NEWS

Post date: Tue, 08/29/2023 - 05:44

Enthusiastic supporters of the Golden Rule on the dock in Erie, PA, on August 4, 2023.

By Mary King and Susan Smith
Pittsburgh Branch

September 2023

On August 4, 2023, a caravan from Pittsburgh WILPF traveled to Erie, PA, to greet the Golden Rule, a ship built by Quakers in 1958 to sail to the Marshall Islands to interrupt nuclear testing. It has been restored by Veterans for Peace to share its message that nuclear abolition is possible along its 1500-mile Great Loop voyage.  

An enthusiastic group from Pittsburgh was joined by about a dozen locals in welcoming the beautiful ship and crew.

We toured the ship, talked to the crew, and sang anti-nuclear and peace songs on the dock. The mayor of Erie sang two songs along with us. Members of the group who sailed with the crew reported getting many waves and thumbs up from others in the harbor.

You can learn more about the Golden Rule and its mission at: www.vfpgoldenruleproject.org.

House Resolution 77, in committee since January, offers positive steps to reduce the risk of nuclear war and to promote global peace and security.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 08:30

WILPF member and Hibakusha Hideko Tamura will appear in a documentary about Oppenheimer on MSNBC on July 9th at 10 pm EDT. Image was screenshot from the trailer for this film which will also be streamed on Peacock from July 10th onwards.
 

by Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
Co-chairs, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

July 2023

The DISARM committee invites you to take part in several actions during July to help highlight the scourge of nuclear weapons and to advocate for their abolition. WILPF member Hideko Tamura is a Hibakusha of the Hiroshima bomb, and she will appear in the documentary film To End All War: Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb on MSNBC on Sunday, July 9, at 10 pm EDT (then it will be streamed for some weeks on NBC’s Peacock service). We encourage you and your friends to watch it and also to see the dramatic film Oppenheimer.

We are taking advantage of the Oppenheimer film premiering on July 21st in cinemas all over the United States to tell the public about the dire need to abolish nuclear weapons. We will provide you (via an eAlert) with a flyer to hand out to audience members as they leave your local theater after any showing of Oppenheimer, which is expected to run for several weeks.

One way to bring the existence of nuclear weapons to an end is through the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), which we are urging the President to sign, using hardcopy and online petitions.

CONGRATULATIONS to the Boston WILPF branch which has sent the Disarm Committee 285 signatures collected since the first of the year on the WILPF US petition to the President asking for his signature on the TPNW, and to the US Senate for ratification of the TPNW! Way to go, Massachusetts! Try to catch up, everybody!

QR codeThere are more than 7,000 signatures collected on paper petitions by WILPF members all over the country since July 2017, when the TPNW was approved at the United Nations. There are also 3,204 signatures collected on the online petition so far.  You can also access the online petition through this QR code.

The pandemic interrupted the signature campaign, so we were delighted to receive 20 paper petitions from Eileen Kurkoski in June, and we hope it's a sign of many more to come from all branches and members! 

We hope everyone will begin gathering signatures again, both personally and via social media, which we will take to the next review of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in New York in 2025, to demand the nuclear powers live up to the pledge in Article VI of the NPT, which reads, “Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”

Related to the TPNW and the NPT is the so-called “Norton bill” which has been introduced in 16 sessions of Congress by Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, whose goal is for the US to get rid of all its nuclear weapons and to spend the money saved on converting our energy sources to renewable ones. The bill is HR-2775 this session. We are asking you to take part in lobbying your congressperson to co-sponsor HR-2775 on July 12th or 13th. If you are interested, fill out this Washington, DC Lobby Day Form and you will be contacted by Nuclear Ban US with the appropriate details.

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

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 06:38
Announcements Graphic

 

July 2023

SAVE THE DATES: WILPF Gathering – Wednesday, August 16 and Thursday, August 17 

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary

Virtual meetings, where all members may attend from the comfort of their home, can be a boon and great tool for a national organization like WILPF US. You can participate and learn more about WILPF and your areas of interest. 

