NEWS

Post date: Wed, 09/29/2021 - 06:41

By Orly Benaroch Light
WILPF San Diego

The September 11 attacks are remembered as a double tragedy. The attacks on that day killed almost 3,000 people, and the wars that followed killed and injured hundreds of thousands more. Our thoughts and prayers for the victims, survivors, and families.

After 20 years of war, the Taliban are back. Questions are being asked about how the group will govern Afghanistan, and what their rule means for women, human rights, and political freedoms.

Ex-official Matthew Hoh states that the American media provides false information about what's been happening in Afghanistan over the last 20 years. The media has said things about the war, about how Afghanistan prior to the withdrawal was in a period of relative stability, and how there had been progress. These are complete lies and fabrications. Please watch our fact checking about 9/11, war in Afghanistan, media manipulation, and why Afghanistan is still the worst place to be a woman.

Matthew Hoh is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and a member of the Eisenhower Media Initiative. He is a 100 percent disabled Marine combat veteran, and, in 2009, he resigned his position with the State Department in Afghanistan in protest of the Afghan war by the Obama administration.

Orly Benaroch Light is an Entrepreneur, Women's Achievement & Empowerment, Human Rights Defender, Speaker, and Mom.

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 09/29/2021 - 06:33

By Nikki Abeleda, ASW
Field Facilitator, Inside & Out Initiative

October 2021

There are three steps of the Asset Based Community Development (ABCD) Framework: (1) Collect Stories, (2) Share your gifts, assets, and strengths, (3) Map the gifts, capacities and assets of individuals, and associations, also known as Asset Mapping (Nurture Development). WILPF San Diego, Sacramento, Des Moines, Boston, and Philadelphia have continuously utilized the ABCD approach through a step by step process and are currently on the third step of putting it all together in Asset Mapping.

Asset mapping refers to the process of creating a visual inventory of the skills, talents, and resources that exist within a branch. It is not just another list of resources; It is a strategy to identify assets that are available from within the branch, more importantly it’s a process for connecting and engaging the branch and to unlock the talents of people to help solve problems and build a better and stronger branch.

WILPF branches started the process of asset mapping, highlighting their strengths and discussing different social justice issues the branch would like to focus on. After, the cohort met on Sunday, September 26, 2021 for a social, “Putting it All Together: Asset Mapping.” In this session, members were able to reflect, review their knowledge of the ABCD framework, and get to know one another.

Inside and Out WILPF US Branch Updates:

Sacramento:

After their first Asset Map meeting, the Sacramento branch highlighted the importance of working on anti-racism. Sacramento will reflect and discuss which organizations to partner and build solidarity with.

San Diego:

WILPF SD partnered with the Peace Resource Center of San Diego (PRCSD) and held a “Peace Meet & Greet.” This meeting sparked intentional and meaningful discussion on peace and starting a women’s feminist peace group, while allowing space to build community.

Des Moines:

With a strong emphasis and passion for environmental justice, WILPF Des Moines is focusing on clean water and food sovereignty. In fact, the Des Moines branch is involved with a private/public partnership at the UN, the Food Systems Summit. Along with these issues, Des Moines is interested in local issues such as the election. Lastly, the branch attended an action uplifting Afghan refugees on Friday, August 24, 2021.

Boston:

The Boston branch is working on building solidarity with local peace community organizations to send letters to legislative figures regarding “banning the bomb” and stopping the aid of militarization and nuclear weapons.

Philadelphia:

WILPF Philadelphia recently had a branch meeting, in which they were able to reflect on their Congress presentation on “Breaking Out of White Supremacy.” They plan to have their Asset Map meeting during the first week of October to discuss their strengths and future goals.

The Field Facilitator supported and encouraged the branches to present at Congress. The Sacramento branch presented, “Growing a Peace Camp”; San Diego members Anne Barron presented “Turning Down Post-Trump Escalation” and Orly Benaroch Light facilitated an interview on “A Revolution of Compassion for Peace”; and Philadelphia presented, “Breaking Out of White Supremacy.”

The branches have been working outside of their comfort zone by challenging themselves. Through the process of ABCD, members have been working on themselves internally, which enables them to provide their strengths externally to the community and for their branch. Stay tuned for more Inside and Out updates!

