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Provided below is an article about Watermark Justice, authored by Michelle Devereaux and published on June 7, 2009.

Justice –  by Michelle Devereaux

Rick Howard & Jeff Ward meet with Congolese lawyers

It’s a place where justice often takes a backseat to survival; a place wrought with chaos and hurt; a place where rape is commonplace, but often leaves women with broken spirits and permanently damaged bodies. This place is Goma, in the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Goma, along with many other African cities and villages, has seen violence and corruption that has shaken the very foundation of the justice system that should have been protecting it. The conflicts in Congo and nearby African regions are causing a loss of life quickly approaching that of the Holocaust.

There often seems to be no hope for these war-torn regions, but hope abounds in the hearts and minds of a group of American lawyers thousands of miles away from this small African region. Hope that justice would be in the hands of African men and women devoted to protecting those left in their care.

Van Beckwith, a leader of the Watermark Justice team and the Watermark Operations team, never imagined he would travel to one of the most dangerous places in the world to buy dinner for a group of African lawyers. But in the fall of 2006, he boarded a plane with other Watermark leaders to do just that.

In the months before the trip, Van had spoken with a friend about issues of justice and and whether God was committed to justice in the here and now. He was  pointed to a book by Gary Haugen, founder of the International Justice Mission (IJM), entitled The Good News About Injustice. IJM’s focus is on working with local governments to seek justice for those who have fallen victim to slavery, sexual exploitation and other forms of violent oppression.

“I started reading about how God is a God of justice, and I immediately began seeing the parallels between that principle and being a lawyer,” Van said. “Gary talks about the fact that God doesn’t have another plan other than us being here on this earth taking action. There is no Plan B. We have to be the hands and feet of justice.”

When invited to accompany a group of Watermark members traveling to Goma on an exploratory trip, Van did not accept immediately. The team’s purpose was to see the needs in Goma and to pray about if and how Watermark should begin working with local or national leadership. He didn’t know much about the region, so he did some research.

“It seemed like a very far off, mysterious kind of place,” he said. “I went to the U.N. and State Department websites and found out that Goma was not really a place you should be going. At the time, the largest U.N. peace­keeping force was there – 17,000 of what they call ‘blue helmets.’ Goma was home to the largest rape crisis known to man.”

After his research, and despite the danger involved, Van accepted the invitation to travel to Goma on one condi­tion – he wanted to meet with judges and lawyers there to talk about what they could do to improve the justice system in their country.

“It seemed like a very lawless place,” he said. “And it seemed very logical that if there were Christian lawyers and judges – or even nonbelievers – that would stand up and be about justice, they could make a huge impact. In fact, they really HAD to make an impact or else the place would drop off the map into chaos and death. Befriending, challenging, and then training African lawyers and judges to take justice seriously and to fight for it seemed that it would make a bigger impact than anything else we could offer.”

With the help of ALARM (African Leadership and Reconciliation Ministry), a group of local lawyers and judges gathered in Goma for an afternoon of eating dinner and spending time together. Van’s hope was to encourage them to take a stand to right the injustices occurring in their country, and to let them know they were not alone.

He didn’t know what to expect when he walked into a room of about 40 young Africans looking at him with eyes full of discomfort and skepticism.

“They had their arms crossed and were just looking at me like, ‘What’s he trying to sell?’ or ‘What’s he trying to take?’” he said. “I told them flat out, ‘I don’t have a book. I don’t have a video. I don’t have anything to sell you. I just wanted to buy you dinner.’ And you could see they all started to relax.”

Van and others presented the Gospel to this group of justice professionals. They talked about how God loves justice and how Christians are called to care for orphans and widows.

“In the course of a few hours, we saw these people come alive and realize that they could make a difference in this lawless land,” he said. “These are people who are laying their lives on the line if they were going to accept what we were asking them to do.”

This was the first time these judges and lawyers had been brought together to talk through some of the issues they faced every day. Despite being in the same profes­sion and living in the same town, they had never sat together to think about banding together to fight injustice. It was the breakthrough that was needed to spark a conversation about what it means to be a lawyer and a Christian.

When Van arrived back in the states, he approached several other lawyers in the Watermark community, including Rick Howard, a local criminal defense lawyer, and Jeff Ward, Watermark’s director of external focus. He spoke with them about his experience and encour­aged them to start thinking about going to Africa to build on the progress that was made.

“We needed to get another group of lawyers over there and see if we could build something that will out-sustain us,” he said. “We want Africans to run Africa.”

In the fall of 2007, a second group of lawyers traveled to Goma to shepherd the men and women struggling with their faith in a broken justice system. Jeff and Rick were stirred by Van’s experience and went with this team. Jeff practiced law in Dallas for about 14 years before joining the Watermark staff. He was just as passionate about encouraging young African lawyers to be committed to God’s calling for justice.

“We talked through some of the things that they struggle with on a daily basis, like bribery,” he said. “They struggle with what it means to be a Christian and a lawyer when your clients expect you to bribe the judges and the judges expect to be bribed. If you’re not part of that practice, you’re practicing law behind the eight ball.”

In response to the lawyers’ questions, Jeff said he and Rick told them what they knew was truth.

“We were diving into what God’s Word has to say about justice issues and how we want to be passionate about what God is passionate about,” he said. “We know from Micah 6:8 that there’s a short list of what God wants us to be passionate about, and at the top of that list is to promote justice. That’s something we can do as Christian lawyers, whether we’re in Africa or Dallas.”

After seeing for themselves the need for dialog and instruction, Van, Jeff, and Rick began planning follow up trips to Goma and neighboring places. The group has returned twice since the initial trips to continue their work with judges and lawyers in the trenches of a war on the people of Congo and Rwanda.

“The people of Goma inherited a lot of turmoil from the Rwandan genocide,” Jeff said. “They got the refugees and the rebels who perpetrated that genocide, but they don’t have the leadership to resolve the conflict.”

The group assisted with leadership development and conflict resolution training in an effort to equip African lawyers and judges to maintain and uphold justice in their courtrooms and in their country.

While important work is being done in Goma with outside help, Van and Jeff agree that it is Africans who should be leading Africa.

“Part of what I want to be remembered for is building into men and women who, over there, can be leaders,” Van said. “The reality is that Dallas lawyers – lawyers with Watermark Justice – are too far away to affect daily change in Africa. But we can build into people’s lives and tell them that their lives matter and that we love them and that we’re going to equip them. And then we have to leave it up to God to do whatever God is going to do through these passioned, trained, and committed African lawyers and future leaders.”

Jeff said he sees in these men and women a group who will do what is necessary to right the wrongs in their country.

“It really is a group of highly passionate, motivated, strong-believing guys and gals over there with a heart to transform their country for Christ,” he said. “And that’s why we keep going back.”

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