NEWS

Post date: Mon, 06/15/2015 - 15:06

Location: National, Office location negotiable with successful candidate

About Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom

The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom was founded in 1915 during World War I, with Jane Addams as its first president. WILPF works to achieve through peaceful means world disarmament, full rights for women, racial and economic justice, an end to all forms of violence, and to establish those political, social, and psychological conditions which can assure peace, freedom, and justice for all. 

Celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2015, WILPF published a manifesto reiterating its commitment and determination to work for the world it envisions -- a transformed world at peace, where there is racial, social, and economic justice for all people everywhere. WILPF works to create an environment of political, economic, social and psychological freedom for all members of the human community, so that true peace can be enjoyed by all.

Current Context and Opportunities

WILPF US is one of 33 WILPF sections. It is unique among the national WILPF sections, in that it is the largest section with the greatest potential access to resources, and also inhabits the most militarized nation in the world. Despite a long history and legacy of impactful work, recent years have been challenging for the organization, characterized by staffing transitions and declining membership and funding. Having been in a period of reflection, WILPF US is now under new Board leadership, and is halfway through a major $1million financial campaign called “Growing WILPF”, of which half of the goal has been reached. This campaign is providing a window of opportunity to build a new platform and infrastructure for the organization’s next phase of existence. 

A new staff leader will be a critical player in working with the Board to advance key priorities. The next 12-24 months will be a critical time of increasing and diversifying its membership and broadening its base of organizational and financial support to ensure long term viability.

Primary Job Responsibilities of the Managing Director:

  • Financial management including budgeting, financial projections, financial reporting and cash flow management.  In collaboration with the Treasurer, preparing reports and information as needed for the Finance Committee and Board to fulfill its fiduciary responsibilities.
  • Strengthen and support board governance
  • Support the membership, branches, program and issue committee leaders
  • Supervise and support the Membership Coordinator and part-time Bookkeeper as well as all  contractors to ensure that volunteer leaders can focus on programs
  • Develop strong and innovative fundraising capacity; and build collaborative relationships with the donor community and other stakeholders, in combination with the Board development committee
  • Strengthen and support other critical infrastructure, such as databases and other IT needs
  • Provide a public face of the organization and serve as a liaison to volunteer committees, WILPF International and other collaborating organizations.
  • Develop organizational systems to strengthen decision making processes, communication channels
  • Support transforming internal organizational culture  to reflect the peace and transparency it aspires to

Qualifications:

  • Minimum of 5 years of non-profit management experience, at least 3 years in senior management roles
  • Strong financial management skills including budgeting and cash management
  • Commitment to the mission and values of the organization
  • Positive, entrepreneurial spirit
  • Strong interpersonal skills including verbal and written communication
  • Emotional maturity, flexibility and, ideally, a sense of humor
  • Advanced degree in business, non-profit management, education, policy or related field preferred
  • Experience in fundraising is desirable
  • WILPF member preferred

Reporting Relationship:  The WILPF US Managing Director will report to the Board President and Personnel Chair.

Applications including cover letter, resume and salary requirements to be submitted no later than July 31st to: wilpfdirector@gmail.com.

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 12:50


This year’s US Social Forum will draw participants from around the US to Philadelphia and San Jose for several days of movement building. Advance registration closes June 19.

Many of the topics for the June 25-28 Philadelphia forum and for the June 24-28 San Jose forum relate to WILPF-US campaigns.  Workshops and People’s Movement Assemblies (longer sessions designed to draw on the contributions of all participants and conclude with agreed-upon next steps) will run simultaneously.

Advance registration is available online through June 19. Watch for Marge Van Cleef’s workshop on drones and Fran Foulkrod in a panel convened by World Beyond War in Philadelphia. Nancy Price has a workshop on the Human Right to Health and Safe Food and helped organize a PMA on Food Sovereignty: Reclaim the Commons – Save Our Land, Our Water, Our Seed

In San Jose, the local branch along with Santa Cruz members will table at sessions on food sovereignty, farmworkers, and health care.  San Diego members are presenting a workshop on Peace and Anti-Militarization Tactics: Past, Present, and Future. Raging Grannies are practicing in hopes of singing for the plenary.

