About

We believe IC is not just a charity, but a group of people choosing to live differently. This blog highlights what we're up to as an organization, what inspires us, challenges us, and makes us laugh. It's our collective mind written down. We invite you to read, think critically, and speak openly.

INVISIBLE CHILDREN INC.

Invisible Children uses film, creativity and social action to end the use of child soldiers in Joseph Kony's rebel war and restore LRA-affected communities in central Africa to peace and prosperity.

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Archive for 2009

October 31, 2009
Category: Schools for Schools Contributor: Invisible Children

Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop

The Aurora West Schools for Schools club is not kidding this year

We aren't sure if they're holding up peace or victory signs

 

Aurora West High School is not messing around.  They’re the first school to be featured on the blog twice, and for good reason.  They dropped an amazing video last week about Jose’s experience on last year’s Schools for Schools trip (he’s the guy with the glove on in the photo above) and then they sent us this picuture of them in front of the 28,000 square foot volleyball court they installed for a fundraiser this week.  Send pictures of your fundraisers and club meetings to us at schoolsforschools@invisiblechildren.com to let us know what you’re up to, and make sure you get that money post marked by December 1st if you want to be eligible for the bonus trip.

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October 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

A great music video: Miike Snow

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We have to appreciate creative filmmaking, and the visual journey this music video takes you on is worth a look and a listen.

The band is called Miike Snow.

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October 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, IC in Uganda, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

Spread a smile with MJ style

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Meet Davis.  He is a little boy from Uganda who loves Michael Jackson.  His dance moves made us miss Michael so bad, we had to make a little tribute video.  Send this video to your friends and spread smiles today.

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October 30, 2009
Category: Homepage, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

We’re in INSTYLE

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Many thanks to Guess, Vanity Fair, Kristen Bell, Pete Wentz, and Rachel Bilson!  We are getting a lot of coverage from the event last week, and the wonderful shirts that Guess have made for us are getting great press.  What an honor it is to have these amazing organization’s and people’s support. We are so grateful.

If you want to get one of these shirts, all of the proceeds go to Invisible Children.  aaaaaand, they are made from cotton grown in Uganda. Click here to check them out.

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, Inspiration, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

TED Talk: We stopped being wise

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Don’t know if you guys love TED talks yet, but seriously, get on it.  Turn off Dating In The Dark for five minutes, and go to ted.com and commence the mind-blowing process. It is an unparalleled collection of the world’s brightest thinkers explaining what they believe and why they believe it.  About business. About life. About the way the world works. Watch it, learn it, and be wise.

This one was found by our girl Margie.

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, News and Updates Contributor: Invisible Children

The new US point man on war crimes: Stephen Rapp

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By Robert Marquand | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor – Madrid

New US ambassador for war crimes Stephen Rapp knows firsthand what it takes to prosecute man’s inhumanity to man. The former Iowa district attorney has already prosecuted participants in the Rwanda genocide and former Liberian strongman Charles Taylor.

The United States is much criticized abroad for its attitude toward international justice and world courts. The charge in Europe and Africa is that the US wants universal law for others but not for itself.

But in Mr. Rapp, who took up his duties Sept. 8, President Obama has found someone who international justice advocates expect will deepen US engagement in crimes against humanity cases.

For instance, Rapp favors an International Crim­­inal Court (ICC) investigation of Kenya’s 2007-08 postelection violence and wants an investigation into September’s soccer stadium killings and rape in Guinea. “Mass crimes against humanity are not acceptable … and the US will be more engaged,” Rapp told a conference of jurists in Madrid earlier this month.

“[Rapp] comes to the job with experience in international criminal justice,” says Stuart Alford, a London barrister and chair of the War Crimes Committee of the International Bar Association. “He understands the difficulties of putting on trial men like Charles Taylor. He knows the security issues involved, and the reconciliation issues within the region, including Liberia. To have someone from the US with that kind of background is encouraging.”

From Iowa to Rwanda

Rapp is known to have “prosecutorial zeal.” Four days after being tapped to take charge of the Rwanda tribunal in 2005, “I was on the plane to Kigali,” he said in a Monitor interview. Rapp brought his whole family from Iowa­ and says he wants to spend his life “bringing justice to places that have never had it before.”

Rapp, who traveled to Africa in a small Beechcraft airplane that often packed lawyers and defendants together, has prosecuted cases centered on violence against women, child soldier recruitment, and the use of the media to create and direct genocide.

In Rwanda, he prosecuted the “media case,” mainly against radio station RTLM, which infamously implored Hutus to kill the “cockroaches” or Tutsi minority in the 1994 genocide. The case took 34 months. The judges found that RTLM was not only a mass mechanism for inciting violence, but also a logistical tool for genocide – directing troops and reading the license tag numbers of Tutsi cars to machete-wielding men waiting at checkpoints.

(more…)

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, Other Important Stuff, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

Our man: Luis Moreno-Ocampo, in his words

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The International Criminal Court (ICC) is regularly criticised for being too selective or too slow in the pursuit of war criminals. Here, its prosecutor gives his side of the story, explaining how the court goes about its work, and answering his critics on the cases concerning Sudan’s President Omer el Beshir, Ugandan rebel Joseph Kony and Congolese former warlord Jean-Pierre Bemba – with a combination of patience and passion for seeing justice done.  Read the interview here.

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, Schools for Schools Contributor: Invisible Children

BONUS TRIP TO UGANDA

Or don't watch the video if you have no interest in hanging out on the Nile

Watch this video immediately to find out how you can win a bonus trip to northern Uganda this summer.  You have to act fast if you want in, but this could be your best shot at the trip of a lifetime.

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, Schools for Schools Contributor: Invisible Children

Signed Twilight Books???

That's Stephanie Meyer's John Hancock right there

That's Stephenie Meyer's John Hancock right there

We’re auctioning off a set of signed of Twilight books.  You heard us right and you know that you want them.  You already have your New Moon tickets and your Bella and Edward costumes ready to go for this weekend , but what you don’t have is signed copies of the entire series.  They’re in great condition and are each signed by Stephenie Meyer herself.  She gave them to us last year, during the biggest book drive in history.  You might have heard of it.  The auction will be up for the next 10 days.  All proceeds go to the Schools for Schools program, so don’t be shy with your bids.  Thanks, Stephenie.

PS – check back when the movie hits theaters, we have a few more Twilight themed surprises for you

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October 29, 2009
Category: Homepage, Schools for Schools, We Recommend Contributor: Invisible Children

Facebook and Schools4Schools for World Peace

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Check out peace.facebook.com. The social networking site is keeping track of how many connections it establishes between Albania and Serbia, Israel and Palestine, Turkey and Greece, and India and Pakistan. They are quantifying the social connections between regions of the world that have historically hated each other. They are hoping that the more we know about each other, the more we are exposed to the other, the more we will understand and the less we will fight.

AND, one of the programs they are featuring is Invisible Children’s Schools for Schools, because S4S bridges the gap between western kids and the kids of Northern Uganda. Yeah, we’re proud.

The largest social network in the world features Invisible Children. I’m so stoked I had to say it again.

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