NEWS

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 12:40

 

By Cherrill Spencer and Ellen Thomas
Co-chairs of DISARM/END WARS Issue Committee

The Peace in Ukraine Coalition is holding a week of actions September 12-15. Find the day-by-day details of this week of actions here. If we work in concert with other peace organizations then our messages are more likely to be heard and acted upon.

The DISARM Issue Committee asks, if you have time only for one action, that you rally outside your Congressperson’s local office on Thursday, September 15.

Here are the points we want you to raise to your congressperson by leaving them a written note or talking to them in person on September 15. Urge your congressperson to support these steps to end the war:

  • Call for a ceasefire
  • Support peace negotiation and oppose escalatory actions by the U.S.
  • Support U.S./NATO parallel talks with Russia to address broader pan-European security issues, including the removal of U.S. nuclear weapons stationed in NATO countries
  • Freeze all weapons transfers and pause military actions by all belligerent leaders
  • Support debt relief and debt cancellation for Ukraine as it copes with the destruction of the war
  • Your constituents have needs that will be better served by spending the billions of dollars currently going into the pockets of the weapons manufacturers on health care and combating global warming

Posters and flyers for you to use at your rally can be found here. Here are some short phrases to put on rally signs:

  = CEASEFIRE Now

  = DIPLOMACY to End the War in Ukraine

  = $$$ for Climate, Healthcare & Housing NOT Weapons to Enrich War Profiteers

  = DO NOT RISK NUCLEAR WAR!

When you have organized your rally, post the details using this Google form and your action will appear in the peaceinukraine.org website where other activists in your town can see it and join you.

Send any questions to disarmchair@wilpfus.org

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 12:20

by Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

This month is important for seeking out and encouraging potential board candidates. The deadline for submitting a personal nomination, showing your regard and support for a member you think should be invited to apply for a board position, is October 1. The board candidate application deadline is shortly thereafter, on October 9. You can encourage the leadership of others! (Watch for a member-only eAlert about election details later this month.)

Sadly, some white and BIPOC WILPFers have backed off of national leadership, due to their reluctance to be publicly attacked. While it’s true that courage is another quality of leadership, WILPF wants to stand up against any violations of the WILPF International Code of Conduct. WILPFers engage in political disagreements – not personal attacks. If necessary you may report behavior or even file a complaint. Contact me for more info: president@wilpfUS.org.

Encouraging leadership – with any of our members – is crucial, because women are frequently discouraged from putting themselves forward. Some of the most important qualities for leaders are compassion, willingness to listen, an interest in developing the leadership of others, the ability to encourage and accept compromises, willingness to delegate, and a sense of ethical behavior. Time management skills and a degree of organization are also important. Of course, none of us is perfect. Part of the benefit of accepting leadership is personal and character development.

As President and a member of our national Board, I know that WILPF US will be a stronger and healthier organization when we have more racially and ethnically diverse leadership and membership.

That means you must be part of this outreach! Also, branch members, can you seek to have BIPOC branch membership more nearly proportional to your local populations? The COVID pandemic has been a difficult time for organizing work, yet most of us can seek out and cultivate some personal contacts through various aspects of our lives. Also, individuals and branches alike can take the initiative to interact with and participate in BIPOC-led groups. We must reckon with the importance of having BIPOC voices within our branches. Connect with the October return of the “One by One We Grow” campaign to get more pointers on recruitment.

I believe most readers will understand that, given our generally older membership, WILPF has a critical need for recruitment. Will we continue as a progressive, women’s-perspective peace and justice organization? Or will we slowly fade away?

White WILPFers, I want to talk to you for a moment. We have to understand how much harm systemic racism causes. The cost of being a minority is huge: increased rents, higher cost of loans, lack of generational wealth and capital, wage discrimination, and more health care expenses due to chronic health issues related to the stresses of racism and environmental factors that impact BIPOC communities.

WILPF has sought to open up to a more diverse membership and to increase understanding of racism and white supremacy by doing the following:

I encourage folks to contact me, Darien, with any questions about the upcoming board elections and WILPF racial justice work:  President@wilpfUS.org

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 12:08

by Odile Hugonot Haber and Tura Campanella Cook
Leadership Team Members, Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee

September 2022

Five nuclear weapon free zone treaties signed between 1967 and 2006 have succeeded in making 60% of the planet free from nuclear weapons. We urge support for a similar zone to be established in the Middle East.

