NEWS

Post date: Fri, 05/06/2022 - 06:03

By Cindy Domingo
Jane Adams Branch

May 2022

After six years of the war against drugs in the Philippines (resulting in over 30,000 deaths according to the International Criminal Court’s preliminary report) rampant government corruption cases, a pandemic that has left the Philippines in economic shambles, and a government unresponsive to repeated typhoon disasters, hundreds and thousands of Filipinos waving pink flags, wearing pink shirts and hats, and handing out pink baked goods have turned out to support Leni Robredo in her bid to become the next Philippine President in this month of May. Robredo, the current Philippine Vice President, has been met with huge rallies throughout her travels within the country, such as her birthday rally at the end of April, numbering 420,000 in Pasay, an area just south of Manila. Her running mate is Kiko Pangilinan, a popular sitting Philippine Senator who gave up his reelection bid to run for Vice President at the request of Robredo.

Many predict that this election is the election of our lives, given what is at stake. While there are several Presidential and Vice-Presidential candidates (the Philippines doesn’t have a primary, narrowing the field to the top two), Leni Robredo finds herself running against Bong Bong Marcos (also known as Marcos, Jr), the son of deposed dictator Ferdinand Marcos and his wife Imelda Marcos. Pangilinan is running against Sarah Duterte, the daughter of current President Rodrigo Duterte. This has been cast as both an election against the Marcos-Duterte political dynasty as well as stopping a possible 12 more years of authoritarian government since terms are six years long. Sarah Duterte would undoubtedly run for President after Marcos Jr’s term ends – if Marcos Jr. does not try to stay longer.

As Vice President and a former Congressional Representative, Robredo has a history of effective programs, especially in the areas of disaster relief and COVID-19 pandemic response, women’s empowerment, and gender equality. The Philippine Commission on Audit has rated her Office with the highest marks for excellent fiscal management. Robredo has taken on human rights cases for women, children, urban poor, workers, and fisherfolk as a lawyer. A statement signed by 150 human rights lawyers stated, “while she (Robredo) has only been a public official for nine years, she has been a public servant for most of her life.”  While Marcos, Jr has served in several elected positions, he has a lackluster record of sponsored bills and serves as the administrator of the unexplained wealth of the Marcos family, whom most believe is the stolen treasury of the Philippines government, estimated now worth $10 billion. Cases have also been filed in court that Marcos Jr. is ineligible to run for office since he has been convicted of tax evasion.

While most surveys and media outlets have predicted a win for the Marcos/Duterte ticket, no one can forget the Filipino people’s tenacity to fight for democracy in 1986 which resulted in the yellow-colored peoples’ power movement forcing Ferdinand Marcos and his family to flee the Philippines as millions of people took to the streets. Robredo, with her ‘Kakampink’ movement, took on the color pink as the symbol of democracy and combined it with the word “kakampi” which means ally. At a rally in Cebu, the second largest city in the Philippines, amongst the 250,000 participants outfitted in pink was a caribou painted pink with Robredo and Pangilinan’s faces to symbolize the support of farmers for the two. Massive volunteers, many of them young people, are now going door-to-door to convince people to vote for Robredo and Pangilinan and the rallies have drawn major actors, singers, and artists offering their services for free to the campaign. Even in the US where there are 200,000 dual Philippine citizens eligible to cast their vote in the elections, the Kakampink movement has resulted in car caravans, religious events, fundraisers, picnics, and voter mobilization in support of the Leni/Kiko ticket in major cities with large Filipino populations.

There is fear of what a Marcos/Duterte election may mean, given the powers of the executive office and the experience of repression under the present Duterte government. Marcos Jr’s refusal to acknowledge human rights, abuse and stolen wealth of his father’s regime, and characterizing those years as “the golden era in Philippine history,” has many worried that the true history of the Marcos regime will be erased from museums, books, and archives. Just as serious would be the possible return to the Marcos family of confiscated property and money seized by the Commission on Good Government due to investigations of stolen wealth. Lastly, the Marcos family could be absolved of any crimes, such as Marcos Jr’s tax evasion.

