Teaching Gentle and Inner Peace: The Story of Baimonah Mamacol

Baimonah “Ma’am Bai” Mamacol is a grade 6 teacher at Buayaan Elementary School in Ditsaan, Ramain Lanao del Sur. She has ten years of teaching experience and is a mother of four. She enjoys going to training seminars for her professional growth. Her family is native to the town of Ditsaan-Ramain, one of the communities closest to Marawi. She remembered vividly the terror they had to live through in Marawi as the fighting persisted.

Ma’am Bai is a participant in the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course for Educators, which trained teachers on how to integrate peace education in schools as well as how to live peacefully and incorporate peaceful practices into their daily lives.

During the Marawi Siege, she and her family decided to stay to protect their properties until the siege was over. Until now, she finds it unbelievable how the sounds of bombs going off and gunfire started to become a part of their daily lives at that time. They must take longer trips each week around Lanao Lake to Iligan, which is five times longer, to buy and maintain their daily needs. They have been able to survive without electricity for the past four months because Marawi’s primary source had to be shut down for security reasons. Because of the stress, worry, and hassle of daily life, she came to understand the value of instilling peace in her students.

She learned a lot during the siege about being a Muslim, a daughter, and a parent. She is aware that she can help her students, but she is unsure of how to get started. She remembers how, when schools in Lanao opened a month after the siege, the importance of peace education became essential. Since students decided to attend classes during that time of ongoing fighting in Marawi, it put her profession as a teacher to the test. She can only hope that there are ways to teach peace or even a proper way to process her student’s feelings and have inner peace from the ongoing conflict.

Years after, Ma’am Bai met Teach Peace Build Peace Movement (TPBPM); she heard that an organization would train not only students but the teacher and parents, too, in an inclusive and holistic approach to peace education. They believe that every part of our society and our community has a role to play. She was enthusiastic when she heard about the learning opportunities for peace education. She is aware that teachers, like the students, would appreciate these lessons being imparted to their lives, as they were also victims of the Marawi siege.

Throughout the course, she came to understand that there are internal paths to achieving peace in addition to an external battle for harmony. She learned how being gentle with her students would impact her outlook on life. She felt most at ease when she became gentle. She concludes that being gentle involves treating not just others but also ourselves.

“It surprised me how I changed from being a nag when they are naughty or misbehaving to becoming gentler and implementing peaceful classroom management. It also made me feel good.”

She enjoys learning about different love languages and how to use them with different people in her life. First, her family. As a mother of four, she is now more aware of the needs of each of her children because they all express their love in different ways. Then she goes to work, where the faculty members may have different views and guiding principles, but after the lesson, something has changed in the way they approach misunderstanding and differences.

“Like any other workplace, we teachers encounter misunderstandings also. But after the program, we learned tolerance and gained more understanding that we have different stories and struggles. I learned that there were conflicts that we needed to peacefully resolve, especially if it would affect other people in the school, and we do not want students to see us fighting over little things.”

She enjoys learning about different love languages and how to use them with different people in her life. First, her family. As a mother of four, she is now more aware of the needs of each of her children because they all express their love in different ways. Then she goes to work, where the faculty members may have different views and guiding principles, but after the lesson, something has changed in the way they approach misunderstanding and differences.

“Like any other workplace, we teachers encounter misunderstandings also. But after the program, we learned tolerance and gained more understanding that we have different stories and struggles. I learned that there were conflicts that we needed to peacefully resolve, especially if it would affect other people in the school, and we do not want students to see us fighting over little things.”

Nurturing Inner Peace For A More Peaceful Future: The Story of Isah Comacasar

Addressing the trauma from her firsthand experiences of violence and conflict, Isah Comacasar drew new strength to find better approaches to building a culture of peace within their school and community.

Facing trauma from conflict

It was during the first day of Ramadan when Isah went to Marawi. Recalling the memory like it happened yesterday, she remembered the first day of the city’s siege. She was riding a tricycle when an unknown armed person halted them and asked for an identification card from the driver. When the driver could not provide one, he was shot on the spot in front of Isah. The experience brought her trauma as she could not do anything for one month.