Questions? Email Nikki Abeleda nfortuno.abeleda@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Fri, 09/10/2021 - 04:17

Now is the time to apply for or nominate someone else for an opening in the 2022 WILPF US board! See the elections timeline. The deadlines are October 10 for nominations and October 15 for applications.

See the position openings to know what seats are vacant for 2022. Get details on the job descriptions here. The application form is available here.

For further information about nominating a potential candidate for a position, candidate qualifications, and other election matters, contact nominatingcommittee@wilpfus.org or call 313-882-1596 (EDT). 

 

Post date: Thu, 09/09/2021 - 17:26

September 2021

NOW IS THE TIME! Board Elections!!!

Now is the time to apply for or nominate someone else for an opening in the 2022 WILPF US board! See the elections timeline. The deadlines are October 10 for applications and October 1 for nominations.

See the position openings to know what seats are vacant for 2022. Get details on the job descriptions here. The actual application form is available on the board elections page here.

For further information about nominating a potential candidate for a position, candidate qualifications, and other election matters, contact nominatingcommittee@wilpfus.org or call (617) 266-0999 (preferably during working hours on Wednesday).

THE WOMEN’S LEARNING CIRCLE on Public Banking still has a few slots open

Curious about how public banking can save the planet, advance racial and gender equality, and protect your community from economic turmoil? Join us for the next session on Friday, September 10th! By M. Gardam.

If you meant to register but didn’t, or if you registered then forgot to show up at our first session, you can still participate.  Our first meeting on Aug. 27 was an Introduction to participants and the structure of the Learning Circle going forward. The next session is on Friday, October 1 and Thursday, October 22. You can still participate if you register NOW at Share the website link: www.AnEconomyofOurOwn.org/events.  

If you had trouble registering over the Eventbrite site (there were some hiccups!) contact PublicBanking.wilpfus@gmail.com, or contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com.  We’ll walk you through to make sure you get to the 2nd session.

Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee

The national WILPF ADVANCING HUMAN RIGHTS Issue Committee has had three revitalizing meetings this summer and will meet again on Tuesday evening, September 29. Register here:  https://bit.ly/Aug30AHRmeeting

Four of the subcommittees will have full-length meetings during September. Write to AHRchair@wilpfus.org to be connected to one or more of those subcommittees if you are not already getting their email messages:  United Nations and Women, Immigration, Anti-racism work by WILPF US and branches, Mass incarceration and police militarization. Subcommittees "on the way" include UN International Decade for People of African Descent, Housing, Human trafficking, and perhaps others!

The Social Media Committee wants to know...

To respond or for more info on these items, email President@wilpfus.org

Did you register for Congress?  Did you attend?  The Social Media Ctte. invites your feedback on your “tech. experience”:  Did Zoom work well for you?  What feedback do you have on Congress functions: How good was the ease of getting into meetings?  Why did you participate – or not?  Why – with over 240 registrants – did we usually see some 80 at a given presentation?

Have you been to our recordings page, to see the Congress session recordings and much more?  The Social Media Committee reminds you that we need only 21 more subscribers to our YouTube page to reach the 100 level – which qualifies us to name our page something snappy: https://bit.ly/WILPFUSVids!

Do you use Instagram or Twitter? Help us develop better ways to reach out to the world of social media – building better connections to our branches and to other communities!  The Social Media Committee especially seeks those who use Twitter and/or Instagram.

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Thu, 09/09/2021 - 16:36

By Darien De Lu
President, WILPF US

September 2021

In WILPF’s past, our racial justice work has addressed both “inner” work – addressing the personal awareness, attitudes, and unconscious biases of WILPF members – and “outer” work – addressing race-related injustices in education, employment, the law, etc. 

I believe the distinction between these two kinds of work is important, and I’ll touch on it later in this article. Our political work is WILPF's purpose, and should, I believe, focus on the outer.  At the same time, to be a healthy organization, we also want to be aware of our own attitudes and structural biases –  the inner. So we do both.

The Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee has a newly forming subcommittee pursuing “outer” anti-racism work.  Contact Joan Goddard, the interim AHR coordinator, for further information on that: ahrchair@wilpfus.org

In order to be more welcoming to all kinds of possible WILPF members, another committee will help members and branches increase their awareness about various “cultural” differences, including economic, gender-identity, and age. For information on this WILPF “inner” work, or if you would like to be part of this ad hoc “inner” work committee (that met through the summer and which will reassemble soon) please contact me (President@WILPFUS.org). 