The Summer of Our Power Southern People’s Movement  Assembly for a Just Transition in Jackson, MI,  June 26-28,  will focus on how to broaden and expand the southern movement for climate justice and a just transition to a new economy. A Forum in Houston, TX is being planned, and finally, activists from the United States and Mexico will convene in Tijuana on June 25. Themes for the Mexico events include migration, environment, land and water, work and salary, and mega projects.

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 12:46


By Joan Bazar, Communications Committee

Acting on the theme Women’s Power to Stop War, Nobel laureates led a walk across the DMZ in Korea, and US Section members back from the events in The Hague are carrying the powerful message to branches around the country. 

Learn more about the May 24 effort to bridge the divide in Korea by international peace activists Mairead Maguire (Northern Ireland) and Leymah Gbowee (Liberia) online.  Organizers included Gloria Steinem, filmmaker Abigail Disney and US WILPFer Gwyn Kirk.

Arrange for a speaker in your city on the inspiring events in The Hague by contacting the US Section office. President Mary Hanson Harrison has addressed a UN Association gathering and joined with Detroit President Laura Dewey in presentations. Melissa Torres (Texas), our International Board representative, and the rest of the delegation are available to speak, along with dozens more who attended the Conference.

Robin Lloyd (Vermont) writes of her thoughts on attending a graveside memorial in the Netherlands for Australian and New Zealand casualties of WW I in How War is Remembered.  Anne Hoiberg (San Diego) reflects on seeing the film Pray the Devil Back to Hell and hearing Leymah Gbowee in The Hague:

Leymah Gbowee, one of four Nobel Peace Laureates at the Women’s Power to Stop War conference held in The Hague in April 2015, raised several questions: Can’t women do something about war? Can’t women do something about the enslavement of women and girls, about prostitution? Can’t women in the USA do something about Blacks being killed? Can’t women do something about the degradation of our planet?   Can’t women do something about the attempts to separate us into categories, such as religious or political pigeonholes?

We can’t be silenced. We women can do something about war; we women can do something about Blacks being killed in the US.  Women have to say something—to keep the dream of peace alive. We women can raise our voices to stand up to politicians and get in their space. We can do the unthinkable. We in WILPF can cause trouble in a good way, just as women 100 years ago protested the madness and horrors of war, and just as women did under Gbowee’s direction in Liberia, as shown in Pray the Devil Back to Hell.

We have to do something—to turn the world upside down for permanent peace.

Mary Hanson Harrison urges branches sponsoring report backs: “Please use this wonderful opportunity as a recruitment tool and the possibility of fundraising for GROWING WILPF!”

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 12:36


In late May six WILPFers visited numerous Congressional offices and the State Department with Alliance for Nuclear Accountability's expert nuclear "watch dogs,"  In addition to advising legislators about DC Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton's "Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act," they told about recent experiences at the United Nations during the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty review, and the growing determination of non-nuclear nations to completely ban nuclear weapons, which threaten the peace and security of us all, and could lead to extinction of our species and other life on earth. 

Representatives Lewis of Georgia and Grijalva of Arizona had signed on to Norton's bill in past sessions, and were quick to instruct their aides to tell Ms. Norton that they wish to co-sponsor the bill again this session. Read the bill, Ms. Norton's Dear Colleague letter, and a history of the legislation.

Mr. Grijalva is Co-Chair of the Progressive Caucus.  He has been working with WILPF members Charmaine White Face, Helen Jaccard, and Pat Birnie, on a Uranium Mining Moratorium and Clean-Up bill, which he indicated he was nearly ready to introduce.