Weeks passed, and the continuous firefight was normalized in their daily life. Yet, the trauma brought by her encounter increased her anxiety and fear. There were moments she ran straight out of her house and forgot to get her child. Because of the lack of transportation, she also had to feed her child different milk brands.

After the siege, Isah returned to her work as a teacher and noticed her behavior toward her students. She was more easily agitated and annoyed. A messy environment or unruly behavior can quickly trigger her. Her annoyance affected the school environment, including her interactions with her colleagues.

Studies show that witnessing or experiencing conflict can be a precursor to psychological or social issues. These concerns become opportunities for violent extremist groups to provoke individuals to commit violent acts or make them subjected to submission and fear. It can also become an entry point to make the individual more sensitive to intrusive thoughts or violent behavior.

Finding The Need for Inner Peace

With an opportunity to be part of the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course of the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement, Isah started her peace journey by facing and healing the trauma caused by her experience. Her participation in one of the inner peace sessions made her process and reflected on the encounter she witnessed. She also started to take care of her inner peace and be more mindful of her surroundings.

By being more aware of her actions, Isah tried her best to understand her students and refrained from letting her emotions take hold of her actions. She used deep breathing techniques to calm herself before going to work or finding ways to relax on her way home. Isah also took a moment during the Culture of Peace Circle to apologize to her colleagues for any misbehavior that she unintentionally did.

Drawing from her experiences and observation, Isah expressed the need for peace education to provide practical ways to protect one’s inner peace and share that peace with others. As a teacher, she understood the need to impart the values of respect, empathy, and kindness so that students themselves can be peace advocates.

“The school can be a core institution in building a culture of peace in communities by having practical knowledge ledge to spread peace.”

Protecting Your Inner Peace to Share Peace : The Story of Jamellah Alih

To be able to impart peace, Jamellah Alih found that one should be able to foster peace within themselves first.

When Doubt Disturbs One’s Peace of Mind

For Jamellah, fulfilling the role of teaching continues after the usual lessons within classrooms. They pass on to their students the values of compassion and gratefulness. These acts of kindness motivated their students to create thank-you cards that the teacher uploaded to their social media accounts.

However, recalling an instance when a parent went to the school to attack them, Jamellah found themselves doubting their capability as a teacher. Without warning, the parent went straight to the student who was said to be bullying their child. The teacher tried to intervene and mediate between the parent and the child, only for them to become the center of the blame. The enraged parent made Jamellah feel insecure about their responsibility and that they should be held accountable for the accusations.

After this experience, Jamellah always felt that a parent or a child would suddenly come and attack them. They placed themselves in an uncomfortable position of self-doubt and extreme criticism of their actions. The stress brought by the encounter also brought them fatigue and loss of appetite.

The culture of hate and violence can manifest in various forms, including self-hatred brought by doubt and insecurity. Studies show that among the drivers of violent extremism are the individual motivations and processes which become ‘pull factors’ for them to be vulnerable to violent behavior. Jamellah’s experience of contempt for oneself can bring them to mirror that hate toward others.

Rediscovering The Passion

When they joined the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course of the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement, she became aware of protecting one’s inner peace through meditation, mindfulness, and cyber peace. They started to focus on protecting their inner peace and found ways to cultivate a peaceful environment for themselves.

At one time, Jamellah was scrolling through social media when they found an album filled with thank-you cards from their past students. These posts reminded them why they took a teaching profession – for the children. To keep this drive, they found protecting their inner peace an essential part of sustainability.

Soon, they became more aware of their thoughts and actions in face-to-face interactions and online conversations. The content they posted and shared was sensitive to other people’s feelings. They also ensured that these posts were not misleading or instigating negative discussions.

Learning that conflict will always be a part of life, Jamellah now faced these struggles with deep breaths and an open mind. They know that how they think, see, feel, and hear will always reflect the peace values they want to impart to their students.