Members and branches can combine both inner and outer work. Watch for more information about the group book study curriculum on Uprooting Racism by Paul Kivel. Also, see this Resource List for Dismantling White Supremacy for over twenty pages of resources for WILPF branches and members. 

In this article I talk about the last few years of national WILPF work on diversity and race matters. For the decades before that, see Part 2 in the next eNews.

Work from 2017 to 2020 

In an initiative to make diversity and inclusion a part of all WILPF work, in 2017 a national board committee looked at options. In early 2018 the board agreed to incorporate diversity and/or inclusion questions in the agenda of each Board and Steering committee meeting. Also, the board agreed to specialn board training sessions with Dr. Kesho Scott to broaden thinking about racism and biases, as well as to have Scott available as a resource to get direction on any issues members might want to discuss.

At about the same time, the 2017 Chicago WILPF Congress discussed possible WILPF racial justice work. Program Chair Barbara Nielsen, a white woman, did a workshop on that topic at the Chicago Congress; and a Black WILPFer, Courteney Leinonen, got involved through that Congress. Subsequently, on February 18, 2018, the first monthly Racial Justice call took place, in response to the workshop at the 2017 Chicago WILPF Congress. Nielsen and Leinonen served as the coordinators. 

At some point, the calls became the Racial Justice Working Group (RJWG). The RJWG was sponsored by the Advancing Human Rights (AHR) Issue Committee, under Chair Barbara Nielsen. The AHR during that time did not generate “outer” work. In order for the RJWG to be open to non-WILPF-members, it was considered a “working group” instead of an actual issue committee activity.  Participants communicated via teleconference calls, using the Maestro system, discussing books or, more often, some articles, expressing their personal responses and analysis. 

However, in the summer of 2018, Leinonen became frustrated with the work of the nearly all white group. (The only Black participants in 2020 were Phillip Cole and Theresa El-Amin.) An increasing practice by the other RJWG coordinator – of sending emails to the group a day or less before the call, listing current (e.g., NYT) news articles for discussion – caused the group to postpone the more focused book discussion. Also, the group had dropped reading/studying the book that Leinonen had started them on, White Rage. Instead, Nielsen had shifted to White Fragility, a book more directed to white people. Leinonen left the group.

In the Fall of 2018, Nielsen was unable to consistently organize the monthly discussions, since she was working two jobs at that time. She was ready to cancel the upcoming meetings, and also said she’d be willing to step down as AHR chair. However, when others offered to facilitate the RJWG, Nielsen resumed facilitating the meetings. As an inward-focused group it continued for two years, with slightly shrinking numbers.  

The Advancing Human Rights Committee from 2020 to Now

In early 2020, after requesting but not receiving meeting minutes or other documentation to show that AHR met issue committee standards I instigated a re-formation of the group, to have it function as an issue committee. In January 2020, I invited all known AHR and RJWG contacts to a conference call meeting to determine whether the AHR committee would re-form or should be deactivated. Sufficient interest arose to re-form the issue committee.

At the subsequent February 6, 2020, AHR meeting, three co-chairs, all Black women, were elected by acclamation: Valarie Young, Setou Ouattara, and Martha Collins. At that time three from the RJWG group – Black members, Phillip Cole and Theresa El-Amin, and white member, Nielsen –  seconded the three-person nomination.

Unfortunately, later that month, the next (and last official) meeting of the RJWG did not go well. Young introduced herself to the group and explained about the new AHR co-chairs and possible RJWG changes. At his request, the three co-chairs had agreed to let Cole facilitate that RJWG meeting; however,  Cole’s first act as facilitator was to announce that he had decided to change the focus of the meeting, away from the document on the characteristics of white supremacy culture and discussion questions that Val had disseminated to the group. Additionally, Nielsen demanded of Young whether she was going to continue to “lecture us”, taking up so much time to introduce the meeting and new co-chairs. Harshly critical emails to the RJWG listserve about the transition followed this meeting.

Other circumstances arose and complicated the situation from there. Although AHR initiated some work on the UN Decade of People of African Descent, suggested a Racial Justice Library (see this article for Racial Justice Library listing), and spoke up about protecting voting rights and the accuracy of the vote count, the pandemic greatly affected the lives of all three co-chairs, with family deaths and community demands. They were eventually unable to facilitate regular meetings. 

