NEWS

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 13:25

 

December 2024

Honoring Peace: Detroit Branch Donates Award-Winning Books to Inspire Young Readers
by Laura Dewey

March on Washington for JobsThe Detroit Branch continued its annual donation of Jane Addams Peace Association award–winning books to the Children’s Department of the Detroit Main Library.  Four titles, including A Song for the Unsung celebrating the life of Bayard Rustin, by Carole Beston Weatherford and Rob Sanders, will be displayed and available for check-out, on January 15, 2025, in celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King’s birthday.  Rustin was the organizer of the historic 1963 March on Washington, D.C., which was led by Dr. King.  

Other titles are The Lost Year, The Artivist, and The Flag.  Peace education books are given in honor of Helga Herz (1912–2010), an activist with the Detroit Branch of WILPF, a volunteer at the Wayne State University Center for Peace and Conflict Studies, and a librarian at the Detroit Library for 30 years. She also supported the American Friends Service Committee and was an ardent anti-nuclear activist.  Her mother, Alice Herz, immolated herself in 1965 to protest the war in Vietnam.

The Detroit Branch’s donations of the award-winning books began under Helga’s direction, and the Detroit Library’s main branch is now home to dozens of these children’s books, dating to 1953, the first year of the Jane Addams Peace Association book awards.  

Photo: In front of 170 W 130 St., March on Washington, left to right Bayard Rustin, Deputy Director, Cleveland Robinson, Chairman of Administrative Committee/World Telegram & Sun photo by O. Fernandez.

 


Building Community and Standing for Justice: Humboldt Branch in Action
by Sue Hilton and the Humboldt Branch
Humboldt County, CA

The Humboldt Branch has been actively engaging with the readings provided by Program Committee Chair George Friday during the June training, and we’re planning to continue our discussions. We’ve also been busy selling tickets for our annual quilt raffle, which supports the Edilith Eckert/Jean McCovey Scholarship. This has given us a great opportunity to connect with the community. The quilt raffle took place on December 21. Looking ahead, we’re beginning to plan our annual International Women’s Day event, which will be held on March 8.

PosterRecently, much of our focus has been on supporting Centro del Pueblo, a local immigrant rights group we’ve been allied with for several years. We’re working together to prepare for whatever actions Trump and his allies may attempt. This includes speaking to City Councils across the county and the County Board of Supervisors to ensure that local resources are not used to support deportations, as the county passed a sanctuary law in 2018. We are also addressing the pressing issues of bullying and hate crimes within our community.

The poster at left highlights an event held last week, sponsored by Centro del Pueblo and partially funded by our branch’s Edilith Eckert/Jean McCovey Scholarship. We were honored to hear “the inspiring stories of Indigenous migrant women working in Humboldt’s tourism industry, including hotels and restaurants, while reclaiming and celebrating their cultural heritage.”
 


WILPF Peace Pentagon Virginia Branch: Weekly Worldwide Wakeup

by Rev. Laura M. George, J.D., Executive Director
Date: January 1, 2025 @ 11:00 am EST
Webpage: www.FoundingMothers.world/weekly-wakeup
Launch Rally Registration Link: TBD

The WILPF Peace Pentagon Virginia Branch is focused on the Founding Mothers Movement (FMM) – a global coalition to attain “Planetary Partnership and Peace.” FMM stewards the reimagined global Women’s Congress, which meets on the first Saturday of every month at 11:00 am EST.

At the third Congress in September, the Women’s Congress passed the Founding Mothers Proclamation, which contains two solutions to the polycrisis:
(i) Universal rights for all women, including reproductive freedom
(ii) End to war.

The Proclamation also contains a solemn promise:
If our wisdom is ignored, the Founding Mothers will commence campaigns on New Year’s Day 2025 – a direct-action response to Project 2025. Thereafter, our novel, nonviolent demonstrations will escalate to include noncooperation, targeted girlcotts, and civil disobedience.

John Lewis (1940-2020) famously told us to make “Good Trouble.” During the Civil Rights Movement, he was arrested 45 times and later served 33 years in the U.S. Congress. To herald the arrival of the Founding Mothers, we’re going to make “Good Noise” on Wednesday, January 1, 2025. And we will repeat this tactic EVERY Wednesday at HIGH NOON in EVERY time zone.

The purpose of the Weekly Worldwide Wakeup is to declare our arrival and provide weekly reminders that the Founding Mothers mean business. The duration of the “Weekly Wednesday” event may be as short as 5 minutes if done at home or work, though we encourage longer and larger group events at visible public venues.

Every week, we will make a variety of loud noises to arouse curiosity and gain public support for our mission. Tactical noise-making may include:

  • Playing musical instruments, drums, rain sticks, gongs, and singing bowls
  • Blowing whistles, including bird whistles that our children will love!
  • Banging pots and other materials easily found in our homes
  • Singing, chanting, and street dancing to music, including flash mob performances
  • Shouting our tagline: Planetary Partnership and Peace
  • Shouting our motto: Truth * Love * Light
  • Shouting our goal: We’re here to build the MOTHER of all Movements!

