Laurence Konmla Bropleh

Laurence Bropleh (born April 13, 1967) is a Liberian Politician, Diplomat, United Methodist clergyman, Lawyer, former Cabinet-Level government official, and business executive. Bropleh was Minister of information, Cultural Affairs and Tourism of the Republic of Liberia in the administration of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.[1] He is the owner of a farm in Grand Bassa County and Law Practice on United Nations Drive in Monrovia. Bropleh received primary education in Liberia and advanced degrees including a PhD in the United States.

Rev. Dr.

Laurence Konmla Bropleh

Esq.
Born (1967-04-13) 13 April 1967
NationalityLiberian
CitizenshipRepublic of Liberia
Alma materMonrovia College
Lott Carey Baptist Mission School
Morgan State University
Wesley Theological Seminary
Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law
OccupationAttorney
Educator
Media Personality
Politician
Presidential Advisor
Years active1990–Present
Known forHumanitarian work, preaching, politics and teaching
Political partyIndependent (2018–)
Spouse(s)Doris M. Minikon (divorced)
Children3
Parents
  • Rev. Judge Paul Mombo Bropleh (father)
  • Joanna Elizabeth Bropleh (née Davis) (mother)
RelativesAlfred Francis Russel
Beverly Page Yates
Amos Herring
FamilyAbner Bropleh (son)
Lauris Bropleh (daughter
Joseph D. Summerville (Great-great-grandfather)
Josiah Hilton Davis (Grandfather)
Sarah Luvenia Summerville (Grandmother)
Charles Walker Brumskine (Maternal Cousin)

Early life

Born in Buchanan to Paul Bropleh a Kru-Fante judge, United Methodist clergyman, and educator and Joanna Elizabeth Bropleh (née: Davis) an Americo-Liberian educator, humanitarian and activist. His middle name, Konmla comes from the Klao language, meaning "Blessed" or "Lucky."[2] Bropleh's mother ascends from two strong United Methodists families, the Summerville and Davis families, which had a lasting impact on his faith. Bropleh was raised the settlement of Upper Buchanan, Grand Bassa County. He and his six siblings were raised in close proximity to their maternal relatives, including grandparents, great-grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and other relatives. As Bropleh was growing up he experienced an accident that left him blind in one eye. His mother encouraged him to not let his disability to hinder him, he frequently went to Monrovia for formal swimming lessons at the Ducor Hotel where he met his former wife. He later attended Lott Carey Mission School in Brewerville, Montserrado County, Liberia and was educated at the College of West Africa in Monrovia before moving to the City of Baltimore in the United States, where he studied at Morgan State University and Wesley Theological Seminary, respectively.

Career

In the mid-eighties while studying journalism and law in the United States, Bropleh's mother died in Liberia and his father suffered a stroke leaving him seemingly alone in Baltimore.[3] In 1991 he became a student-pastor of Mt. Zion United Methodist Church a rural Methodist congregation in Dickerson, Maryland. In 1993 under Bropleh's commission, Mt. Zion merged with Warren United Methodist Church, another local church. Rev. Bropleh served as Pastor of Mt. Zion-Warren for seven years.[4] In 1998 he was appointed Regional Executive Secretary for Sub-Saharan Africa by the United Methodist Church’s general board of Global Ministries managing at the time, forty-eight countries. While pastor of Mt. Zion Warren Bropleh was an advocate for the youth, elderly, and low-class, he and his then-wife, Doris Minikon, founded a youth camp at Owens Park in Bealsville.

While at the UMC’s Global Ministries Bropleh is accredited with Ministries of Hope Programme along with other faith-based related initiatives that benefit people all over the African Continent, especially in conflict resolution and peace building.[5]

In 2003, Dr. Bropleh was named as the World Council of Churches (WCC) Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations,[6] he is the first Liberian and African to be appointed to that position.[7]

In 2006, Bropleh returned to Liberia and was appointed as Minister of information, Cultural Affairs and Tourism of the Republic of Liberia in the administration of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.[8] In 2009, Bropleh resigned as Minister per charges of corruption. Dr. Bropleh was later exonerated of charges of corruption after an investigation and trial.[9][10]

Bropleh created a radio show entitled "Changing Minds Changing Attitudes: The Liberian Renaissance" on the Liberia Broadcasting System’s ELBC Radio Station which he regularly hosts every Tuesday at 8PM. As of 2013 he does the same show in his hometown of Buchanan on Saturday mornings.[11]

Dr. Bropleh ran for Grand Bassa County’s District #3 (Buchanan District) in the 2011 Liberian general election and the 2017 Liberian general election, respectively. He lost both races but continues to be a prominent citizen, humanitarian, and public figure in Buchanan and the country at-large.[12]

On February 14, 2019 Rev. Dr. Laurence K. Bropleh was appointed as Special Envoy and Advisor to President George Weah.[13]

Personal life

Bropleh currently practices law at Bropleh and Associates Law Firm in Monrovia and Buchanan, Liberia a law firm he founded after working and leaving Brumskine & Associates Law Firm.[14] Bropleh was married to Doris M. Minikon, the daughter of Liberian career diplomat, statesman, and former Deputy Minister of Information, Christopher Minikon and his wife Bernadette M. S. Minikon. Together, Bropleh and Minikon had three children: Ulrich, Abner, and Lauris.[15] The marriage was dissolved in the early 2000s.

Ancestry

Due to his Americo-Liberian ancestry, Bropleh has a varying degree of European, Native American, East Indian and West Indian ancestry.[16] Both Bropleh's parents have ethnically diverse backgrounds. His mother is a descendant of mixed race West Indians from Barbados and Bahamas and African-Americans from Virginia, Georgia, Mississippi and other regions in the Americas who were described as Octoroon, Mulatto, and Mixed Race. His father comes from Kru and Fante people who are mixed-race with varying degrees of Dutch, Portuguese and French ancestry.

References

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