Matters came to a head at a September 2020 AHR meeting, facilitated by Joan Goddard, former (2019) Program Chair. The meeting was sparsely attended and the participants, including Nielsen, Cole, and El-Amin,  declined to talk about the announced agenda – future plans for the AHR. Instead they criticized the current leadership and the meeting process. The three co-chairs all eventually resigned. 

In late 2020, after a hiatus in AHR meetings, and moving forward after March 2021, Goddard, has worked consistently to renew the AHR. On Monday, August 30, the third AHR meeting in as many months continued with multiple (about five) subcommittees and plans for the subcommittees to meet independently. One subcomittee is on anti-racism. Because WILPF issue committees address “outer” work, that will be the focus of that subcommittee’s work.  

So please contact Joan Goddard, the interim AHR coordinator, for “outer” anti-racism work through the AHR subcommittee and for further information on AHR or any of the AHR subcommittees: ahrchair@wilpfus.org. As I mentioned above, please contact me (President@WILPFUS.org) if you would like to be part of the ad hoc committee on “inner”  work. That ad hoc committee will focus on helping branches be more welcoming to a wider range of members.

 

Post date: Wed, 09/08/2021 - 16:47

By Mary Hanson Harrison
Congress Coordinator, WILPF US

September 2021

“Not only were the content and organization of the [Congress] program timely and diverse, but the technology worked brilliantly…all by WILPFers.”
       
—Mary Bricker-Jenkins
          Poor People’s Campaign leader and long-time WILPF member

WILPF US members, friends, colleagues, and the public just took a demanding and inspiring journey into the future; for two weeks – August 9 thru August 22, the WILPF US Section 34th Triennial Virtual Congress zoomed its way around the globe.  Two-hundred-and-forty-one people registered (241), five received scholarships and 30+ panelists and speakers who were comped, came together to produce WILPF US’s wide-ranging and diverse itinerary; reaching nearly 300 people participating in, listening to, and/or donating to “Women, Power, and Social Justice: Building from Strength” WILPF US Congress.

There were 28 webinars: from “HOW TO’S – Seeking Solutions” on weekday evenings, grounded in building local pathways to strengthening legislative advocacy, membership, fundraising, building branches, calling out the military recruitment of youth, preserving branch history, caring for the homeless and newly housed and children’s peace camps, to presentations as far away as Ghana and the Americas - Costa Rica and Cuba; Europe – Norway; Middle East -Lebanon, Palestine, and Israel seeking peaceful solutions.

Outstanding speakers like Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, who opened our weekend with the imperative to work with the Poor People’s Campaign (PPC) as a movement led by those most impacted by poverty and inequality and to have the moral courage to change the system.  The voices of Vandana Shiva, Maude Barlow, and Mary Grant on environmental challenges from corporate takeovers to the degradation of Mother Earth added to that imperative.  Moderated by Nancy Price, Barbara Arnwine and Jan BenDor gave a lucid and chilling presentation of threats to our democratic system of voting.  Paul Kivel, founder of Standing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ), provided a pathway for systemic white racism to be confronted, leading to its end. Rickey Diamond and Marybeth Gardam (Women$Democracy IC) spoke on economic justice for women and children, giving hope for overcoming the staggering injustice for women.  Patricia Hynes added her perspective on feminist foreign policy.  Sikowis (Christine) Nobiss and Janna Pratt revealed more of the whitewashing of the history of Indigenous boarding schools in Canada.  Dolores Huerta reminded us how all the issues we work on are connected and integral to social justice for field and frontline workers.  Patricia Wells Solorzano presented about creating theater with Latinx farmworkers. Beatriz Schulthess (Costa Rica), WILPF International’s America’s Representative to the International Board talks about the continuing effects from colonialism, followed by an update from Beatriz and Janet Slagter, the Alternate Representative to the America’s, on WILPF International’s upcoming changes. Matt Hoh, senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, gave us an update on Afghanistan.

