Over the last five years, tens of thousands of children from a single area smaller than Los Angeles County have been kidnapped in the dead of night. Thousands of boys and girls forced from their beds at gunpoint, tortured, terrorized. How is this possible? How can this be true? It seems too horrific to be real – but it is. The kids are from the northern part of the small African nation of Uganda. They are ordinary kids – going to school, listening to hip-hop, dreaming of their futures – but nightly they face a terrifying and all-too-real possibility: being kidnapped by a rebel leader named Joseph Kony, who heads a group called “The Lord's Resistance Army.” He claims he's a Christian and that he wants to take over the country in order to run it according to the Ten Commandments. He’s doing what he’s doing in the name of God. And the rest of the world is, for the most part, standing by and letting it happen.

The UN is now calling the situation in northern Uganda one of the worst humanitarian crisis on the planet. Kony kidnaps the children – and forces them to kill that same night, often a member of their own family. If he takes three brothers, he forces two to kill the third – or all to die at once. He preys on their minds, telling them that once they’ve killed, they’re part of his army forever. He pulls them from everything they know – their parents, their homes, their schools – and forces them to steal and kill as roving packs of rebels – or face certain death.

The Night Commuters

To avoid being kidnapped, every night thousands of children travel from their homes before dusk and sleep in two protected villages. The sight is almost unbelievable Children sleeping crammed on church steps, bus station floors, anywhere they can find – just to be safe for the night.

Some of the kidnapped children do manage to escape – but even then they can’t return home. Kony will search them out at their villages, and if he finds them, force them to kill their parents and loved ones. A few organizations have opened “re-education centers” for the children. The first night after they arrive, counselors walk up and down the open sleeping areas all through the night, telling the traumatized children, “We love you. You are our children. We are sorry we could not protect you. We welcome you home. What has happened is not your fault...”

Whose fault is it?   How can it be stopped?
Why can’t someone get this guy?

It’s a complicated situation. Kony is surrounded by his “rebel army”- which is composed of abducted children. Unfortunately, when the reports come in that the Ugandan Army killed “forty rebels”, the truth is – they could have possibly killed forty abducted children. It’s not a solution that is humane – nor is it working. Peace talks have unfortunately broken down.  The situation is ever-changing. For up to moment information about the situation, go to some of the links below, particularly RESOLVE UGANDA.

How can I help? Really?

A massive, collective outcry is needed to stop the horrors in Northern Uganda. The International Criminal Court has issued its first arrest warrants ever – and they’re for Joseph Kony and five of his followers. The charges include “crimes against humanity” – including killing, maiming, abduction, rape and forced recruitment of thousands of children.

The UN has officially affirmed that “The international community, through the UN, has the responsibility to use appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian and other peaceful means to help protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity.” This Responsibility to Protect calls for “collective action in cooperation with relevant regional organizations as appropriate, should peaceful means be inadequate and national authorities manifestly fail to protect their populations.”

We are taking a stand by asking ourselves, the UN, and Uganda to live up to our Responsibility to Protect these children - and to bring an immediate end to this reign of terror. We’ve collected the names of thousands of children abducted by Kony and have imprinted each one on a distinctive silver necklace nameplate with a green band. All profits from the sale of the nameplates go to advocacy and care for children of Northern Uganda. But buying the nameplates is where the campaign begins.

Money won’t solve the problem. Your voice will.  Wearing a name of an abducted child is making a commitment to something larger – to creating a movement, to speaking for a child who’s been silenced, to telling the story of these children, until everyone knows it and no one can turn away. Until the world comes together and brings them home.

Confidentiality Statement
We do not give out, nor do we have, any crucial identifying information about the children. We you wear your necklace nameplate, we ask you to think of ALL of the children of Northern Uganda.
How To Begin Telling The Story

Using the power of your words

Using the power of your name
Using the power of community
Learn About the Story
Overview
A Deeper Look


Others Who Are Telling The Story

Photographers

BRUNO STEVENS - Human Rights Watch Series
Stephen Shames

Journalists

KEVIN SITES - IN THE HOT ZONE
FRANCINE ORR of THE LA TIMES - HORROR IN NORTHERN UGANDA
CAROLYN DAVIS of THE PHILIDELPHIA INQUIRER - UNTIL THERE IS PEACE IN UGANDA

Filmmakers

INVISIBLE CHILDREN - Intense, poignant film documenting the story of three young American travellers who stumble upon the story of the children of Northern Uganda - and decide to do something about it.
WAR DANCE  - Set against the backdrop of Uganda's civil war in which over thousands of children have been abducted by a rebel army, War Dance, tells the story of a journey to compete in Uganda's national music and dance festival.

Writers

ABOKE GIRLS - Searing, powerful story of the LRA abduction of an entire girls boarding school - and the nun who risked her life to save her students.

Relief Workers

WHEN THE SUN SETS, WE START TO WORRY

People Just Like You

GULUWALK
UGANDACAN
MELINDA MARIA

PARENTS AND CHILDREN OF NORTHERN UGANDA

EVALINE APOKO
AN APPEAL FROM A MOTHER

 


 

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