NEWS

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 08:23

 

May 2020


Program Committee

Join Next Open Program Committee Meeting on June 2

By Joan Goddard

The national Program Committee meeting on Tuesday, June 2 at 5/6/7/8 pm will follow up on the nifty open-to-all-members meeting we had in April, with annual program planning breakout rooms for branch and at-large members, hosted by each issue committee listed on the WILPF US Our Work page.

For info, contact Program Chair Joan Goddard at the email address listed on the National Board page.


Disarm/End Wars

Sign and Share Petitions Supporting Call for a Global Cease-fire

By Odile Hugonot Haber and Ellen Thomas

Last month, we reported on the March 23, 2020 call by United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres for a global cease-fire during the coronavirus pandemic (see "What We Can Do Right Now as Disarm Activists"). Silencing the guns and ending air strikes in zones of conflict (including permanent truces in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen) would help create corridors for life-saving aid, open special windows for diplomacy, and bring hope to places most vulnerable to COVID-19.

Many peace organizations and some nations joined the call, but not the United States and Russia. So France’s President Macron tried diplomacy, creating a resolution promoting a limited cease-fire for conflict zones, to be monitored by a 15-nation international council. The US and Russia sluggishly joined in. Chinese President XI Jinping confirmed that he agrees, and Macron is hoping for a virtual summit of the five nations in the United Nations Security Council (Britain, China, France, Russia, US).

This is not what Guterres asked for and would still allow states to continue military operations against individuals and armed groups designated as terrorists by the Security Council. Nevertheless, for those living under the bombs, it is a blessed relief.  

Thanks to the work of Cherrill Spencer and the Disarm Committee, acting with the Earth Democracy and Middle East Committees, WILPF US has joined with many organizations and the United Nations to call for a global cease-fire.

World Beyond War is keeping a running total of the countries that have signed on, and there are two petitions you can sign, one set up by World Beyond War at Action Network and another by Avaaz. We urge you to sign on to one or both of these petitions, and to share them widely.


Women, Money, & Democracy

Act Now On Student Loan Forgiveness

By Marybeth Gardam

A US Department of the Treasury’s recent webpost promotes the idea that The CARES ACT works for all Americans. Not quite true.
 
A recent national webinar drew hundreds of people and advised how holders of federal student loans could apply for delayed payments during the pandemic. But any student who obtained a loan from a bank or private lender or their university finance office is just out of luck! That includes millions of people who cannot expect any relief, even while their employment is suspended because of COVID-19!  
 
The WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee, finds it unacceptable that millions of students will not be able to get student loan forgiveness, at a time when we need to have everyone participating in our economic recovery.

In this recent eAlert, learn how you can take action NOW on this issue through using social media and contacting members of congress.


Earth Democracy

Mother’s Day Statement, New Plans & Materials Coming Soon

By Nancy Price

The Earth Democracy Committee will have a statement for Mother’s Day, May 10, to highlight Climate Justice+Women+Peace.

Furthermore, for the June eNews, we’ll unveil a new social media plan, new materials for several of our sub-committees, and posting the “Communities and Nature” Toolkit.

If you have comments or questions, please email Nancy Price, nancytprice39@gmail.com

 

 

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 08:13

Coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, has infected thousands of people in the Middle East. Map from middleeasteye.net, used with permission.

By Ellen Rosser, Middle East Committee member, Barbara Taft, Middle East Committee Co-Chair

May 2020

COVID-19 is infecting the Middle East. Iran is the worst hit, with more than 58,000 cases and more than 3,400 deaths. Since the US sanctions prevent Iran from accessing adequate medical supplies, 34 members of Congress, including Senators Sanders, Warren, and Feinstein, have sent a letter to Trump asking that sanctions be lifted during the course of the pandemic. In addition, several E.U. countries are helping Iran since it was the US, and not Iran, that withdrew from the nuclear agreement.

In other countries in the Middle East, such as Yemen, Syria, Libya, and Iraq, in spite of brief cease-fire agreements as a result of the Secretary General of the UN’s call for a global ceasefire, fighting is still ongoing. In Iraq, the US has reoccupied the country after having refused to leave when asked by the Iraqi government, and has attacked some Shi'ite bases. However, the US remains in Iraq now only in a few bases.  

