NEWS

Post date: Mon, 06/03/2013 - 13:12

In our efforts to eliminate nuclear dangers we could well begin with ending the first link in the nuclear chain: mining of uranium. In the US, most of these mines are on Native American lands. Watch and listen to this presentation by Charmaine White FaceCoordinator of Defenders of the Black Hills and also a WILPF member. 

 

It was filmed by Crystal Zevon of Montpelier WILPF and may be used by all of us and freely shared with others. Thank you Crystal and Charmaine!  And check this June 5 Truthout article, which quotes Charmaine and is a damning exposure of uranium mining effects on Sioux and Navajo people and their lands and, to a lesser extent, on the rest of us as well.

 

In DISARM/End Wars, we continue to work primarily toward a nuclear free future and on related issues of space demilitarization including elimination of militarized satellite guided drones. We are open, however, to supporting other branch and member projects for demilitarization and ending wars that are compatible with WILPF policies and programs.

 

I. BANNING MILITARIZED DRONES:

  • Marge Van Cleef continues to represent WILPF in the Know Drones movement. See the Know Drones website for continuing updates of action and resources. Members from Monterey, Sarasota, Fresno, Los Angeles, St Louis, Tucson, Philadelphia and Boston are among those who have participated in events or vigils protesting militarized drones. Reports on individual, Branch sponsored or coalition actions in April and May—or planned for June—should be forwarded to Marjorie Van Cleef at mvc@igc.org.
  • Marge has chaired the national Know Drones committee on university drone research and training. The military budget is where the contract money is and just now there is plenty available for work on drones and other weapons for robotic warfare. Marge is also gaining expertise in relevant law. In May she attended a forum for WILPF in Washington, DC on legal issues pertinent to drone warfare and is speaking on a panel for Amnesty International. Please turn to her for resources and help as well as to share your own knowledge and action reports. Also see her contributions in Peace & Freedom and as a separate entry in this June e-news.

II. ABOLISHING NUCLEAR WEAPONS: 

In June, in addition to our continuing work, many of us will be planning Hiroshima-Nagasaki-Fukushima events as opportunities to educate ourselves and our communities on the dangers of nuclear weapons and the whole nuclear chain. These events are opportunities for community education, and also for strengthening our own commitments to work tirelessly for a Nuclear Free Future and an end to wars and threats of war.

 

WILPF has three strong contributions to make to the abolition movement:

  • Support of Congresswoman Norton’s HR 1650 calling for nuclear weapons abolition by 2020 and an end to nuclear power.
  • Support for the US Conference of Mayors 2012 Resolution which makes the same demand and the even stronger one proposed for 2013. Read both here
  • The leadership of WILPF's Reaching Critical Will in international efforts to ban the bomb.

The miracle is that all of our partner organizations also have rich contributions to make and together we are determined to achieve our mutual goals. Go to the UFPJ Nuclear Free Future websitewhich we are now helping to update for 2013. Soon the new calendar will be ready for your postings on Hiroshima-Nagasaki events. In the meantime check the available resources

 

The bad news last month was another nuclear missile test on May 20. MacGregor Eddy is currently recovering from back surgery and this time we were unable to do much without her except support the letter writing campaign of our close ally Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. We will seek, along with NAPF and the UFPJ working group, (convened by Life WILPFer Jackie Cabasso) to stay alert for the next test. These must be publicized and stopped, as must be the rebuilding of the entire nuclear weapons complex and its thousands of warheads. Most US citizens seem blithely unaware of these grave new nuclear dangers.

 

The best US good news is Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton’s new version of her Nuclear Free Future Act introduced April 17. We now have copies of her Dear Colleague Letter and an action strategy with which we are proceeding. You will hear from us soon this June with a request for finding co-sponsors for Norton's HR 1650. 38 of our branches are in districts with progressive caucus members. These are the most likely candidates for co-sponsorship.

 

As a first step, Norton has just informed us she is joining Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament (PNND) as we have suggested. Representatives Ed Markey, John Lewis, Carolyn Maloney, George Miller and WILPF members John Conyers and Barbara Lee already belong to PNND. We should be recruiting other progressives in our Districts because PNND brings them into closer relationship with the United Nations and other Parliamentarians from around the world working for nuclear weapons abolition. (Many WILPFers will be pleased to know that Dennis Kucinich is still PNND UN Rep even though he has left Congress and cannot communicate with other members until 2014).