To kick off the Weekly Worldwide Wakeup campaign, FMM will hold a virtual Launch Rally on January 1, 2025, at 11:00 am EST. The Rally will feature notable speakers and performers. Then, after the Rally on the East Coast, we will go outside and make some “Good Noise!”

To date, three WILPF branches have joined FMM: the Peace Pentagon Branch in Virginia, the virtual Jane Addams Branch, and the WILPF International branch in Ghana, Africa. We invite more WILPF branches to join FMM and contribute to this Meta-Unity coalition. Help build the MOTHER of all movements, with the power to shift the paradigm!

 


Join Us in January and February for the Jane Addams Branch Events
by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

The monthly third-Wednesday open gatherings, to which all WILPF members are welcomed, are taking a break! The Jane Addams events will resume on Wednesday, January 15, with very timely speakers from Korea Peace Now. Hear how women are leading the continuing quest for peace in Korea.

In February we’ll hear from one of the leaders from the new Chicago Branch. Carron Little is an artist and the director of the Chicago Women's History Center. She has an intriguing art project that lifts up the issue of unpaid labor in this country, especially among caregivers who are mostly women. How much labor do you provide each year that is unpaid?  This could be anything from helping at church, caregiving for grandkids, gardening for friends, caring for an elder (including your spouse!) – even cleaning the house!  

Carron seeks to raise community awareness about the amount of unpaid labor our economy depends on – especially women’s unpaid labor. To focus on the unpaid labor of the attendees at her art shows, Carron writes a printed “check” – covered in her own art – for each one.

Save January 15 and February 20 and every third Wednesday for the Jane Addams Branch events! 
5 pm PT / 6 pm MT / 7 pm CT / 8 pm ET.
Join the gathering for the featured speaker(s), followed by WILPF announcements and open discussion.

 


Support Peace within WILPF – Volunteers Wanted
by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

Do you want to help WILPF practice the peace-seeking we advocate? WILPF is looking for two kinds of volunteers for our new Peace Seekers Procedure for dispute resolution.

Even if you have little or no special background, you can volunteer to be a supporter. We’re looking for folks to help get the program off the ground by assisting with the creation of the basic administration and dispute forms needed to proceed. We’re flexible: You can help with small, discrete tasks!

Or perhaps you have special peace-building skills? Are you trained, experienced, and/or learned in mediation, arbitration, nonviolently addressing conflict, or other aspects of dispute resolution?

If you’re interested in either kind of assisting, please contact me, Darien De Lu, at President@wilpfus.org. Both kinds of volunteers are highly appreciated – and I particularly want to hear from potential Peace Seekers applicants by January 6, if possible!

 


WILPF Collaboration Initiative Can Help Propel Your Branch’s Area of Interest
by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

Branch members! Would you like to focus national WILPF attention on some issue that is important to your branch? Let WILPF US use our communications capacity to spread the word about it through a special Office of the President and Branch Collaboration Initiative.

As WILPF President, I can help your branch connect with the WILPF publicity.  Get the word out about the political and civic actions you recommend to WILPFers, providing your branch’s description and analysis of an issue. 

The first example of this Collaboration Initiative was the essay, “Fund Schools First: Calling for a Commitment to the Future” – available on our website here.  While it is longer than what other branches are likely to offer, it shows the latitude of this initiative.  And that first example shows the WILPF tradition of identifying a number of related issues and tracing the connections among them, while focusing on a particular issue.

Please feel free to contact me to find out more about this branch collaboration project – by email (President@wilpfus.org) or phone (after 9:30 am PT:  916/739-0860).

 


Expanding Your Perspective: You can apply to be our next WILPF International Advisory Board Member Alternate
by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

How does it affect our WILPF US Section, that we are part of the international organization of WILPF?  In what ways does our international-level work influence our perspectives on issues to a wider realm?  You can discover the answers to these and learn about WILPF International firsthand if you are appointed to the position of International Advisory Board Member Alternate 

The current opening is for a relatively short-term Alternate position – through the next International Congress.  This position is a good one for someone wanting to try out becoming more involved with national and international leadership. As the Alternate, you would be invited to attend, virtually, the WILPF International Advisory Board meetings, twice a year.  Also, optionally, you’d be part of the WILPF US Board meetings. 

The virtual Advisory Board meetings address topics of general concern to WILPF International sections. The terms of the Advisory Board Member and Alternate continue until one to three months after the next WILPF International Congress. The incumbents may re-apply for the next term; the full terms are about three years. 

Applicants must have been a WILPF US members for 24 out of the last 30 months and be current members. To get more information, contact the Nominating Committee (including Chair, Ellen Schwartz) at Nominatingcommittee@wilpfus.org. The deadline for applications is not yet determined.