Interviews were integral to the success of the program. In addition to Patti Naylor’s enlightening interview of Vandana Shiva on ecofeminism, Adilia Caravaca (former WILPF International president and current president of WILPF Costa Rica) interviewed forest engineer and feminist, Aimara Espinoza Ulate, who focused on surviving sexual and labor harassment. Bianca Humady Rey, Nghĩa Nguyen, and Marie Angel Venarsian were interviewed by Nikki Abeleda on the struggles and issues for transgender women of color.  Orly Benaroch Light, from the San Diego Branch, interviewed Robi Damelin and Laila Alsheikh from The Parents Circle Families Forum, which highlighted mothers who have lost a child to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Nada Farhat, WILPF US member of Middle East Peace and Action Committee, interviewed Shirine Jurdi, WILPF Lebanon member and Hala Kilani about the social, political, and economic aftermath of the horrific explosion in the port of Beirut.  There was poetry too, on using our voices to overcome the silence about sexual violence by Ayo Ayoola-Amale, president of WILPF Ghana, and all of which represented the expansive reach that WILPF US exemplifies by working for women all around the world.  Theresa El-Amin, George Friday, and Chantaye McLaughlin introduced the tenets of the Black Liberation Caucus to highlight the need to include Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) in WILPF US.

Branches’ and Issue Committees’ input not covered above: After Theoharis’s opening, the Poor People’s Campaign women presented the way to collectively “lift up” those voices mired in poverty.  The Philadelphia Branch focused on “Breaking Out of White Supremacy.” The San Diego branch gave impetus to “Turning Down Post-Trump Escalation.”  WILPF Des Moines Branch is working with Daoud Nassar, Palestinian farmer (Tent of Nations farm), to write a children’s book about this annual summer children’s camp.  The Sacramento Branch interviewed Millee Livingston and Natalie Pahley Zapata on how to grow a peace camp for youth.

Earth Democracy Issue Committee (IC) delivered two presentations, the ecological threat of factory farms/ CAFO’s and on another, the threat to the UN support of agroecology in the upcoming UN Food Systems Summit.  Women$Democracy IC’s second presentation looked to the foundational “intents and purposes” of our economic system.  The Cuba and Bolivarian Alliance IC related the real story of success and stresses in Cuba and COVID-19. The Disarm/End Wars IC reinforced the imperative to “Move the Money” from the military/industrial/financial complex to supporting peace, globally and locally.  Middle East Peace & Justice Action IC featured efforts to promote peace, particularly in relation to Palestine and uncovering the corruption connected to oil in that whole region.  In a special category of its own, environmental radioactive pollution and its connection to women’s health along with indigenous peoples was discussed in a presentation, “Uniting Communities for Environmental Justice: Radioactive Pollution Deadly in Any Space.”

Last but not least, without the exceptional technical help provided by our president, Darien De Lu, Ellen Thomas, Ellen Schwartz, and liaisons, Laura Dewey and Bev Fitzpatrick, all would have collapsed (which I believe they did after it was over!).

Please go to www.wilpfus.org to view the details of our 14-day congress program. Click on “WILPF Congress” to appreciate the magnitude of our achievement and goodwill! THANK YOU ALL!

“The Congress was excellent. It gave me hope that WILPF can survive and thrive,” affirmed Laura Dewey, CONPRO member, WILPF US Board Member               

Videos Available on YouTube, from Ellen Thomas

We are in the midst of fine-tuning the Congress video recordings on YouTube.  As each recording is edited, it is made public on the WILPF US YouTube channel and can be found in two places:  along the top of the page, above "Most Recent Videos", click on the word "VIDEOS" or on the word "PLAYLISTS" where you can click on the "WILPF US Triennial Congress" playlist which is listed under.  The various playlists are also shown, with a thumbnail, lower down on the home page.

We hope to change the URL of the YouTube channel to wilpfus, which we understand we'll be able to do when we have 100 subscribers.  We're up to 79 as of September 1st.   PLEASE go subscribe to the channel so we can make it easier for people to find it!   It's free, no obligations!

One quick way you can get to the WILPF US YouTube channel for now is via Bit.Ly. A list of all the Congress recording links will be provided by eAlert once the editing process is complete.

 

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 09/08/2021 - 13:53

By Marybeth Gardam
Women, Money & Democracy Committee

September 2021

A CARING WAGE:  OUR TIME IS NOW is a webinar on Saturday, September 18th that’s been in the works for nearly a year, but the guest speakers that WILPF’s own Mary Bricker-Jenkins has assembled were worth waiting for.