Since the teacher is at the core of every classroom, it is important that a teacher also protects and nurtures their inner peace.

Making The School A Peaceful Space: The Story of Norhaima Aragassi

How personal conflicts seep into a community

As a teacher-in-charge of the school, Norhaima understood her responsibility to cultivate a peaceful environment where children are nurtured and encouraged. She was happily fulfilling the duties of this position until she was replaced by her cousin to become the school principal.

Because of this substitution, she developed ill feelings against her cousin and was displeased with the decision. These personal issues that hounded the school leadership soon affected the school environment. Citing instances where she took a more proactive approach to school decisions, Norhaima mentioned that there were times when the teachers were forced to side on which person to follow. The pressure that the teachers felt almost made them cry and further divided the school.

Growing up with violence around her, Norhaima developed a normalized thought that conflict is a natural order of the environment.

By having this perception, she did not mind the issues and division that were brought about by her strife with her cousin. Despite being prone to misinterpretation, she continued her antagonism toward the leadership of her cousin.

Given that they are still building their sense of social and communal relationships with others, various studies show that exposure to conflict and violent extremism adversely affects the children that they will bring into adulthood. Enduring from firsthand experiences, these children learned to address any type of conflict in a violent manner. Thus, perpetuating the cycle of hate and violence and influencing others to replicate the approach.

Mending broken bridges for peace

Upon joining the Training of Trainers of the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement, Norhaima saw the effects of the struggle with her cousin on the peaceful environment of the school. She started noticing that there are teachers who would rather stay silent on the issue or who avoided possible confrontations.

During the Culture of Peace Circle activity, Norhaima started to bring down the walls that she raised due to the conflict and sought forgiveness for her actions. The activity made her reach out to her cousin and talk to each other which resulted in a thoughtful discussion. Both of them apologized and decided to be better colleagues to each other.

Unlike before, Norhaima observed that the improvement of her relationship with her cousin also enhanced her relationship with her colleagues. The healing that both cousins cultivated soon nurtured a culture of peace within the school administration. People became more friendly with each other and more open with their feedback.

Teachers tend to have a more influential role among children because they spend more time at school than at home. Her participation at TPBPM made Norhaima understand the crucial importance of teachers being role models to their students. Recalling her experience, she knew that her absence of inner peace due to conflict with her cousin trickled into her colleagues and the whole school environment.





A teacher has a role and responsibility to ensure that they reflect peace to their students so that they will bring it home to their own families.

Empowered Peace Educator, Proactive Learners and Peace Champions

Teacher Ommo Hani, from Maharlika Integrated School, has experienced living in diverse communities. Having spent her childhood years in Manila, spent her college years in Marawi City and presently living in and teaching in a school in an interfaith community in Taguig, where most of the members of the community are Muslims. 

With her exposure to several kinds of conflict growing up, including armed conflict, violences relating to religious beliefs, discrimination, and community conflicts such as RIDO, her understanding of conflict and peace has been shaped by those experiences – viewing peace as the absence of such conflicts and violences inflicted towards other people. 

Taking pride in being an educator, she sees and understands her role in shaping the minds of children not just from learning in the classroom but also the way they relate with them. Admittedly, she mentions employing discipline methods in the classroom that are, in her words, “old fashioned.” When getting mad at her students for certain misbehavior, she did not know how to handle some situations in a calm manner which she says affects her physical health and mental well-being sometimes. Learning from the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course, she shared that she learned how to refrain from being mad as a reflex response whenever her students misbehave and that Peaceful Classroom management not only affects what’s inside the classroom but also life outside the classroom. 