 


Mark Your Calendar
WILPF January Website Launch

Jan. 16 Website Launch Event  

You are invited to the Re-Initiation of & Introduction to the Website
WILPF US Event on: Jan 16, 2025 05:00 PM PT / 8PM ET

Register in advance for this meeting

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 12:57
Cartoon

CARTOON: COLD WAR, 1948. 'Peace Today.' Rube Goldberg's 1948 Pulitzer Prize winning cartoon comment on the precarious position of world peace. It has not gotten any better! Used with editorial license from The Granger Collection

December 2024

by Cherrill Spencer
Co-chair of DISARM/End Wars Committee

Your DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee is busy planning actions for you to take in late December and January, so please be on the lookout for eALERTS to all members and emails to the branches detailing actions to take and events to attend. “I’m not going to start wars, I’m going to stop wars,” declared Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump in his victory speech on November 6th. An ad hoc committee of DISARM has written a letter to the President-elect and his senior foreign affairs staff to provide advice on how to reach a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine-Russia war and how to start building détente in Europe so it can be a peaceful region. We encourage you to share this letter with your Congressional representatives and with your own networks. It will appear soon at the top of this webpage: https://wilpfus.org/story/statements-and-resolutions.

Suggestions for articles to read/videos to watch:
There is a recording of the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony held on December 10th, with the prize being awarded to the Nihon Hidankyo organization, which has advocated for the survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs for about 70 years.

It is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqvPpz1huIw.

It includes commentary in English that explains who is who and what is happening. Here is the main message from the Nihon Hidankyo lecture:

“It is the heartfelt desire of the Hibakusha that, rather than depending on the theory of nuclear deterrence, which assumes the possession and use of nuclear weapons, we must not allow the possession of a single nuclear weapon. [...] I therefore plead for everyone around the world to discuss together what we must do to eliminate nuclear weapons, and demand action from governments to achieve this goal.”

This is a good moment to remind you that August 6th and 9th, 2025, will mark the 80th anniversaries of these horrific bombings, and it is not too early to start planning your actions to bring attention to your local communities about the continuing menace of nuclear weapons.

The New York Times (NYT) interactive opinion pages continue to publish informative articles on various aspects of nuclear weapons. These pieces are not behind the NYT paywall. Here is the latest piece: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/12/05/opinion/nuclear-weapons-space.html.

WILPF also seeks disarmament from conventional weapons of war, and here is a thorough analysis of the relationship between conventional weapons based on new technologies and existing nuclear weapons: https://www.sipri.org/publications/2024/eu-non-proliferation-and-disarmament-papers/potentially-revolutionary-impact-emerging-and-disruptive-technologies-and-strategic-conventional.

We recommend these upcoming events in January 2025; more details will be sent by email. The threat of nuclear war is increasing rather than abating. President Biden’s recent sending of long-range missiles (ATACMS) to Ukraine has sharply increased the risk. The tragic Israel/Gaza conflict continues to expand. Cold warriors in high places are beating the drums of war toward Russia and China. Enormous public expenditures are being spent on upgrading all three legs of the U.S.’s nuclear weapons triad. Responding to these dangers, the annual “Reducing the Threat of Nuclear War” Conference will be held as a virtual gathering on Saturday afternoon, January 25, 2025. This long-standing MIT-based conference is one of the nation’s most significant gatherings of nuclear disarmament advocates. The 2025 theme will be “Reducing Congressional Spending on Nuclear Weapons.” We will tell you more and will ask you to invite your Congressional representatives to attend, by email, when the registration details are available.

Every year, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists' Science and Security Board meets to set the hands of the Doomsday Clock. In January 2024, they kept the clock at 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it has ever been to a global catastrophe, based on the current threats of nuclear weapons and the climate crisis. It will be re-set on January 28th, 2025, and all the major media will run stories about it. The NGO ReThink Media wants us to take advantage of this worldwide media attention to get our local radio and TV stations and newspapers to run our Op-eds about why your hometown residents should be worried about nuclear weapons. They ran an excellent training workshop on how to write and get an Op-ed published around January 28th and how to plan a media event.

You can watch the recording here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f1D_p0E-qJs. A second training workshop described how to prepare to be interviewed by your local TV or radio station, which applies in general to any interview topic. Watch it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlTnnkAA6LQ.

Please Join Our Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee. We Welcome New Members. 

We meet by Zoom on the second and last Sundays of each month at
4:30 pm PT, 6:30 pm CT, 7:30 pm ET.
To find out the Zoom link and to request to join the DISARM listserv,
write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org.

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 12:46
Pope Francis

Photo in the public domain 

by Jan Corderman 

December 2024

Presented by Palestinian officials, the nativity features a baby Jesus lying on a keffiyeh, the traditional scarf used by Palestinians as a national symbol. Pope Francis called on believers to “remember the brothers and sisters, who, right there [in Bethlehem] and in other parts of the world, are suffering from the tragedy of war,” adding, “Enough war, enough violence!” and lamenting the existence of the commercial arms trade.  

BETHLEHEM, West Bank: For a second year running, there is no Christmas cheer in Bethlehem, with tourists shunning the Palestinian city and many residents seeking a way out as the Gaza war grinds on. Bethlehem's Manger Square, in front of the Church of the Nativity, is largely deserted, and souvenir shops are shuttered.
"During these difficult times that our Palestinian cities are going through, especially in the Gaza Strip, it is difficult to show any signs of joy and happiness," said Issa Thaljieh, an Orthodox priest who ministers at the Nativity Church.