Ms. Norton was pleased to learn about our success in finding co-sponsors so soon after the bill was introduced on April 21, and suggested that we initially focus our attention on attracting other members of the Progressive Caucus.

Carol Urner, co-chair of Disarm/End Wars Committee, and Katya Murillo, an intern from Whittier College in California, have developed a list of WILPF branches whose legislators are members of the Progressive Caucus -- Boston MA, Burlington VT, Cleveland OH, Detroit MI, Eugene OR, Los Angeles CA, Milwaukee WI, Minneapolis MN, Monterey CA, New York Metro, Oakland CA, Philadelphia PA, Portland OR, Santa Cruz CA, Tucson AZ. 

Senator Bernie Sanders of Burlington, VT, is also a member of the Progressive Caucus.  It would be great if he would introduce HR-1976 into the Senate. 

The other Progressive Caucus members may have at-large WILPF members as constituents in their districts -- Phoenix AZ, Claremont CA, Richmond CA, Riverside CA, Santa Clara CA,  New Haven CT, Boca Raton FL, Orlando FL, Chicago IL, Indianapolis IN, Medford MA, Baltimore MD, Charlotte NC, Ewing NJ, Brooklyn NY, Scranton PA, Pawtucket RI, Memphis TN, Houston TX, Alexandria VA.

Steve Cohen of Memphis, TN, and Sheila Jackson-Lee of Houston, TX are former co-sponsors of Norton's bill.

For more information contact Ellen Thomas .

Photo: Representative John Lewis and aide, with Glenn Carroll and Ellen Thomas at right, and Georgia WAND and Shell Bluff, Georgia, constituents who live near the Savannah River nuclear weapons facility. Courtesy of Rep. John Lewis’ office.

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 12:20

By Kim Redigan

Detroit community members plan a 68-mile walk from Detroit to Flint, Michigan calling for an end to water shut-offs in Detroit implementation of the 2005 Detroit Water Affordability Plan, provision of clean, affordable water in both cities, and an end to the commodification of water, declaring that water is a commons not to be commodified for private profit. The tentative plan is to begin the walk July 4th and educate people along the way by lifting up various voices from the Detroit community, and ending the walk in Flint with an event on July 10.

In Flint, there is a dangerous public health crisis due to contaminated municipal water, while at the same time an increasing cost of service and water.

For more information, please contact Kim Redigan.

Photo:  Activists will take part July 4-10 in a 68-mile walk from Detroit to Flint, Michigan calling for an end to water shut-offs in Detroit.  Credit: Kim Redigan

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 11:08


By Lib Hutchby, Earth Democracy Committee

Magnolias bloom in May in North Carolina so you can imagine time-lapse photographs and on recent sunny days, one can sit for an hour and watch the buds begin to open.  It's an amazing sight for sore eyes.

Between weeping, chanting, fighting, listening, and learning, we enjoy aroma therapy, right?  NC still has more hogs than people, more coal ash “ponds” than any other state,  more stored nuclear fuel rods, and Duke Energy Progress still has a monopoly's grip on rate-payers' source of electricity. In fact, Duke Energy just began removing coal ash from NC and sending it to a “lined pit” in Georgia, .out of our site, but not out of our minds; meanwhile, shareholders and their proxies, like John Wagner of the Triangle Branch, pled with Lynn Goode, the current (female) CEO of Duke Energy, to attend to the precautionary principle to protect life rather than to defend her purse.

For this news, let's focus on all three of the following that happened on the same day, May 27.  There's a rush to spend money needlessly for fracking exploration because the fiscal year ends in June.  For example, needing to spend already designated funds for “exploration,” May 27 marked the beginning of the core sample drilling in the Cumberland-Marlboro Basin, east of Raleigh, where two samples will be made on state-owned property and the other at the NC Wildlife Fish Hatchery near Fayetteville.