 

More good news is the proposed Nuclear Free Future Resolution to be considered at the US Conference of Mayors June 21-22. We already have a very strong resolution from 2012, so together with Norton’s bill and legislation from Markey and Lee we should have clear voices the Administration cannot ignore. The mayors share with Norton the same time frame: nuclear weapons abolition by 2020.

 

And good news continues from efforts of our partners around the world, and especially in the non-nuclear countries determined to see abolition within a time bound framework. Alice Slater, our member/adviser, has sent us a good summary of hopeful events thus far in 2013. These events have been under reported or ignored in our own media so let’s investigate, report and support them!

 

III. SHUTTING DOWN NUCLEAR POWER:

  • Action on shutting down nuclear power continues, inspired by the continuing disaster at Fukushima. We are now planning an August tour for Cecile Pineda on the West Coast where only two reactors now remain open. Five Vermont Yankee Shut it Downers were arrested again at the end of May with two WILPFers among them. Hundreds have showed up at Nuclear Regulatory Commission public hearings, quoting from Gregory Jaczko, former chief of that agency, who has declared that all existing US reactors are unsafe and should be phased out.

IV. ELIMINATING THE WHOLE NUCLEAR CHAIN:

  • Of course it is difficult to abolish nuclear waste. What already exists will be with us for many thousands of years as a threat to future generations and life on earth. But we must prevent creation of more and harebrained schemes to blend radioactive waste with other materials for commercial or military use.
  • Michigan WILPFer Kay Cumbow and friends who organized Cecile Pineda’s Great Lakes tour are now deeply involved in efforts to stop massive Canadian waste dumps on the shores of Lake Huron that could endanger our largest  fresh water supply. They are also resisting transport of liquid and solid radioactive waste to from Canada to the United States.
  • WILPFer Charmaine Whiteface is temporarily in Geneva bringing her plea for a moratorium on uranium mining on Native American lands to the United Nations. In the meantime, we will continue to promote the excellent video of Charmaine’s presentation by Montpelier WILPFer Crystal Zevon and freely available for our use. We also invite your help in finding support in Congress for a moratorium on uranium mining at least until thousands of abandoned mines on Native American lands are properly cleared of radioactive materials and sealed.
  • We invite those concerned about any other aspect of the nuclear chain—depleted uranium, Mox fuel, medical research reactors—to step forward and begin their own action projects under the DISARM-End Wars umbrella.

Speaking about radioactive fallout, the late President John F. Kennedy said,
"Even then, the number of children and grandchildren with cancer in their bones, with leukemia in their blood, or with poison in their lungs might seem statistically small to some, in comparison with natural health hazards. But this is not a natural health hazard and it is not a statistical issue. The loss of even one human life, or the malformation of even one baby who may be born long after we are gone should be of concern to us all. Our children and grandchildren are not merely statistics toward which we can be indifferent." July 26, 1963 upon signing the ban on above ground nuclear tests." July 26, 1963 upon signing the ban on above ground nuclear tests. 

V. The PACIFIC PIVOT:

Pacific Islanders—including, among others, from Guam, Marshall Islands, Okinawa, Jeju, Philippines and Hawaii—met in Berkeley June 1 and 2 for a giant “teach-in.” They all participate in Moana Nui, a new network of indigenous Pacific Islanders reaching out to each other in a common search for survival by non-violent means. They called for a nuclear free Pacific and shared concerns for loss of their lands and cultures to military bases and bombing ranges. Climate change brings threat of submerging their islands. Now there are added challenges of new draconian Trade agreements (TPP) which will allow corporations to sue governments that pass laws to protect their own environment or people if those laws  might also limit corporate profits. Add to that the new US Pacific Pivot which is bringing both NATO and 60 percent of the US military into the Pacific for increased war games and military installations and the future looks dark indeed for these people who already have suffered so much from colonial exploitation and the ravages of World War II.

Sheila Goldner from Los Angeles Branch, Celeste Howard from Portland Branch and Carol Urner from both Branches attended the Moana Nui Teach-in, as did Jackie Cabasso, Cecile Pineda and other WILPFers from the Bay area. There was much to concern WILPF there as we work for human rights, for earth democracy, for an end to corporate personhood, we seek to build the beloved community, disarm and end wars.