Register HERE

International feminist rock star SELMA JAMES is the outstanding presenter in this webinar that is co-sponsored by the WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee and allies An Economy of our Own and the National Welfare Rights Union. Selma James launched the unfinished debate on “women’s work” in a 1971 radio broadcast.  Today, at 92, she continues to press the case for caregiver wages as an essential component of a social order for survival. Her latest book—Our Time Is Now: Sex, Race, Class, and Caring for People and Planet—deftly and deeply analyses the impediments to and the promise of a system we can and must create. Selma was the founder of the international Wages for Housework campaign in 1971 and continues as the international coordinator of the Global Women’s Strike. Her book is widely available, but she asks that we support independent publishing by ordering from CrossroadsBooksOnline.net. Selma James will be joining us from her home in England, 6pm GMT.

Selma’s message on the need for a living wage for essential caregivers will be clear: Our time is now—IF we organize and fight for it!

Along with Selma this webinar features three more women who have been working nationally and internationally since the 1970s for the right to a fair wage for caregivers, whether the work be done in or out of the home: Pat Albright, Marian Kramer, and Margaret PrescodSee their bio information below.

Last among industrialized nations, the United States has recently (and reluctantly) implemented a stripped-down and sanitized form of a “child allowance” to support caregiving work. Is that a victory? Or is it a deft maneuver to derail the movement for a just caregiver wage – indeed, to derail the movement for the fundamental right to the basic means of survival.

Panelists excavate the historical relationships between “women’s work” and capitalism, between capitalism and the degradation of people and the planet, and the ways that racism and other systems of supremacy are used to thwart action.  But that’s not all!  Recognizing the power of organized women and men to make history, they guide us to claim our right to do so using the practical steps we have learned to take in our daily caregiving work.  Dialog and brainstorming will follow the panel presentations.

Here are all of the speakers

Pat AlbrightPat Albright is a low-income single mother with a disability and is a former welfare recipient.  She is part of the Every Mother is a Working Mother Network organizing for our work as mothers and caregivers to be valued and paid for.  She is a member of the New York State Coordinating Committee of the Poor people’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival.

Selma James launched the unfinished debate on “women’s work” in a 1971 radio broadcast.  Today, at 92, she continues to press the case for caregiver wages as an essential component of a social order for survival.  Her latest book—Our Time Is Now: Sex, Race, Class, and Caring for People and Planet-- deftly and deeply analyses the impediments to and the promise of a system we can and must create.  Selma was the founder of the international Wages for Housework campaign in 1971 and continues as the international coordinator of the Global Women’s Strike.  Her book is widely available, but she asks that we support independent publishing by ordering from CrossroadsBooksOnline.net. Internationally esteemed Selma James will be joining us from her home in England, 6pm GMT

Marian KramerMarian Kramer is a civil rights, poverty, and labor activist based in Detroit, Michigan. She got involved with the Civil Rights Movement as a child, attending community meetings and rallies with family members.  She emerged as a leader in the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO) in the 1960s and continues her work today as cofounder, in 1987, and current chair of its successor organization, the National Welfare Rights Union (NWRU).  Since the 1960s, the welfare rights movement has organized for the right to an adequate caregiver wage, whether the work be done in or outside the home. Marian is the recipient of numerous awards, including an Alston/Bannerman Fellowship for esteemed, long-time community activists of color.

Margaret PrescodMargaret Prescod is a decades long community-based women’s rights, anti-poverty and anti-racist campaigner at local, national and international levels.  She is the host of “Sojourner Truth” a nationally syndicated drive time public affairs program on Pacifica Radio.  She worked with welfare rights leaders in the 1977 Congressionally-mandated conference on women to win a resolution that called for welfare to be called a wage.  Margaret has expanded and continued that work through the decades a co-founder of Black Women for Wages for Housework, as a founding member of Women of Color/Global Women’s Strike and as founder of the Every Mother is a Working Mother Network and the Black Coalition Fighting Back Serial Murders.

Mary Brickers-JenkinsModerator Mary Bricker-Jenkins is a member of the board of the National Welfare Rights Union and a past Program Chair on the WILPF-US board.

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 09/08/2021 - 13:41

By the Women, Money & Democracy Committee and the Earth Democracy Committee.

September 2021

The UN Food Systems Summit (UN-FSS) event scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 23rd has been in the works for over a year, and presents itself (falsely) as ‘the peoples food summit’.  It’s anything but.  It’s wholly owned by Big Ag and corporate profiteers and polluters, and it deliberately excludes and silences the real people who are closest to the crops and the food production: small family farmers and farmworkers. 