In 1974, Egypt and Iran began discussions in the United Nations (UN) for a Middle East Nuclear Weapon Free Zone. Support has since grown to 20 Middle Eastern and Arab nations.The goal has become a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (Middle East WMDFZ) including nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons. Israel has had nuclear weapons since the 1960s, but has not signed the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) allowing inspections of its facilities. Israel has participated in regional conferences on this issue, but has refused to enter into these discussions at the UN, citing security issues. The United States has not used leverage to urge Israel to sign the NPT.

At its 33rd Triennial Congress in Brisbane during July 2022, the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom adopted a Resolution supporting a Middle East WMDFZ and urging WILPF members and civil society to publicize this effort for regional peace.

The American public in general is not familiar with nuclear weapon free zones, their effectiveness, or the ongoing advocacy for a Middle East WMDFZ.  Sixty years of milestones are covered in an  interactive timeline from the Middle East WMDFZ Project of the UN Institute for Disarmament Research. The Middle East WMDFZ Project  goals include:

  1. Supporting new thinking on regional security, drawing on lessons from other regional nuclear free zones
  2. Collecting new ideas and developing new proposals on how to move forward
  3. Fostering inclusive dialogue among experts and policymakers on regional security and the zone

We urge you to become involved!

  1. Familiarize yourself with the subject and subscribe to newsletters from Reaching Critical Will
  2. Discuss the Middle East WMDFZ in WILPF branches
  3. Reach out to religious institutions, educational institutions at the primary through college levels, and other areas of civil society
  4. Show documentaries and pressure the media to cover the subject
  5. Express support to UN representatives
  6. Urge members of Congress to reduce all appropriations for weapons and to endorse the UN process for a Middle East WMDFZ
  7. Establish a national WILPF subcommittee to promote the Middle East WMDFZ
  8. Support our WILPF sisters in the Middle East and North Africa in their work for peace   

For more information or to join us, contact MEPJAction@wilpfus.org

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 11:47
Make Nuclear Weapons Illegal

Photo credit: Martha Spiess

by Martha Spiess
WILPF Maine

September 2022

Maine WILPFers commemorated the 77th #NagasakiDay on August 9th in Auburn, Maine, gathering at the Auburn-Lewiston Peace  Bridge. They brought a string of peace cranes, a nuclear abolition sunflower and a #NuclearBan banner (with its QR code for the petition supporting Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton’s bill HR 2850 calling for global abolition of nuclear weapons).

Earlier in the week, several peace and justice groups met to commemorate #HiroshimaDay in nearby Lewiston. The bridge connecting the two cities, called the Peace Bridge, is related to nuclear disarmament in a most unusual way. In 2008, Lewiston’s Mayor for Peace dedicated the bridge to Dr. Lown, co-founder of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) and PSR (Physicians for Social Responsibility and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1985. He was a cardiac specialist and wrote several books on the subject, but one of his most well-known in the peace community is entitled Prescription for Survival: A Doctor’s Journey to End Nuclear Madness. The forward was written by Howard Zinn.

Back in Auburn, a pedestrian stopped to look at the town’s special bridge plaque for Dr. Lown, read the #NuclearBan Banner’s text and left, irritably muttering “They’re not illegal.  Nuclear weapons aren’t illegal. Nuclear weapons are everywhere. All over the place. And this (pointing) is the South Bridge.”

Change is laborious. It seemingly takes forever. WILPF members sharing their NPT notes from the UN meetings currently underway display their dedication and determination. They inspire and  provide each of us a path forward, through different ways to join in the work for nuclear abolition.

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 11:42

by Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth Democracy Issue Committee

September 2022

Please plan now to join me and the many women, children, families, firefighters and supporters from near and far who come together on Tuesday, September 20 to rally in front of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency headquarters in Washington, DC. The organization S.A.F.E “Scientists, Activists, and Families for SAFE Environments is organizing the rally and spearheading a grassroots movement to hold the EPA accountable for environmental contamination.