In Palestine, COVID-19 is active in the West Bank, especially in Ramallah, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem, with many fewer cases in Hebron and elsewhere. Many of the cases are from workers returning from Israel who were not adequately protected from Israelis with the virus, and the workers infected their families. Palestine is worried that when 50,000 workers return from Israel as everything shuts down for Passover, many more infected workers will spread the virus further in the West Bank.

In Gaza, there are twelve cases, six of which have recovered. Two Gazans who traveled to Pakistan first brought the virus to Gaza. Ironically, the blockade may help keep the virus out of Gaza, which is extremely short of medical supplies and lacks clean water and food. In Israel, more than 8,000 cases have been reported and more than 60 deaths, with the ultra-Orthodox city of Bnei Brak being worst hit.

There is evidence that the coronavirus has also struck Lebanon, where many refugees have fled and people are living in very close proximity to one another, and that it is also present in refugee camps in Jordan and Greece, among other places.

In the US, 34 Senators have written to Trump asking him to restore the $300 million in aid to UNRWA, an action that would greatly help Palestine, which does not have the medical supplies necessary to confront the coronavirus., although Israel is helping some in the West Bank.  

The Middle East Committee asks that you contact your senators to ask them to support this letter and request that Trump restore this necessary aid. Note that the virus must be eliminated everywhere in order to stop its spread.

For more information, contact Ellen Rosser: ellen.rosser@gmail.com

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 08:04

Thousands of paper cranes were donated to WILPF US last summer by Japanese atomic bomb survivors and peace activists. Photo by Jan Corderman.

By Ellen Thomas, Cherrill Spencer, and Robin Lloyd
Disarm/End Wars Issue Committee

May 2020

Plans are underway to mark two important 75th anniversaries, and we need your help!

WILPFers Robin Lloyd, Cherrill Spencer, and Charlotte Dennett are preparing an interactive website showing a timeline that follows the unfolding of two major events that happened in 1945: (a) development of the atomic bombs which were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and (b) the creation of the United Nations. There will be Zoom meetings on various dates along the timeline with keynote speakers.

We will soon be sending out an eAlert with the link to this interactive timeline, and will be asking you to let your friends know about it.

Please look for the eAlert, when we will announce the date and time of the first Zoom event. Martha Hennessey, one of the Kings Bay Plowshares defendants due to be sentenced on May 28-29, will be speaking!

Paper cranes, books, and videos

Jan Corderman is volunteering to send out packages from the WILPF office to all 40 WILPF branches, each containing hundreds of folded paper cranes. We will be distributing the thousands that were donated to us last summer by Japanese atomic bomb survivors and other Japanese peace activists…six huge boxes full!  

Robin Lloyd is planning a display for Burlington, VT, and Judy Adams is planning activities with the cranes in the San Francisco mid-peninsula region. Branches should contact Jan Corderman ahead of time to let her know you’re looking forward to receiving them, and to ensure that they go to the right address (not a P.O. Box).

We are developing a letter to send in the package that will include a list of books about Hiroshima that have been written for children, youths, and adults, and films that you might want to show remotely or (if possible) in gatherings. It will also include a request that you send announcements of your commemoration activities this year, and photos from past Hiroshima and Nagasaki events, to Ellen Thomas to post on the WILPF US Facebook page. Also send Ellen your suggestions for books and videos that people may want to use.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 07:53

Photo by Cherill Spencer.

By Judy Adams, Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch, WILPF International

May 2020

On April 28, 1915, during World War I, a unique group of 1,136 women from warring and neutral nations gathered in The Hague to discuss how to end the war and ensure permanent peace. The meeting ended with the foundation of the Women’s International League of Peace and Freedom.

In these difficult days, we reflect on the work of WILPF for 105 years for peace and freedom, and honor those who came before us who have inspired us to carry on their work. WILPF US asks each of you to celebrate by sharing with online posts – using #celebrateWILPFturns105, and in other creative ways, the positive things we have gained or learned or done with WILPF.

International WILPF asks us to remember our history when we face today’s and tomorrow’s challenges. We honor that history at the same time that we acknowledge the distance we must go before war ends and our other goals are reached.

For example, the Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch shared a digitized slide presentation on Vimeo originally from the 1980s that used one of WILPF’s slogans, “Listen to Women for a Change.” Through the images and captions, you can still catch the spirit of the women whose work for peace and justice paved the way for ours.

