NEWS

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 07:07

WILPF members Marge Van Cleef and Joan Ecklein relate to each other. Photo credit: Darien De Lu,

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

May 2023

How are WILPFers connecting with each other? In today’s world of isolation and individuality, relationships can be helpful and healing! Many of us are fortunate to have a geographic branch in our area, which might hold events (including meetings) where we "talk politics" – WILPF politics that identify the interconnections among issues and that help direct our work to organize activities that influence resources and policy. This approach not only helpfully assists us in seeing the patterns of influence and dependency between issues and interests – in what might otherwise seems to be a world of isolated crises and events – but also, by working supportively with each other on "WILPF politics," we build human relationships.

There are additional important ways to connect our WILPF work and our lives.  For example, we’ll be glad to return to another important and traditional one in May/June of 2024 – our national WILPF US Congress, planned to be in-person in Minnesota.

I want to talk about other ways we can build both our personal relationships in order to increase our political effectiveness. For the encouragement to do so – and to embrace trying to practice a healing-centered style of relationships and leadership myself – I am indebted to Shawn A. Ginwright and her article in Nonprofit Quarterly, "Healing-Centered Leadership: A Path to Transformation". In his article, Ginwright acknowledges that many nonprofit groups (like WILPF) are sincerely seeking solutions for social change. He also identifies some widely shared myths about how social change works. And then he outlines how we can be doing better by improving the nature and quality of our relationships with each other.

Close Relationships Built Over Decades

WILPF members understand that the goal of ending war and all causes of war is a long-term goal. Of course, we undertake projects that last only several months and campaigns that may go on for a few years. Yet we’re in for the long haul! With the closeness and consistency of branch membership, we seek to encourage continuing relationships among our WILPF branch members. And with our triennial WILPF Congresses and numerous national committees, WILPF members meet and work together for decades – celebrating our successes and regrouping after defeats. Yet sometimes, as in most human relationships, those decades-long relationships can be quite difficult!

I may be irritated by the way Susie always wants to bring the discussion back to her pet issue or by way that, when Thelma starts to talk, I’d better settle in because she always goes on and on. Any of myriad individual patterns can get under my skin. Maybe it seems just too difficult to make the effort of self-examination to see why certain behaviors bother us – and why we just tolerate them, rather than taking the personal risk of (gently) raising an objection or concern.

Yet now we have a better understanding of how our lives are shaped by traumatic experiences.  In these trauma-filled times, it’s very easy to sink into hopelessness in the face of the current political landscape. So it can be a comfort to cling to a known issue! We might not realize that we’re acting out of what may well be an unconscious but formative personal or even historic trauma. As feminists – female and male – we may find ourselves filled with outrage at the discounting of so many women’s personal authority in making decisions about their own bodies and their lives. Yet will that outrage be a source of energy to work for a better world? Or will it boil over into a rage makes us reactive instead of responsive – leading to failed strategies and tactics?

A Healing-Centered Approach

Ginwright offers us a key to healing. He explores the personal and political transformations possible through a healing-centered approach, affirming the power that comes when we strengthen and deepen our interactions by working to heal our personal and shared pains.

We are all human, and we can learn so much by cultivating receptivity to more of the broad humanness of those we work with. We can do this with small steps – starting with the self-reflection and awareness that allows us to be notice the specifics of whatever situation or interaction we find ourselves in. What are our own feelings about it, and what are the responses of those around us? Keeping an eye on our political goals, we can take the time and space to find a way to speak or act that might open up – as a group and as individuals – the possibilities of healing. By looking within, by being sensitive to others, by speaking thoughtfully, bravely, personally, truthfully – we can begin to discover the ways harsh and painful experiences have shaped us and others. That discovery can lead to steps toward healing.

Ginwright also talks about the way our culture and society pushes us to be addicted to speed, action, doing, quick responses. From my professional work in substance use treatment, I know that addiction is almost always connected to trauma. We find ourselves pressured to rush forward in a hasty world – and we may have become addicts! Yet Gandhi spoke of haste as violence. As WILPF members working for a caring and nonviolent society, this world of acceleration is not the world we seek to build!

In our community organizing we might succeed in gaining a policy "win", but at what personal cost? How much does my daily email glut pull me away from individual relationships, family, and even civic involvement? I see our enduring personal and political connections in WILPF as being a potential place where we can consciously seek to support healing relationships. Our goals, for which we are working, meeting – even laughing and crying – together are both based on and propelled by the transformative changes that can arise from healing.