The last totally virtual WILPF US Congress (out of necessity, due to the pandemic) was a great success! In 2024, our Congress is expected to be in-person — possibly with virtual options. Then, the next year, the 2025 WILPF international Congress will take place. 

That leaves this summer as the perfect time for our first virtual Gathering: Wednesday and Thursday evenings, August 16 and 17, starting at 5 pm PT/ 6 pm MT/ 7 pm CT/ 8 pm ET and ending two hours later.

Our WILPF US "Gathering" is for all WILPF US members. 

At the Gathering, you will have a chance to hear from the WILPF US Board, our national staff members, the issue committee chairs, and some branch leaders — and you’ll be able to ask them questions. 

On both Wednesday and Thursday there will be breakout rooms before and after each session. On Wednesday and before the Thursday meeting one can join a small group for face-to-face interactions. The breakout rooms after the meeting on Thursday will be with the Issue Committee chairs and can go on as long as the group desires.

Mark your calendars now! And watch for an eAlert in mid-August for the agenda and event time details. 
 

Two Options for ‘Official’ Branch Logos

by Dianne Blais
WILPF US Secretary

WILPF can improve recognition for our organizational and further promote WILPF by using consistent logos. And now the national board has approved two logo options for branches to use, if they wish – designated, here, as #1 and #4.

Contact me at Secretary@wilpfus.org with the branch name and logo selection (by number) and we will arrange for you to get your branch logo.

Logos
 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 06:15
No to NATO

by Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth Democracy Issue Committee

July 2023

From July 6th to 9th, Global Women for Peace Against NATO will gather in Brussels, Belgium, and “virtually” in countries around the world. Events are open to all genders, individuals, and organizations worldwide.

This global gathering takes place about a month after the International Summit for Peace in Ukraine, held June 10-11 in Vienna, Austria, and just before the NATO Summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, July 11-12.

For those coming to Brussels, the events and seminars will take place at the Pianofabriek, Fortstraat 35 on July 7-9. People can register here and indicate if attending “in person” or “online” as “virtual” participants.

Please read the Declaration of Peace here and sign the Declaration here, where you will also find the list of languages for translations of the Declaration. We encourage everyone to send the Declaration to you family members, friends and colleagues and invite them to read and sign the Declaration.

The Declaration and list of signatories will be sent to the NATO headquarters, NATO members and partners, and their parliaments, together with the EU Commission, members of the European Parliament. We will make sure our voices are heard – raising our collective voice for peace and justice.

Important Program Events

Here’s a quick overview of the July 6-9 program so that wherever you live, you may plan the time to tune into the actions, discussions, and seminars:

Thursday, July 6
12:45 – 14:00 CET
The Women’s Declaration for Peace will be presented to Members of the European Parliament, followed by speeches and discussion.

Friday, July 7 & Saturday, July 8
Hybrid Seminars for those in Brussels attending in person and others attending “virtually” where they live.

Friday, July 7
9:40 – 12:45 CET
NATO/US - threat and consequences: welcome and hybrid seminar

13.30 – 16.00 CET
NATO in the Global South – hybrid seminar

17:30 CET
Protest action: Invest in Peace organized by Belgium peace organizations at Albertina Square that will be filmed for the Peace Wave 2023.

19:30 – 22:00 CET
Global NATO or Global Peace? Public panel organized by the No to War – No to NATO Network and Belgian peace organizations.

Saturday, July 8
10:00 – 12.30 CET
NATO in the Asia Pacific

14.00 – 15:30 CET
NATO in Latin America

16.00 – 18.00 CET
Stopping US and Canada’s Participation in NATO’s Wars

Sunday, July 9
10:00 – 13:00 CET
Global Women for Peace United against NATO: future planning meeting.

NATO continues to add member countries and to increase the number of groups and allies they work, consult, and carry out exercises and trainings with; as they are doing this work to prepare countries to become members, it is time to say “No to NATO,” No to War,” and “Yes to Peace.”