Especially in this time of a global pandemic, when there is so much suffering, we have opportunities for action to ease the suffering now, with healthcare in crisis, food insecurity, economic loss, and an uncertain future on so many fronts, and to work for a future that is peaceful, just, and free of the nuclear threat. Our committees, branches, and members continue to act collaboratively for a healed planet, a return to democratic process, and an end to poverty and racism.

When we say “Happy Birthday WILPF” we honor all who came before us, and express our wish for a better world ahead!

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 07:37
Ellie Bluestein, Nora DeWitt

Ellie Bluestein, left and Nora DeWitt, right, both longtime activists in the Fresno Branch.

By Leni Villagomez Reeves and Darien De Lu

May 2020

Fresno, California WILPF recently lost two of its longtime activist members, Nora DeWitt and Ellie Bluestein–both driving forces in making Fresno WILPF the vibrant organization it is today. Below are short bios with longer ones to come in the next Peace & Freedom.

Ellie Bluestein (1928-2020)

Ellie BluesteinEllie Bluestein founded the Fresno Branch of WILPF in 1965. Ellie greeted, welcomed, and recruited members continuously over the years. She was the go-to person for anything and everything.

Ellie also was a founder of the Fresno Raging Grannies group. In a 2018 interview, she said, “I love to sing! I love the chance to challenge the status quo. Raging Grannies is not just a slogan. It’s how I feel.”

When she was a new mother, Ellie found herself empathizing with mothers and their babies around the world, which ended up merging with her passion for peace, when she learned that in time of war it is women and children who disproportionately suffer starvation and death. These concerns led to multiple efforts: her participation in a Models Cities Program, teaching and mediation work, and her involvement with the Chicano Civil Rights Committee on issues of police harassment, which became an extensive, years-long effort to bring an Independent Police Auditor position to Fresno.

A woman of strength, power, and compassion, Ellie had a command about her that made you want to do what she suggested. She had a way of being with people of all kinds of backgrounds. She and her husband Gene headed a musical household that hosted many of America’s greatest folk performers.
 
Everyone knew Ellie, and no one could say no to her! At the WILPF table at the Fresno Branch’s annual crafts fair, she was an expert at getting members to renew their membership and bring in new members. In 2015 Ellie organized the WILPF exhibit, “One Hundred Years of Dangerous Women” at the Madden Library in Fresno. Another community project that was dear to her heart was the Women’s Oral History Project published as “20 Fresno Women Committed to Change,” which was replicated by her in Japan as “14 Tokyo Women Committed to Change.”

Ellie saw her community and activism work as an extension of her family life, saying: “They work together. My attitude towards my family as being a haven for peace and fulfillment, working things out together, living together in a humane way, is extended into the community.”

A longer bio of Ellie sent by her family can be found here.

Nora DeWitt (1940-2020)

Nora DeWittNora was born in Hungary in 1940, and her early years, under Nazi occupation and later as a war refugee, may have been her impetus for being a social justice advocate. Nora’s family immigrated to Australia, ultimately buying a farm on the outskirts of Brisbane, where Nora did high school and college, then she went on to study for a PhD in microbiology.

In 1975 she moved to Fresno, where her husband Hiram’s mother lived. Nora and Hiram had given birth to Sophia, who was born premature and later diagnosed with cerebal palsy. Nora worked in immunology for 30 years at Valley Children’s Hospital.

Her involvement with WILPF began with the Nuclear Weapons Freeze Campaign. Under Nora and Hiram’s leadership as county chairpersons, the Freeze passed in Fresno County. In the early 1990s, Nora became membership chair of WILPF. She stayed in that position for over twenty years, bringing to it her strong, quiet presence.

Under her leadership, she watched membership grow, and saw through Fresno community events such as co-sponsoring speakers, installing the Jane Addams sculpture at Fresno State’s Peace Garden, and children’s book presentations in branch libraries. Nora also mentored a social work intern.

Nora credited WILPF with the joy of working with like-minded friends. She demonstrated a lifelong dedication to peace and social justice.

Remembering Ellie and Nora

Fresno branch members and other friends sent remembrances of Ellie and Nora for Facebook. Here are some excerpts:

Nora DeWitt and Ellie Bluestein…join Jane Addams in their amazing contributions to the status of women everywhere. I loved being in Nora’s strong, quiet presence and learning from her. She was a loving, steadfast contributor to the strength of Fresno WILPF through her time as branch membership chairperson.