  • 44,758+ Palestinians killed and at least 106,134 wounded in the Gaza Strip, 59% of whom are women, children, and elderly.
  • 808+ Palestinians have been killed in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem. This includes at least 146 children. At least 6,250 injured.
  • Israel revised its estimated October 7 death toll down from 1,400 to 1,189. At least 8,730 injured.

Amnesty International’s December 5 report, ‘You Feel Like You Are Subhuman’: Israel’s Genocide Against Palestinians in Gaza, documents how, during its military offensive launched in the wake of the deadly Hamas-led attacks in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, Israel has unleashed hell and destruction on Palestinians in Gaza brazenly, continuously, and with total impunity. The report alleges that Israel’s war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip constitutes the crime of genocide under international law, the first such determination by a major human rights organization in the 14-month-old conflict. Amnesty has called on the UN to enforce a ceasefire, impose targeted sanctions on Israeli and top Hamas officials, and for Western governments such as the US, UK, and Germany to stop providing security assistance and selling arms to Israel.

The US is now very alone in its support of Israel. On December 11, the United Nations General Assembly voted overwhelmingly for a resolution demanding an immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire in Gaza. The resolution was adopted with 158 votes in favor from the 193-member assembly, nine votes against, and 13 abstentions. Palestinians and their supporters went to the General Assembly after the US vetoed a Security Council resolution on November 20 demanding an immediate Gaza ceasefire. Algeria’s deputy UN ambassador, Nacim Gaouaoui, warned: “The price of silence and failure in the face of the Palestinian tragedy is a very heavy price, and it will be heavier tomorrow.”

The WILPF US Middle East Peace & Justice Committee sponsored a webinar on the International Day of Peace, a global event that aims to promote peace and understanding, on September 21. Perhaps you were able to join us. Together, we watched the documentary ‘The Night Won’t End: Biden’s War on Gaza.’ Through the 1-hour, 18-minute film, Fault Lines and Al Jazeera take an in-depth look at attacks on civilians by the Israeli military in Gaza and the United States’ role in the war.

Nada Farhat, a MEPJAC Leadership Team member, introduced Sharif Abdel Kouddous, the Al Jazeera correspondent for ‘The Night Won’t End.’ Sharif is an independent print and television journalist based in New York and Cairo. He is a recipient of the George Polk Award for his investigation into the killing of Palestinian journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, an Emmy Award for his coverage of the Trump administration’s Muslim travel ban, and an Izzy Award for his coverage of the 2011 Egyptian revolution.

Sharif and the documentary leave no room to question that U.S. weapons have killed civilians in Gaza in violation of both international humanitarian law and domestic law.

MEPJAC will be hosting more webinars with Sharif. Keep an eye out for future announcements.

The grief, sorrow, and pain are endless. And it is funded and enabled by the United States, which continues to arm the Israeli government. Congress must intervene. Use the link below to tell Congress to demand an immediate, permanent ceasefire and humanitarian access for Gaza. Urge them to end all military funding to Israel.

Deck the Halls (Stop the Bombs)
Stop the bombs, the news is dire! Fa la la la la, la la la la.
We demand a full ceasefire. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
No more money for these weapons. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
Tis the season, peace now beckons. Fa la la la la, la la la la.

We can’t bomb our way to peace. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
When will all this suff’ring cease? Fa la la la la, la la la la.
Weapon sales fill U.S. pockets. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
See the blazing bombs and rockets. Fa la la la la, la la la la.

U.S. blesses Israel’s tactics. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
That’s B.S., ye lads and lasses! Fa la la la la, la la la la.
Sing we now in holy anger. Fa la la la la, la la la la.
Sing for ev’ry friend and stranger. Fa la la la la, la la la la.

“Act Now” link from American Friends Service Committee:
https://afsc.org/action/call-cease-fire-and-humanitarian-access-gaza-now
MEPJAC Webinar 9.21.2024 Intro & Q&A:
https://youtu.be/jiJAEUdbUts
‘The Night Won’t End’: Biden’s War on Gaza, by Al Jazeera (1:18:36):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECFpW5zoFXA

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 12:36
Hurricane damage in Cuba

Ciclón árbol: Huge tree smashes bus shelter and blocks main road. Credit, Leni Villagomez Reeves

by Leni Villagomez Reeves
Co-chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Committee

December 2024

Cubans care for each other. Saving lives is the first priority for the government and helping each other is what the people do. Human solidarity persists even in these hard times, deliberately made as hard as possible by US economic siege warfare.

On Wednesday, November 6, Hurricane Rafael hit central Cuba, and I was there. This is a contemporary account written from Marianao, Havana, four days later, while our electricity was still out.

Slamming Wind and Water
“It’s hard to assess the damage from here because the electricity system as a whole went down; between the damage from the hurricane and its recently restored state after the collapse two weeks ago, this was not surprising. The wind and water came from the southeast with tremendous force, as if a whole battery of firehoses was blasting the walls and windows from that direction. It drove water right through the closed and fastened windows. I got quarts and quarts of water off the floor with a dirty rag and a bucket, but there was still more coming in all the time.