We can start by practicing both self-examination and empathy – by seeing how much we are like others – and different. I hope you’ll take a thoughtful risk, to both be compassionate and yet go beyond tolerance of differences at your next branch or national committee meeting. It is in extending ourselves in relationships across differences that we model a world in which very different cultures, societies, and people can live together peaceably. I’m seeking to practice this compassionate, curious, and healing-centered approach – which works with our differences. I hope you will try it.

If you’d like to find out how to connect with your local branch or to become part of a national committee, please contact me! President@WILPFUS.org, 916/739-0860 (please call after 9 am Pacific Time!)

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 06:51

Poster urging people to sign the petition, provided by the Peace in Ukraine coalition.

by Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
Co-chairs, DISARM Committee

May 2023

WILPF US is a member of the Peace in Ukraine coalition which is calling for an urgent end to the war in Ukraine. It’s time to stop the killing and devastation and we urge a ceasefire & peace negotiations now! Please sign the petition to Presidents Biden, Putin, and Zelensky at this website.

To build the movement needed to help end this calamitous war, we’ll need to reach more people. That’s why we’re raising funds to place this petition as a full-page ad in a major newspaper. Where it gets printed will depend on our fundraising efforts. Please go to this website to donate to this effort. Even just $5 will help!

Persuade Your Congressperson to Cosponsor H.R. 2775

Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton has introduced the “Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Conversion Act” (for the sixteenth time) as H.R. 2775 - 118th Congress (2023-2024): To direct the United States to sign the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons and convert nuclear weapons industry resources and personnel to purposes relating to addressing the climate crisis, and for other purposes. There are five original cosponsors, US Representatives Jim McGovern (MA), Raul Grijalva (AZ), Omar Ilhan (MN), Rashida Tlaib (MI), and Mark Pocan (WI). If they are your rep, please write a thank-you note to them.

We can and should begin asking all our legislators to co-sponsor her bill NOW in the House, and to introduce a companion bill in the Senate! You can read more details here.

Our DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee welcomes new members, write to disarmchair@wilpfus.org to request to join.

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 06:34
Laura Dewey

Click here to view video.
 

By Jeneve Brooks and Mary Hanson Harrison
Development Committee

May 2023

As WILPF US’ Development Team, we are hard at work seeking to raise money to keep WILPF US alive and thriving. Specifically, WILPF US Development Steward Mary Hanson Harrison is piloting a new fundraising project, “Lighting the Way: Your WILPF Legacy,” encouraging WILPF members to set up legacy donations as well as to consider becoming recurring donors. Jeneve Brooks, WILPF US Development Coordinator, is reaching out to new prospective major donors, working on our end of year and spring appeals, and is also meeting with issue committees to develop grant proposals to support our work.

We need more WILPFers to sign up for recurring monthly donations to help ensure our legacy. There are four main benefits to giving monthly:

1. Convenient for you! 
Once a monthly donation is set up, you do not have to think about it. You will not be hit at the end of the year, seeking to balance your contributions to other organizations along with a gift to WILPF. It will be deducted automatically from your account.
2. Good for WILPF!
Just like a family does a monthly and yearly budget, it is of great help to WILPF to be able to build a solid, reliable foundation for the twenty-first century.
3. Inspiring!
Studies show that in membership organizations like WILPF, recurring monthly donors feel more connected to the work and it inspires them to know that their contributions are making a difference.
4. Inspired member, Laura Dewey! Laura focuses her legacy on seeing that the Detroit Branch thrives and has just increased her monthly donation. View her video here and YOU will be inspired!

To set up recurring donations, click here. Then follow the first prompt under: DONATE ONLINE directly to WILPF US.  

As it reads on the website:
A RECURRING MONTHLY DONATION TO WILPF US
The gift of predictable monthly income supports sustained activism in any given month, to enable longer range planning. Mark your donation as a recurring donation.       

Any questions or ideas, please contact us! We’d love to hear from you!
If you have any questions or other ideas regarding raising money for WILPF US, please feel free to reach out to Mary Hanson Harrison at HARRISON0607@msn.com or Jeneve Brooks at wilpfus.jenevebrooks@gmail.com.