For me, Ellie is not gone; I feel her presence daily. That’s who Ellie is/was. I first met her at a branch retreat; I was fresh into retirement and looking for some way to productively use my time. I didn't know much about WILPF. At the retreat it was announced that a new Branch Chair was needed. Somehow, and I still don't quite know how, I came out of that gathering being that person. I said that I would not do it without the help of Ellie and Joan Poss. They did that, guiding me and the board on a daily basis. Ellie was never afraid to give her insights. They were given in a strong, loving way. That was Ellie: strong and loving. Ellie, I know you will continue to guide WILPF. Thank you for that, and for being Ellie.
             —Jean Hays


My memories of Ellie are many. Ellie “was” Fresno WILPF! Being a founder and active member she was respected and the go to person for anything and everything. I loved it when we would talk, just hearing her voice made my day.

For many years Ellie was always at the WILPF table at the annual Crafts Faire. When she was at the table she was an expert at getting members to renew their membership and bring in new members. So many people knew and loved Ellie that they would stop by the table to say hello and she would have them right where she needed them! “Remember no one could say no to Ellie.”
 
In recent years, Ellie had slowed down and stayed home more, so when she arrived at the Crafts Faire, there was a certain excitement that came over the crowd. In recent years, I remembering hearing throughout the Crafts Faire, “Ellie just arrived!” Many attendees would make their way to greet her, and Ellie was always glad to see her many longtime friends.

She was our “Star” for a very long time and will continue to shine on the Fresno WILPF Branch forever!
             —Bev Fitzpatrick


In this time of sheltering in place, my acre garden is my respite and a place of remembrance. Each morning with my coffee, I walk the pathways and remember friends by the plants they have given me. Years ago when Ellie moved from their Alamo home to her Fig Garden condo, she gifted me with some of her forget-me-nots and white violets. They have survived the drought and proliferated. The forget-me-nots remind me of our forty-year friendship and our one-year project: Twenty Women Committed to Change. She interviewed; I photographed twenty radical Fresno women.

In 1989 I was in a portrait photography class at Fresno City College and wanted to use my time creating something meaningful and lasting. I had met some interesting and amazing women in Fresno who had been early members of Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). Each had a long history of political and social involvement. I wanted to capture their history and likeness before they were gone. Ellie was first on my list as she had organized the Fresno WILPF group in 1965. I visited her in her home, set up my tripod and Hasselblad camera. She cooperated and then said, “Let’s sit and have some tea.”

“Tell me again about your project.” I told her. She asked to see my list of women. Looking it over, she remarked: “I don’t see any women of color on your list. Why is that?” “I don’t know any,” I replied. “Well, I do,” she said. “I like this project. It’s something I’ve been wanting to do. I’ll tell you what.  You photograph and I’ll interview!” Whew! I heaved a sigh of relief. Ellie, first on my list, would not allow herself to be a focus in the project.

I could never say no to Ellie. And in 2015 Ellie again called on me to help design and produce the WILPF exhibit, “One Hundred Years of Dangerous Women” at the Madden Library. In that project I was finally able to honor Ellie with an enlarged copy of the photo I took of her 25 years earlier. Her photo appeared side by side with Jane Addams, the first president of WILPF.

Now as I wander the garden each morning, her forget-me-nots remind me of our forty years of active friendship. There’s more but I wanted Ellie to have this much.   
             —Pat Wolk


A memory of Ellie: In 2008 I went to a Raging Granny meeting for the first time. Ellie was there greeting and welcoming me and other newcomers. She had a command about her that made you want to do what she suggested. She said you have to join WILPF & Grannies, and I did. It was the best thing I did—as a result, I found my community here in Fresno.

As someone said, “you can’t say ‘NO’ to Ellie.” The last visit I had with Ellie (four weeks before she passed), she had comments about WILPF and the Library Committee. Even with an oxygen tank connected to her body, she wanted to talk about WILPF. I loved her strength, her power, her compassion.

Memories of Nora: Nora was a quiet, competent membership chair for WILPF for so many years. She did her job without fanfare and not needing praise. What an amazing life she lived, not with fanfare but with grace and beauty.
             —Ann Carruthers


Ellie just had a way of being with people of all kinds of backgrounds. She had an understanding of pain in the world and of difficulties; she wanted to do something about this – and she did! She focused on important things that were beyond the personal.