Hurricane damage, Cuba
Ciclón derrumbe: People clearing after partial collapse. Credit Leni Villagomez Reeves

It toppled a lot of trees—some broke, and some had less root-hold in the ground than the force of the wind. A tremendous number of branches were also torn off. A lot of power poles and wires were knocked down too.

Out in the Streets Clearing Up
The next morning was quiet, and everyone was out in the street. Clearing and sweeping the sidewalks was the most popular occupation, which is notable because, if our experience was typical (and why not?), everyone also had a lot of mopping up to do inside. By Thursday night, some areas got their power restored, and some more by Friday and Saturday. But this area of Marianao has a lot of trees and suffered a lot of damage. On Saturday, crews worked until midnight, and some tantalizing lights appeared along a different street just a block away, but it was a different circuit.

Prolonged Power Outage
On Sunday, our lights were still out. All the perishable food that didn’t get eaten had spoiled. We were worried about how much water remained in the rooftop tank, especially because it’s water delivery day (every other day), and the water cannot rise to the tank by itself; it needs to be booster-pumped up. We’ve been saving water in some of the usual gross ways but trying not to get too gross. But there were trucks and even a bulldozer scooping up the trees and garbage, even though it’s Sunday. We are waiting.

There Were No Deaths
We are waiting for electricity, and our phones are dead, and there’s no connection anyway, and the refrigerator has been at room temperature for a while and smells bad. Honestly, it’s no fun at all. But: no one died. This is Cuba, the civil defense capital of the world. Everyone at severe risk was evacuated—not “warned to evacuate” but given bus transport, a place to stay (usually in school dorms), and food. Yes, it’s very sad watching this on television before the event. People have only what they can carry and are facing the prospect of losing everything else.

Cuba after hurricane
Ciclón limpieza: A few days after Hurricane Rafael hit Havana, crews were already clearing debris and trees and replacing power poles and wires, even in Marianao, a working-class district of Havana that tourists rarely see. Credit Leni Villagomez Reeves

Recuperation and Solidarity
Immediately after the event, the recuperation started. Cuba is in serious condition economically. The tightening of the US blockade and the determined effort of the US government to prevent Cuba from having any sources of income or finance have been diabolically successful. We should be ashamed. But the crews are here, working hard, clearing debris, restoring posts and lines. And, most important, the people of Cuba are spontaneously clearing up, checking on each other, and collecting bundles of goods for those who have lost their possessions in this and the previous hurricane, Oscar, that hit Guantanamo and other eastern provinces two weeks ago.

All the evil that the governments of the US have been able to do, over 65 years, has not been able to break these people. Cooperation and human solidarity are deeply ingrained in the Cuban psyche now. Cubans, in this worst moment, feel that they are not isolated, and they are not victims. They are together fighting for a better future.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 12:03

Snow Queen by Tamara Lorincz

by Glo McMillan
WILPF Tucson and Re-Start Chicago WILPF Team, DISARM
edited by Cherrill Spencer
Chair of DISARM

December 2024

Thanks to all those who worked collaboratively on the Snow Queen “Tamara Lorincz-Inspired” painting suggestions and more actions beyond this one painting to give visibility PR assistance from our new CCS action group at WILPF US. We are fully integrating the arts into our social activism at the national level and anybody who wishes can join. JOIN CCS E-group e-list by emailing me at: Scifi200111@gmail.com

Inspired by this Canadian WILPFER’s moral courage when Gloria McMillan learned about Tamara’s Lorincz’s trip to St. Petersburg, Russia, for a peace and ecology conference, Gloria informed our CCS collaborative action team and started on a painting of The Snow Queen for this CCS project.  Our CCS is helping Tamara in tangible and intangible ways to gain some visibility in WILPF US. Tamara was able to attend some conferences and to speak at schools in both St. Petersburg and Moscow in late September to, most importantly, attend The Peace, Nature, Cooperation in The Baltic and Arctic Regions Conference in St. Petersburg from September 21-22, 2024. Read Tamara’s complete report for more details on where she went and what she accomplished. 
Photo: WILPF Canada’s Tamara Lorincz attends peace conference in St. Petersburg, Russia! Tamara Lorincz (l), Finland’s Lea Launokati and Ulla Klötzer (r)

As members of the new WILPF US CCS action group, we are happy to work with each other to support members initiatives. Jane Addams and the women who went to The Hague knew it was pretty hopeless to “leave it to the men” to get over arming themselves to the teeth on all sides in 1914.  What Tamara has done shows the same kind of courage that those 1200 women showed when they met at The Hague in March 1915.  Our sisters in the north are doing some inspiring actions, so we at CCS want to highlight them and hope you will share this news.

Look for more updates from CCS working group of WILPF US and—stay strong!

WILPF Canada Describes Tamara's Trip 

PDF of Tamara's full report

 

For more information, please contact: wilpf.canada@gmail.com

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 11:52
Jane Addams

The National Women's History Museum 

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Jane Addams Branch Convener

December 2024

The JA branch plans meetings on the 3rd Wednesday every month except December. Our next meeting, on January 15, 2025, will feature Korea Peace Now. As always, ALL WILPF US leaders and members are allowed to share news or questions on these calls that are now open to all WILPF US members.