Aside from classroom management challenges before, she has also raised the concern in terms of the increasing vulnerability of children and exposure to many violent narratives. Teacher Ommo Hani shared that some children from Marawi City who experienced the devastating effects of the war have enrolled in Maharlika Integrated School. Being a close-knit Muslim community, Maharlika Village in Taguig was home for Muslims who seeked refuge and home after the Marawi Siege happened where many were displaced and children were greatly affected and vulnerable. Teacher Ommo Hani had some students in her class who were from Marawi City. Knowing and experiencing the cultural differences between Metro Manila and Marawi City, she has observed among the students some adjustment difficulties – she saw that the students felt fear and experienced challenges in connecting with other students. This has resulted in some bullying cases and fights among students in their school. She has seen this as possibly a way for children to defend themselves from feeling like they are “othered” which makes her believe that strategies in handling bullying and banter is not only essential for the school but also for the formation of the child and the child’s response to the difficult situations he/she faces. Teacher Ommo Hani shares her appreciation for Restorative Chat, she says “I’m always thinking about practicing the Restorative Chat ever since I have learned about it from the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course.

That strategy not only is about resolving conflict but it more importantly empowers the children to resolve conflicts because they can voice out what they want and the resolution comes from them.” 

Other than that, she also shared stories where other students can’t afford to go to school. This, Teacher Ommo Hani shares, has opened the opportunity for the children and youth in their community to be recruited by what she has termed “extremist groups” and offer the students money. Presently, she shared that she does not hear active recruitment from violent groups but she believes that anytime, it can happen again and children continue to be at risk especially in a difficult time in this pandemic. 

Moving forward, she is motivated to share what she has been learning from the Peace Education Leadership Formation Course. Teacher Ommo Hani is looking at opportunities to immediately apply what she has learned and hopefully other teachers can also experience the formation course. She shares..

“I am thinking of ways how I can integrate my learnings when I teach, and I am ready to even conduct activities even once a month with my learners. And hopefully other teachers can do this too because we all have to be reminded that we need this not only for our school but more importantly, how we engage with the learners for them to also champion peace.”

A new peace journey begins..

In March 2021, the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement (TPBPM) through the Peace Heroes Formation Programme conducted interviews with teachers from different schools to gain a better understanding of the schools and communities’ peace and conflict situation in Lanao del Sur. Before the onset of the Programme, TPBPM wants to impart the stories of our Peace Educators as we begin this journey of Peace Education. 

Though outside of Marawi City, Ditsaan-Ramain was one of the 20 municipalities affected by the Marawi Siege in 2017. Residents of different barangays (communities) heard the loud explosions that shocked their homes. Azcayah Sacar, 37, the Officer-in-Charge (OIC) Principal of Barimbingan Central Elementary School (CES), recalls, “During the Marawi Siege, we experienced violence. Education stopped. We were not able to protect education, even our homes. We did not know where to go. There was no stability. Everything was affected, our mental, emotional, and physical health.” Conflict and violence affected Azcayah, her family, community, and her students at Barimbingan CES.

When there is no peace, different individuals experience the devastating effects of war. Alaina Ampuan, 35, a teacher from Barimbingan CES, described what they went through. She shared, “During the siege, we evacuated. When bombs were crashing to the ground near us, we felt it. We couldn’t bring anything. The explosion was only five minutes away from the school.” The conflict greatly sowed fear among the school and community members. It affected the focus of students and teachers, especially the service they render for the school community. 

Alyannah Mamailao Macmod, 35, Division Office Staff at Buayaan Elementary School, added “When there is gunfire, our children cannot go to school, even the economy and lives of people in the community are affected.  People feel fear, they do not have peace of mind when there is violence.”

In the current modular learning setup, they faced inner conflicts and challenges relating to the increased workloads and stress, and difficulties in contextualizing the modules, printing, releasing and distributing it to parents and students, as well as evaluating students’ performances in the new normal. 

In TPBPM’s consultation with teachers in conflict-affected schools in Ditsaan-Ramain, all of them conveyed that there is a lack of training on Peace Education for teachers. They also have not participated in training on cultivating inner peace, conflict transformation, and relationship-building which are essential in coping up with today’s challenges in teaching in the new normal, and in building the resilience of communities highly vulnerable to conflict and violence. Peace Education proved to be even more relevant when interviewed teachers recalled their experiences of teaching during a pandemic. The presentation of the programme and consultation led them to the realization that there is strong hope in the possibility of cultivating change in schools and communities through Peace.