She was always open to new things, even learned to enjoy opera with us. She was our dearest friend and Stan and I loved her a lot.
             —Joan Poss


    

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 07:03
Pat Birnie

Pat Birnie, longtime WILPF activist.

By Marliese Diaz
Former Chair, Baltimore Branch

May 2020

Baltimore and Arizona lost another extraordinary WILPF member on April 15, 2020, Pat Birnie. Pat turned 90 last September 2.

Through the 1980s and until she moved first to Florida and then to Arizona in 1993, Pat’s activism took her to protest at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physical Lab located between Baltimore and D.C.

We would get those reports at branch meetings and hear her stories of going to General Electric board meetings and taking on the stockholders about GE’s investments in weapons contracts. She owned some stock in GE and Pat took that issue seriously, as we learned firsthand.

A longer bio will be printed in the next issue of Peace & Freedom. Here is one remembrance of Pat from Felice Cohen-Joppa:

Pat Birnie, Presente! My friend Pat, a longtime and tireless peace and anti-nuclear activist, died on April 15 at age 90. Pat and Betty Schroeder, her friend and partner in crime (literally and figuratively, with both women arrested occasionally at protests, including with other Raging Grannies at a Military Recruiting Center!), moved to Tucson in 1994.

It was with Pat and Betty that Jack and I started monthly peace vigils at Davis Monthan Air Force Base and Raytheon Missile Systems more than 20 years ago, which continue to this day. We did A LOT of organizing and protesting together! Together with others, including Jim and Lucille Burkholder, we spent many months organizing multiple events to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Pat, a member of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, was a very kind and caring person. When Jack had surgery after breaking his arm in a bicycle accident, she and Betty came over to deliver a big box of groceries and make sure he was okay. Betty died in 2009, and Pat later moved to Maryland to be near her family, leaving some very big shoes to fill in the Tucson activist community.

For many years, Pat dedicated herself to working for a nuclear-free future, and I am deeply grateful for her vision, for her persistence and for the way she inspired and invited so many people to join her.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 06:56

Among the Humboldt Branch’s recent events was a “donations only” celebration for International Women’s Day on March 8.

By Carilyn Goldammer
Humboldt Branch

May 2020

Humboldt WILPF is small, but our outreach is huge. Monthly planning meetings and a few key events during the year enabled us to once again award our annual scholarship grants to county residents with projects that “support peace and justice locally or globally.”

This April we have given over $3,500 to diverse groups including our local GI Hotline; two organizations providing meals to folks in need; the Kunle Center “warm line” for people experiencing stress; a blossoming Black music and cultural group; a community radio program to train youth in media; and a large grant to the local Latina outreach group helping keep families afloat. Additionally, we annually support a nonprofit summer camp for 6th-8th grade girls.

March 8 was our eleventh “donations only” celebration for International Women’s Day that included food, speakers, a silent auction, Raging Grannies, a sing-along, and raffling another quilt donated by local Open Heart Quilters. Community donations have been generous. Any money raised goes to our Edilith Eckart Memorial Peace Scholarship fund and to donating the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award books to our library system.

We participate in and sponsor many events that speak out for peace, freedom, and justice. Our community’s support for our fundraising allows us to give back to the community and world. We are 12 members strong in our geographically large Northern California county of about 80,000 people. Small in scale, but huge in heart.

For more information contact: Carilynah@gmail.com

 

Post date: Thu, 04/30/2020 - 06:48

 

By Judy Adams and Wendy Peikes
Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch

May 2020

Zoom into Action: Our April meeting was our first on Zoom. One member had to use a public hotspot from her car! One reverb problem solved (no mic when not talking). We agree that “Zoom sure beats not having a meeting!”

Committees emailed reports before we met, so we could focus on opportunities for action. It was wonderful to see each other after a month and check in! We closed the meeting with Dori Midnight’s poem “Wash Your Hands.”

Technical notes on Zoom privacy/security are available from our branch, including tips on keeping uninvited guests away. If you want us to send you this list of links we’ve gathered, contact us at: wilpf.peninsula.paloalto@gmail.com.

Zoom has a webinar every Wednesday at 11am CA time, and also offers other live demo and interactive training opportunities. Visit zoom.us/events to view and register for events and webinars.

