Download Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books

By Bryan Richards on Wednesday 1 May 2019

Download Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books



Download As PDF : Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books

Download PDF Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books

Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children's Literature finalist, 2013

The Children's Literature Roundtables of Canada's Information Book Award finalist, 2012

2013 Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children's Literature nominee

Sierra Leone is the poorest country in Africa. Yet it is populated by people who are hopeful, and aspire to better themselves through education, proper health care, and through putting behind them the horrors of civil war.

Kathleen Martin spent several weeks in the tiny village of Kamakwie in the interior of the West African country. Here she spoke to the people -- and the children -- about their lives, their aspirations, their memories of war. The experience was a revelation, which she has so wonderfully chronicled in this moving and inspiring portrait of a people willing to forgive so they can look to the future with regained hope and dignity.


Download Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books


"I am a Benedictine monk, professed for over forty years, who has just read KAMAKWIE as Lenten spiritual fare. It is probably the most profoundly moving book I have ever read--and perhaps am likely to read--during the Lenten season.--This little work about life--and I use that word deliberately and decidedly--in a small town in Sierra Leone is a rare achievement. To have read KAMAKWIE is to have lived in Kamakwie, even if but briefly...and to have lived in Kamakwie, even if but briefly, is to have known both almost unimaginable human degradation and misery and, in the face of such, the likewise almost unimaginable ability of the human heart to forgive and forget, to fill itself to overflowing with gratitude and joy, to hope. If the slimness of a volume ever belied the force of its contents, that of KAMAKWIE does so in spades.--In her account of her stay in Sierra Leone, the author found just the right balance between the objective and the subjective,
between the situations and, especially, the people she encountered there and her personal responses to them. There is no doubt about, variously, the keen grief, the fierce anger, and the sheer delight that she experienced, but she has deftly written of these unintrusively, in a way that only intensifies the reader's focus on the people whom she came to know and love.--And then there are the glorious photographs...many of them reminiscent of Edward Steichen's in THE FAMILY OF MAN. The coordination of the photographs and the text, that is, the physical format of the book, purposely and purposefully mirrors its conceptual format to a degree not often found in publications these days. Clearly the project that was the production of this book had an overarching design, meticulously thought out and meticulously executed--so much so that for its unity and cohesiveness, its integrity as a published work, I would not hesitate to elevate the book to the status of a minor work of art (and minor only because of the modesty of its aim, scope, and size).--The book is divided into relatively brief sections that allow a reader, at will and with ease, to leave off reading and then resume it without loss of train of thought. But, if other readers are anything like me, this is probably needless information. Once I picked the book up, I literally could not put it down until I had finished it.--The pathos is overwhelming, most of all in the author's consideration of the moral dilemmas in which mothers were put during the civil strife that engulfed the country, dilemmas that make the choice in SOPHIE's CHOICE seem like child's play. But so is the celebration of new life where one might least expect to find it. "Compelling" is too pale a word to describe the book. Read it and, at once, let your heart break and your spirit soar."

Product details

  • Age Range 12 - 18 years
  • Grade Level 7 - 12
  • Paperback 175 pages
  • Publisher Red Deer Press; 1 edition (November 18, 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0889954720

Read Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books

Tags : Kamakwie Finding Peace, Love, and Injustice in Sierra Leone [Kathleen Martin] on . Ann Connor Brimer Award for Children's Literature finalist, 2013 The Children's Literature Roundtables of Canada's Information Book Award finalist,Kathleen Martin,Kamakwie Finding Peace, Love, and Injustice in Sierra Leone,Red Deer Press,0889954720,FBA-|302890,Biography Autobiography - Social Activists,People Places - Africa,Social Topics - General,Kamakwie (Sierra Leone),Kamakwie (Sierra Leone) - Social conditions - 21st century,Kamakwie (Sierra Leone);Description and travel;Juvenile literature.,Kamakwie (Sierra Leone);Social conditions;21st century;Juvenile literature.,Martin, Kathleen,Sierra Leone - History - Civil War, 1991-2002,Sierra Leone;History;Civil War, 1991-2002;Personal narratives;Juvenile literature.,1973-,21st century,Children Grades 4-6,Description and travel,JUVENILE NONFICTION / People Places / United States / African American,JUVENILE NONFICTION / Social Topics / General (see also headings under Family),JUVENILE NONFICTION / Social Topics / Values Virtues,Juvenile Nonfiction,Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography Autobiography / Social Activists,Juvenile Nonfiction / People Places / Africa,Juvenile Nonfiction / Social Issues / General,Juvenile Nonfiction/People Places - Africa,Juvenile Nonfiction/Social Topics - General (see also headings under Family),Juvenile literature,Kamakwie,Martin, Kathleen,,People places (Children's / Teenage),Sierra Leone,Social conditions,Travel,Young Adult Biography,JUVENILE NONFICTION / People Places / United States / African American,JUVENILE NONFICTION / Social Topics / General (see also headings under Family),JUVENILE NONFICTION / Social Topics / Values Virtues,Juvenile Nonfiction / Biography Autobiography / Social Activists,Juvenile Nonfiction / People Places / Africa,Juvenile Nonfiction / Social Issues / General,Juvenile Nonfiction/People Places - Africa,Juvenile Nonfiction/Social Topics - General (see also headings under Family),Young Adult Biography,1973-,21st century,Description and travel,Juvenile literature,Kamakwie,Martin, Kathleen,,Sierra Leone,Social conditions,Travel,Juvenile Nonfiction,Children Grades 4-6,People places (Children's / Teenage)

Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books Reviews :


Kamakwie Finding Peace Love and Injustice in Sierra Leone Kathleen Martin 9780889954724 Books Reviews


  • This book is excellent! The pictures and story of Kathleen Martin's visit to Kamakwie really make you think-about how lucky we are to have grown up in the USA in so many ways but also how the human spirit can thrive even in horrible circumstances. I would highly recommend this book to anyone.
  • As the author's brother I eagerly anticipated the release of this book. I had the privilege of previewing a number of chapters, pre-publication, but not the final product until it arrived on my doorstep. As I proudly began to read I expected to be effusive with praise for my sister. What I didn't expect was to be impacted by her experiences as much as I was.

