My US book tour
This photo was taken by Geoff Marsh, The Fletcher School |
My US book tour of September and October 2012 took me to four cities. I started off in Boston where The World Peace Foundation at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University invited me to give a talk.
The World Peace Foundation organised my book tour and asked no less than five academics to review my book. I also wrote a response to those reviews. I would like to thank Alex de Waal, Bridget Conley and Lisa Avery of The World Peace Foundation for all their help, as well as the engaged and intelligent students of Tufts University who came to my talks, and asked such interesting and challenging questions.
The book event started with a book-signing in The Hall of Flags at The Fletcher School.
This photo was taken by Geoff Marsh, The Fletcher School |
This photo was taken by Geoff Marsh, The Fletcher School |
This photo was taken by Geoff Marsh, The Fletcher School |
By chance, the Somali flag was hanging near to where I signed my books |
Signing books for students |
Armed man in Mogadishu |
Destroyed parliament in central Mogadishu |
Opening of the Coca Cola factory in Somaliland |
The Somaliland Circus |
I then took the beautiful train journey from Boston to New Haven, whizzing through autumn woodland and past grand properties on the coast, sailboats bobbing in the ocean. My second talk was at Yale University, where I was delighted to see several Somalis in the audience, some of whom had driven in from the town of Hartford, where there is a substantial Somali community. One of them read out a quote from a book called 'Warrior' by Gerald Hanley and asked whether I agreed with it. Here is the quote: "Of all the races in Africa, there cannot be one better to live among than the most difficult, the proudest, the bravest, the vainest, the most merciless, the friendliest: the Somalis'.
Yale |
Some Somali members of the Yale audience |
Some Somali members of the Yale audience |
... in the grounds of this petrol station:
Many people enthusiastically display their political affiliations on their front lawns:
After New Haven, I took the train to Washington DC. Some of the poorer neighbourhoods of some of the towns I passed, especially Baltimore, somehow reminded me of parts of Mogadishu. A group of Somalis met me at the grand Union Station in Washington and looked after me the whole time I was in the city. I spoke at the United States Institute of Peace, which is directly opposite the State Department.
The United States Institue of Peace is a beautiful building. The roof looks like the wings of a dove. |
Speaking at the United States Institute of Peace |
I then headed for New York city where I first spoke at the Centre on Global Counterterrorism Cooperation. This was a closed event. The Somali ambassador to the United Nations was there, as were Kenyan representatives at the UN. The meeting was chaired by Liat Shetret of CGCC.
The next day, Tatiana Carayannis and Ciara Aucoin of the Social Science Research Council organised a marathon day for me. I went to UN headquarters where I held two interesting closed discussions with senior officials working on Somalia. I also spoke at the beautiful, serene Quaker House.
The gardens behind Quaker House, right in the heart of New York city. |
Ken Menkhaus and me on the sofa in Quaker House |
Good friends came to the event |
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