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 09:00
UN Photo/Sophia Paris

At Delmas 33, a camp for displaced Haitians in Port-au-Prince, a woman grimaces as a Cuban doctor administers a vaccination provided by the World Health Organization (WHO) on February 16, 2010. UN Photo/Sophia Paris.

By Cindy Domingo
Co-chair, WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issue Committee

April 2020

“He who says he is not afraid is a superhero, but we are not superheroes, we are revolutionary doctors.” These words were spoken by Dr. Leonardo Fernandez, a 68-year-old intensive care specialist from Cuba and part of the Cuban healthcare team of 36 doctors and 15 nurses that arrived in Italy on March 22, at the request of the Italian government, to assist in the fight against COVID-19.

But this is not the first time that Dr. Fernandez has traveled to other countries in the face of natural disasters, disease, or pandemics. He has served on eight international medical missions including Nicaragua, Pakistan, and East Timor. Dr. Fernandez was also part of the hundreds of Cuban healthcare workers who were decisive in the fight against Ebola in Liberia and Guinea.

However, this is the first time that Cuba’s medical teams have been dispatched to a developed nation that has rich resources. The Cubans will be bringing with them the antiviral medication, Interferon Alpha 2B, that Cuba developed and is being produced in cooperation with the Chinese government. Interferon Alpha 2B is one of the antiviral medications being used in China’s successful battle with COVID-19.

Interferon Alpha 2B was first developed by Cuba in 1986 at Cuba’s Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology. It is an immune boosting antiviral medication that has been used in the treatment of dengue fever, HIV/AIDS, Ebola, hepatitis B and C, shingles, and now COVID-19.  

Another Cuban medical mission composed of 144 health workers will be going to Jamaica, 50 to Suriname, 136 to Venezuela, and others will be going to Nicaragua and Grenada. The team traveling to Venezuela will join 2,000 Cuban doctors already in the country who are working with local communities in the training of the population and professionals in health assessments and treatment.

On March 18, Cuba became the lone nation to accept the British cruise ship MS Braemar carrying 1,000 passengers, which had 50 of its passengers and crew displaying symptoms of, or diagnosed with, COVID-19. Cuba then facilitated the return of these passengers to England under the strict guidelines of the World Health Organization. In a recent statement, Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez stated, “Let’s reinforce healthcare, solidarity, and international cooperation.” For Cuba, this approach is the “vaccine” to help stop COVID-19 and has been their approach since 1963.

Cuba’s offer to assist countries in their fight against COVID-19 comes in the midst of their own fight. As of March 22, Cuba had 40 cases of COVID-19 and 10 deaths ranging from the ages of 18-94 years old. Recently, Cuba limited entrance into their country to only Cuban residents and it is closely monitoring all returning Cubans. However, their fight against the virus is anchored by its community-driven public health system and tri-level medical system, and by a centralized, unified response of its government.

Cuba’s History of Healthcare Solidarity

Cuba’s medical missions began in 1963 when it sent 55 doctors, nurses, and technicians to reestablish Algeria’s healthcare system and to take care of combatants and orphaned children resulting from the war of independence from France. This assistance came at a great sacrifice for Cuba since half of their 6,000 doctors had left Cuba after the 1959 revolution. From the mid-60s through 1974, Cuba’s foreign policy led the country to send both military and healthcare personnel to Africa, in particular to Guinea-Bissau during their war of independence against Portugal.

After apartheid was defeated in South Africa, Cuba sent more than 450 Cuban doctors and medical personnel from 1996 - 2002 to serve in areas that had no medical services. Cuba’s largest and most extensive medical mission has been with Venezuela, beginning in December 1999 in the aftermath of landslides that killed 20,000 people. At the height of its mission, Cuba provided Venezuela with 31,000 Cuban doctors, dentists, and other medical personnel in exchange for Venezuelan oil.  

Today, there are 50,000 Cuban healthcare workers in 59 countries around the world. In a recent March 21 virtual conference on US-Cuba relations, Dr. Jorge Delgado Bustillo, Director of Cuba’s Medical Cooperation Programs Abroad, stated that since 1963, Cuba has sent a total of 450,000 healthcare workers to 160 countries resulting in 1.6 billion people served with healthcare without any charge to the patient.