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 06:25

Photo credit: From the President Wilson House website.

by Pat Hynes
WILPF At-large Member

May 2023

The nineteenth century origins of Mother’s Day differ vastly in spirit from celebrations of it in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Mother’s Day was first inspired by two women with diverse but compatible social and political purposes. Prior to the Civil War, Ann Reeves Jarvis of West Virginia organized “Mothers’ Day Work Clubs” to teach women the basics of sanitation in food preparation and drinking water in a time of high infant and child mortality. After the war, she organized “Mothers Friendship Day,” bringing mothers of sons who fought on both sides of the Civil War “to promote reconciliation.”

Her daughter Anna Jarvis carried her mother’s legacy forward and convinced President Wilson to establish the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day. Jarvis eventually became so disillusioned with what she saw as the commercial sentimentalizing of and profiteering from Mother’s Day by the card, food and floral industries that she disowned it.

The first public “Mother’s Day for Peace” rally was held in New York City on June 2, 1872 at the inspiration of Julia Ward Howe, an ardent anti-war activist and promoter of world peace. Her 1870 Mother’s Day Proclamation passionately lamented the futile deaths in war and heralded action to stop future wars:

Arise then, women of this day! Arise, all women who have hearts…

Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have taught them of charity, mercy and patience…

We women of one country will be too tender of those of another to allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs.

From the bosom of the devastated earth, a voice goes up with our own.  It says, ‘“Disarm, disarm!”’…

Her Proclamation concluded calling for a congress of women of all nationalities to promote the “amicable settlement of international questions and the great and general interests of peace.

This theme of engaging women across the world for peace has only grown more urgent. Try Googling “photos of negotiating to end war in Ukraine,” recommends Margot Wallstrom, Sweden’s former Minister of Foreign Affairs: women are largely absent. Despite a more than 20-year-old UN Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security that promotes including women “in all efforts for the promotion of peace and security, less that 10 percent of peace agreements have female signatories,” she states. Yet, research shows that with “more women involved in peace processes, more proposals are put on the table and agreements reached last longer.”

In my 2018 interview with Nigerian lawyer, mediator, peace activist,  and WILPF member Ayo Ayoola-Amale, she underscored the critical impact of women in peace negotiations. “The Liberian 2011 Nobel Prize laureate Leymah Gybowee, together with Christian and Muslim women, pressured warring parties into the 2003 negotiations that eventually ended years of horrific war in Liberia. Research has shown that where women’s inclusion is prioritized, peace is more probable, especially when women are in a position to influence decision making…Women take an inclusive approach whether it is stopping conflict, contributing to peace processes, or rebuilding their societies after conflict or war.”

Restoring Political Roots to Mother’s Day

For the eighth consecutive year, the Black Mamas Bail Out Initiative is posting bond on and near Mother’s Day for Black mothers in jail, women languishing in “cages” without a trial because they are too poor to post bail. Their action has highlighted the profiteering of the bail bonds industry and inspired nationwide community action.

The US puts more women in jails and prisons than any other country in the world. And while comprising roughly 6% of the US population, Black women make up 22% of women’s imprisoned population.  Most are arrested for low-level drug use, some on false charges; and most are mothers. Support Black Mama’s Bailout Fund this Mother’s Day.

Postscript

I learned recently that “More phone calls are made on Mother’s Day than any other day of the year.” And I understand why. As a child, I loved giving my mother a card and a present on Mother’s Day as an expression of my love for her; and after I left home, I called her.Now I look forward to sending my sisters and nieces Mother’s Day greetings to honor them as the wonderful mothers they are. But even more urgent is restoring the spirit of our original Mother’s Day – calling for World Peace, a call that is loud, persistent, insistent, public and passionate.

Let us also remember that mothers wake up the morning after Mother’s Day to their social, economic, and political realities: poverty and food insecurity for almost 25% of single mothers; doing most of the unpaid domestic and caregiving work at home; pay discrimination; sexual violence for 1 in 4 women and widespread sexual harassment.

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 05:53
Cuba Protest

This March 2023 rally in Seattle is part of national monthly rallies calling for changes in US policies toward Cuba. Photo credit: Brenton Brookings, used with permission.

by Cindy Domingo
Co-chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

May 2023

WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issue Committee invites you to join us in a new campaign to remove Cuba from the United States State Department’s list of State Sponsors of Terrorism. Please go to www.nnoc.org to find out more information, social media tools and how your branch can take up this national campaign. With one signature, President Biden has the power to remove Cuba from this list, a list that Cuba does not belong on given its historical record of assisting nations, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In Trump’s final days in office, he placed Cuba back on the US State Sponsors of Terrorism List for refusing to fulfill right-wing Columbian President Ivan Duque’s 2019 extradition request for ELN’s peace negotiators after peace negotiations in Cuba broke down. The ELN (Ejercito de Liberacion Nacional) is Columbia’s National Liberation Army. This designation, along with Trump’s almost 250 additional sanctions against Cuba, added to the preexisting ones that stand as part of the 62-year-old blockade. These measures have caused even more damage and suffering to the Cuban people as their economy struggles in this post- pandemic recession.