S.A.F.E is a natural ally for WILPF. As stated on their website: “Most of us are women and we share similar, dreadful stories. We’ve organized ourselves as “Scientists, Activists, and Families for SAFE Environments” or simply ‘S.A.F.E.’ We are determined to return to Washington every year in greater numbers. We demand accountability for environmental contamination that has sickened our children, families, wildlife and the environment.”   

In early September, check back to www.safeprotestepa.org for more information and also check and learn more at SAFE Protest EPA facebook page.

The S.A.F.E organizers are pleased to have the support of the General President Edward Kelly of the International Association of Firefighters for this important protest and movement.

Join thousands of SAFE protestors outside the EPA headquarters. Meet at Freedom Plaza – 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue NW at 9:00 am (Archives Metro Station on the Green and Yellow Lines) and we will march to the EPA Headquarters at Federal Triangle. It’s only a little less than ½ mile or 8 minute walk.

This first annual event demands EPA accountability for environmental contamination that for decades has sickened our families, polluted our land, and poisoned sources of drinking water. The list of harmful chemicals is long and now includes the large family of PFAS “forever chemicals.”

Click on The Advocates to read the many heartbreaking stories of mothers whose children, husbands, and family members suffered cancers and other diseases. In many cases, these women have formed advocacy groups and went to work to document, advocate, educate and mobilize for action and accountability.

Most alarming, but not unexpected, is that even when local neighborhood cancer clusters were documented by these mothers, they received very little help or response from the agencies that should be protecting them and their communities. Some children have suffered through devastating rare cancers for their age group and repeated cancer operations, and tragically many children and adults succumbed to their disease.

Read stories at Sick School Across the Country about how biological agents, toxic poisons and nuclear radiation threaten our children in school.

As we know from the 2019 thriller Dark Waters, a film that tells the story of the corporation DuPont’s contamination of Parkersburg, West Virginia, they knew.

Over 60-70 years, chemical and manufacturing corporations, the FDA, EPA and the Department of Defense knew, and looked the other way. On September 20th, all eyes will be on the EPA.

 

Photos from https://www.safeprotestepa.org

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 11:30

By Marybeth Gardam
Women, Money & Democracy Committee

September 2022

The Women, Money & Democracy Committee of WILPF US hoped that its first two Public Banking Learning Circles would attract a large number of people wanting to learn more about what a public bank is, how it works, and how it can benefit women, families, peace, the environment, economically depressed communities, small businesses and communities of color. The first series in 2021 went so well that another was held in 2022. When more intimate groups of 10 to 15 women gathered, there was the opportunity to get to know one another better and for everyone to benefit from the facilitators’ experience: Susan Harman of the Public Banking Institute and California Public Banking Alliance, Rickey Gard Diamond founder of An Economy of our Own, author of Screwnomics and MS Magazine columnist, and Marybeth Gardam Chair of WILPF’s Women, Money & Democracy Committee.

Over a 6-session series, facilitators offered impressive tools and resources: The WILPF US Public Banking Toolkit, videos, and collaborations with An Economy of Our Own and California Public Banking Alliance.  They explained the public banking movement, and brought together women who admitted they didn’t know much about public banking, but agreed that the for-profit commercial Wall Street banks are ripping people off left and right.

During this session, a happy accident brought together five women from Vermont who shared an interest in transitioning to a more equitable economy. They gained momentum because of another chance coincidence– an upcoming run for State Treasurer. A few years ago, there was a vibrant and hopeful public banking movement in Vermont under the leadership of Gwen Hallsmith, an economist and author. But efforts were impeded by the previous Vermont State Treasurer. The five women from our Learning Circle now have the tools and resources necessary to do the relationship building and outreach across Vermont to convince incoming candidates for State Treasurer to consider the wisdom of a Vermont Public Bank. They’ve set out to do just that, with continued mentoring and advice from the Learning Circle guides.

They’re holding weekly organizing meetings in preparation for the November elections and meeting with all the candidates and influencers. They are reaching out to allies whose dreams for environmental solutions, public education funding, affordable housing, small business support and affordable student loans will benefit from public banking. You can see how they are doing by tuning in to their Friday half hour “PUSH” meetings at 7:30 pm EST, joined by Vermont legislators and influencers! Here’s the zoom link to tune in.