The Summit is wholly owned by Big Ag and corporate profiteers and polluters, and it deliberately excludes and silences the real people who are closest to the crops and the food production: small family farmers and farmworkers. See article here for more background. And this website:  https://www.foodsystems4people.org/resources-2/. Here’s a short video about this: https://youtu.be/xO4f-kQePBQ 

There’s a good reason that they did not want to announce the final date until very late August. They want to quell expected opposition to the profiteers that are calling the shots. By waiting to announce a date they make it challenging to mount a counter summit protest in NYC on the date of the actual Summit, Thursday, September 23rd.  

That’s not stopping our allies in the Food Sovereignty Alliance (FSA). They are planning for VIRTUAL OPPOSITION and PROTEST through social media and web content that holds the UN program accountable. They’re asking WILPF US members to step up and join the online protest. Via Campesina and other allies that form the Food Sovereignty Alliance are asking WILPF US members to help get the word out about this false messaging from the UN, which is deliberately silencing small family farmers and farmworkers at the Food Summit.

Look for Facebook memes to share, tweets to tweet, and letters to the editor to send, all in the works.  

Here are Hashtags to use when posting about this:
#FoodSystems4People, #FoodSystems4All, #NotInOurNames, #NoEnNuestroNombre, #UNFSS2021

More content and social media materials will be available in the next week or so, in plenty of time for you to use them to educate the public and alert them to this corporate takeover of the UN’s Food Systems Summit. For more information, contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com
 

Post date: Wed, 09/08/2021 - 13:33

By George Friday

September 2021

On August 16th members of newly formed branches in the Carolinas met in Gastonia, NC at the Esquire Hotel restaurant.  Co-chairs of Southern Anti-Racism Network (SARN), Theresa El Amin and Chantaye McLaughlin, attended the meeting. SARN covered the cost of lunch for all attendees.

New members of the Triangle branch (Rosa Saavedra, Mary White, Ashley Carrington) were invited but unable to attend.  Rita Gonzalez, Kim Porter, Samantha Turner, Cate DeMallie, Stacey Friday, and George Friday with the Triad branch were present. Jennifer Disney, Winthrop College professor in Rock Hill, South Carolina attended.

Conversation centered on building the Triad branch and starting a Piedmont branch.  (Triad area is Greensboro, Winston Salem, High Point, and areas North of Charlotte.  Piedmont area is Charlotte, Gastonia, and areas West and South of the Triad.) Jennifer Disney and Danielle Redman Foxx will organize South Carolina’s Rock Hill/Fort Mill branch.

After a scrumptious lunch including appetizer, entree, dessert and drink, each Carolina attendee named 2-3 people they will personally ask to join WILPF US.

We plan to return to the Esquire in October to access our progress.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 09/08/2021 - 13:05

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

September 2021

The Corvallis, Oregon WILPF branch paired up with Veterans For Peace, Chapter 132, Linus Pauling chapter to hold our annual commemoration which featured live traditional Japanese koto music, the reading of a letter written by June Ikako Terasaka Moore, a 93-yo Hibakusha woman who lives in Corvallis, and a group recitation of a community affirmation denouncing war and nuclear weapons. Following the program, participants had a candlelight procession to a bridge from which we watched a lantern-lit flotilla of kayaks and canoes come up the Willamette River and pass under us.  

As a total surprise, and dumb luck, two young men, David Hedberg and James Krzmarzick and Outdoor History Productions, who are working on a documentary, filmed the entire ceremony and created this video of this entire event.  https://vimeo.com/585655066/9bdfaa8aaf 

Photo (above): Canoes with lanterns paddle along the Willamette River in Corvallis, Oregon in a Hiroshima event co-organized by the Corvallis WILPF branch. Photo by Bart Bolger, used with his permission.

WILPF East Bay (California) co-sponsored a gathering outside the main gate of Lawrence Livermore National Lab, in Livermore CA on both 6th & 9th August, the associated photo shows one of the hibakusha, Nagasaki A-bomb survivor Nobu Hanaoka who spoke. Marylia Kelley of TriValley Cares reported: “Among other things, the Lab tried to drown out our opening with a lawnmower! But we brought truth and light and would not be “turned around” by garden equipment. “ The in-person demo was followed by a virtual, streamed on the web, event featuring nuclear analyst and whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, Nell Myhand, Tsukuru Fors, John Burroughs, Marylia Kelley, and Marshallese climate activists, all dedicated to the abolition of nuclear weapons. Musicians Betsy Rose, Benjamin Mertz, and Francis Wong provided the music.

