
Rotary International has awarded $158,000 to the Seeds of Hope (SOH) International Peace Leadership Academy, a unique program that trains young adults in conflict resolution, peace building and civic leadership. The initiative was created through a partnership of the Rotary Club of San Antonio, Belfast and LondonDerry (Northern Ireland), Dublin and Clonmel (Ireland), and the Hague (Netherlands).
Jack McGuire, a San Antonio Rotarian and driving force behind the program, put it simply: âThis program exactly answers Rotaryâs goals to promote peace through action. What makes this special is the way clubs from across Ireland, the UK, the Netherlands, and Texas are coming togetherânot just to talk about peace, but to make it real. This will be a model for reconciliation efforts around the world.â
Corrymeela: A Special Place With A Special Mission
The SOH academy is hosted on the famous Corrymeela Community Campus; an organization founded to promote peace and reconciliation in 1965 in Northern Ireland. It is in a stunningly beautiful location. But it was born during an ugly era; The Troubles (1960s-1990s), a decades-long, violent conflict between Protestant unionists and Catholic nationalists. As violence grew, Corrymeela became a refuge for displaced families and a safe place where divided community leaders could meet to grow peace and reconciliation.
Students who attend Corrymeelaâs SOH will not only learn of Rotaryâs philosophy of Positive Peace, they develop practical skills in public communication, organizational management, and leadership to effectively serve their communities. The academy emphasizes peace application in which students are to apply what they learn to difficult, real-world situations.
Peacebuilding: Itâs Not Easy
âPeacebuilding is hard work. Very.â Said Ken Nixon of the Rotary Club of Belfast, the projectâs host club. âPeace requires action. And courage. So, we teach young leaders how to have the hard conversations, how to build trust where itâs been broken, and how to stand up and take the lead when no one agrees on the way forward.â
âHosting this program here, in Northern Ireland, is deeply personal for many of us,â said Nixon. âWeâve learned some hard lessons in Northern Ireland. Our SOH academy makes sure those lessons are shared at home and abroad.â
The Seeds of Hope international Leadership Academy is backed by over 40 Rotary Clubs across 12 countries. It reflects Rotaryâs growing focus on Positive Peaceâwhich is not just the absence of violence, but the presence of justice, reconciliation, opportunity, and inclusion.
âNorthern Ireland is a living laboratory for peace makers. But this isnât just Northern Irelandâs story,â said McGuire. âThis a global storyâand Rotary is helping write the next chapter.â

