 |
PEACEMAKER: In death, as in life,
Biehl inspires reconciliation.
|
In the mind’s
eye,
Amy Biehl is still 26. She is still exuberant, irrepressible,
oozing energy. And 10 years after
her death, she is still a powerful influence for change.
Biehl, ’89,
was beaten and stabbed to death near Cape Town, South
Africa, on August 25, 1993, by a gang of black
youths whose misdirected rage fell upon the Fulbright
scholar studying the role of women in South Africa’s
transition to a democratic government. “Amy was the
bravest soul I’ve ever known,” recalled Stephen
Stedman, ’79,
MA ’85, PhD ’88, in STANFORD (“Hell on
Wheels,” March
1994). Her death inspired books, an upcoming movie (former
Stanford student Reese Witherspoon recently signed on
to play Biehl) and a nonprofit foundation that carries
on her advocacy
work.
The Amy Biehl Foundation Trust works closely with
Cape
Town communities to provide after-school programs,
job-skills training and HIV/AIDS education and prevention. “It’s
not about Americans going in and saying ‘This is
what needs to be done.’ It’s listening to the
community and their needs,” says Linda Biehl, Amy’s
mother, who established the foundation with her husband,
Peter,
who died in March.
Two of Amy’s murderers, who received
amnesty, now work for the foundation. Linda Biehl says
she still receives numerous
letters from people touched by the power of redemption.
Many of them are from children. “Amy’s story
has been a catalyst to people who were barely born
[when she died],” she
notes. |