First, I’d like to welcome the new members of the virtual Jane Addams (JA) Branch. Although, ideally, all WILPF members could travel a short distance to join, in-person, with other WILPF sisters, this often is not possible – so therefore the JA branch was formed. By joining the JA branch, members can get the news that comes from the “WILPF US branches listserv” and join the monthly JA meetings.

The JA branch plans meetings on the 3rd Wednesday every month except December. Our next meeting, on January 15, 2025, will feature Korea Peace Now. As always, ALL WILPF US leaders and members are allowed to share news or questions on these calls that are now open to all WILPF US members.

The February 19 JA meeting will feature Carron Little, an artist who serves as director of the Chicago Women's History Center.  She has a project regarding unpaid labor in this country.  Again, as at all JA meetings, members will have a chance to speak.

Guest speakers for the March – Nov. 2025 JA meetings are being worked out.

You can watch past JA meetings on YouTube at WILPFUStoday, in the “Branch Videos” playlist.

Laura George and Judith Hand have spoken twice at JA meetings (in March and October 2024) about the organization each recently started.  They would greatly appreciate WILPF member support:

  • The Founding Mothers Movement (FMM) Weekly Worldwide Wakeup campaign will start on Wednesday, January 1, 2025 at NOON in every time zone around the world. The virtual LAUNCH RALLY is set for 11:00 am EST on New Year’s Day. The goal is to “make good noise” EVERY WEDNESDAY at NOON until peace and gender equity are achieved. The noise-making (singing, blowing bird whistles, playing musical instruments, banging pots, etc.) can be as short as 5 minutes, though longer events are encouraged at visible public venues. Please join this weekly FMM campaign.
  • Project Enduring Peace (PEP) has created a 17-minute video to prove to all that peace is in fact possible. Check out the video and sign the PEP international peace treaty petition which is directed to key world leaders. 

 

We hope that ALL WILPF US members join the JA monthly meetings. eAlerts about each JA meeting go out the week and day before each meeting with this link to register. 

 

And, if for some reason, you don’t have access to a local branch, know that the Jane Addams branch is here for you.  

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 09:09

12/3/24 ANA Group Photo 

by Ellen Barfield and Ellen Thomas

December 2024

Two WILPF US members toured the Savannah River Site (SRS) on December 5, 2024, the final day of the annual Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA) fall meeting. While video was only permitted inside the building where they received their tour badges, Kevin Kamps of Beyond Nuclear shared important background information before the van arrived. You can view it here.  

For a glossy perspective, SRS offers its own greenwashing tour video. Get on the Bus - Savannah River Site.

We encourage you to attend next spring’s ANA DC Days and consider becoming a member of the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability! Learn more here.
 

Further Information
by Ellen Barfield 

Savannah River Site The Alliance for Nuclear Accountability (ANA) Fall Meeting, held in Atlanta from December 3-5, was a powerful gathering that brought together seasoned activists and new, young nuclear opponents. Founded in 1987 as the Military Production Network, ANA was created by neighbors of U.S. nuclear weapons plants who directly faced radiation and other health threats. These early activists, including myself, had to educate ourselves about nuclear policies and learn how to challenge the government’s negligence toward its own people and the world. My own early activism began at the Peace Farm, directly across the highway from the Pantex nuclear warhead assembly plant near Amarillo, Texas.

Today, ANA has grown broader in scope, with members covering a wider geographic area and addressing diverse nuclear issues. The network includes national anti-nuclear power, anti-weapons organizations, and anti-war allies like WILPF.

At this year’s meeting, we strategized for the future—discussing fundraising, resisting the return of nuclear war threats and new weapons designs, and confronting the dangerous fantasy that nuclear power can solve the climate crisis. We also continued pushing for proper handling of nuclear waste and contaminated sites, demanding they not be “cleaned up” and dumped onto impoverished, politically marginalized communities. ANA remains a critical hub for information on nuclear issues and is working to archive and preserve oral histories from long-time members about their sites and efforts.
 

The meeting’s host, Georgia Women’s Action for New Directions (Ga WAND), has long fought the nuclear dangers in the region surrounding the Savannah River Site, located near Augusta, GA, and Aiken, SC. SRS was originally built to produce tritium and plutonium for bombs. Now, its future includes plans to produce 50 new plutonium pits per year by 2032 for new nuclear bomb designs—another step in the reckless nuclear arms race. Nearby, the Vogtle nuclear power plant is the only facility in the country with new reactors under construction, and the Barnwell nuclear waste site looms just southeast of SRS. Residents in rural and small-town communities around these facilities face ongoing threats while also relying on the limited jobs they provide. Ga WAND works carefully to educate residents, sharing critical information while recognizing their few economic options.

The Tour

Georgia Women’s Action for New Directions Following two days of ANA business, about 15 of us boarded a bus for a guided tour of the Savannah River Site. We asked hard questions of the tour guide, who—drawing on his former broadcast news experience—delivered a skillful greenwashing narrative about SRS’s operations being “under budget, ahead of schedule, clean, and safe.” While remaining friendly, we challenged his carefully curated script.

