NEWS

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 07:47

On August 5, 2019, Nuri Ronaghy and Alan Shorb of Ojai, California, and Ellen Thomas from western North Carolina, had a joyful lunch in Hiroshima, Japan, with eight Hiroshima WILPF members during a rare break in the busy conference schedule of plenaries and workshops. Photo taken on Ellen Thomas’s iPhone by waitress.

By Ellen Thomas
Co-chair, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

On August 2-10, 2019, three WILPF US members (Ellen Thomas, Nuri Ronaghy, and Alan Shorb) joined thousands of Japanese activists in Hiroshima and Nagasaki during the 74th anniversary 2019 World Conference against A & H Bombs, and then visited Nuclear Free Kobe.

On August 6th, after the formal 74th anniversary commemoration of the bombing in Hiroshima Peace Park, there was a conference plenary in the Hiroshima Prefectural Gymnasium, where Ellen spoke to an estimated 1,500 people and announced that WILPF US members had gathered over 7,500 signatures on a petition to the US President and the US Senate asking for ratification of the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

On August 7th, Ellen handed a thumb drive with scans of 559 petitions to three atomic bomb survivors in Nagasaki, along with letters from Darien De Lu, President of WILPF US, and David Swanson of World Beyond War, as well as dozens of notes of support gathered at recent Nuclear-Free-Future events in California and via email.

Photo: Kido Sueichi, secretary-general of Nihon Hidankyo (Japan Confederation of A-and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations); Tanaka Terumi, co-chair of Nihon Hidankyo; Tanaka Shigemitsu, co-chair of Nihon Hidankyo and president of Nagasaki A-Bomb Survivors Council, receive WILPF US petitions and letters of support from Ellen Thomas in Nagasaki on August 7. Dr. Manisha Gaur (in green sari) also presented petitions from India. Other people on the stage are displaying how many “Hibakusha Appeal” signatures they and their friends have collected. Photo credit: Hayato Koga.

It was announced that the next World Conference against A & H Bombs would be held in April 2020 in New York City during the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review at the United Nations, at which time atomic bomb survivors and a host of other Japanese antinuclear activists will march. The activists will meet at the Riverside Church, and will deliver their Hibakusha Appeal, which has around 10 million signatures so far supporting the UN nuclear weapons ban treaty and calling for no more Hiroshimas or Nagasakis. Let's hope that there will be many WILPF members participating in this event!

California Tour

Nuri Ronaghy Before arriving in Japan on August 1, Nuri, Alan, and Ellen toured California, speaking at Nuclear-Free-Future events hosted by WILPF and Peace Action in Sacramento, by WILPF in Palo Alto and Fresno, and by Mothers for Peace in San Luis Obispo. Nuri spoke passionately about her experiences as an Iranian/American. Ellen recorded all the presentations and hopes to have the best of them posted on YouTube and Facebook soon.

Photo: Nuri Ronaghy speaking in Palo Alto, California, on July 17, 2019. Photo by Ellen Thomas.

The travelers also joined local constituents on visits with staff members of seven Representatives: Doris Matsui (Sacramento), John Garamendi (Davis), Zoe Lofgren (San Jose), Ro Khanna (Santa Clara), Jackie Speier (San Mateo), Anna Eshoo (Palo Alto), and Jim Costa (Fresno) - to ask for co-sponsorship  of the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act of 2019. They also met with Kristina Solberg in Senator Dianne Feinstein’s Fresno office to ask that a companion bill be introduced into the Senate.

The legislators were in D.C., but returning home in August. The staff members said they would immediately inform the DC office. Ellen reminded her companions that it is important to arrange personal meetings with the legislators while they are home, because they make the decisions, and suggested that people also attend candidates’ forums to ask if they will support the UN nuclear ban treaty and if they will co-sponsor HR-2419. Three questions can be found at the bottom of page 2 of Good People Doing Great Things in 2019 for a Nuclear-Free Future, a handout prepared for this 2019 tour.