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 06:05
All People Poster

by Tura Campanella Cook and Regina Birchem
WILPF-US Middle East Peace & Justice Action Committee

July 2023

What would society in Israel and Palestine be like if it were Apartheid-Free? What if all communities were without elements of exclusionary institutions, laws and practices, and had economies that work for all with no one stateless?

The situation of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories, specifically Gaza, the West Bank, and Jerusalem, continues to deteriorate. It is clear that the Israeli occupation since 1948 and furthered in 1967 has gone from an illegal military occupation to an apartheid regime, a crime against humanity. Last November discussions began within a North American coalition of faith groups under leadership of the American Friends Service Committee to urge collective action by organizations of conscience to end apartheid, settler colonialism, and military occupation of the Palestinian territories.

The Pledge for Apartheid-Free Communities

WILPF-US has endorsed the pledge for Apartheid-Free Communities, as Barbara Taft reported in her May 2023 eNews article. More action ideas and supporting materials became available after the public launch in June. The social justice committee of your faith organization, your local anti-war or civil rights group, tenants council, food co-op, book club, WILPF branch, or any “community” can fill out this form to take the Pledge:

  • We affirm our commitment to freedom, justice and equality for the Palestinian people and all people: and
  • 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.

Your community can discuss Apartheid-Free Communities in the context of where you live and how apartheid plays out in the Palestinian Occupied Territories. Who enables and supports the oppression financially, shares military weaponry, and uses the research on surveillance and control?

To help you and others in your communities deepen your understanding of the issues, there are many excellent resources at the Apartheid-Free website.

Apartheid in Context

Apartheid (the Afrikaans word used to describe institutionalized segregation in South Africa) is defined in international law as a crime against humanity that involves “inhuman acts committed for the purpose of establishing and maintaining domination by one racial group of persons over any other racial group of persons and systematically oppressing them.” These inhuman acts include murder, torture, arbitrary arrest, legislative discriminatory measures, the persecution of people resisting apartheid, and more.1

We can recognize this: institutionalized segregation was well established in the United States by the Black Codes following the Civil War and the Supreme Court ruling Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896. It was the US status quo in 1948 when institutionalized segregation was established in white-ruled majority-Black South Africa. That same year, the Jewish state of Israel was created within majority non-Jewish historic Palestine where Muslims, Christians, and Jews had lived together under British colonial rule, during the Ottoman Empire, and earlier. What began in Israel as illegal occupation became apartheid.

Actions to Live Into Your Pledge

Each community has a different context and is on a different journey toward addressing the evils of apartheid and all forms of racism, bigotry, discrimination, and oppression. As of mid-June, 114 community organizations have signed the Pledge.

Check out the action guide for ideas about how to live into your pledge.

Footnotes

[1] For a detailed discussion of the definition of apartheid and how it applies to the situation in Palestine/Israel see also resources by the Institute for Middle East Understanding, Amnesty International, and Kairos.

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 05:56
Take Cuba Off the List

At a June 25, 2023 march in Washington, DC, where over 500 solidarity activists demanded normalization of relations with Cuba, including an end to the US blockade and taking Cuba off the US List of State Sponsors of Terrorism. Photo credit: Bill Hackwell, used with permission.

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

July 2023

Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issue Committee Co-chair Cindy Domingo has described the campaign to remove Cuba from the US State Sponsors of Terrorism List in her excellent e-News article “Cuba Is Not a Terrorist Country”!

Former President Trump arbitrarily reinstated Cuba’s designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism less than a week after the January 6th attempted coup, reversing the Obama-Biden administration’s 2015 decision to remove this status after an exhaustive review by the U.S. State Department. Cuba does not satisfy any criteria for inclusion on this list. Cuba sponsors peace and health care, not terror.

This campaign, coordinated by the National Network on Cuba, of which WILPF-US is a member, sponsored a week of action in June with educational advocacy and a June 25 march and rally in Washington, DC, that drew over 500 activists. The central demand was that Biden keep his campaign promises to work toward normalizing relations with Cuba, and that he initiate the process of removing Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism List.