“Peace Education is important because we can achieve what we want with peace; we are in the right direction. We can also aim for quality education because we also have peace in our pupils, teachers, and community,” Monaimah Salic, 35, Principal of Rantian Elementary School shared during the consultation.

For the teachers in Lanao del Sur, Peace Education is important for children to have quality education,  nurturing relationships and the resiliency to achieve their goals. A common sentiment they shared is that when there is no peace, teachers experience inner conflict, including the parents and their children. They deeply emphasized that we can only have good quality education for children if we have peace within ourselves and towards others.

Through these consultations and conversations, it has cultivated a sense of hope for schools and communities amidst trying times. While the PHFP with partner schools in Ditsaan-Ramain, Lanao del Sur is at its onset, the teachers and school leadership have already captured the need to teach Peace to schools and communities and the relevance of living Peace as a Way of Life. 

Peace Gifts Project: A Teacher’s Wish Series (Hanina Bayao Sampulna-Kamsa, Mosaiden D. Abdul, and Hazarah K. Macapintal)

Every week, we want to give you a glimpse of what our I TEACH PEACE Champions from our Kapatiran Schools and Communities face as teachers in the middle of a pandemic. We hope that you find inspiration in these teachers’ resilience. 

Nelson Mandela once said, “It is through education that the daughter of a peasant can become a doctor, that the son of a mine worker can become the head of the mine, that a child of farm workers can become the president of a great nation. It is what we make out of what we have, not what we are given, that separates one person from another.”

Clearly, education is a family’s way out of poverty. But it is also poverty that prevents children from realizing their full potential. As if poverty is not enough, the current pandemic is making it harder for students of Hadjik Salik Kalaing Elementary School in Mamasapano, Maguindanao. According to teachers Hanina Bayao Sampulna-Kamsa, Mosaiden D. Abdul, and Hazarah K. Macapintal, most of the families in their community do not have a steady source of income. So, providing for their children’s needs for distance learning is only secondary to providing food on the table.

“Pahirapan sa pagsakay ang mga guro at mga magulang dahil doble  ang pamasahe at malayo sa working station ang ibang guro. Expensive ang modular learning dahil sa dami ng bond paper na nagagamit, at kailangan din ang load para makapagcommunicate ang teacher sa mga magulang [The fare to meet some teachers in their working stations is expensive. The modular learning materials are also expensive because of the amount of bond papers we need. Teachers also need cellphone load to communicate with the parents.],” they shared.

But just because it’s hard doesn’t mean they have to give up. While teachers like them are busy preparing modules and lectures, they’re also busy convincing parents to not let the pandemic discourage them from educating their child.

Just like what Mandela had taught us, Teachers Hanina, Mosaiden, and Hazarah believe that education will determine our future. “Ang edukasyon ay ang tanging kayamanan pwedeng maipamana ng magulang sa kanilang mga anak na hinding-hindi mananakaw ninuman [Education is the only form of wealth which can never be taken away],” they said. 

Their only wish is for this pandemic to be over. But while it’s still here, they know that there is a job to be done. And they hope that while fulfilling their duty, they’ll be protected from COVID-19 and the children from their community will still get the quality education they deserve.

Hadjik Salik Kalaing Elementary is one of TPBPM’s Kapatiran Schools that is part of our ongoing Peace Gifts Project which aims to provide schools with equipment and materials for printing modules such as printer and copier, printer ink, and bond papers. For those who wish to donate, please send your donations to:

Bank of the Philippine Islands
Teach Peace Build Peace Movement Inc.
Account Number: 9601000528
Swift Code: BOPIPHMM

Be part of our Kapatiran Support Circle. And together as brothers and sisters, we can help our peace hero children.


Peace Gifts Project: A Teacher’s Wish Series- Teacher Jamaliah

Every week, we want to give you a glimpse of what our I Teach Peace Champions from our Kapatiran Schools and Communities face as teachers in the middle of a pandemic. We hope that you find inspiration in these teachers’ resilience. 