The group will hold an in-person gathering on October 7th at the Pavilion Building of the Vermont State Capital in Montpelier called MONEY MATTERS:  WOMEN and TRANS THERAPEUTIC JOURNEY OF FINANCIAL FREEDOM, which will include lunch and lots of amazing panels and workshops. The event is produced in collaboration with the Vermont Kindness Project and is co-sponsored by WILPF US and An Economy of Our Own, among other allies. The women are also planning a statewide zoom forum on public banking to put their hopes and ideas before the whole state. Local leaders are Shanda Williams and Jaqueline Reike, Learning Circle graduates and women on fire about economic justice in Vermont!

All in all, the Women, Money & Democracy Committee is pretty pleased with this outcome. They’d love to see the same kind of informed and motivated cohort grow in every state. The WMDC Committee is working with An Economy of Our Own to create Public Banking Learning Circles “packages” with resources and Facilitator Packets, so that activists can mount their own organizing and educational efforts in every city and state. If you are interested, contact wmad@wilpfus.org.

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 11:23

by Ellen Thomas
Board Member and Social Media Committee

September 2022

If you’re active on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Linked-in, YouTube, and/or other social media …

21st Century WILPF US is reaching out to you!  We urge you to contact us by emailing et@prop1.org.

A few WILPF members have been posting to @WILPFUS Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube for several years now, providing information about upcoming events, reporting on past ones, and sharing news of significance for WILPF projects. We invite you to join us and get involved in expanding our outreach to the online world!

WILPF’s most interactive Facebook site is WILPF SMART, where subscribers can post and Facebook users can read and comment. You’re invited to scroll through existing posts, and encouraged to subscribe and start posting!

There are other social media platforms that we haven’t yet tapped into which are popular with young folks, such as Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, Pinterest. We hope you (or your kids or grandkids) will join WILPF’s social media team and help spread WILPF’s messages!

We especially invite you to check out WILPF’s YouTube channel, and explore the many videos that are organized into playlists. Below, see the number of videos associated with each topic:

PLEASE share ideas, subscribe to WILPF SMART and the WILPF US YouTube channel, and volunteer for the social media team! If you feel like you don’t know enough to volunteer but would like to learn, be sure to watch the training videos posted on the WILPF US YouTube playlist Social Media Trainings. If you find other trainings that you think should be saved to this playlist, please let me know (Ellen Thomas et@prop1.org).

P.S. – What do you think about WILPF US forming an ad hoc Communications Committee? The committee would meet periodically to review outreach via eNews, YouTube and other social media platforms, and other communications in WILPF.  Would you like to volunteer to join us?  Contact me at et@prop1.org.

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 08:59

by Gloria McMillan
Tucson WILPF

September 2022

I’m Gloria ("Glo"), with a suggestion to all my well-read WILPF friends. How many times has somebody cited a text during a WILPF meeting that you later forgot to read? Reading belongs to the people, not just “experts” and is a part of our inclusionary work via creative and activist literacy!

Reading brings people’s stories to light by embodying values. Reading books and having illuminating discussions with WILPF members can be an aid to our collective action. So I’m proposing that we start a virtual WILPF book club. I am a bibliophile and happy to coordinate this Zoom-based WILPF Book Club to start us off.

WILPF members, I know you have more creativity in naming than “The Book Club,” so we’re open to names. Contact BookClub@wilpfus.org with your ideas.

Among exciting trends in literature are the BIPOC writers who are writing their own take on classic novels: Femi Osofisan’s Tegonni: An African Antigone (original by Sophocles). Or how about Wide Sargasso Sea — a 1966 novel by Dominican-British author Jean Rhys. The novel serves as a postcolonial and feminist prequel to Charlotte Brontë's novel Jane Eyre (1847). Nigerian American science fiction writer Nnedi Okorafor’s Hugo Award-winning novel Binti (2015) is a short but powerful ride into Afro-futurism. Multi-faceted Indian writer and former UN Undersecretary Shashi Tharoor wrote a humorous novel about colonialism and Indian lit: The Great Indian Novel (1989).