Much more detail on this amazing five-week tour will be available in the October eNews. Currently, Nuri, Alan, and I are recuperating at our homes, but we are planning to head to DC and New York to continue the Nuclear-Free Future campaign. We hope you will work with us now, where you are, and next April you will join us in New York!

Please Support These Upcoming Events

Extinction Rebellion: Sept. 20-27 Week of Action
International Day of Peace: Sept. 21

Keep Space for Peace Week: Oct. 5 – 12, sponsored by the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space.

For more information, contact:

Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org
Nuri Ronaghy nurironaghy@gmail.com

Alan Shorb alan.shorb@mindspring.com

 

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 06:40
1 / 3

2 / 3

3 / 3

 
Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 06:13
Esther Franklin

Sacramento WILPF member Esther Franklin before her arrest at the August 6, 2019, protest at Livermore Lab. Photo by Francisco Dominguez.

By Ellen Schwartz
Sacramento WILPF
 

On August 6, 2019, 94-year-old Sacramento WILPF member Esther Franklin joined 200 Bay Area peace and justice advocates, capping a day of speeches, dance, and somber reflection by offering herself for arrest on the 74th anniversary of the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The event, sponsored by the Livermore Conversion Project, Tri-Valley CAREs, and others, took place outside the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, where today the Trump Administration is spending billions to create new nuclear warheads.

Slide Show

Click here to view a slideshow of images taken by professional photographer Francisco Dominguez before, during, and after Esther’s arrest.

Participants gathered at 8 am to hear the keynote address by Daniel Ellsberg, the military analyst and whistleblower who shone a bright light on U.S. policy and helped end the Vietnam War when he released the Pentagon Papers.

Nobuaki Hanaoka, an atomic bomb survivor, was the rally’s special guest speaker. Hanaoka, now living in the Bay Area, was an infant when the bomb fell on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945. His mother and sister died from illnesses linked to radiation poisoning and his brother died at age 39 from premature aging associated with fallout from the bomb.

Following the program, the participants, wearing signs with the names of bombing victims, marched to the Livermore Lab West Gate. At the gate, Japanese activists led a traditional bon dance, followed by a commemorative “die-in” and symbolic chalking of the bodies to mimic the “shadows” left by men, women and children vaporized by the A-bomb blast.

Esther FranklinIn the final action of the day, 42 people, several using wheelchairs and walkers—Esther among them—stepped or rolled inside the gate and were arrested, while others provided legal witness and support.

Photo: Esther Franklin after her arrest. Photo by Francisco Dominguez.

As has been the case for many years now, the arrests were conducted without roughness or fuss; the arrestees searched and issued citations and promptly returned to the main group. However, the police were decked out in full riot gear, a sign that the so far symbolic nature of these arrests was entirely at the discretion of the authorities. Congratulations, Esther Franklin, on putting your beliefs into action!

 

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 06:07

By Darien De Lu
WILFP US President

How comfortable are you with social media? As a hundred-plus-year-old organization, WILPF may not be an obvious candidate to become a force in social media; after all, quite a few of us are more familiar with mimeograph machines and typewriters than Bluetooth and Instagram. Nonetheless, we are a living and vibrant organization! So we’re preparing Twitter content for the Sept. 20 climate crisis general strike. Maybe you can help?

Some of you readers may be put off or even baffled by my reference to Twitter content. Read on to feel more at ease and to learn! While this article has some important messages for you, I’m especially reaching out to those WILPFers and WILPF friends who are curious about social media or even post regularly to it.

Also, both baffled and more experienced social media users might want to watch for future announcements about WILPF’s revised social media trainings.  For now, the trainings have been suspended. Once the new Social Media Committee is started, it will work with our communications worker, Michael Ippolito, to develop specific trainings for different levels of knowledge and experience.

Social media trainings are just one of the ways that WILPF is moving into the modern world of electronic social communications. To reach a wider audience and to publicize WILPF perspectives, we’re sharpening our social media skills and looking to develop a social media plan. Already, we’ve expanded from having only 1,400 Twitter “impressions” (people seeing WILPF US content) in the 15-month period ending July 31, 2017, to 81,200 impressions in the 15-month period ending July 31, 2019.