Join us for DC Days!

One of ANA’s most impactful annual events is DC Days, a spring lobbying effort likely taking place in May 2025. Participants meet with members of Congress, federal agencies, the EPA, NNSA, and DOE to advocate for more responsible nuclear policies and the urgent phase-out of nuclear activities in the U.S. Tara Vassefi of the DMV (DC, Maryland, Virginia) WILPF Branch is working on forming a strong local delegation for DC Days. WILPF members from farther afield should also consider joining this critical event.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:54
Senator Fetterman's Office

In front of Senator Fetterman’s office. Credit Tina Shelton 
 
by Tina Shelton and Pam Albright

The Greater Philadelphia Branch sends a message of solidarity to our WILPF sisters! We were able to join in an Anniversary event, recognizing one year of advocating for a Ceasefire in Gaza outside of our junior Senator’s Philadelphia office. Although we have since realized that Sen. Fetterman’s stance is considerably more entrenched than we anticipated, we continue to be a part of the only weekly vigil against the war in Philadelphia. Many peace and Palestinian groups in our area have actions, but Fridays at Fetterman’s is the only one that has had a consistent time and place.

Sylvia Metzler, Tina Shelton, Louise Lisi, Joan Wider The Greater Philadelphia Branch sends a message of solidarity to our WILPF sisters! We were able to join in an Anniversary event, recognizing one year of advocating for a Ceasefire in Gaza outside of our junior Senator’s Philadelphia office. Although we have since realized that Sen. Fetterman’s stance is considerably more entrenched than we anticipated, we continue to be a part of the only weekly vigil against the war in Philadelphia.   Many peace and Palestinian groups in our area have actions, but Fridays at Fetterman’s is the only one that has had a consistent time and place, and our Branch is a sponsor. On December 6, a vigil was held with a poet, a singer, Quaker peace activist George Lakey, Medea Benjamin from Code Pink, a Fetterman puppet (complements of Spiral Q) and others who stood in the cold to mark the anniversary. We then walked to a nearby location where we shared bread and soup and warmed our resolve for the coming season of organizing. Photo: From left to right: Sylvia Metzler, Tina Shelton, Louise Lisi, Joan Wider 

Medea reminded us that despite our having an eye on the goal of a ceasefire, weapons embargo and a new vision for peace in Gaza and the West Bank, we cannot fail to recognize that for the first time ever, a bill was allowed on the floor of the Senate and Senators had a chance to vote on limiting arm sales to Israel. And despite the enormous pressure that they received from the many powerful sources, 19 Senators—forty percent of the Democratic contingent—voted in favor of limiting sales. The pressure to “stand with Israel” was enormous, and yet, 19 Senators responded to pressure from their constituents and organizations like ours. Medea B. joined us later for a discussion about student organizing and the repression that can follow. We hope to create space for students to join in the Project led by WILPF International to gather these stories for future reference. You can learn more about that project here.

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:44

Click here for a PDF of this statement.

To: President-Elect Donald John Trump and the New Federal Administration
From: The US national section of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
Subject: Building Detente in Europe
Date: December 10, 2024

The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, US national section (WILPF US) is a nonprofit membership organization committed to nonpartisanship. WILPF International is a non-governmental organization (NGO), assigned consultative status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), that engages in dialogue impartially with all governments. WILPF has national sections and groups in forty-eight countries, with an international Secretary General and Secretariat based in Geneva. The WILPF International website is https://www.wilpf.org/.The WILPF US website is: https://wilpfus.org/. We will celebrate our 110th anniversary in 2025.

Originally this statement started out as an emergency message on peace in Ukraine prompted by the tensions between superpowers threatening a nuclear war, as in 1962 and again in 1983. Without attempting to address the specifics of the diplomatic steps needed to resolve the immediate tragedy and crisis of the war in Ukraine, a topic we leave to the more knowledgeable in the political realities of today, we look ahead to the opportunities for detente that this peacemaking process may open.

From this perspective, we would like to address some concerns and issues related to averting or ending a new Cold War between the USA and the Russian Federation, and towards bringing about the vision of President Mikhail Gorbachev, President of the USSR, of "a common house of Europe."

1. The Importance of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) represents what President Gorbachev sought: a 21st-century approach to the yearnings of Europe for peace and security. In contrast, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is a relic of the Cold War, a vestigial and dangerous organization analogous to the appendix in the human body, presenting the peril of provoking rather than preventing war, as may well have happened in the Ukraine conflict. We see the demilitarized architecture for Europe of Presidents Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan, including some crucially important arms control agreements at the end of the old Cold War, as a safer and saner guide to a flourishing "common house of Europe." 

The OSCE has concerned itself with Ukraine both before and after the outbreak of the current conflict (February 24, 2022) and should play an integral role in peace negotiations.

