A Time to Heal

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photos by William Haun

Posted on July 13, 2011

Glimpses of post-war Ivory Coast include congested roads, busy bus stops, and joyful church services.

Crowds gather around news stands daily in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, to read the latest headlines about their government in transition.

The shot-up carcass of a vehicle stripped clean of its parts sits on the side of the road and serves as a constant reminder of the war that plagued Ivory Coast for nearly nine years.

This 21-year-old soldier in the Republican Forces of Ivory Coast (FRCI) army claims to have fought in the former rebel army since he was 12 years old.

Streets in Abidjan that were virtually empty during Ivory Coast’s fighting in early 2011 are now packed with vendors, pedestrians and vehicles.

A man in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, delivers potatoes to be exported north for sale in Burkina Faso and Mali. The nation’s trade in agricultural goods is picking up once again as the political climate stabilizes.

Sanitation workers in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, are back to work and the city’s traffic is once again backed up.

A young refugee sits bored at a Baptist church in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where he lived for over three months to escape the fighting in his neighborhood.

Christians displaced from their homes lived for months on the property of a Baptist church in Abidjan. At the height of the violence over 60 people were living on the church compound.

A Baptist pastor in Abidjan reviews for his upcoming Sunday message. Church leaders have been preaching on Christian love and forgiveness in the months after the recent violence that plagued Ivory Coast.

A young woman peddles screwdrivers on the streets of the Marcory neighborhood in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Many residents of that neighborhood spent the two weeks leading up to April 11, 2011, hiding in their homes from stray bullets and artillery fire.

The Baptist church in the Air France II neighborhood of Bouaké, Ivory Coast, was broken into and looted 13 times during the last nine years of civil war. Nonetheless, the church never missed a Sunday service during the conflict.

An orphan boy in Katiola, Ivory Coast, plays by himself at an orphanage. A Baptist pastor founded the institution to care for children victimized by the country’s nearly nine years of civil war.

Believers in Brobo, Ivory Coast, pray during the Baptist church’s day of celebration on Pentecost 2011. The church planned the event to give thanks to God for His protection and blessings over the last nine years.

Deacon Arnold Kouassi Brou emcees a special celebration to give thanks to God for His protection and blessings over the last nine years of civil war.

Kouakou Kouadio plays a traditional Baoulé guitar and leads worship at a Baptist church celebration on Pentecost 2011 in Brobo, Ivory Coast.

Believers in Brobo, Ivory Coast, sing and dance on Pentecost 2011. The Baptist church there hosted a special celebration to give thanks to God for His protection and blessings over the last nine years.

A music group made up of believers from different countries and ethnicities leads worship during a church celebration in Brobo, Ivory Coast, on Pentecost 2011.

A young girl dons traditional paint for the Baptist church’s celebration in Brobo, Ivory Coast.

Young girls in traditional garb bring forward their offerings of fruit and vegetables at a church celebration in Brobo, Ivory Coast, on Pentecost 2011.

A new believer prays in Brobo, Ivory Coast, during her church’s day of celebration on Pentecost 2011. The Baptist church planned the special event to give thanks to God for His protection and blessings over the last nine years.

     

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