If you have an interest in social media – whether active or passive – I invite you to think about joining the new Social Media Committee. The committee will meet by conference call to learn more and strategize about effective posts, how WILPF can increase our visibility, and the different social media networks (especially Facebook – FB – and Twitter, but possibly Instagram and others). The committee will encourage and guide other WILPFers in posting WILPF news and info on personal FB pages and in Tweets on individual accounts. Those committee members ready to represent WILPF will do “official” WILPF FB and Twitter posts.

All of us can help! You don’t have to know much of anything about social media to creatively come up with an idea for a powerful image. An image is a key component of many posts, and with Twitter’s tight character-limit, images are even more important. Come up with an idea, and we’ll find someone to draw or otherwise create it! Most WILPFers already know about the major role of the US military in driving climate chaos, but the public is ignorant about this under-discussed connection. So in September, in Facebook and /or Twitter, along with a verbal message and appropriate WILPF link, we want to share a powerful image that communicates some key aspect of the military-climate crisis connection.
 

Can you help us with some good original suggestions?

This is peace work through art and imagination! Help us think peace, talk peace, and share peace messages! Please send me your image ideas, in words or as an image, for this and other WILPF issues. Also contact me for more information about the Social Media Committee, which is forming now:  President@WILPFUS.org.    

Are you ready to join others in working together to transform your compassion into action? There is a place for you on one (or more!) of our varied national WILPF committees. Also, of course, now is the time to apply to be a candidate in our national Board elections. I would be glad to talk with you about the opportunities in WILPF US where you can make a difference for peace. Give me a call:  916/739-0860 (Pacific time zone).

 

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 05:58

Palestinian children hold candles as they sit on the rubble of a house destroyed during Israeli airstrikes in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 7, 2019. Photo credit: Abed Rahim Khatib / Shutterstock.com.

By Ellen Rosser
WILPF US Middle East Committee

The situation in Gaza is almost unlivable. Indeed, the UN predicts it will be totally unlivable by 2020. Already, ninety percent of the water is not drinkable due to sewage and ocean seepage. Babies therefore are dying of diarrhea, and a disease called “blue baby Syndrome” is increasingly being seen due to contaminated water. Many older children are also sick with diarrhea.

More than 500,000 Gazans are children, more than 50% of that area’s population. Between 2000 and 2013, Gaza’s population grew by over 687,000. By 2020, the region is projected to have 2.1 million people who will increasingly be attempting to survive without food and safe water (watch a PBS News Hour report about this dire situation).

Since Egypt destroyed the tunnels through which Gaza got its food and other supplies, people have been unable to rebuild houses destroyed in Israel’s 2014 attack on Gaza. Building materials are in short supply. And there are only about four hours of electricity a day, since the Palestinian Authority (PA) is not paying for electricity in Gaza since the split between the PA and Hamas.
    
As a result, some hospitals have had to close, and the remaining ones have been overwhelmed by the number of wounded. Israeli soldiers shoot across the border and kill or wound Palestinian demonstrators weekly at their Friday demonstrations. Indeed, at least 252 Gazans have been killed by Israeli sharpshooters, including 31 children, the youngest aged four. Three medics and two journalists have been killed, while 25,522 people have been injured, many of them intentionally shot in the knee. Due to the overwhelming number of injuries and the closure of many hospitals, the leg ends up requiring amputation in many of these cases.   

Moreover, recently the PA announced it would no longer send drugs to Gaza hospitals. And access to medical care outside Gaza is very restricted; Israel denies 40% of those applying for medical visas to enter Israel for treatment, and Egypt also restricts entry.

The US facilitates these atrocities by giving Israel $3.8 billion a year in aid while eliminating aid to Palestinian refugees. In Gaza, 70% of the people (1.4 million) are refugees, and since the US cut its funding for UNRWA (the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which was established to provide aid to Palestinian refugees), Palestinian refugees in Gaza and elsewhere have been hurt.