In a November 2022 speech by Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parilla at the United Nations annual vote to lift the blockade, he put the economic damage of the US blockade at $9.1 million for 2020 alone. During the first 14 months of the Biden administration, the damage to the Cuban economy was estimated at $6.35 billion, equivalent to more than $15 million a day, Rodriguez added. For the 30th consecutive year, the UN vote was overwhelmingly in favor of lifting the blockade with 185 in support, the United States and Israel voting no and Ukraine and Brazil abstaining.

The main basis for Trump placing Cuba on the State Sponsors of Terrorism List, and Biden maintaining Cuba’s listing, is no longer valid. Current Columbian President Gustavo Petro has rescinded the extradition request and has applauded Cuba’s role in helping to bring peace between the government and the ELN. Other countries have noted that Cuba has done more to provide health care to the rest of the world than any other country, and that 120 countries have graduates from the Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM) located in Cuba. There are 30,644 physicians who graduated from ELAM who serve communities globally and the Henry Reeve Brigades, specially trained Cuban healthcare professionals, were sent to fifty countries to aid in the fight against COVID-19.

The #OFFTHELIST campaign was initiated by the National Network on Cuba, of which WILPF is a member, and had its first big national action on March 14 and 15 when hundreds of people called into the White House demanding that Cuba removed from the State Sponsors of Terrorism List. Many callers also contacted their congressional representatives to educate and move them to demand Biden take action.

Cities and organizations have passed resolutions also demanding Cuba be removed from the list and the continued monthly caravans in cities across the US are highlighting this campaign. We invite you to join us in this important campaign. Contact our issue committee co-chairs if you would like to attend our committee meetings and/or involve your branch in #OFFTHELIST Campaign: Cindy Domingo, cindydomingo@gmail.com; Leni Villagomez Reeves, lenivreeves@gmail.com.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 05:49

London, UK, May 14, 2022: Campaign sign at the End Apartheid - Free Palestine march in protest of 74 years of Nakba. Photo credit: John Gomez/Shutterstock.

by Barbara Taft
MEPJAC Leadership Team

May 2023

The Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee (MEPJAC) is proud to announce that our committee has signed on to the Apartheid-Free Communities Pledge, and that the WILPF US Section has now officially signed on as well. Information about this initiative can be found at Apartheid-Free Communities – Cut Your Ties to Israeli Apartheid.

The following is what the initiative calls upon endorsers to pledge to do. In addition, we would like you to urge other groups, including religious and secular entities, to also sign on. The pledge has been widely accepted by a range of groups, including Jewish, Christian, and Muslim organizations, as well as social justice and human rights groups. Please help us to spread the word.

Apartheid-Free Communities Pledge

We Affirm: our commitment to freedom, justice, and equality for the Palestinian people and all people;

We Oppose: all forms of racism, bigotry, discrimination, and oppression; and

We Declare: ourselves an apartheid-free community; and to that end

We Pledge: to join others in working to end all support to Israel's apartheid regime, settler colonialism, and military occupation.

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 05:44
Tina Shelton, Sylvia Metzler and Tarryn Keleman

From left, Tina Shelton, Sylvia Metzler (both of the Greater Philadelphia Branch), and Tarryn Keleman, librarian at Kensington Library.

by Tina Shelton,
Chair, Greater Philadelphia Branch

May 2023

The Greater Philadelphia Branch is very pleased to share the news that the book about Libby Frank, WILPF member and activist, is near publication! Friends of Libby’s and those interested in WILPF history may enjoy the short video put together by Heather Shafter: We Must Publish the Inspiring Story of Libby Frank | Indiegogo
 
In other book news, six books were donated to the Kensington Library (part of Free Library of Philadelphia system) by the Greater Philadelphia Branch (GPB) in honor of Marge Van Cleef, member and activist. We are glad that these books, which received recognition from the Jane Addams Peace Association’s Children’s Book Award, will be enjoyed by patrons of the Kensington library. Librarian Tarryn Kelemen helped us to make sure these books were received and labeled as a gift in honor of Marge.
 