In an attempt to prevent President Biden from doing this, Florida Republicans have introduced H.R.314, the FORCE Act. This proposed legislation in the US House of Representatives, currently controlled by Republicans, is designed to remove a particular executive power from a president of the other party; it is a partisan power-grab. The bill changes the process for removing, specifically and uniquely, Cuba from the US State Sponsors of Terrorism List in order to prevent the President and State Department from acting. The FORCE Act has also been introduced in the Senate by Republican Senators Rubio and Scott. If enacted, this bill would stop President Biden from making any effort toward normalizing relations with Cuba.

The unjust State Sponsor of Terrorism designation has no basis in fact and gravely increases the punitive restrictions on Cuban trade, finance, family remittances, and travel. Countries and potential business partners refrain from trading with Cuba for fear of angering the US or incurring penalties. The result has been severe shortages of food, medicine, spare parts, fuel, and all necessities in Cuba. This adds to the shortages that the Cuban people already experience due to the blockade. Even humanitarian aid is blocked by the restrictions involved in this designation, as detailed by the Washington Office for Latin America: “Fearful of being accused of abetting terror and the mammoth fines that an infraction entails, most banks refuse to process Cuban payments and have frozen funds for permitted religious and humanitarian activities…”

Please join us in urging your representatives in the House and Senate to VOTE NO on H.R.314/S.538, the FORCE Act. Please continue to urge President Biden to remove Cuba from the US list of State Sponsors of Terrorism. There is no reason Cuba should be on this list. The designation of “terrorist” would be absurd if the consequences were not so real and damaging.

Contact our issue committee co-chairs if you would like to attend our committee meetings and/or to involve your branch in the #OFFTHELIST Campaign:

Cindy Domingo, cindydomingo@gmail.com
Leni Villagomez Reeves, lenivreeves@gmail.com

 

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 05:52

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

July 2023

WILPF has activities, programs, actions, and campaigns – all at the local, national, and international levels. Through our structures at all these levels, we connect and coordinate, support and strategize, plan and produce. And you – WILPF members and activists, participating as you can in the areas you choose – are what makes it all happen!

This article gives you a quick overview of where and how you can link in, identifying your “political home” in WILPF. Of course, not all WILPF members can engage to the same extent, yet through our multi-level connections and structures, each of us can contribute some of the energy and imagination we bring to life. Through a dynamic network, part of a whole. we accomplish more than we could individually.

We all have multiple overlapping and intersecting areas of personal life demanding our attention. Yet, as informed and active people, we see what’s happening in the world. This year, this time, feels critical! With the Dobbs anniversary, the latest Alabama voting rights decision, the nuclear and climate threats, the petro pipelines and loans, the wars and violence…. Maybe you’re ready to take a look around to see how and where you can take organized action?

There’s a place for you in WILPF! Where do you want to be in WILPF’s structure? Each of us can choose: Do you prefer to focus more at the neighborhood and city level? Working in a local branch lets you build relationships with other WILPF members and gives you a place for thoughtful discussion and ongoing activism.

If you’re not near a branch, I encourage you to bring a WILPF perspective – on the interconnections of issues – to your local work. You can also join our virtual branch: the Jane Addams Branch welcomes members from across the country. Enjoy a valuable part of WILPF in the activist ties and interconnections that offers!

Perhaps – in addition to or instead of a local focus – you may want to participate in a national issue committee, where you can see wider perspectives and be part of broad campaigns. Or are you drawn to the nuts and bolts of our organization? Help develop WILPF leaders through the Nominating Committee – or contribute on matters covered in the Personnel Committee or Finance Committee, or in areas of another of WILPF’s national standing committees. See the illustration above of our structures, showing the seven issue committees, many of the popular standing committees, and the national board, plus, of course, the members in branches or at large.