What can we do? Call your representative and ask that she/he support H.R. 2839, a bill that would restore US funding for UNRWA and that will also provide necessary appropriations to the State Department and support other needed programs such as the U.S. Institute of Peace and the Israeli Arab Scholarship Program.

For more information, contact ellen.rosser@gmail.com

 

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 05:51
Des Moines WILPF

Photo credit:  Alan McDonell. Used with permission.

By Linda Lemons
WILPF Des Moines Leadership Team

As the nation, Iowans, and WILPF Des Moines are getting organized for our first in the nation presidential caucus, WILPF Des Moines members are supporting each other as we each advance our WILPF Talk in our community.

When we learned that the Democratic Party would be voting at their National Meeting in August on whether to hold a debate with the 2020 Presidential Candidates solely focused on climate crisis, WILPF Des Moines took a resolution to our local Polk County Democratic Central Committee requesting that they vote for the Democratic National Committee to do so. The resolution passed by a loud shout out for, and a quiet voice against. Locally WILPFers were creating change from the ground up and experiencing what a democracy should look like.

When we heard that the Sunrise Movement was holding a rally at the Iowa Democratic Office on August 20th to advocate for a Democratic Presidential Debate focused entirely on Climate Crisis, ten WILPF members showed up to share our voices and provide our support. It was wonderful to experience and hear the voices of young people, to hear their language and the change in narrative they are calling for, and to sing songs bringing us together. We were well received, and the energy we created was vibrant and alive.

We followed up with a letter to Iowa’s five members of the Democratic National Committee and by encouraging our folks to continue their calls and emails until the very moment their meeting was gaveled into session.  

Although we have learned that the Chair of the Democratic National Committee was able to convince the committee to vote against holding a debate entirely on Climate Crisis, we’re pleased to learn that they voted to remove their rule banning candidates from participating in any kind of climate debate. Up until now, the DNC’s stance was not only that they would not host a climate debate, but they also ruled that any candidate who took part in a climate debate hosted by a third party would be banned from all future Democratic debates.

WILPF Des Moines will keep doing our part in helping to change the narrative and build a grass roots movement for change.

 

Post date: Thu, 08/29/2019 - 05:41

At a July 2 MoveOn demonstration in Palo Alto, Judy Adams spoke about the inhumane conditions at immigration detention camps and about WILPF’s involvement in peace and justice issues. Photo by Jack Owicki.

By Judy Adams
Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch

I have been organizing small (5-15 participants) weekly Friday noontime “peaceful sidewalk protests” at a busy street corner in Palo Alto since WILPF became a partner with the Poor People’s Campaign in 2018. And, of course, Peninsula/Palo Alto branch members also participate in other larger local demonstrations and rallies in coalition with other groups.

This summer, I joined forces with Ruth Robertson, organizer of the Palo Alto Raging Grannies Action League (not formally affiliated with WILPF, but it includes some our branch members). Together we took on co-sponsorship of a July 2 MoveOn National Action Day event (#ClosetheCamps) to protest immigrant family detention and deportation, and to call for inhumane detention camps to be closed. The event brought nearly 300 participants to the same street corner where we have our small Friday demonstrations, our biggest turnout so far! 

Raging GranniesWe had hoped that our local peace and justice center might join us as co-sponsors, but at an earlier peace center planning meeting, I learned that MoveOn didn’t consider the center’s sponsorship sufficiently “grassroots.” So Ruth and I decided to forge ahead and we organized a very successful grassroots effort.

Photo: Raging Grannies Action League members at the July 2 event. Photo by Jack Owicki.

The event was spirited and peaceful. We made sure that the participants stayed on the public sidewalk, didn’t block crossings, and crossed safely at intersections. The marchers filled both sides of the streets at the busy intersection for more than an hour, and were welcomed by waves, thumbs-up signals, peace signs from bicyclists, and enthusiastic honks from drivers. Protesters held signs that included messages such as “Families Belong Together,” “Stop Torturing Children,” and “No Cages, No Walls.”
 
The event got good press in The Stanford Daily, since many Stanford students participated in the demonstration.

Jack Owicki took several photos at the event and posted them on probonophoto.org. The Pro Bono website contains more images from the event including some that provide a sense of the size of the crowd.

