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When Women Lead, Peace Follows: UN Brings Stories of Women Leading Peace to Photoville Festival

Lawyer and civil society leader Mona Mohamed Omaer Hamad works with Sorkenat Organisation in Sudan to raise awareness of women’s rights and peacebuilding. Through education and legal advocacy, she empowers women to drive democratic change and challenge gender-based violence. Photo credit: Mona Elfateh

A Cambodian woman who grew up amid landmines now clears them as a UN peacekeeper in Lebanon. A Sudanese civil society leader rallies displaced women to reclaim their voices in peacebuilding. Young activists from the divided communities of Cyprus foster dialogue and understanding in a deeply complex and long-standing conflict. These are just a few of the extraordinary stories captured in Through Her Lens: Women Rising for Peace, a striking photo exhibition that premiered on 7 June 2025 at Brooklyn Bridge Park as part of the Photoville Festival.

Undeterred by the rain, visitors gather at Brooklyn Bridge Park for the opening of Through Her Lens: Women Rising for Peace at the 2025 Photoville Festival. Photo Credit: UN DPPA/Kyung Ae (Susie) Lim

A joint initiative of the UN Department of Peace Operations (DPO), UN Women, the Elsie Initiative Fund, and the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (DPPA), in partnership with Photoville, the exhibit highlights the stories of women as leaders, negotiators, and protectors in conflict-affected societies — told through the lenses of women photographers from those very communities.

“Too often, women in conflict are portrayed only as victims,” said Natasha Lamoreux of UN Women. “But these photographs tell a different story. They show women as peacekeepers, negotiators, human rights defenders — leaders actively shaping peace.”

One of only eight women deminers with the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, Warrant Officer Ham Sievhong from Cambodia, a country with a legacy of landmine contamination, helps communities safely return to their homes and rebuild their lives. Photo Credit: Rita Kalaban

From Sudan to Cyprus, Haiti to Lebanon, the UN collaborated with local women photographers who not only document the lives of women but also share in their struggles, striving to build peace in their communities, which creates an intimate and powerful perspective.

Behind the scenes in Cyprus: Photographer Antonia Maria Nicolaides captures Ayshe Biyikoglu (left) and Eleni Anastasiou (right) — co-founders of Cypology, a grassroots initiative and research platform working across the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot communities. Photo Credit: Peter Šulgan

“This exhibit is the culmination of months of partnership between the four organizing entities as well as between headquarters and field-based colleagues,” said Shatha Hussein from the UN Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs. “We worked on very difficult contexts and turbulent situations that are changing by the day. So working with women on the ground to amplify their efforts through this initiative was not easy in any of the contexts featured, but their commitment, despite the odds, made this possible.”

Preparing this exhibit has been a profound challenge — one that mirrors the obstacles women face daily in conflict zones. Intense fighting spiked early this year in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan as the photoshoots were being planned.

Sophie Boudre (left) and Natasha Lamoreux (right) take the stage at Photoville 2025 in Brooklyn Bridge Park to share the stories behind Through Her Lens: Women Rising for Peace, honoring the women featured in the exhibit, their allies, and the photographers who made it possible. Photo credit: UN Women/Ryan Brown

“These images are more than art — they are a collective story of resilience, acts of resistance, and transformation,” said Sophie Boudre of the UN Department of Peace Operations. “They declare that women’s rights must be protected, their leadership recognized, and their voices heard wherever peace is made.”

Rooted in the Women, Peace and Security agenda launched by UN Security Council Resolution 1325, the exhibit underscores both the critical roles women play in peacebuilding and the persistent challenges they face — including a rising global backlash against gender equality.

Through Her Lens: Women Rising for Peace, a UN photo exhibition spotlighting women and their allies shaping peace as local peacebuilders, UN peacekeepers and community leaders. On view at Photoville Festival in Brooklyn Bridge Park from 7–22 June 2025.

The Through Her Lens exhibit is on view through 22 June 2025 at Pier 1 of the Brooklyn Bridge Park. It will also be shown at UN Headquarters in time for a Security Council open debate on Women, Peace and Security at the end of October. Importantly, the exhibit will travel to the regions featured in the photographs — bringing these powerful stories full circle.

To view the exhibit online, visit https://www.un.org/en/exhibits/exhibit/through-her-lens