing the outline of Ulster outline with prison watchtowers, red hands breaking chain. Shankill Road, Belfast.  

Jeruslam's sacred sites
The Haram es-Sharif (Temple Mount) with Islam's third holiest site, the Dome of the Rock,
built between 688-91 AD, the Al-Aqsa mosque above the Western Wall, the place that
is most holy to Jews.

Sri Lanka Road Painting
Human rights activists and young people have been involved in a novel road painting programme. The road painting movement developed as a response to war-related violence in Colombo. The road painting movement paints peace murals on roads where bombings and other war-related violence has occurred in Colombo in order to reclaim public space, encourage non-vindictive memory and transform sites of violence into sites of beauty and healing.

 

Durban Arts Center
Local South African artists exhibiting their work near the city's port.

 

Slavery in Philadelphia
Between 1790-1800, Philadelphia was the capital of the United States. The
President lived a black asway from Independence Hall where the Declaration of
Independence and the Constitution were written and signed. When George Washington was President during this period there were nine different Afircan-American slaves who lived and worked in the house. The quarters were underneath what is now the entrace to the pavilion
housing the Liberty Bell. As a result, on the one site we can reflect on the braided history of
freedom and slavery in the United States.

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