Yes, there is much at stake in the Philippine elections. The results could mean a beginning to the return of democratic rule or 12 more years of authoritarian rule. Which would you vote for?

Cindy Domingo is a Filipino American and has been active in the US-based Philippine solidarity movement since 1974. She continues her work today as a leader in the organization Akbayan North America. 
 

Post date: Fri, 05/06/2022 - 05:54

By Judy Adams and Cherrill Spencer
Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA WILPF Branch

May 2022

Marchers on the 15th arrived at the Lockheed Martin facility at the top of the hill, a mile from their starting point. Afterward, they stood on both sides of the road with signs and banners while cars, trucks, and bicycles passed by. The Grannies led us in song. We delivered a petition with 4000 signatures to the guards and read part of the petition aloud afterward. It urged Lockheed Martin to immediately convert from weapons manufacturing to “peaceful industries” for economic, environmental, and survival reasons. We felt the spirit of other groups taking the same action. Two Pacific Life members read a statement by Daniel Berrigan and the text of Isaiah Isaiah 2:4 from the Bible: “He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many peoples; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more.”

Photos were taken in front of the sign at the gate, including our WILPF “End the Nuclear Era” banner supporting the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, held by Judy and a Palo Alto Granny. Take a look at more pictures here. We refreshed ourselves for the mile walk back down the hill by cutting into a pentagon-shaped cake to symbolically cut the Pentagon’s budget and redirect it to peaceful production. We closed the day knowing that we had much to do to end weapons production but had others share the task.

The following Friday (April 22), Judy returned to the Palo Alto street corner where she organizes weekly vigils for WILPF; she recalled the past vigils she attended there as a new member of WILPF during the Vietnam War and remembered another 22nd, January 22, 2021, when the Pacific Life community joined us after their traditional fourth-Friday Lockheed vigil to support our celebratory vigil of the entry-in-force of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. So on April 22, Cherrill represented WILPF at the Pacific Life continuation of the “Stop Lockheed Martin” campaign at their regular vigil outside Sunnyvale’s Lockheed Martin.

The protestors took a short walk from the large blue sign identifying the facility to the plant gate, watched by several nervous security guards. Before and after the walk they listened to readings from America in Peril by Robert Aldridge, Civil Disobedience and Other Essays by Henry David Thoreau, and Other Essays by Thoreau. Cherrill and Judy have previously demonstrated with the Community, and the connection guarantees more work in coalition. The Community’s goal is “Ending Nuclear Weapons and War-Making Through Nonviolent Direct Action” We encourage branch members to plan to attend one of their Friday vigils to get to know them and their dedication as we stand together for peace.

 

Post date: Fri, 05/06/2022 - 05:45

Click here to view photo at full size.

By Martha Spiess
WILPF Maine

May 2022

To recognize #TaxDayEarthDay this year, Maine WILPFers participated in a Pop-Up Art Exhibit at Congress Square Park in Portland, Maine. It featured the #DefundClimateChaos project’s six artist panels that we assembled at home and transported to the park. We handed out Veterans for Peace (VFP) Climate Crisis & Militarism Project bumper stickers: “US militarism fuels climate crisis” and posted National Priority’s Pie Chart of discretionary tax dollar spending.

We handed out fliers for the May 1 PPC collaborative event featuring Keynote speaker Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, co-chair of the Poor Peoples Campaign. She spoke about Militarism and the War Economy. We were inspired by the WILPF PPC solidarity committee to invite her and were excited to collaborate with Maine’s Poor People Campaign and Peace Action Maine.

WILPF Maine continues to picket and vigil for diplomacy and peace for Ukraine with so many others. We take heart from WILPF’s open letter to the UN Security Council, which notes, “The rhetoric of militarism has silenced the calls for peace, and there continue to be flagrant violations of international law, including the core principles of the UN Charter.”
 