The illustration says nothing of our many ad hoc committees, which come into existence to focus on particular topics or programs. You might enjoy that ad hoc committee combination of national perspective with specificity. In any case, you’re wanted – as a dedicated ad hoc or standing committee member, a participating issue committee member, an attending branch member, and/or a contributing WILPF member!

If you’re involved exclusively at the at-large or branch level, you may wonder what national WILPF has to do with you. Of course, here you are, reading this eNews! So you already know quite a bit about the initiatives of branches and issue committees across the country – and how those actions can inform and inspire you.

While most members don’t participate at all the different levels, you can try out different areas and levels of activism – perhaps to discover something that is unexpectedly gratifying. WILPF US is a member-driven organization; it is dependent on volunteer participation.

Be introduced to WILPF’s structures and leadership by spending just a few hours at the Gathering on Wednesday and Thursday, August 16 and 17. You’ll meet issue committee leaders, staff, and our board. (Also, you’ll have the chance to get to know other WILPF members, by coming early to the main sessions – or lingering afterwards. I’ll be welcoming everyone to dyads and triads in the breakout rooms that we’ll host as part of the Gathering.)

Beyond the eNews and eAlerts, you can find out more by attending a WILPF National Board meeting. Those meetings address a range of WILPF concerns in a virtual format every other month, and they’re open to all WILPF US members. You’re likely to hear reports from standing board committees or about such board committee business; frequently the meetings issue calls for volunteers for ad hoc committees. Besides committee members, WILPF needs National Board members – and when you attend board meetings, you might realize that someone you know – or you – could be a good board member.

You’re invited to our next board meeting, on Saturday, July 22! Or join us in September or November. Find the meeting time and dates, information about the board members, and how to get the meeting attendance link, all on this National Board webpage.

I hope I can welcome you to a board meeting sometime! If you have questions about our WILPF structures – including the Jane Addams Branch, drop me a friendly email: President@wilpfUS.org.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 05:46

 

by Janice Hawkins
Des Moines Branch

July 2023

“No Mow May” started in the United Kingdom in 2019, jumped the pond, and has now been embraced by more than 200 cities and campuses throughout the United States. In Iowa, Ames, Cedar Falls, Dubuque, and Des Moines have joined the No Mow initiative. WILPF Leadership Team Members Carolyn Uhlenhake Walker and Joann Muldoon along with Janice Hawkins formed the trio leading this action.

Pollinators are the keystone members of our ecosystem with the number of bees worldwide dropping by 50% since the 1970s. Pollinators are directly or indirectly responsible for 75% of the human food supply worldwide. The United Nations has stated that the dwindling count of pollinators is a threat to the survival of life on earth, including human life. Allowing grass to grow higher creates an inviting environment for bees to reside and flourish.
  
How high your grass can grow before it is referred to as a “public nuisance” is typically found in your city’s list of ordinances, under “weeds.” We approached our City Council, offered education, then requested a proclamation supporting the effort and waiving the height restriction for weeds. Des Moines Mayor Frank Cownie met with us several times and heartily agreed to promote the City Proclamation including a waiver of the maximum height rule. An editorial and several articles including “Letters to the Editor” were reported in the Des Moines Register. 
   
Not everyone could participate due to rules, agreements, or contracts of their living situation (the City Proclamation does not usurp those agreements). Negotiated modifications can be successful and allay fears of personal neglect, neighbor complaints, or leaving the impression of no one at home or the property being abandoned.

Des Moines has 49 Neighborhood Associations and over 150 yard signs were placed in 28 or 57% of those jurisdictions. Four weekly newsletters provided information on the names of individuals posting signs. At the end, we gave participation awards of gift certificates to Blooming Prairie Nursery and gardening texts. Spurred by the interest, we are already dreaming of “Mow Less May” for next year! See more in the next issue of Peace & Freedom.