Or how about the short story where Ray Bradbury takes on US racism, nuclear war, and imperialism’s payback, “The Rocks Cried Out”? Or Magic Realist classics like One Hundred Years of Solitude by Mexican writer Gabriel García Márquez. There are more possibilities than space here permits, as well as those books known to you and not to me! And this is just fiction.

Besides the benefits of fiction for a book club, many new histories like Shashi Tharoor’s Inglorious Empire: What Britain Did to India (2017) and William Darity’s 2020 text on slavery and reparations, From Here to Equality, offer new lenses for understanding how the past has shaped us and placed us in today’s world.

So – pause for breath here – we can choose from many excellent books, fiction and/or non-fiction.  What is your preference, if any? Again, if interested, contact me at BookClub@wilpfus.org. Thanks for your consideration!       

 

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 08:51

by Mary Bricker Jenkins
Jane Addams Branch

September 2022

Our WILPF sister Dorothy Van Soest knows a thing or two about the kinds of topics that call us to the WILPF community. We meet each other to confront the outrages of racism and poverty and war, and to share our longing for community, peace and even simple fairness. We know and embrace each other around these common causes but seldom get to know and delight in the tapestry of each other’s lives. Now Dorothy invites us in to explore more of our common ground in a manner both singular and unique: through her social justice mystery novels.

Dorothy Van Soest has written four novels, all published by Apprentice House, with another book on the way. Just Mercy (2018), was praised by Sr. Helen Prejean as “a must-read that teaches us about the true nature of justice.” In At the Center (2015), we meet unlikely sleuth Sylvia Jensen, whose investigation of a child’s death propels her to the juncture of personal responsibility and political defection. In the award-winning Death, Unchartered (2018), Sylvia Jensen must pick her way through the rubble of corruption and conflicting agendas to pursue a personally uncomfortable but compelling inquiry. In Nuclear Option (2020), Dorothy performs the acrobatic feat of yoking us empathically to unappealing characters— or perhaps she presents them during unappealing periods of their lives, as they confront our hidden and still lethal nuclear heritage.

Dorothy’s books are available through your local independent book store, online through IndieBound https://www.indiebound.org, or – if you must – through your favorite rapacious, union-busting, online corporate seller.

Visit Dorothy’s website at https://www.dorothyvansoest.com

Post date: Mon, 08/29/2022 - 08:45
WILPF members attend a participatory community art project in commemoration of Hiroshima. Photo credit: Judy Adams

WILPF members attend a participatory community art project in commemoration of Hiroshima. Photo credit: Judy Adams

by Judy Adams
WILPF Palo Alto 

September 2022

On August 6, the WILPF Peninsula/Palo Alto branch in California held a Community Art Project for Hiroshima Day, organized by member Judy Adams. For the 3rd year in a row we partnered with A/V (Art Ventures) gallery in Menlo Park, whose director is a peace activist.

In 2020, volunteers and branch members made over 2,000 paper peace cranes as an art installation inspired by the strands of cranes sent by WILPF US to peace activists in Ehime Prefecture, Japan (see our short video). In 2021, we partnered again with the gallery, with a dedication of a "peace sculpture" of a Torii Peace Gate for the gallery’s Silicon Valley artists exhibit. We helped the artist install 1,000 cranes to the tall wooden gate as she prepared her sculpture to be entered into the gallery’s annual Silicon Valley sculpture exhibition.

Making block prints with artist Yoko Tahara. Photo credit Judy Adams.
Making block prints with artist Yoko Tahara. Photo credit Judy Adams.

Wood block prints of fish This year, local Japanese artist Yoko Tahara submitted a wire and cloth sculpture depicting fish that could be damaged by radioactive elements in water used to cool the Fukushima reactor cores, a process planned for release next spring. Tahra asks the question in her artist's statement, “Will it poison the fish in local and global fishing grounds, and contaminate the human food chain?”

As part of the event, participants used the artist’s hand-carved printing blocks with images of fish and fish skeletons to decorate a long scroll, depicting them floating down an ocean channel. The scroll will be exhibited with Tahara’s sculpture at the gallery.

Scroll, printed by participants, for art exhibitions Scroll, printed by participants, for art exhibitions

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