In March, a small bevvy of activists were given a tour of the Lest We Forget Slavery Museum by the executive director of the museum, Gwen Ragsdale. For two hours, she informed, exposed, and related tales of the transatlantic slave trade and the museum’s collection of artifacts. The museum has a traveling exhibit, so reach out if you know a community event that would be willing to host. Thanks Gwen!
 
March was a busy month! We also partnered with Korea Peace Now to bring the film Crossings to the UPenn campus and Philadelphia. It was well received, and we are looking forward to more opportunities to work together!

 

Post date: Wed, 04/26/2023 - 05:37
Lance Canales and Dirk Charley

Lance Canales, left, and Dirk Charley, in front of the San Joaquin River. Both participated in a World Water Day event sponsored by Fresno Earth Democracy. Photos by Jean Hays.

by Jean Hays
Co-chair, Fresno Branch Earth Democracy

May 2023

Fresno Earth Democracy co-chairs Jean Hays and Kyla Mitchell, with committee members Joan Poss and Kay Pitts, organized an event that featured a quiet walk along the San Joaquin River. On March 22, 2023, a windy day that was a brief break in the series of storms hitting Central California for over a month, we gathered at the San Joaquin River Conservancy and contemplated water. We witnessed flows and amounts rarely seen in this river, one of the nation’s most controlled rivers.

Lance CanalesLance Canales, Yokuts, played Native American flute music, and Dirk Charley, Dunlap Band of Mono Tribe, shared some of his life experiences and talked about water from an Indigenous perspective. We heard from representatives of environmental organizations, such as Rachel Clark, president of the Fresno Audubon Society, and from Anita Lodge from Friends of the Gorge, which has been stalwart in the struggle against Temperance Flat Dam. Photo: Lance Canales playing his flute. 

Then we again went out to see the San Joaquin and returned to share our impressions in words and pictures. There was a very good crowd, and each of us took with us something from this extraordinary experience.

Post date: Wed, 03/29/2023 - 08:00

by Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth Democracy Committee

April 2023

This year’s Earth Day theme “Invest in Our Planet” focuses on engaging governments, institutions, businesses, and the more than one billion citizens who participate annually in Earth Day to do their part – “everyone accounted for, everyone accountable.”

This may be the first Earth Day when so much attention is focused on climate. After the most recent IPCC Synthesized Report for the Sixth Assessment Report was released on March 23, 2023, UN Secretary General António Guterres exclaimed: “The climate time bomb is ticking.”

This IPCC Report issued the warning that we need to keep global warming from exceeding 1.5 degree Celsius and cut GHG emissions by nearly half by 2030. The report emphasized that effective and equitable climate action now could reduce losses and damages for nature and people and create a safer, sustainable world. Should global warming pass 1.5 degrees Celsius, it would be devastating for the Earth’s people and ecosystems. Can we slow down catastrophic global warming, and reduce devastating weather events, rising seas, floods, droughts, food and water insecurity and hunger?

Earth Day 2023 Campaigns

The 2023 campaigns are described at www.earthday.org/earth-day-2023/ under Our Work with pictures, videos, and actions to take that will appeal to people of all ages, backgrounds, and interests. They focus on:

  • The Canopy Project: Conservation and Restoration to plant trees
  • Climate & Environmental Literacy
  • Plastic Pollution
  • Fashion for the Earth
  • Foodprints for the Future
  • The Great Global Cleanup
  • My Future My Voice
  • Regenerative Agriculture.

What does this year’s “theme” mean to you and your branch at a time of great urgency, human suffering, environmental destruction, and loss of species?

What campaign might your branch work on – not just on Earth Day, but all year?! Design handouts and signs. Consider your message and the kind of publicity you what. Order one of these WILPF banners:

Peace and Planet Banner

Climate Justice Women + Peace Banner

Consult the Earth Day Action Toolkit and register your event on the Take Action Earth Day Map! Please send pictures of your actions and events to EarthDemocracy@wilpfus.org with appropriate acknowledgements and captions.

 

The Earth Day Initiative: Festival + Virtual Stage on April 16

For those of you in the New York City area, on Sunday, April 16, you can join the in-person Earth Day 2023 Festival in Union Square, East 17th Street and Park Avenue South, from 12 to 6 pm. The organizers aim to “build the climate conversation, and the call for environmental justice in this pivotal year.”

