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Preemptive Love and Prosperity Candle Working to Combat Social Injustice in Their Communities

July 8, 2010 by Joshua 

Woman holding Prosperity Candle

Luma.
Wafa.
Arib.
Nezhet.
Ibtisam.

These names represent five of the strongest women I have ever met.

These women are actively standing in rebellion against a social system in Baghdad which works to suppress them — a system which imposes and restricts. It was truly an honor to meet them, to talk to them, to laugh with them, to grieve the death and pain of this war with them, to share tea with them. And it is an honor to now call them friends.

Working for Prosperity Candle, an organization which employs women from conflict areas, these women are empowered to break beyond the veil of oppression working to smother them and to whole-handedly take their lives back from the powers who have fought to rob them.

Making candles subverts this. It screams in the face of oppression. It fights back against a male-dominated culture that identifies women as less useful, as less valuable. Making candles, in my opinion, has never been more powerful.

It would be impossible to explain their mission better than they have themselves:

“Our vision is bold – we imagine a world lit by millions of points of candlelight, each reflecting the resilience and courage of women who have survived inconceivable hardship and seek to create a better future.”

(taken from the Prosperity Candle website)

prosperity candle-woman in pink

I love the language of a world lit by millions of candles each radiating the soft light of its wick and releasing into the air the stories of widows, of children lost, of hope amidst pain and of love amid war.

Operating in Baghdad, perhaps the world’s epicenter of extremism and violence, these women will not be intimidated into inactivity. They are strong. And they will continue to share their stories with the world with each candle produced. Their stories are painful, bringing stinging tears and causing me to grieve the sin of this world and the misery it brings to so many. These are stories of love robbed by bombs, of hope shattered by shrapnel, of bitter pain and of a deep, lasting sorrow.

Because of the nature of our work in Iraq, the Preemptive Love Coalition intentionally connects with others who share a common vision, whether or not we are fully capable of incorporating it into our mission. Prosperity Candle is one of these groups, and it has been a joy to partner with them.

Our shared longing for social justice among disadvantaged people groups is what drew us to partner with them for peace and equality in this region. Just as we are concerned with giving children the opportunity for new life, Prosperity Candle strives to give these women and others like them the ability to work independently in their communities. It is that shared concern for humanity that unifies our visions to stand in a hostile place, and become advocates for justice.

After seeing a video produced by PLC’s director Jeremy Courtney, Prosperity Candle contacted us in the hopes of having a video filmed of these women and their work. Last weekend, after finalizing details with Jeremy and Heber Vega, a dear photographer friend of ours, we finally hosted our new friends from Baghdad. I was there to photograph and help Jeremy and Heber with their work, but mainly to just sit and talk with the women.

Since then, I have struggled to write my thoughts. I’ve sat down, stood up, taken walks, come back to the computer and still feel it is impossible to fully write in such a way that will give you an adequate understanding of these women — or perhaps an adequate expression of my own thoughts.

Why has this weekend with them so affected me? Why will this weekend with women from Baghdad be one of the highlights of my time in this country?

As I’ve spent dedicated time reflecting on these questions, I think a facet of these strong emotions is rooted in my my heartfelt love for reconciliation and peace. These women, for many reasons, should not like me.

Even now, I’m shocked by the chill that last sentence brings to me.

Given who I am, where I am from, and what my country has done to the people of their community, these women should have taken their aggression, their frustration and their anger out on me, the American. But they did not. And it has deeply affected me.

There is still much to write about, still much of their stories to tell.

prosperity candle-woman in black

This has been the easy part to write; the parts that have driven me to tears are still untold.





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Joshua Gigliotti is a PLC Summer Intern ('09) turned short-term staff who spends a majority of his time with PLC taking exceptional photos of children in Iraq in an effort to humanize Iraqis and portray them as people full of dreams and hope. When his camera is not in-hand, Josh is often found in local tea houses with friends and also enjoys traversing the great outdoors. Follow Joshua on Twitter: @JoshGigs.

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