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Titus Oyeyemi's Page

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Titus Oyeyemi added 2 blog posts
October 31
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I think the capability and capacity to translate materials posted on this forum to 20 languages is awesome. Bravo to everyone who contributed to make this possible.
October 26
Titus Oyeyemi added 2 blog posts
October 20
Many thanks to Dr. Zelizer for sharing this information
October 19
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Titus Oyeyemi added a blog post
JUNE 2009 INTERCESSORY PRAYE1.pdfSEPTEMBER 2009 INTERCESSORY PRAYERS.pdfIn February 2006 African Projects/Foundation for Peace and Love Initiatives inaugurated its Peace and Harmony Day in Nigeria as follows: 2nd Sunday of the month in churches; 2...
October 8
Titus Oyeyemi added a discussion
I am looking for survey and statistical instruments that are already validated which I can replicate for a perceptual or attitude quantitative correlational research for a school-based conflict resolution/peace building curriculum. The subjects wi...
September 25

Profile Information

What motivated you to become involved in peace and conflict resolution?
Founded in 1996, APPLI is a nonpolitical, nonprofit 501(c)3 organization with international headquarters in the United States—and Nigeria as the continental lead country. Pilot projects are growing by “leaps and bounds” and increasingly are taking root all over Nigeria. Exploratory discussions are taking place throughout Africa, and affiliates have been established in other parts of the world, including London, England. The organization’s mission is to use proactive grassroots peacebuilding initiatives to foster peace, love, justice, and ethnoreligious harmony in Africa. To achieve this mission, the implementation approach adopts Structured Education for Peace (SEP), Socio-cultural Adjustment Programs (SAP), and indigenous peacebuilding capacities.

Starting with Nigeria as the model field of operations, the SEP programs labeled Youth Peace and Nation Building (YPNB) and Community Peace and Nation Building (CPNB) educate to instill peace measures as alternatives to war—and love as opposed to hatred in an ongoing effort to generate and maintain peace and love among Africans through renewed knowledge. The YPNB program—through the grassroots peace and love clubs in schools and higher institutions—targets youths from kindergarten through college to their one-year National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), a government-imposed, mandatory paramilitary program to serve the nation after college graduation, with the intent to unite ethnically diverse Nigerians.

The YPNB clubs are:
• African Children of Peace Clubs (ACPC) serving kindergarten, nursery, and primary schools for nine (9) years
• Youth Peace Alliance Clubs (Y-PAC) serving junior and senior secondary schools for six (6) years
• KAIROS Peace and Love Clubs (KAIROS) serving institutions of higher learning for four (4) years
• New Peace Legacy Clubs (NPLC) serving NYSC participants for one (1) year.

The overall goal of this proactive grassroots peacebuilding approach is to be sustainable by steadily bringing a changed mind-set to average Nigerian youths in their 20-year educational careers. Peace curricula are developed by APPLI and taught weekly to club members by government- and school-assigned teachers who are peace-certified, having gone through APPLI’s Peace Training Institute.

The CPNB program, on the other hand, uses KAYERO (Yoruba for “Let peace prevail on earth”) Peace and Love Clubs, the City Peace Clubs, and the Mayoral Institutes to target politicians, government personnel, traditional rulers, religious leaders, community leaders, and business people. Through the creation of these peace education centers, APPLI aims to instill conflict resolution, conflict management, and conflict transformation in Africa. The program also cultivates indigenous peacebuilding capacities.

Apart from the educational aspect of peacebuilding, SAP efforts provide hands-on tools to minimize violence through entrepreneurship and job creation. This approach ameliorates idleness and anger caused by joblessness and poverty. For more information please feel free to visit our website at http://www.africanprojectsforpeace.org
Please feel free to provide a short bio about yourself (no more than 3 paragraphs)
I am Christian Clergy, a Peaceworker and an Administrator. My academic qualifications include MDIV, MAPS. I am a doctoral student in Organizational Leadership. I am 54 years old.

