水果派

Come Together Right Now. Guest: Shamil Idriss

April 1, 2021

Shamil Idriss, CEO of the organization Search for Common Ground, shares the lessons of peacebuilding from his work in聽 Niger, the Balkans, and Rwanda. Technology and social media are creating patterns and pathways of conflict that few people anticipated or even imagined just a decade ago. And we need to act quickly to contain the effects, but we don't have to reinvent the wheel. There are people like Shamil who have been training for years to understand human beings and learn how to help them connect and begin healing processes. These experts can share their insights and help us figure out how to apply them to our new digital habitats. 鈥淧eace moves at the speed of trust, and trust can鈥檛 be fast-tracked,鈥 says Shamil. Real change is possible, but as he explains, it takes patience, care, and creativity to get there.

Episode Highlights

Major Takeaways

  • When we reduce other people to a single 鈥渋dentity鈥 caricature, it鈥檚 much harder to connect with them. Storytelling can help people see others through a variety of identity lenses, like being a parent, or struggling with illness. This builds trust and opens lines of communication, allowing us to hear and respect each other even while disagreeing.
  • Peace moves at the speed of trust and takes years to build. Yet trust can also be destroyed in an instant.
  • Though dialogue is an important starting point, people establish deeper trust by cooperating with each other to build something meaningful together.
  • Security, dignity, and hope are the three ingredients of a healthy society. Luckily, all three are public goods, not zero-sum resources 鈥 if one group has security, dignity and hope, it doesn't mean another group has to have less.
  • Security doesn鈥檛 come from financial wealth; it鈥檚 a psychological construct. When people have what they need to feel safe, they feel secure. Likewise, don鈥檛 assume societies like the U.S. are stable just because they鈥檙e wealthy 鈥 they may be more precarious than you think.
  • When resolving ingrained, long-standing conflicts, it鈥檚 important to take a complex-systems approach. There鈥檚 no easy, deterministic sequence of steps to follow. Instead, an iterative approach is needed: Make informed choices but plan to be curious and to constantly adapt to what you encounter.

Take Action

Join Shamil Idriss in discussion with David Jay, Head of Mobilization at the 水果派, for our conversation series Let鈥檚 Talk on Friday, April 9th at 1PM ET/ 10AM PT. .

Share These Ideas