    This book opened me to a world I previously had no real ability to comprehend. Kathleen's writing style took me there with her. The beautiful photos allowed me to experience her words. I came away with a deeper understanding of the incredible resolve of people, the human ability to love and forgive, and a new basis for assigning value to things, both tangible and intangible.

    I started the book the moment I got it, and finished it a few hours later, but I haven't stopped thinking about what I read and how it made me feel since.

    I strongly recommend you experience this journey and share it with your children. Too many of us are disconnected from world's outside of our own. Reading this will definitely put things in perspective.
  • Kamakwie was a very difficult book to read. I can only imagine how difficult it was for Kathleen Martin to write.

    "When I went to Sierra Leone...I knew I would see things that would make me sad. And I knew...that I would also find happiness growing like determined wildflowers--seemingly oblivious to the troubles all around. But there was so much I did not know. I did not know the vast darkness of war. I did not know how vicious fate could be. I did not expect at times to feel as if I were imprisoned in a dream where, no matter how I shouted or waved my arms, I could not be heard or seen."

    This book is clearly Martin's attempt to be heard and seen by the world outside of Sierra Leone, as she tells the story of the people of a country that has so long been held in the vise-like grip of poverty and war. It is not told so much for herself as for the people she met and connected with there, like Abu, a young boy enamored equally of learning and soccer. Like Sallay, who sees atrocities in the war that she has to share, and then later is able to laugh with her sons, showing the triumph of the human spirit over the ugliness of needless death and destruction. Martin writes of her,

    "I can see, as she speaks, that story digging into her body, clawing into her skin, twisting through her veins on its way out."

    I suspect that the story of the people of Kamakwie, and, indeed, of Sierra Leone, did the same for Martin. She accepted the challenge and created an extraordinary book. Kamakwie is a double-edged sword, eloquent both in language and in the spirit captured in the stunning photographs throughout the book.

    Just as telling the story of her stay in Sierra Leone--spending time in hospitals and schools, getting to know mothers and babies, grandfathers and teachers--was a challenge for Martin to write, it is also a challenge for us, the readers. There are sections of the book that are very hard to read, hard to get our minds and hearts around. This was true for me, and I have lived in a third-world country for years, experienced war and seen first hand the effects of malnutrition and lack of medical care. Kamakwie is a glimpse into a world most will never experience. The book asks all of us to open our hearts and minds and to somehow, in some way, make a difference.

    by Khadijah Lacina
    for Story Circle Book Reviews
    reviewing books by, for, and about women
  • I am a Benedictine monk, professed for over forty years, who has just read KAMAKWIE as Lenten spiritual fare. It is probably the most profoundly moving book I have ever read--and perhaps am likely to read--during the Lenten season.--This little work about life--and I use that word deliberately and decidedly--in a small town in Sierra Leone is a rare achievement. To have read KAMAKWIE is to have lived in Kamakwie, even if but briefly...and to have lived in Kamakwie, even if but briefly, is to have known both almost unimaginable human degradation and misery and, in the face of such, the likewise almost unimaginable ability of the human heart to forgive and forget, to fill itself to overflowing with gratitude and joy, to hope. If the slimness of a volume ever belied the force of its contents, that of KAMAKWIE does so in spades.--In her account of her stay in Sierra Leone, the author found just the right balance between the objective and the subjective,
    between the situations and, especially, the people she encountered there and her personal responses to them. There is no doubt about, variously, the keen grief, the fierce anger, and the sheer delight that she experienced, but she has deftly written of these unintrusively, in a way that only intensifies the reader's focus on the people whom she came to know and love.--And then there are the glorious photographs...many of them reminiscent of Edward Steichen's in THE FAMILY OF MAN. The coordination of the photographs and the text, that is, the physical format of the book, purposely and purposefully mirrors its conceptual format to a degree not often found in publications these days. Clearly the project that was the production of this book had an overarching design, meticulously thought out and meticulously executed--so much so that for its unity and cohesiveness, its integrity as a published work, I would not hesitate to elevate the book to the status of a minor work of art (and minor only because of the modesty of its aim, scope, and size).--The book is divided into relatively brief sections that allow a reader, at will and with ease, to leave off reading and then resume it without loss of train of thought. But, if other readers are anything like me, this is probably needless information. Once I picked the book up, I literally could not put it down until I had finished it.--The pathos is overwhelming, most of all in the author's consideration of the moral dilemmas in which mothers were put during the civil strife that engulfed the country, dilemmas that make the choice in SOPHIE's CHOICE seem like child's play. But so is the celebration of new life where one might least expect to find it. "Compelling" is too pale a word to describe the book. Read it and, at once, let your heart break and your spirit soar.
  • I have read this book while it was still iin draft form and it is a very moving account of life in Sierra Leone. Kathleen has captured the essence of the struggle as well as the love and joy of the Sierra Leonean people. I highly recommend the book!