This Earth Day Initiative includes special programs: Volunteering & Community Engagement, Renewable & Clean Energy, Sustainable Food, and Green and Healthy Buildings with comprehensive information on the topics and tips for organizing.

Are any of these initiatives already taking place in your community? Take this opportunity to work with other groups to advocate for funding and support for one of these programs to create new policy where you live.

People across the country and worldwide may tune into the “Virtual Stage” to hear speakers, music and more. While 2023 plans are finalized, check out the Earth Day 2022 Virtual Stage schedule here.

 

A Growing Chorus

Combining Earth Day with campaigns and climate will bring together different groups of people and organizations that often work in their own silos. This will further expand the movement for a just and sustainable world.

A growing chorus of those most impacted by global warming in parts of Africa, Asia, Central and South America, the Least Developed Countries, Small Islands, and the Arctic will be heard demanding action and that governments, institutions, and businesses must be held accountable.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 03/29/2023 - 07:19

April 2023

 

Visit Golden Rule in the DC Area April 2-17

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary

The Golden RuleThe Golden Rule, which is making a Great Loop, will be in the Washington, DC area April 2-17. There are several different scheduled events open to the public, including open boat events at the DC and Alexandria wharfs. The project manager for the Golden Rule peace ship is a WILPF member who has been traveling since September with the crew. WILPF is supporting the Golden Rule with branch participation and monetary support –  the WILPF US board agreed to support their anti-nuclear efforts with a $2500 donation. 

Click image for larger version of schedule.

 

Issue Committee and Board Meetings Schedule

by Darien De Lu
President

At the national WILPF level, we’ve heard/seen a number of requests about when upcoming meetings may be. WILPF has issue committee, board, and multiple other periodic meetings.  All current WILPF members are generally welcome to meetings of the first two – issue committees and the board.

For our issue committees, here is some information that was offered via our WILPF Branches listserv.  Please contact the committee chairs for meeting details, including the actual virtual meeting link. Look at their webpages for information on all seven of WILPF’s issue committees (the live links are listed, in the right column, here). There you’ll find the contact information for committee leadership. 

Meeting dates may vary to accommodate core members’ schedules, so please reach out well in advance so as not to miss out!

  • Women, Money & Democracy – Third Tuesday of each month at 8:00 pm ET/7:00 pm C/5:00 pm PT
  • Domestic Prisoners of War – last week of month, often on a Wed.: 8:00 pm ET/7:00 pm C/5:00 pm PT
  • DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee – second and last Sunday of the month at 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET
  • Middle East Peace and Justice Action Ctte. (MEPJAC) – third Saturday of the month at 2 pm Eastern.
  • Earth Democracy has not yet set a recurring meeting date. 
  • Advancing Human Rights has not yet set a recurring meeting date.

Please contact issue committee chairs/leadership for additional details.

For the board meetings, the next meeting is Saturday, May 27 – at 10 am PT, 11 am MT, noon CT, and 1 pm ET.  Please refer to the detailed information here.

If you are interested in being involved at the national WILPF level, please contact me by email – President@wilpfUS.org – or phone:  after 9 am PDT – 916/739-0860 (landline, texts don’t work!). Our standing board committees, as well as an assortment of ad hoc committees, frequently are seeking additional voices and helpers to accomplish the administrative and organizational work of WILPF.

 

National Board Awards the 2024 WILPF Congress Bid to Minnesota!

by Darien De Lu
President

In two days of weekend, marathon meetings, the WILPF US National Board made a number of important decisions. I’m excited to announce one that I hope will capture the attention and interest of all WILPF members.

In response to energetic organizing work by our WILPF US International Advisory Board member and Minnesota at-large member Dee Murphy, a virtual meeting of Minnesota members enthusiastically agreed to submit their bid to the National Congress Committee. That committee solicited additional bids, receiving seven responses – only two of which included bids. The committee recommended the Minnesota bid to the Board, and the Board voted in favor of that bid.

The Minnesota bid suggests that the 2024 WILPF US Congress should most appropriately be scheduled in May or June of 2024. That’s a little earlier than is often the case for our Congresses – so save time in your calendar now! Watch for further eNews updates.

 

Virtual Summer Gathering

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary

This summer will be WILPF US’s FIRST virtual summer GATHERING! Gatherings will hopefully be held every year when there isn’t an international or national congress. Our WILPF US staff, board, international reps, issue committee chair and representatives from each branch will speak! A “Save the Date” will go out soon.

 

 

Pages