We emphasize that the effectiveness of the OSCE depends on the full inclusion of the Russian Federation in its proceedings. The 110 million Russians living within the European portion of their country deserve this closer integration into the civil society of Europe, and achieving this goal will be one important aspect of building a new and equitable global economic and political order based on multipolar plurality and peace. We note that Russia has deeply yearned for this integration into European civil society since the time of Czar Peter the Great (reigned 1682-1725), an aspiration recently and fittingly reaffirmed at St. Petersburg by an international conference of women, as detailed in Section 2 below.

We emphasize that using the OSCE is a thriftier path to European security for the USA than NATO. As President Dwight David Eisenhower declared (April 16, 1953):

“Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.”

It is also a more natural path, since the OSCE evolves out of the civil society of Europe. It is a safer path for Europe, the USA, and the world at large. 

We write at a time of present and urgent danger, as signaled by this November 19, 2024, statement of nuclear weapons doctrine from the Russian Federation:  

"Furthermore, a nuclear response is considered possible in the event of a critical threat to Russia's sovereignty, including through conventional weapons, including an attack on Belarus or a massive attack by warplanes, cruise missiles, drones or other aircraft crossing the Russian border." 

We see resolving this immediate crisis and negotiating peace in Ukraine as only the first steps toward detente with the Russian Federation and further development and expansion of the structures of peace for a safer world which President-Elect Trump's predecessors Presidents Ronald W. Reagan and George H. W. Bush helped to establish. WILPF is ready to offer dialogue and suggestions throughout this process. 

2. The Importance of Women in Conflict Resolution (UNSC Resolution 1325) and the St. Petersburg Conference on Peace, Nature, and Cooperation in the Baltic and the Arctic Regions and its Declaration (October 23, 2024) 

We also affirm the central role of women in peacemaking under UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (UNSC Resolution 1325, October 31, 2000) and progeny. We see WILPF’s role of advising our government in the USA on war and peace issues as consistent with this UNSC resolution.

This role was highlighted by the St. Petersburg Conference on Peace, Nature, and Cooperation in the Baltic and Arctic Regions, which brought together an international group of women, including many from WILPF International, and their subsequent Declaration which is available here:  https://worldbeyondwar.org/declaration-from-the-international-conference-in-saint-petersburg-russia/ 

This Declaration urges: "Instead of the militarized concept of security, put emphasis on human and common security, prioritize peace, climate cooperation, environmental sustainability, equitable resource distribution as well as social, health and educational security." An important provision of the Declaration relates to the OSCE: "We call for an OSCE Summit in 2025 to mark its 50th anniversary –  and in the spirit of the Helsinki Summit in 1975 – to include Russia and a broad spectrum of civil society." 

We emphasize that peacemaking in Ukraine and detente in Europe could serve as a model and precedent for the implementation of UNSC Resolution 1325 in other regions of the world, thus realizing the values of International WILPF.

3. Doveryay no proveryay: "Trust but verify"

We hold that a just and balanced peacemaking process resolving the Ukraine war should follow a favorite Russian adage for President Reagan: Doveryay no proveryay, or"Trust but verify." While saving Ukrainian and Russian lives is the immediate worthwhile goal, such a peace, beginning with good faith, can consist of and facilitate confidence-building measures which serve to verify the mutual trust of the parties and set the foundation for other agreements on arms control and peaceful and flourishing coexistence in a multipolar world. We see the fears of both sides, fueling a new Cold War, need to be addressed urgently:

(a) Fears on the part of the Russian Federation that the USA is out to dismember Russia and dominate the world. This worst-case scenario was regrettably made all too credible and plausible by the unwise Wolfowitz Doctrine, shortly after the old Cold War, holding that the USA would not tolerate "rivals" on the world stage (1992). We urge a swift repudiation of this pernicious doctrine which might well illustrate renowned Senator J. William Fulbright’s book title The Arrogance of Power. 

(b) Fears on the part of the USA and some Europeans that the Russian Federation is out to invade other European nations, a scenario much favored in the old Cold War. 

First and foremost, the DISARM/End Wars Committee of WILPF US declares that regardless of the specifics of a peace solution, the USA, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine must be willing to make some compromises and “cease fire” in order to agree on treaty parameters and prepare for a decade or more of cooperative restoration and rebuilding. This will be only one step in building detente in Europe.

 

Post date: Wed, 12/18/2024 - 08:36
Women, Money & Democracy

by Marybeth Gardam
Chair of W$D Committee

December 2024

Annual Planning Retreat
Saturday, February 8, 2024
Begins at 9am PT/10am MT/11am CT/Noon ET

Where should WILPF’s economic justice, women’s rights and pro-democracy efforts focus in 2025-26?

Each year the Women, Money & Democracy Committee gathers for an annual planning retreat to identify the goals for the upcoming year. Last year they focused on collaboration and outreach.  

This year, with so many threats to economic justice, women’s rights and democracy on many levels, the committee will plan where to focus their limited energy and resources in the next year.  

The first hour of the committee planning retreat will be an opportunity for any WILPF US member to contribute ideas and suggestions on direction and goal-setting which the committee will take into consideration in the subsequent planning retreat, immediately following this introductory hour.  

Register in advance for this zoom event with this link:  

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.
 

 

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