Post date: Thu, 04/28/2022 - 08:56

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Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 13:23

 

Stop Wall Street bankrolling pipelines and prisons by advocating for a public bank!

Register for a 6-session workshop: Starting Friday, April 8 at 8 p.m. (EST), with five more Friday evenings (same time – 8 p.m. EST) on April 29, May 20, June 10, July 1, and July 22. Learn more! [Link to 03 article]

Invest in Our Planet!

Plan Now for Earth Day on Friday, April 22. This year’s theme is INVEST IN OUR PLANET. It’s time for real, dramatic, revolutionary system change that puts People and Planet before Profit and Climate Justice+Women+Peace before war and destruction. Find out how you can contribute. [Link to 02 article]

#StopLockheedMartin on April 21

Lockheed Martin is by far the largest weapons producer in the world. From Ukraine to Yemen, from Palestine to Colombia, from Somalia to Syria, from Afghanistan and West Papua to Ethiopia, no one profits more from war and bloodshed than Lockheed Martin. People are asked to arrange a demonstration outside one of the hundreds of Lockheed Martin facilities!

There are many ways to be involved in WILPF US!

In addition to being in a branch, WILPF US members can join as many issue committees as they'd like. All a member needs to do is contact a chair/co-chair and say they'd like to be on the issue committee. Plus, WILPF US has many ad-hoc and standing committees. A list of those that are open to accepting new members will be listed in an eAlert that will be coming out within days. Watch for it! For more information, contact Dianne Blais at 703-830-1998 (cell: 703-300-7937).

Organizing for the Poor People's Campaign

It is time for us to ramp up our efforts and get ready for the mobilization required to have record numbers of people in DC on June 18, where we will demonstrate the powerful coalition that will build a moral fusion movement. Learn more
 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 13:17

By Emily Keel
WILPF US liaison to the PPC

April 2022

When the eNews comes out, I will be at NC's Moral Monday reunion rally with thousands of inspired people ready to act for justice! It is time for us to ramp up our efforts and get ready for the mobilization required to have record numbers of people in DC on June 18, where we will demonstrate the powerful coalition that will build a moral fusion movement. We are all pursuing the same fight when we work for labor rights, a living wage, health care for all of us, immigrant justice, guaranteed housing, ending militarism and the war economy, LGBTQ rights, and voting rights! I have been so encouraged by the number of people who are really putting forth the effort to recruit branch members and community members to join in. The only way forward is to confront injustice head-on with a mass movement, and we want to be a part of this.

The WILPF Poor People's Campaign committee is excited to announce that we will have both buttons and T-shirts available soon to celebrate the June 18 rally in DC. Please assess how many buttons your branch would like to receive; send that number to me, and we will get those to you. More will be coming your way soon about T-shirts and how to select and order them. Let's make this a united WILPF march with all of us making our commitment to this endeavor known to everyone. Click here to view the videos of WILPF members who voice their dedication to June 18 participation. Create a video of your thoughts, text Rev. Rowan Fairgrove at 408-472-5121 for a time to meet virtually and record.

The WILPF US board will be meeting in DC on June 19 and suggesting a meal together for all attending on the 18th or 19th .  Wouldn't it be exciting to spend time together talking, planning, and just enjoying each other for the first time in years?! There is a discussion about a Peace/PPC train from coast to coast to collaborate with other activists from Code Pink and other peace groups as well as PPC groups while traveling to the campaign on June 18.  Thoughts on planning this are underway, and you will hear more about this soon. If you would like to volunteer to help plan this trip, please let me know how you would like to participate.  Visit PPC’s website for June 18 resources, including bus reservations from your city, social media toolkits, and powerful statements to share WHY we march.