Though the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) may find granite instead of natural gas, they proceed.  Even though, in fact, there is not enough money for testing the contents of the core samples, they proceed. 

Lest you think little has changed, you'll understand comparisons to time-lapse photography as we report that alliances and coalitions have developed in our fight for clean air, clean water, healthy and just life-experiences.  The movement seems to be beginning to blossom as a judge ruled for a stay on fracking regulations, because the legislature never had authority to appoint a mining and energy commission in the first place.  Lawsuits against Gov. McCroy and DENR are multiplying.

Triangle WILPF continues to support anti-fracking efforts, keeping coal ash in solid containment above ground on Duke Energy’s property, and the Environmental Justice Network that focuses on statewide efforts to attend to the civil rights of individuals living close to poisoned or threatened lands.  As partners with HkonJ/NC NAACP, we speak out in efforts to connect all issues of climate change, education, health care, voting rights, and Medicaid expansion.

We continue to rally with Moral Mondays, which became Moral Wednesdays, when the NC Legislature decided to lock the doors of its office building at 5:00 pm on Mondays and arrested some who refused to leave.  Moral Monday is moving around the state to locales in trouble; for example, on May 27, Moral Wednesday morning was held in Walnut Cove, a rural community that is home to the largest coal ash site in NC and is also scheduled to have a core sample taken soon to test for natural gas/fracking. Kim Porter of NC WARN, a 26-year-old Durham-based nonprofit keeping an eye on Duke Energy’s practices, called the coal ash spill “a toxic mix of politics and corporate greed.”

She said Duke is the largest utility in the world and the largest political action committee in North Carolina. “It’s never paid its fair share of state income tax. There’s something going on here. Duke dodged the federal income tax over the last five years, and actually received a $300 million tax rebate from our federal government.”

On the evening of May 27, Moral Wednesday met in Raleigh, rallied on the issues of healthcare, the need to accept Medicaid expansion, environmental justice,  the need to stop more coal ash spills and start clean up, and fracking.

We chanted as we walked inside the legislative office-building for speaking truth to power outside the legislative chamber doors.

Triangle WILPF is also a partner in the alliance of FrackfreeNC, which doggedly tracks the schedules of the governor, the head of DENR, participates in rallies, citizen air-monitor trainings, and wakes up the next morning to continue, just as WILPFers have done for the last 100years.  FORWARD TOGETHER!  NOT ONE STEP BACK!

Photo: Magnolias bloom in May in North Carolina. 

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 10:43

Photo: Virginia Pratt, David Rothauser and Marie Louise Jackson Miller represent WILPF at the Veterans for Peace Memorial event in Boston on May 25. Photo by Michael Borkson, WILPF Boston   


Remembering soldiers, civilians
By Virginia Pratt, WILPF Boston Branch

David Rothauser spoke eloquently about WILPF's 100th anniversary and Article 9 at the May 25 Veterans for Peace Memorial Day service in Boston. Veterans talked about the horror of war. Names of Massachusetts soldiers who died in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars were read, and then flowers were thrown into the harbor symbolizing all the civilians killed by the US military.

Also participating from the WILPF Branch were Marie Louise Jackson Miller, Virginia Pratt and Michael Borkson, whose photos and video of the event are viewable online.

 

Honoring peace activists
By Lois Fiedler, WILPF San Jose CA Branch

San Jose Peace & Justice Center presented commemorations from the US Congress to the San Jose Branch of WILPF at a 100th anniversary picnic May 23. Attendees heard from Barby Ulmer who joined the branch in 1956, soon after its founding in 1951.

A new mother and the youngest member by a couple of decades, she found WILPF “provided an umbrella for all my beliefs and issues, both foreign and domestic.” She went on to provide draft counseling during the Vietnam War and serve on the national board. She helped establish the San Jose Peace Center in 1957.  

