Bisina went home and started talking. He brought tribal leaders together to resolve their grievances with each other. He trained women, young people, anyone he could gather, in the skills of peaceful negotiation. He brought the case of the Delta’s people to the Nigerian government. He brought health workers in to talk to people about protecting themselves from the dangers of the region.
As founder of the nonprofit Niger Delta Professionals for Development (NIDPRODEV), Bisina also spoke out to the press, calling for an understanding of why people in the Delta were so desperate that they had taken up weapons.
“It doesn’t help humanity,” Bisina told a reporter, “to leap to conclusions when issues are calling for attention, and the biggest mistake the world can make is to just label the situation in the Niger Delta as terrorism and respond with military might. You will just kill a generation of innocent people who are asking for a better living condition because you are taking so much from their land.”
NIDPRODEV (www.NIDPRODEV.org)has formed a partnership with the American nonprofit organization Global Citizen Journey, and in 2005, the two organizations collaborated to build a library in the Delta community of Oporoza. This community was one of only two in that part of the Delta to have a school, but there were no libraries at all. Determined to have information and knowledge come to their region, Oporozans hired an architect to design the library they wanted. A team of 20 Americans and 20 Nigerians came together to build it. Full of light, books, films and Web-connected computers, the library has opened for all the people of the region, no matter what tribe they belong to.
Bisina’s main focus now is on telling the Niger Delta story to the world. A film about the area, the conflict and the possible solutions is making its way through US film festivals. (You can see footage at sweetcrudemovie.com)
Bisina hopes you’ll see the film, or come to the Delta to see the situation for yourself. Once you understand what’s happening, he’s sure you’ll become an “apostle for the people of the Niger Delta.” Joel Bisina hopes you’ll tell your legislators that much of the oil used in the US comes from a place few outsiders know, the Niger Delta, and the Delta’s people mustn’t be sacrificed for that oil.
To read a transcript of Bisina’s speech at the dedication of the Library in Oporoza, click here.
To read an account of the building of the library, click here.
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