I am the Founding President and CEO of African Projects for Peace and Love Initiatives (APPLI) incorporated as a nonprofit NGO in the United States of America. While APPLI is our international network headquarters, African Foundation for Peace and Love Initiatives (AFPLI) incorporated in Nigeria is our continental headquarters in Africa.
Please list the countries and/or regions in which you have direct and significant expertise
Nigeria, Countries in Africa, United States and United Kingdom
What is your current country of residence?
United States and Nigeria
What is your current job (and organization) and/or where and what field are you studying?
President/CEO, Peaceworker
What is one of your favorite websites in the field? (please provide one answer per box)
http://www.africanprojectsforpeace.org
Which are your primary sectoral areas of expertise?
Alternative Dispute Resolution, Peacebuilding, Conflict Resolution, Conflict Mainstreaming, Development, Youth, Education, Organizational Development, Environment
Which are your primary skills areas?
Training, Program Design, Program Administration, Advocacy, Intervention
What are some of your current areas of research (if any)?
Equipping the New African Peacebuilder
Growing with Peace
Youth Peace and Nation Building
Community Peace and Nation Building
Inclusion of Peacebuilding as Co-curricular activity in secondary schools

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Titus Oyeyemi's Blog

Titus Oyeyemi

STUDENTS ACQUIRING MEDIA SKILLS FOR YOUTH PEACE AND NATION BUILDING (SAMS) 2010, 1ST EDITION

letter102609SAMS01-2010REGFRM-2.pdfIn pursuance of the Memorandum of Understanding between African Projects/Foundation for Peace and Love Initiatives, (APPLI/AFPLI) and the Lagos State Government Ministry of Education, the first edition of the seminar/workshop aimed at equipping secondary school students with media skills for y… Continue

Posted on October 31, 2009 at 5:15am —

Titus Oyeyemi

September 2009 Intercessory Prayers

JUNE 2009 INTERCESSORY PRAYE1.pdfSEPTEMBER 2009 INTERCESSORY PRAYERS.pdfIn February 2006 African Projects/Foundation for Peace and Love Initiatives inaugurate… Continue

Posted on October 8, 2009 at 2:23am —

Comment Wall (5 comments)

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At 9:30am on February 17, 2009, Craig Zelizer said…
Great. Make sure also to look up the University of Peace's Africa program and there are also many other great institutions based in Africa working on conflict, peace and development.
At 9:42am on February 22, 2008, Victor Gotebve said…
Thank you for writing. I work full time with Vanguard Media Limited (www.vanguardngr.com) and coordinate a network of young Nigerian Professionals (NiPRO). You can read about us at www.niproevents.com or www.niproinc.com. I also serve as project manager of Youth Bank (www.youth-bank.org).

My email is victor@unesco.co.uk and me@victorgotevbe.com
At 10:41am on February 21, 2008, Dan Shenk said…
Not sure what this is all about, but I'm willing to give it a shot. Thanks for inviting me.
At 2:20am on September 24, 2007, Eyal Raviv said…
Hi Titus,
I like your profile! I'd like you to join me on mepeace.org,
a platform for peacemakers advancing Middle East peace.

Eyal :-)
At 10:41am on August 1, 2007, Gary A Blythe said…
Dear Titus,

It as an honor and blessing to be in communication with you. Your work is remarkable, fresh and inspiring and I think that many peace builders could learn from your idea of long range peace building. Truly innovative and provoking which will do more as you say to chip away at structural violence. Often it is the habits of our thinking that take the longest to remove. Even the word habit is difficult to lose. First we lose the H and we still have abit. Then we lose the A and we still have "bit." Then we lose the b and we still have "It", then we lose the I and we are left with T and too much tea is also a bad habit. More people need to know about your work. Please also join www.peaceportal.ning.com and join me at www.thoughtnetwork.ning.com. Also any articles and data you can share about your work, publications, obstacles from your perspective will be very helpful in building my work as I wish to incorporate a global perspective.
 
 

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