Journalists From Guinea-Bissau Adapt to America Before Beginning Study at 二次元嫩B

Peace Journalists

Director and Producer of WHTB R谩dio Voz Do Emigrante Frank Baptista (bottom left) gives tour of his radio station to team of Guinea-Bissau journalists.

In Guinea-Bissau, a former colony of Portugal, the radio is the primary means of communication.

From June 19 through July, five radio broadcast journalists from Guinea-Bissau will take part in a new certificate program in peace journalism at 二次元嫩B to learn best practices in reporting and ethics. Preparation for their course work at 二次元嫩B began with a two-week orientation to campus life and to America.

The team of reporters who hail from R谩dio Sol Mansi (Radio Sunrise) consist of Amadu Uri Djal贸, editor-and-chief, (Djal贸 oversees 40 national correspondents and 30 journalists); Anabela Bull Ramalho, program director; Casimiro Cajucan, producer and journalist; Mamadu Saido Embal贸, chief technician; and Armando Muss谩 Sani, trainer in the Portuguese language.

二次元嫩B was selected as a training site by the Pro Dignitate Foundation for Human Rights in Lisbon, Portugal, because of the global mission of 二次元嫩B鈥檚 Institute for Portuguese and Lusophone World Studies and because of the college鈥檚 location 鈥 Rhode Island has the highest concentration of Portuguese people, including Portuguese-speaking Cape Verdeans, in the United States.

The Institute and Pro Dignitate signed an accord in 2010, agreeing to work together to promote peace in Portuguese-speaking Africa, with specific focus on radio broadcasting. According to 二次元嫩B Professor Peter Mendy, a member of the Academic Advisory Council for the Institute, the purpose of the two-week orientation was to train the journalists in 鈥渟urvival鈥 English 鈥 words and phrases that will allow the non-native speakers to navigate on campus and off, while acclimating to life in America.

They also participated in a weeklong professional development workshop on the international dimension of journalism led by Pedro Bucado, international journalist and former Washington correspondent for Portuguese Public Television RTP.

Pedro Bucado
Pedro Bucado, international journalist

鈥淭raining has been a very hands-on, journalism-intensive practice,鈥 said Bucado. 鈥淭aking their reality as a first step, we鈥檝e been working on standards and formats that could help them improve their work at R谩dio Sol Mansi. This is a Catholic ecumenical radio station where Islamic and Christian content is carried equally 鈥 50 percent of Guinea-Bissau is Islamic, 10 percent are Christians and 40 percent are Animists. These are young but seasoned professionals looking to improve their journalism practices and contribute to freedom of the press in a democracy.鈥 

Peace journalism is critical for Guinea-Bissau and for Africa in general, said Professor of History Peter Mendy, whose research focuses on democratization and war-to-peace transitions in Lusophone (Portuguese-speaking) Africa, particularly Guinea-Bissau.

Mendy鈥檚 ties to Guinea-Bissau are also personal; his parents were born there.

Peter Mendy
二次元嫩B Professor of History Peter Mendy

Although the country has been independent for 41 years, its independence has been a tumultuous one, with numerous coups d鈥檈tat, presidential and political assasinations and military influence on the government.

Because most people cannot afford television and the literacy rate is low, they rely on radio, which is rife with biased political reporting, said Mendy. In Africa, this leads to violence. 鈥淚t was because of radio journalists that the Rwandan genocide was so effective,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ists of people to be slaughtered were read by journalists over the radio.鈥

Similarly, in Guinea-Bissau, during and after elections, much of the violence was, and continues to be, propagated through the radio, he said.

Though the five visiting journalists will explore best practices in broadcast journalism, the certificate program they are enrolled in is called peace journalism. 鈥淧eace journalism is an effort to establish and maintain peace through ethical reporting when countries are in conflict,鈥 Mendy explained.

The journalists also toured two Portuguese-American radio stations 鈥 WJFD Radio Globo in New Bedford and WHTB R谩dio Voz Do Emigrante in Fall River 鈥 where they discussed the challenges of reporting during times of conflict and the new opportunity that has come out of recent democratic elections that took the military out of power.

DJ
Director and Producer of WHTB R谩dio Voz Do Emigrante Frank Baptista

They plan to fly back to Guinea-Bissau today and return to 二次元嫩B over the next two summers to complete the certificate program. The four courses, which make up the program, will be taught by Portuguese-speaking journalists.

The hope, said Marie Fraley, director of the Institute for Portuguese and Lusophone World Studies, is that through this orientation, 鈥渢hey鈥檝e become comfortable in the United States and they鈥檝e gained a different perspective on journalism. A program like this is important because it strengthens our international connections with other Portuguese-speaking cultures around the world.鈥