And here is one of those statements: “There are abundant resources to meet our needs, and we march to summon the political will to do so. America must have a moral revolution now. It is time to non-violently disrupt, protest, shake up and alter the direction of our nation towards a moral agenda of love, truth, justice, and equal protection under the law”. We want to be there as WILPF because if we truly want peace, we must work for justice.

For more information, please contact Emily Keel at ekkeel@protonmail.com or 252-944-7474.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 13:09

By Nancy Price
April 2022

Plan Now for Earth Day on Friday, April 22. This year’s theme is INVEST IN OUR PLANET. It’s time for real, dramatic, revolutionary system change that puts People and Planet before Profit and Climate Justice+Women+Peace before war and destruction with women at the peace table. 

Climate Justice Women + PeaceThe Earth Day website has all the materials you need to plan. Scroll down the home page to register your own event or find one near you. 

The planners emphasize:

  • This is the time to change it all - the business climate, the political climate, and how we take action on climate. 
  • Now is the time for the unstoppable courage to preserve and protect our health, our families, and our livelihoods.

For Earth Day 2022, we need to act (boldly), innovate (broadly), and implement (equitably). It’s going to take all of us.  

As you plan for Earth Day, how will you and your Branch interpret the following questions:

  • What issues in your community will bring diverse groups together to envision and cooperate on carrying out local solutions, especially for those of your neighbors harmed by climate and environmental Injustices? 
  • What projects, plans, or proposals might you take to your city or county councils? What funding might you need?
  • What kind of materials would you want to research and write for local education, mobilization, and action toward a Just Transition to green, sustainable energy, and food security for low-income residents in your community? 

Help organize an event in your community for the Great Global Cleanup®, a worldwide campaign Earth Day planners highlight. It’s to remove billions of pieces of trash from neighborhoods, beaches, rivers, lakes, trails, and parks to reduce waste and plastic pollution, improve habitats, and prevent harm to wildlife and humans.  

On this Earth Day, are we moving toward realizing the promise of  Martin Luther King, Jr’s Revolution of Values?

Poor People's CampaignJoin the Poor People’s Campaign—A National Call for Moral Revival on June 18 in Washington DC.

At this terrible time of devastating destruction of the cities and communities, ecological destruction and climate impacts, and death in Ukraine, let us remember that the first Earth Day in 1970 resulted from the coming together of the anti-Vietnam war and environmental movements.

We are headed into a mid-term election season when our civil and constitutional rights are under attack, and the future of people and the planet is threatened by the evils of racism, poverty, militarism, and ecological devastation. The founders of Earth Day in 1970 knew so well then the need for education, massive mobilization, and legislation.
 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 12:57

By Marybeth Gardam
Women, Money & Democracy Committee

April 2022

Stop Wall Street bankrolling pipelines and prisons by advocating for a public bank!

Register for a 6-session workshop: Starting Friday, April 8 at 8 p.m. (EST), with five more Friday evenings (same time – 8 p.m. EST) on April 29, May 20, June 10, July 1, and July 22.

You'll love connecting with like-minded women activists to change the story and work towards a more equitable future. Bring a glass of wine, a cup of tea, a snack or dinner to go, and join women activists who harbor hopes and passions for local projects that matter and that just lack funding in their communities.

Do you want to protect a historic home or school, get better funding for your local public schools, arts programs, more affordable housing options, homeless programs with wrap-around services, public transportation, community gardens, or low-cost student loans? Do you want to STOP empowering the big Wall Street banks who invest in everything you loathe: extractive mining, fracking, pipelines, for-profit prisons, war and weapons contractors, and climate-denying lobbyists who push for more subsidies for fossil fuel profiteers?

Public banking could offer strong solutions.

Find out more about it, where it’s moving forward, what benefits it offers to communities of color, students, small businesses, and the planet. Then find out how YOU can start the dialogue in states and cities where it hasn’t been introduced yet, or how you can get it going again in states where it has stalled.