And Cuba’s commitment to healthcare as a human right extends beyond sending medical personnel to countries in need. Since 1990, Cuba has provided long-term care for 18,000 victims of the Chernobyl disaster who have suffered from conditions ranging from cancer, skin disorders, and other illnesses attributed to radioactivity. In 1998, in the aftermath of Hurricane Mitch that devastated Nicaragua and Honduras, Cuba created the Latin American School of Medicine/Escuela Latino Americana de Medicina (ELAM) in its commitment to create long-term health solutions for Central America and the Caribbean.

Today, ELAM students come from 124 countries around the world including students from the US. Currently, about 122 students from 29 states, plus Puerto Rico and Washington DC, are enrolled at the school and 33 US students have already graduated with MD degrees. The only commitment these students make are to go back to their home countries and provide medical care to those who are underserved.

More information about ELAM and other efforts in Cuba can be found at ifconews.org.

The Impact of the US Blockade in the Battle against COVID-19

As of March 21, 37 of the 59 countries that Cuba has sent healthcare workers to have reported COVID-19 cases. The US population will not be able to call upon Cuba to aid us in our fight with the virus because of the 60-year-old blockade. We will not be able to call upon Cuba to send doctors or other medical personnel who have the experience in fighting pandemics and in using Interferon Alpha 2B.  

Over the past two years, the Trump administration has strengthened the US blockade, causing great economic suffering for the Cuban people. Our right to travel to Cuba has greatly been impeded with changes to travel licensure rules, restricted airline travel, and total elimination of cruise ship travel to Cuba. Furthermore, the Trump administration has hardened the US rules on countries that continue to trade with Cuba and has allowed the implementation of a clause in the Helms-Burton Act that gives US residents the right to sue companies doing business with Cuba for lost property, a violation of international law.

The pandemic crisis before the world must take precedence over previous foreign policy directives. Cuba has shown its willingness to aid any country in need. Recently, French Parliamentary leader Andre Chassaigne urged France to join other countries who have requested Cuba’s support in the fight against COVID-19.

Ana Silvia Rodriguez, Cuban Ambassador to the United Nations, closed her speech to the over 300 attendees who participated in the March 21 virtual forum on US–Cuba Relations with the following appeal: “The only way to solve this crisis is through cooperation and solidarity. We have to put political agendas aside. We have to put our ideologies aside. And we have to have all countries cooperate in order that we can solve the situation we have in the world today.”  

The video of the March 21-22 video forums will be posted to www.us-cubanormalization.org and there is other information at this site about how we can stand up for normalizing relations with Cuba.

Act now: Call your Congressional Representative and ask him or her to cosponsor Senate Bill 428 (Amy Klobuchar - D, MN) and HR 2404 (Bobby Rush - D, Il-1) that lifts the trade embargo against Cuba. Tell your representative about the importance of Interferon Alpha 2B and the need to work with Cuba in our battle against COVID-19.

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 08:55
Program Committee Cake

Photo by Michael Ippolito

By Joan Goddard
WILPF US Program Chair

April 2020

The Program Committee Call on Tuesday, April 7 at 5 pm PT, 8 pm ET will feature plans from the WILPF US issue committees for the next two years. Potential local collaborations with branches and at-large members for activities in committee subject areas will be encouraged. All are invited to join this conversation.

The current health crisis is a challenging time. Together, we can continue to share WILPF’s work with people and organizations locally and beyond.

A recent survey of branches along with information gathered during our individual membership renewal showed WILPFers wanting more collaboration and expressing interest in the subject areas covered by our national issue committees.  

(Learn more about the national issue committees here.)

Issue committees are planning far in advance in accordance with Program 2.0, hoping to foster involvement with local members and synergize with other organizations whose concerns overlap with our own. One of our goals is to create actions that are visible and impactful during and after this election year.

The national issue committees are offering information, ideas, and materials to be adapted for local needs, while also encouraging content developed by local, regional, or national programmers. Branch members and at-large members are invited to share content collaborations with each other and with other organizations.

All members are invited to the call and are welcome to join and/or collaborate with the national issue committees.

Register for the April 7 call here.

Maestro call reminders (the day before and two hours before the call) are sent with the appropriate call times, based upon where you are located.

Any questions? Please write to the WILPF US Program Chair, Joan Goddard: joan@rujo.org

 

Pages