Photo (above): Nagasaki A-bomb survivor Nobu Hanaoka speaks at the opening of the demo outside Lawrence Livermore National Lab on 6th August. Photo credit: Jackie Cabasso, used with her permission.
 
The Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA WILPF members, joined by some community peace activists, stood in vigil commemorating the Hiroshima/Nagasaki bombings, at the busy intersection of El Camino and Embarcadero in Palo Alto from noon to 2 pm on Friday August 6. Our signs and banners urged the U.S. and other nuclear powers to sign the TPNW and transfer funds from the military to human needs. We displayed some of the 1000 remaining paper cranes from our July/August 2020 installation of 2080 paper peace cranes outside a local art gallery. We put garlands of peace cranes on light poles  and handed others out to pedestrians with a flyer about WILPF. WE had passers-by sign a petition to the US Senate about the TPNW. Watch this video to learn how 2080 cranes were made and displayed by local residents: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkWL_AnePpQ

Photo (above): Garlands of peace cranes adorn a light pole at Peninsula/Palo Alto vigil on 6 August. Photo by Cherrill Spencer, used with her permission.

Photo (left): Some of the Palo Alto/Peninsula WILPF branch members who stood in vigil on 6 August.  Photo by Cherrill Spencer, used with her permission.

A member of the WILPF San Francisco branch currently living in Albuquerque, NM, Arla Ertz, demonstrated there on 6th August with Veterans for Peace members. 

 

Photo (left): Arla Ertz (on left in white pants) demonstrates with Vets for Peace in Albuquerque, NM. Photo by Arla Ertz, used with her permission.

Three other members from WILPF  San Francisco Branch went to Japan Town in S.F. on Friday, August 6 to put up signs (see in background of photo), plus give out leaflets at stores, basically saying "No More Hiroshimas, No More Nagasakis" and call President  Biden and say so, also included TPNW.  Three were: Deetje Boler, Anne Politeo and Betty Traynor (taking photo).

 

 

 

 

Photo (left): Deetje Boler and Anne Politeo leafleting in San Francisco’s Japan Town on 6 August. Photo by Betty Traynor, used with her permission.

 

 

 

 

Ann Arbor branch member, Odile Hugonot Haber was visiting Dijon, France in August and she joined a fast for nuclear disarmament from 6th to 9th August.

Photo (left): Ann Arbor branch member, Odile Hugonot Haber (on the left) stands in front of a banner in Dijon, France that says: In France and the world we fast from 6th to 9th August for total nuclear disarmament. Photo by Alan Haber and used with his permission.

The WILPF Burlington Branch, Vermont International Film Festival, and Burlington City Arts sponsored a Hiroshima and Nagasaki commemorative event on Thursday, August 5th at the City Hall Park between College St. and Main St. in Burlington, VT. The event had activities for both youth and adults, including painting for peace, origami crane folding, sidewalk chalk drawing, a penny spending survey, the telling of the Sadako story, and information & resources table. That evening Dr. John Reuwer led a discussion on the risks of nuclear weapons and the possibilities for eliminating them. Then they showed the classic film, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.

Photo (above): DISARM Co-chair Robin Lloyd, decorated the side of her house in Burlington, VT, with banners and paintings by local school children 

#PeaceWave_2021_Maine was held on Friday Aug 6 on the Brunswick Green in Maine to Commemorate H&N, to collect signatures for the petition calling on President/Senate to sign & Ratify the TPNW, to collect words & stories from those persons present, and to educate ourselves about the #TreatyBan TPNW, and to read excerpts from the Ban Treaty text. There is an 8 minute video of the Maine branch event on You Tube, watch here: https://youtu.be/pJCyjGRSzRI

Photo (above): Maine WILPFer Barbara West (on right) takes part in the international Peace Wave on 6th August. Photo taken by Martha Spiess and used with her permission.

OTHER Branch Actions

These branches were planning activities to commemorate the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. There were no event reports or photos received for: WILPF Monterey County (CA), WILPF Fresno (CA), WILPF Des Moines (IA), and WILPF members in Asheville, North Carolina.

 

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