When women come together and talk about how to move a good idea forward, everyone benefits. Put your head together with ours, meet with experienced public banking organizers from around the country, and support other women working on projects close to their hearts, needed in their communities, and only lacking funding.

When one such woman in Arizona found out that her state was gutting its public education budget to the tune of $300 million, she investigated WHERE her state spends its money. She found that Arizona sends an average of $300 million out of the state each year to big Wall Street banks, just for interest payments on public money the banks hold for the state. If every state sends an average of $300 million to those big banks, no matter, they have so much power, influence to buy candidates and votes, and money to invest in projects that are against our values.

Don’t forget! Register today! There’s still room for you to join a Women’s Learning Circle on Public Banking, co-sponsored by the WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee, the Public Banking Institute, An Economy of Our Own, and the California Public Banking Alliance. If you have any difficulty registering on Eventbrite, contact info@AnEconomyofOurOwn.org.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 11:53

Collage of photos of Greater Phoenix WILPF’s demonstration on March 6 against the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, with other peace groups. Photos taken by husband of WILPFer Barbara Taft, used with permission.
 

By Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
WILPF DISARM Committee

April 2022

In an eAlert, we urged WILPF members to join with local anti-war and anti-nuclear weapons groups to hold non-violent demonstrations in visible places on Sunday, March 6,  and to post photos and reports on the WILPF SMART Facebook page. An international coalition of peace groups chose the day for activists all over the world to get out on their hometown streets to protest against war and militarism, using the illegal Russian invasion of the sovereign nation of Ukraine as the common theme. Another theme is opposition to NATO for the reasons given in this 2008 statement by WILPF International.

We thank these branches who sent us photos and information about demonstrations on March 6 (listed alphabetically by state): Greater Phoenix, AZ; Humboldt, CA; Peninsula/Palo Alto, CA; Columbus, GA; Brunswick, ME; Detroit, MI; Philadelphia, PA.

Photo: Danita Gibson Lloyd of Fannie Lou Hamer Branch, Columbus, GA, on March 6.  Photo by Theresa El-Amin, on WILPF SMART YouTube channel
 

Biden and Congress Use Ukraine War as Excuse for Increasing 2023 Military Budget

WILPF US is a partner in the “Cut the Pentagon” coalition and the DISARM Committee has been working, with WILPFers’ help, to reduce the military budget for some years. We cannot let the Ukraine crisis lead to increases in military spending!

According to senior administration officials, President Biden is expected to ask for $813.3 billion in defense and national security spending for fiscal year 2023 when he releases his budget request around the end of March. The request would represent a $31 billion increase over the $782 billion in defense spending included in the government funding bill Biden signed into law earlier in March. Congressional leaders are saying the war in Ukraine justifies Pentagon increases and will swamp progressives’ effort to bring Pentagon spending under a bit more control. Like with their successful push last year, Republicans are already pushing to go beyond the president's already bloated request.

Congressional debate on the military budget starts in the Armed Services Committees of the House and Senate, and so we need to be writing to those committees’ members to urge them not to be influenced by the war in Ukraine in their budget discussions, that a diplomatic solution is what will bring the war to an end. You will find the names of these committee members here and here. If you are a constituent, a letter from you will count for more, but we ask all WILPF members to write or phone the House and Senate Armed Services Committee members to tell them not to raise the military budget to $813.3 billion for the fiscal year 2023. Say that you’d rather your taxpayer’s money be spent on nuclear abolition, reducing carbon dioxide emissions, providing universal health care and education, improving public transit, etc.

Weapons Manufacturers Looking to Increase Their Profits From Russia-Ukraine War

We call on WILPFers to join the Global Mobilization to #StopLockheedMartin on April 21, the same day Lockheed Martin holds its 2022 Annual General Meeting. Lockheed Martin is by far the largest weapons producer in the world. From Ukraine to Yemen, from Palestine to Colombia, from Somalia to Syria, from Afghanistan and West Papua to Ethiopia, no one profits more from war and bloodshed than Lockheed Martin. People are asked to arrange a demonstration outside one of the hundreds of Lockheed Martin facilities!

