Why Goodwill Ambassador Ishmael Beah Gives to UNICEF
People have stories about how they came to learn about UNICEF. For many in the U.S., those memories date back to going door-to-door on Halloween, Trick-or-Treating for UNICEF.
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Ishmael Beah's first encounter took place in childhood, too — except that his introduction to UNICEF happened in the midst of war in a place no child should be found.
"I met UNICEF on a battlefield."
Watch Ishmael Beah tell his story:
The onetime child soldier, who was forcibly recruited at age 13 after his entire family was killed in Sierra Leone's bloody civil war, recalls the first moment he laid eyes on UNICEF workers. He had just returned to his squad's base to collect arms and ammunition.
At first, Beah says, he mistook "the folks wearing jeans and blue shirts" for mercenaries who'd come to join the fighting. "No one ever came to see us who wasn't bringing guns, ammunition or drugs."
But gradually, as the people in blue shirts spoke with his commander, he realized that they were there for a far different purpose — to secure his freedom, and as it turns out, his future.
With UNICEF's help, Beah left the army and moved into a rehabilitation home in Freetown, where he began recovering from all he had seen and done. After being granted a passport, he traveled abroad for the first time, to the United Nations in 1996, where he bore witness to the horrors of war and met others with similar stories to tell.
"I met young people from all over the world who had been in similar situations, who had also met UNICEF in those circumstances. We were all there to speak and to talk about what we felt was needed to change the direction of our lives."
As a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, Beah has recounted his story many times and in many countries, to some of the most influential people in the world — as well as to children who have experienced the horrors of being forced to fight in a war. His 2008 memoir, A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, became a bestseller.
And with UNICEF's help, he's working to end child soldiering. He's travelled to South Sudan, among other places, to meet with former child soldiers and advocate for their release and reintegration into their communities and families.
Since the mid-1980s, UNICEF has helped secure child soldiers' release in more than a dozen countries including Afghanistan, Colombia, Liberia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia and South Sudan. Once child soldiers have been freed and returned to their families, UNICEF continues to care for their physical and mental health, delivering life skills training and pointing them towards a positive future.
"When you support UNICEF, you're actually preserving humanity, because when you support the most vulnerable members of society, the children, it means that you're supporting women, you're supporting fathers, you're supporting communities, you're supporting nations," says Beah. "You're actually safeguarding humanity when you decide to donate or be a part of UNICEF, and I don't think there's any more noble cause in the world than that."
HOW TO HELP
There are many ways to make a difference
War, famine, poverty, natural disasters — threats to the world's children keep coming. But UNICEF won't stop working to keep children healthy and safe.
UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories — more places than any other children's organization. UNICEF has the world's largest humanitarian warehouse and, when disaster strikes, can get supplies almost anywhere within 72 hours. Constantly innovating, always advocating for a better world for children, UNICEF works to ensure that every child can grow up healthy, educated, protected and respected.
Would you like to help give all children the opportunity to reach their full potential? There are many ways to get involved.