“Sana mawala na agad ang COVID-19 kasi bawat aspeto ng buhay ng tao ay may epekto ito. Sana lang ang manatiling matatag ang lahat at hindi makalimot sa pagdarasal. Para naman sa edukasyon sa aming lugar, sana po talaga walang batang mapag-iwanan sa new normal na ito.” (“I hope that COVID-19 goes away because everyone’s life is affected by it. I hope that we remain strong and we don’t forget to pray. I hope that no child will be left behind in this new normal.”)

This is the wish of Teacher Jamalia Saruang, from Camp Bagong Amai Pakpak Elementary School (CBAPES) in Marawi. With the transition to distance learning, many teachers like her find themselves navigating an unchartered territory and hoping for the best case scenario to happen: for COVID-19 to end.

The threat to the teachers’ health and safety isn’t the only challenge, the country’s online distance learning modality is faced with other obstacles: limited to no internet connection, lack of resources such as printers and bond papers used to produce the students’ modules, and a conducive learning environment for children.

While the role of parents is just as important, schools in Mindanao like CBAPES are also doing its best to make up for the lack. Safety precautions are in place to protect the teachers as they produce and distribute modules. The school set up orientations to educate parents on how to use the modules and how to support their children.

Hindi po lahat ng mga mag-aaral namin ay mayroong cellphone. Pero po, parang ang hirap po kasi magturo na hindi mo kaharap ang mga bata. Bilang isang guro, kung kaharap po namin ang mga mag-aaral ay mas nasusubaybayan po namin sila,” shares Teacher Jamalia. (“Not all students have phones. But, it can be difficult to teach kids if you’re not with them. As a teacher, we guide students better if we’re with them.”)

For Teacher Jamalia, the teachers can gauge a student’s learning ability better when it is in a classroom setup. This is important to ensure that the children improve as they progress in school. But in the middle of a pandemic, a peace champion like her has to make the most out of the situation. So, she does.

She hopes that the country will one day have free Wi-Fi everywhere, for every student to have their own gadget for learning, and for all teachers to be equipped with free laptops. Though she thinks, this may seem like a far-fetched dream.

So, she settles for what she knows can be achieved at this time: enough supplies of bond papers for printing their modules and tools to help them in creating their video lectures — a simple ask indeed, but one that may change the course of our future generation.

CBAPES is one of TPBPM’s Kapatiran Schools that is part of our ongoing Peace Gifts Project which aims to provide schools with equipment and materials for printing modules such as printer and copier, printer ink, and bond papers. For those who wish to donate, please send your donations to:

Bank of the Philippine Islands
Teach Peace Build Peace Movement Inc.
Account Number: 9601000528
Swift Code: BOPIPHMM

Be part of our Kapatiran Support Circle. And together as brothers and sisters, we can help our peace hero children.

Creating a Ripple Effect of Goodness Through Peace

For Asnia B. Salic, a teacher from Pendolonan Elementary School, Marawi City, peace creates a ripple effect of goodness. When a person has inner peace, he’s more able to share and spread goodness to others, the community, and the environment.

“Peace begins within ourselves. You cannot impose peace to anyone if you alone have no inner peace. Before you can motivate others, you must have peace within yourself,” she said.

While the recent Marawi siege brought challenges to the community, she can now say that her community has started to rebuild itself and people exist harmoniously with one another. Parents and teachers are also very supportive of the children.

As one of the participants of TEACHER LEADERS FOR PEACE: PEACE EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT JOURNEY (PEDJ) developed by the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement (TPBPM) for the Pathways for iCOPE Program, Asnia echoed what she learned: “I’m really glad because it’s a great opportunity to be part of this training. Now I have a clear vision of peace, peace education, and how we, as teachers, can integrate it in our curriculum.” 