Russia Heightens Its Nuclear Weapons’ Readiness Level

The DISARM committee is working with various other peace organizations to increase US political support for the TPNW. The world moved closer to a nuclear catastrophe with the order by Russian President Vladimir Putin to put his nuclear arsenal in combat readiness amid his country’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. The only sure way to avoid a nuclear war is to abolish all nuclear weapons, which is the goal of the TPNW.

Two tactics we are using are (1) to persuade members of Congress to sign the ICAN pledge to support the TPNW and (2) to get more co-sponsors for the Eleanor Holmes Norton Bill, H.R. 2850 this session, which supports the TPNW and would use the saved money to retool and retrain the arms industries instead to produce carbon-free, nuclear-free energy, and other essential needs.

The NuclearBanUS working group has a marvelous tool for keeping track of what Representatives have or haven’t signed the ICAN pledge and co-sponsored H.R. 2850, and how to reach their appropriate staff to persuade them to do so. We hope WILPFers will continue to take part in this ongoing campaign, which evolved in part from the Nuclear Free Future Campaign of Carol Urner, Nuri Ronaghy, and Ellen Thomas from 2009 to 2019. Please write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org if you’d like to join this or any other effort - this is a level 2 activity that you can do from home.  “What’s a level 2 activity?” you may well ask. See below:


Image from back page of Peace & Freedom Magazine, fall/winter 2021

A Spot of Good News

In a slew of bad news we are reading every day: On March 23, Côte d’Ivoire became the fifth West African country to ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), following Benin, the Gambia, Guinea-Bissau and Nigeria. At the continental level, ten other African countries have already ratified the TPNW and 29 have signed it. In total, 60 countries have ratified the TPNW to date. [See ICAN for updates.]

Adios, Robin Lloyd!

Robyn Lloyd
Images from 2016, 2017, and 2018: Robin Lloyd

The DISARM/END WARS Issue Committee says “THANKS FOR EVERYTHING!” to retiring Disarm Co-Chair, Robin Lloyd for her many years of service to WILPF US, WILPF. We are overjoyed that she will stay on our committee and continue her important work in Burlington with WILPF Vermont.

Welcome, Bruce Shay!

Bruce ShayThanks also to Bruce Shay of the Greater Phoenix Branch, a helpful and creative DISARM/End Wars Committee member who has agreed to serve as a co-chair with Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas, elected unanimously at the March 13, 2022 meeting. Bruce lives in Phoenix, Arizona, and is a member of the WILPF Phoenix Branch. Bruce’s activism started in 2008. During a Pace e Bene training, a feminist approach to peace and justice issues led him to WILPF.
 

Bruce, Cherrill, and Ellen can be reached at disarmchair@wilpfus.org. Please write with your questions or comments, and let us know what’s happening for peace and sanity in your neighborhood!

 

Post date: Tue, 04/05/2022 - 11:43

By Darien De Lu

April 2022

I urge all WILPF members – each of you! – to seek out people you can invite to join WILPF – especially people of diverse colors, cultures, ages, and backgrounds. Such a diverse membership will help us choose our issue work and actions with a broader perspective. We know how much WILPF adds to our lives, giving us a like-minded community for activism and discussion. Now, let’s extend that positive experience! WILPF is experiencing the effects of socio-economic changes that lead many people to have less time for volunteering, so it is crucial that we have a wider membership base to support our volunteer-based activities.

We would like the diversity of our branch membership to be proportional to our local populations to better reflect the concerns of our varied communities. WILPF has a strong record of working for racial justice (see my 2021 eNews series on our racial justice work in recent decades – in September, October, and December. Many branches work collaboratively with local, predominantly “BIPOC” (Black, Indigenous, and other People Of Color) organizations, yet it’s time for us to take a stronger stand. Branches and at-large members should seek out opportunities – and create initiatives – to directly interact with and participate in BIPOC-led groups.