Post date: Wed, 06/28/2023 - 05:42

by Mary Sanderson
Madison Branch and Women, Money & Democracy Committee

July 2023

Over four Thursday mornings in May, WILPF’s Women, Money & Democracy Committee (W$D) co-hosted with Alliance For Just Money (AFJM) a lively study group diving deeper into the Future in Our Pockets webinar (FiOP) we presented last February. We were six WILPFers and six others.

Mary Jensen told how Kim Stanley Robinson’s The Ministry for the Future made her attend the FiOP webinar. When she joined the study group, Mary said she had been completely in the dark about the nature and importance of the monetary system before KSR’s novel, and that she is grateful to be beginning to understand some of the finance and economic talk on the news.

Dianne Blais used our work, together with her economics background, to present “A Better Economy” at a Women’s Finance event hosted by the Virginia American Association of University Women (AAUW) and League of Women Voters (LWV). Dianne said, “I opened my talk by asking, ‘who creates 97% of the money in the US?’ I spoke about our debt/war economy and…our founders’ goal of Congress creating the money (not commercial banks).” 

Weeks two and three outlined the specific ways in which this bank-credit system of money creation generates housing shortages, student debt, and permanent war.

Our last session focused on the three legs of an important solution, The American Monetary Reform Act (AMRA). These three measures, historically proven, are hard for us even to imagine after 300 years of trusting bank-credit for money.

  1. Nationalize the private Federal Reserve into the Treasury as a federal agency to keep economic statistics
  2. Take back from private banks the right and responsibility to create money by lending. That power to create money can be thought of as the goose that lays the golden eggs.
  3. Return that goose to Congress who was tasked by the US Constitution with creating and controlling the money supply.

For a possible road to true self-governance, our money supply must be entrusted to an accountable body to be used for public purpose. We are off-target expecting government to do right while private banks hold the power of the purse.

W$D and AFJM will host a second study group to be held evenings in the fall, as requested by ten more Future in Our Pockets participants.

WILPF and An Economy of Our Own (AEOO) members and friends are invited to join the fall sessions. Watching the webinar and completing a short scheduling poll are the only prerequisites.

 

 

 

Post date: Thu, 05/25/2023 - 07:42

 

By George Friday
Program Committee Chair

There is a need to strengthen national, regional and international cooperation in relation to the full enjoyment of economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights by people of African descent, and their full and equal participation in all aspects of society. 

The theme for the International Decade is identified as “People of African descent: recognition, justice and development” with the following objectives: 

Promote respect, protection and fulfilment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by people of African Descent, as recognised in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; 

• Promote a greater knowledge of and respect for the diverse heritage, culture and contribution of people of African descent to the development of societies; 

• Adopt and strengthen national, regional and international legal frameworks according to the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action and the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and to ensure their full and effective implementation.

Excerpts from the WILPF RESOLUTION 33rd Congress   24 July 2022 

Supporting the International Decade for People of African Descent

Slavery was abolished in the United States on December 6, 1865. 

The 13th Amendment passed Congress in January but wasn't ratified until December 6th of 1865. While the bill passed in January of that year, many states with enslaved Africans did not hear that news for months. 

The Emancipation Proclamation had freed enslaved people two years prior but it wasn't until the end of the Civil War that Union troops began to enforce the order for freedom in the Confederate States. 

On June 19, 1865, Texas was informed. Juneteenth became an official holiday in Texas in 1980. It took an executive order to make it a federal holiday. Juneteenth became a federal holiday in June 2021.

It is observed as such in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Delaware. DC. Virginia. West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, Montana, Nebraska, South Dakota, Colorado, Utah. Idaho, Oregon, Washington State, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, and Georgia. 

If you live in any of these states, take the opportunity to participate in or hold an event in recognition of Juneteenth.

Juneteenth is Monday, June 19

Attend an event and share info about WILPF US!! Recruit new members!!

If you are not in these states, consider an action, LTE campaign, or another public education method to call for your state to recognize Juneteenth as a holiday.

For more Information, email George Friday at: ProgramChair-Friday@wilpfUS.org.
    

 

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