In other news, while on a road trip I participated in a parade in Silverton, OR, near Hiroshima Day. Local peace group participants included WILPFers and members of Veterans for Peace and Fellowship of Reconciliation. In the photo, I’m in the center flashing the peace sign in front of the FOR sign and the Dove.

 

 

Post date: Wed, 08/28/2019 - 19:34
Women Cross DMZ

From the “Who We Are” section of Women Cross DMZ’s website.

By Odile Hugonot Haber

In March this year, leaders of WILPF US and Women Cross DMZ (demilitarized zone) had the opportunity to learn much more about each other at the Women's Peace Initiative, sponsored by WILPF US’s fiscal sponsor, the Peace Development Fund. Since that one-day WPI conference, WILPF US President, Darien De Lu, and Christine Ahn, the founder of Women Crossed DMZ, have been in communication to find ways for the two organizations to work together for their mutual benefit.

International WILPF has intersected with Ahn’s group since May 2018, when Women Cross DMZ worked in partnership with the Women’s Peace Walk and a coalition of more than 30 women’s peace organizations in South Korea to convene a delegation of feminist peace activists from across the world.

Held May 23-27, 2018, this landmark event included an International Women’s Symposium and the second DMZ Peace Walk led by Women Cross DMZ in Paju on May 26. Kozue Akibayashi, International WILPF President then, joined the 30 other international peace activists in the Paju Peace Walk across the demilitarized zone between the two parts of Korea.

The delegation issued the 2018 International Women Peace Walk Declaration detailing the actions they call for, including a number of important disarmament measures, such as global nuclear disarmament, the removal of 1.2 million landmines and the barbed wire in the demilitarized zone, a reduction in military budgets, and an end to the arms race.

The US could play a major role in confirming peace in Korea and helping reunite the peninsula. Already, the US House of Representatives has passed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2020, calling for a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War. Consequently, WILPF US is interested in working with Women Cross DMZ to support these goals.

For Ahn, the recent visit of President Trump with Kim Jong-Un is more than just a photo op, it is an opportunity for peace-seeking women to send their message through op-eds, interviews, and via peace media. Now is the time for breakthroughs in US-North Korea diplomacy, which stalled after the Hanoi summit and ended abruptly in February.

Christine Ahn wrote an op-ed for Newsweek in which she wrote, “Now that high-level trust appears to have been established, we need reliable, sustained diplomacy to end the seven-decade Korean War.”

According to a Reaching Critical Will June 2018 E-News article,  “The aim of the movement is to push forward the commitments outlined in the Panmunjeom Declaration made by South and North Korea at their summit on 27 April, including a peace treaty to formally end the Korean war and denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, and to advocate for the inclusion of women in the peace process.” Reaching Critical Will is the disarmament programme of WILPF International.

“Diplomacy is the only way to achieve peace on the Korean peninsula and begin the process of phasing out North Korea’s nuclear weapons program,” said Win Without War Advocacy Director Erica Fein in an article on the Common Dreams website. “Formally declaring an end to the Korean War is long past due and represents a no-cost, tangible, good faith effort that is essential in these aims.”

In referring to the House amendment to end the Korean War – the first such action by Congress – Ahn was quoted in Yonhap News Agency article where she said, “This vote is a game changer. It’s a clear sign that the American people want an end to the oldest U.S. conflict, and that ending decades of hostilities with a peace agreement is the only way to resolve the nuclear crisis.”

In the last summit in Singapore (June 12, 2019), US President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un made a joint statement in which “DPRK commits towards the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula” (DPRK stands for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the country’s official name). The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), of which WILPF is a steering group, supports such Korean denuclearization.

Please call your representatives and let them know that you support this amendment. Call (202) 224-3121 to ask for your representative and inform them of your support.

 

Post date: Wed, 08/28/2019 - 19:24

Bart Bolger from VFP took this picture on August 7 at the Van Buren Street Bridge in Corvallis, OR, at the end of the Hiroshima/Nagasaki Never Again vigil.