We can all offer guidance to other WILPFers by publicizing our local initiatives – such as the very successful (over 200 registrants!) Detroit Branch program on gun violence. That online event featured a multi-ethnic and multi-racial panel and – along with a prior event – reached out to and attracted the diverse membership of collaborating social worker and teacher organizations.

We must remember how systemic racism in the U.S. has created enormous economic obstacles for BIPOC. Many of those obstacles are as specified in the book, The Color of Law by Richard Rothstein. How does racism add to the cost of being a member of a discriminated-against minority group? Can you think of at least three ways?   

We should all be familiar with long-standing racist restrictions on job options and hiring, plus wage discrimination. Historically, Blacks and other minorities frequently paid higher rents for the limited housing available to them. Home and other loans are often unavailable or available only at a higher cost.

Did you think of the increased costs of health care, including chronic problems? Health issues increase due to stress from disrespectful and unfair treatment and various environmental factors for BIPOC individuals. Those range from greater pollution to lack of good grocery stores to the hazards of street crime and police!

And what about the loss of generational wealth – capital – due to all these factors? That makes for greatly restricted opportunities.

How many costs did you identify?  To assist members in understanding and being aware of facets of systemic and institutionalized racism such as these, WILPF has undertaken many activities and measures over the past year. We invited members to join our national book study group on Uprooting Racism, by Paul Kivel, and branches and at-large members can contact me to get the set of study questions to conduct their own study group. Similarly, all members are encouraged to explore in groups their thoughts and responses to the videos, articles, books, and more in this WILPF Resource List for Dismantling White Supremacy (over twenty pages!). Learn from studying those resources and the items in the Advancing Human Rights Resource Library.

However, reading and study alone must be tested by practice! We’ve worked for decades to obliterate racism, yet white supremacy in U.S. society and institutions is like the toxic PFAS and PFOS chemicals in the oceans and soil of the world – present, at least in traces, throughout!  So we must undertake “inner” work in WILPF. We can look critically at the functioning of our branches and at other WILPF structures to identify and confront vestiges of structural racism and unconscious bias. A committee that met throughout last summer addressed such inner work. A key outcome was recognizing the importance of WILPF members directly connecting and working with local BIPOC-led groups that share WILPF values.

Additionally, white WILPFers can specifically address racial justice with groups like Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ). Paul Kivel was one of the founders of SURJ, and he spoke at our August 2021 WILPF Congress. Kivel’s was one of several presentations about racism. You can view Kivel’s recording here, and you can see the entire “playlist” of Congress programs here.

As I noted above, WILPF members have allied with BIPOC groups for years, but we hadn’t necessarily considered the importance of having BIPOC voices within our branches. In national WILPF, we also want and need to have diverse leadership to better pursue racial justice. Choosing that road is useful for us all to view critically – and constructively – our functioning and practices. Sadly, I have heard from some members – white and BIPOC – that they have backed off from national leadership due to the personal, public attacks about alleged “white supremacy.”  White members should understand the tendency we may have to “white fragility,” yet ad hominem attacks are destructive and hurtful. They are inconsistent with the WILPF International Code of Conduct.

WILPF and I will continue to seek ways to pursue anti-racist practices and policies. When the national Board meets in-person in Washington, DC, for the June 18 Poor People’s Campaign march, we’ll continue our long-standing practice of in-person meetings of engaging in racial justice trainings and discussions.

What are you doing with other local people and/or your branch? Have you spoken up to invite diverse community allies to join WILPF? I ask for your help to continue this work! Please share with me your experiences and questions. Contact me (President@WILPFUS.org).

WILPF has been known for our sisterhood, and now we can extend that to even more members.

 

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