This was co-organized with Save the Children in partnership with Plan International and other members of the Pathways for iCOPE Program consortium to achieve a sustainable positive engagement, collaboration, and convergence of key actors and stakeholders in providing and supporting conflict-sensitive quality basic education services and protection.

She highlighted how useful the peace jargons and peace chants are in her class after observing a change in behavior of her students. “The children have become more cooperative through peace jargons and peace chants. They also fight less.”

When it comes to spreading peace, one thing is clear for Asnia: the role of parents and teachers like her as peace heroes. That’s why she loves the Peace Circle session during the training because it gives her the opportunity to release all her emotions and share, without fear of judgment, what’s happening in their school and community.


Learning more about peace taught her why starting from within is important before you can even motivate others. Whether you’re a parent or a teacher, this lesson still rings true: “You cannot give what you do not have.”

ABOUT PATHWAYS FOR ICOPE PROGRAM

Save the Children, in partnership with Plan International, is implementing a program called Pathways for Integrated and Inclusive Conflict-Sensitive Protection and Education for Children in Mindanao (iCOPE). This program aims to achieve a sustainable positive engagement, collaboration, and convergence of key actors and stakeholders in providing and supporting conflict-sensitive quality basic education services and protection.

As part of ICOPE Program, Teach Peace Build Peace Movement’s (TPBPM) Peace Heroes Formation Program (PHFP), formerly called Schools and Communities of Peace Heroes Formation Program will be introduced for the purpose of helping schools institutionalize Peace Education to nurture a Culture of Peace and Resiliency amongst children with the whole school community being involved.  


Small Steps In Peace: A testimony from little Adzam

“… I throw the trash away, I sweep the floor, and now, my teacher can even ask me to go up the board and answer in front of the class.” This is what Adzam, 12 years old, said when asked about the changes he observed since joining the Teach Peace Build Peace Movement’s peace education sessions. He ignored those simple tasks back when he was still, as he described himself, “stubborn”. But now, Adzam sees himself as more obedient and diligent in and out of their home.

Adzam shared having one particular friend who he partners with to clean their classroom after school. He described his friend as having a good heart telling us about how he would offer to lend his pen during class or share his food with others.

At such a young age, Adzam went beyond just learning the importance of these little acts of peace. He is also putting them into practice. It often gives him positive feelings not for but from doing good deeds. 

With joy and pride in his eyes, Adzam recalled how happy his parents were since he started showing positive changes in his behavior and recounted the times he peacefully heeded their guidance. This makes him genuinely happy, both as a son and as a Peace Hero. 

“If not for TPBPM, I wouldn’t be a Peace Hero.” Adzam felt that he would not learn about the virtues of doing good if not for the peace education sessions he attended. 

Little did he know that peace has always been inside him; the sessions just served as a tool to let the inherent good in him manifest. Adzam’s transformation, together with the other children who have undergone TPBPM’s Peace Education Program, is a testament to how Peace Education has contributed to these children’s cognitive, emotional, and interpersonal skills which in turn, resulted to positive behavioral transformation.

Adzam’s testimony of how transformative peaceful actions can be is truly inspiring. Take it from a child who continuously strives to lead by example. 

“I learned to play, draw, and color.” As small as these may be, Adzam went on to learn beyond his years. Next time we think of grand ways to teach our kids peace, we might want to consider starting small. After all, one small step leads to another.

PEACE HEROES FORMATION PROGRAM 

The Peace Heroes Formation (PHF) Program provides a holistic approach to Peace Education by incorporating Conflict Prevention, Conflict Transformation, and Proactive Citizenship Peace Building. It was designed to apply creative and innovative ways and approaches in teaching about knowledge, skills, attitudes, values, and behavior towards a Culture of Peace. It aims to bring about behavior change that prevents the transformation of conflict into violence and war. This program also hopes to show the relevance of Peace Education in our society, and be able to contribute to ways on how to institutionalize educating schools and communities on the art of peaceful living. TPBPM utilizes existing social structures such as family, school, and communities as the primary niche in nurturing the heart of a child to be a Peace Hero.

Get to know more about this program: 

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