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Behind The Shield

Ishmael Beah (Surviving Life as a Child Soldier, Sierra Leone and Hip Hop) - Episode 88

Behind The Shield

James Geering

Mental Health, Fitness, Health & Fitness

4.9695 Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2026

⏱️ 123 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ishmael Beah grew up in the African Country of Sierra Leonne. At the age of 10, civil war broke out and his world change forever. By thirteen, his family had all been murdered and he was forced into war as a boy soldier. Three years later, he was rescued by members of UNICEF and ultimately brought to the US. We talk about his journey through this nightmare, how he rehabilitated, gratitude, forgiveness and much more. Do not miss this episode!!

Ishmael Beah, best-selling author and human rights spokesperson, was appointed UNICEF’s first Advocate for Children Affected by War on 20 November 2007. In accepting the position Mr. Beah said, “… for me it’s just a way to give me more strength to continue doing what I’ve already embarked on, what I’ve dedicated my life to doing – which is to make sure that what happened to me doesn’t continue to happen to other children around the world.” He pledged to give a voice and hope to children whose lives have been scarred by violence.

In 1991, the outbreak of a brutal civil war in Sierra Leone upended the lives of millions. Ishmael Beah’s parents and two brothers were killed and he was forcibly recruited into the war at age 13. After two years, with UNICEF help, he was removed from the army and placed in a rehabilitation home in Freetown.

At the 1996 United Nations presentation of the Machel Report on the Impact of Armed Conflict on Children, Mr. Beah spoke about the devastating effects of war on children in his country. In May 2000, at the UN Special Session on Children he served on a panel entitled ‘Reclaiming Our Children: The UN Responds to the Plight of the Child Soldier’. The panel included then Secretary General Kofi Annan and UN agency heads.

Mr. Beah continues his advocacy to help change the course for the thousands of children still trapped in wars. He is a member of the Human Rights Watch Children’s Rights Division Advisory Committee and has testified before the United States Congress. In 2008, he co-founded the Network of Young People Affected by War (NYPAW) with a mission to raise awareness of the plight of children in conflict zones, advocate for an end to hostilities and provide role models for children who are currently struggling to recover from war.

Activity highlights

Ishmael Beah’s book, A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier was published in the United States in 2007. It has since been published in Canada, Europe, Latin America and Asia and appears in over 35 languages. The book was also available in Starbucks shops, and for each book sold, US$ 2.00 went to the US Fund for UNICEF. A Long Way Gone has been assigned to freshman classes of several universities in the US.

Mr. Beah has received numerous humanitarian and writing awards. He has spoken at many literary festivals including the Hay on Wye Literary Festival in Wales, United Kingdom. He appears in Bling: A Planet Rock, a 2007 documentary that draws attention to the diamond conflict.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome guys to the Behind the Show podcast. My name is James Gearing and this is episode 88 and I am so

0:05.7

excited to bring you my next guest. Imagine if you will that you are a young boy. You grow up for

0:12.4

your first 10 years or so, innocent playing, dancing, listening to music and then one day a civil

0:19.4

war erupts in your country.

0:21.7

Your family are killed and you are captured by one of the guerrilla groups and forced to be a

0:27.3

boy soldier. The alternative is death. You're fed drugs, you're deconditioned by having to

0:34.1

kill other people. And that's all you know for a few years. And then one day you are

0:40.4

rescued by someone from the West and then have to undo all that trauma that you've been through.

0:47.6

Well, that is Ishmael's story in a nutshell. And when I read his book, I was blown away. It recalibrated everything in my life. It changed

0:57.8

the way I raised my son and it certainly changed the way when I woke up whether I thought I was

1:02.7

having a good day or not. If there's a roof over my head, if there's food in my stomach and my

1:06.9

families, if no one's trying to kill us that day, then we're doing pretty bloody well.

1:11.3

So I wanted to bring Ishmael's story to you guys because every single human needs to hear this story

1:17.6

to learn what true, true forgiveness is, what true kindness and compassion are.

1:24.4

And then obviously what he's doing with this journey he's been through to avoid that

1:28.6

happening or try and stop that happening for the young men and women that are out there around the

1:33.1

planet that are still being forced into war by these horrible people. So before I bring you

1:39.1

Ishmael, as I always say, please go to iTunes, rate the show, and please share the hell out of this.

1:45.8

The links are going to be all over social media, just click it and share it, put it on your feed,

1:50.4

and get every single person you can listening to this story and obviously then the other

1:55.4

incredible people that we have on the show.

1:57.7

But to me, if you listen to this incredible journey that he went through and are not

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