The Center honored the branch, "its current members, the memory of all the powerful women who contributed so much to the movement for peace and justice in the South Bay community," and specifically eight of the current WILPF members.  The individuals receiving Certificates of Appreciation included Barby (and Vic) Ulmer,  Sue Guist, Roz Dean, Joan Wildermann, Joan Bazar, Shirley Lin Kinoshita, Joan Goddard and Lois Fiedler.  The branch's Raging Grannies sang, the history of the organization was reviewed, and a buffet vegan picnic lunch with birthday cake was enjoyed at the home of Paula Rochelle. 

Congress members Mike Honda and Zoe Lofgren each sent Congressional commemorations, and the County of Santa Clara sent an impressive plaque. The branch will receive another plaque from the San Jose City Council at an upcoming session (San Jose is the 10th largest city in the US). 

PHOTO: Barby Ulmer recounts her half-century history with San Jose WILPF Branch at peace picnic May 23. Lois Fiedler listens.  Credit: Joan Simon (newest member)

 

Sacramento-Sierra Foothills
By Darien De Lu, branch member and national Bylaws Committee chair

Four branch members attending the 100th anniversary Congress and/or Conference each made their special contributions to the US Section presence at The Hague.  Also, from the branch's WILPF anniversary celebration on Tax Day to Esther Franklin's local presentation on WILPF's 2015 Centenary in The Hague, to plans for summer Peace Camp, the branch finds diverse ways to celebrate WILPF ideals.

Esther FranklinEsther Franklin is a longtime active branch member. She proudly led a "three-generation family delegation" at the centenary occasion in The Hague, along with her daughter (and branch member), Pennie Taylor, and her niece (also a WILPF member).  They joined branch members Theresa Coté (who organized a useful site providing Congress and Conference documents for US WILPFers) and Darien De Lu (who attended as an alternate US Section delegate).  Esther was the first to publicly report back on the Conference when, on May 17, she spoke to local Humanists about the 100th anniversary event.

The branch's April 15 birthday party and meeting featured a special birthday cake, donated by a local vegan bakery -- thanks to the efforts of member Don Knutson.  The occasion provided an opportunity to report on various local and global initiatives for peace -- including the WILPF Conference; the US Social Forum in June in San Jose and the December 2015 meeting of the Provisional World Parliament in India. 

To continue the momentum for peace, the branch once again is supporting the work of branch member and US WILPF treasurer, Millee Livingston, in helping organize a week-long Peace Camp in Auburn, CA..  This year the Peace Camp is engaging in a special video project, partly funded by the Joan Patchen Fund of the Jane Addams Peace Association.  The video documentary will help publicize the images of and valuable learning experiences from the Peace Camp.

For further information, go to the branch website or contact Darien.  Darien also welcomes inquiries and contacts regarding the WILPF US Bylaws Committee.

Photo: Esther Franklin, longtime active WILPF member

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 10:25

By Jan Corderman, WILPF Des Moines. Iowa

Our Citizen Diplomacy Group led by Sharon Tennison, creator of the Center for Citizen Initiatives is in Russia to meet with citizens in four cities to learn and to build relationships to work for reconciliation. 

The Center for Citizen Initiatives is a highly respected, non-profit organization that keeps its ear to the ground in Russia and develops trend-setting programs to meet emerging needs.

During our 15 days in Moscow, Volgograd, Ekaterinburg and St. Petersburg we’ll immerse ourselves in conversations, planned and spontaneous, with Russian citizens to hear their side of the story, share our thoughts and create Citizen2Citizen plans to stay connected—and work for reconciliation on both sides. 

We’ll discuss their feelings about, and the impact of, the sanctions our country has imposed and our government’s efforts to isolate Russia on the world stage.  Our delegation of American citizens may be going into the country as it is having second thoughts about their glorification of all things American.

CCI’s origins date from the height of the Cold War in 1983 when Ms. Tennison led a handful of ordinary American citizens upon an extraordinary mission – challenging the dangerous barriers of fear and mistrust between the two superpowers.