By Maegan Prentice
Corvallis WILPF

On August 7, 2019, Corvallis (OR) WILPF, along with Corvallis Veterans for Peace (VFP), hosted the 38th Hiroshima/Nagasaki Never Again memorial, a moment each year when our community affirms its intention that nuclear weapons will never be used again. This year’s event was one of the largest.

Before the formalities, people moved through the displays of photos and information that have been collected over the last decade. This year a woman from Japan performed on the koto helping to create a deeper sense of the culture that had been so deeply impacted. Once people were seated, four speakers delivered their messages and the evening ended with a candlelight procession.

The speakers represented several different views of the nuclear issue and explained why nuclear weapons must never be allowed to be used again. Fred Schafer of the National Associate of Atomic Veterans shared the experience of witnessing an actual explosion from a ship full of sailors in the Pacific. For decades these men were forbidden to talk about their experience and kept the horror buried deep inside. Pat Harwood is one of the Downwinders who spoke to the physical problems of the people who grew up downwind and down river from the Hanford Nuclear facility. Russ Yamada shared a very personal story of his grandmother and the beautiful city of Hiroshima that she grew up in that disappeared in a moment. The last speaker was the mayor of Corvallis, Biff Trager, who spoke of the power of people working together to create peace. “We have to eliminate nuclear weapons so we can survive to build a world of peace,” he said.

As in many years past, the ceremony ended with everyone reading the Community Affirmation, a communal commitment to peace. No one knows for sure who wrote the Community Affirmation or when it was used for the first time, but the words convey the heartfelt intentions of all the people who have read it over the years.

After the ceremony candles were lit and a procession formed to walk to the Van Buren Street Bridge over the Willamette River. A flotilla of kayaks with lanterns came down river under the bridge, reminiscent of the Japanese tradition of sending lanterns down river to the ocean. This quiet procession and flotilla gave every person an opportunity to reflect on the experience and to realize they were not alone in their concerns.

Many people were involved in making this event a success. A special acknowledgement must go to Leah Bolger who took over the leadership of this year’s project. When asked why the evening was so important, she responded, “We have this ceremony to recommit ourselves to working against these weapons so they are never used again…We are the majority, we just need to make our congresspeople realize it.”

Everyone appreciated being in the presence of a community of people who hold the same vision. Different moments touched different people more intensely. Some of these intense moments related to a specific speaker’s story, and some moments related to the visuals and the music.

For me, personally, the moment that reflected the power of the whole evening came when Masumi Timson, the koto player, returned from the procession. I looked at her face and listened as she tried to express her feelings in English. She had been deeply moved and glad to have been invited to assist in the powerful experience of the evening.

If you’d like to know more about the event or the Community Affirmation please contact Leah Bolger at leahbolger@comcast.net.

Inset photo credit: Bart Bolger.

 

Post date: Wed, 08/28/2019 - 15:32
Greeley (CO) Branch members

Greeley (CO) Branch members are ready to hand out WILPF information at a local grocery store on August 26, Women’s Equality Day.

By Dianne Culver
Membership and Treasurer, Greeley Colorado Branch

Colorado is considered a “purple” State, perhaps trending blue in the future. But Weld County, a very conservative county, houses the only WILPF Branch in Colorado. The town of Greeley has had a small WILPF Branch for 45 years! Going public with any anti-war, Green New Deal, or other progressive message is a challenge here.

On August 15th, eight of us were bold enough to ask a large grocery store if we could stand by their front doors to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote in the United States (Colorado ratified the 19th Amendment on December 15, 1919). The answer was “yes.”

On August 26, Women’s Equality Day, we had a public presence in our town. We wore our WILPF banners, buttons, and handed out WILPF information. We also had one of our members (who is also the President of the League of Women’s Voters) ready with information to register voters.

We stood tall for one hour and felt good about our efforts. We can’t wait for our next challenge – September: Climate Strike and October: Treaties Solidarity Action. We would appreciate positive vibes sent our way. Thanks!

For more information, contact Dianne Culver at (970) 378-7544 or ajculver3@gmail.com.

 

Pages