The Cold War was at a peak - the KAL 007 airliner had just been downed by Soviet Interceptor Jets killing all passengers aboard, and the US and the USSR had 50,000 nuclear weapons aimed at each other. Scientists predicted if 10% of the weapons were detonated, nuclear fallout would shortly leave planet Earth lifeless.

The group’s preposterous mission was to create an alternative to the arms race and open communications between the US and the USSR. They called themselves “citizen diplomats.”  Sharon notes that after Gorbachev came to power and the feared 50,000 nuclear weapon standoff began shifting, it felt like the animosity and fears between the US and the USSR were evaporating.

For the past 25 years, the Center for Citizen Initiatives has dedicated itself to supporting political and economic reforms in Russia.

I’m honored to be the WILPF representative in this delegation.  I would love to share my observations with branches that are interested with an in-person presentation about what I learned and a discussion about building upon the accomplishments of CCI. 

I hope to hear from you!

Jan Corderman
jancorderman@msn.com  
Des Moines Branch, 515-205-4504

Photo by Jan Corderman

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 10:18
Mary Clark , Helen Hildreth and Ann Peabody Brown lead protest against the Vietnam War in the 1960s.


By Judy Adams, Palo Alto WILPF Branch

Don’t let your WILPF Centennial celebration end just yet!  You can now hear for yourself the inspiring stories and voices of more than 90 of our WILPF (and Women Strike for Peace) sisters, interviewed in the 1980s by the Women’s Peace Oral History project, by streaming (or downloading) them to your computer.  I started the project in 1979, with a cassette tape recorder on my lap in the old Peace Center in Palo Alto, CA, and the project grew over the next 10 years to include interviews by my students at Stanford and San Jose State, and other WILPF volunteers across the country, to complete this wonderful collection.

All the materials – recordings, photos, slides, books, biographical information, and other materials have been archived at Stanford since the project’s book, Peacework: Oral Histories of Women Peace Activists was published in 1991. In recent years the collection (ARS 056) was moved to the Stanford Archive of Recorded Sound, where funding was made available to catalog the collection, and in time for our April 28 Centennial this year, to make all sound files (including the WILPF Asilomar conference of 1967) digitally available to the public.  It is a treasure-trove of information and inspiration and I hope that your branch will be moved to start (or continue) your own project to capture the peace work of your members for our next WILPF centennial.

Contacts:

Judy Adams for details about using the collection guide and about how to stream or download MP3 files of the interviews themselves. In the future, you will be able to access transcripts of the interviews as well. 

Of course, you can also arrange to visit the collection by contacting Stanford’s ARS.  For guidelines on how to start your own oral history project, contact Judy, or go here or contact Wendy Chmielewski at Swarthmore. 

Photo: Palo Alto WILPFers Mary Clark , Helen Hildreth and Ann Peabody Brown lead protest against the Vietnam War in the 1960s. From Peninsula WILPF archives

Post date: Mon, 06/08/2015 - 10:13


Sha’an Mouliert, a Vermont community organizer, educator, and artist, received the Lyndon State College Presidential Medal of Freedom during commencement ceremonies.

The longtime WILPF activist, who lives in St. Johnsbury, VT, was honored for her community service with children, the elderly, and Lyndon State College's Social Justice programs.

Sha'an co-founded with Americorps the African American Alliance of the Northeast Kingdom, a grassroots organization committed to racial justice. Mouliert facilitates Theater of the Oppressed trainings; she has led conflict resolution, human potential, creative expression, racial justice, and community organizing workshops nationally and internationally.

Sha'an initiated and chaired the WILPF Building the Beloved Community Issue Committee.  As a WILPF delegate, she attended the 2001 United Nations World Conference Against Racism held in Durban, South Africa.

Photo:  Sha'an Mouliert with Lyndon State College President Joe Bertolino at awards ceremony. Photo by Grad Images.

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