On June 3, Carol met with the Working Group for Peace and Demilitarization in Asia and the Pacific in person and by teleconference in San Francisco. This is an international network in which WILPF DISARM/End Wars has been very much involved during the past two years. The American Friends Service Committee has been the lead organization but many others actively participate including Physicians for Social Responsibility, Peace Action Western States Legal Foundation, Global Network and Fellowship of Reconciliation. Moana Nui is also part of the network and together we seek peaceful ways to counter the aggressive military and economic policies that threaten the peoples of the Pacific Rim, and all peoples everywhere.

 

VI. CONSIDERING A CALL TO CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE:

Hattie Nestel, inspired in part by the actions of Transform Now Plowshares but drawing also from her own experience, has, with the help of Martha Gagliardi, written a call to other WILPFers.

Ellen Barfield, another frequently arrested WILPFer, responded with an essay on civil resistance. Ellen finds that a better term since we are actually obeying higher laws – international treaties, the Nuremberg trials, humanitarian law, World Court decisions, moral conscience, core religious teachings  or even our own US Constitution.

We have opened dialog which we expect to continue. We invite you to join us as we consider best paths to a Nuclear Free Future that must occur if life on earth is to continue. Many WILPFers have participated in civil disobedience and faced trial or jail terms for nonviolent actions like “crossing the line” or blocking entrance ways.

VII. CONTACTING THE TRANSFORM NOW PLOWSHARES PARTICIPANTS.

 

Ellen Barfield and Ellen Thomas have also sent us information from the Plowshares website on how to contact Megan, Michael and Gregory in jail, and on writing to the judge. Read more here.

 

Post date: Mon, 06/03/2013 - 12:46

Strategy and Empowerment at 2013 Democracy Convention

By Marybeth Gardam, Corporations v Democracy Issue Committee

The 2011 National Democracy Convention in Madison, WI was a galvanizing convergence of pro-democracy advocates, environmentalists, economic justice advocates and peace activists. Many attendees called it a life-changing event and dedicated themselves to work towards a 28th Constitutional Amendment.

Since then, there have been regional conferences around the country but finally a long-awaited national convention is scheduled for Madison, WI August 7–11, 2013. It promises to be another inspiring and empowering gathering of hundreds of colleagues all facing the same direction and ready to take their opposition to corporate abuse of power to the next level. WILPF is co-sponsoring the Convention and hopes WILPF members from across the nation will come learn how corporate personhood connects to all WILPF issues. Learn more about the Convention and register at www.DemocracyConvention.org.

The 2013 Democracy Convention will include several tracks. WILPF’s own Nancy Price is planning the Earth Democracy track. Other tracks include the Economic Democracy Track, Democratizing Defense, Race & Democracy, Education for Democracy, Representative Democracy, Local Democracy, Constitutional Reform Conference and the Media Reform Conference. And this year the convention will be even bigger because many of the workshops will be collaborative with the Veterans For Peace Annual Convention which is being held in Madison at the same time.

 

Post date: Mon, 06/03/2013 - 11:11

Inheriting Legacies of Peace and Justice Program

By Jan Corderman, Board Member, Jane Addams Peace Association

The April 27 announcement of this year' winners of the Jane Addams Children’s Book Awards and Peace & Justice program took place at Hull House in Chicago, the first settlement house in the United States co-founded by Addams. First awarded in 1953, the Awards honor exemplary children's literature that most effectively promotes peace, social justice, world community, and gender and racial equality to young readers. Book Selection Committee members Susan Freiss, Jacqui Kolar and Beth McGowan enlisted the help of fourth and fifth grade children who had read and come to greatly admire the award winners with their teachers, Friess and teaching partner Jennifer Peterson. The children joined in announcing and describing two winners and four honor books. The children also participated in conversation during the reading aloud of the winning book for younger readers. See www.janeaddamspeace.org for a list of this year’s winning and honor books and to view a fabulous new searchable data-base of previous winners.

Friess and Peterson, from Stoner Prairie Elementary in Fitchburg, Wisconsin, told of their work in the classroom with Jane Addams Children’s Books and extended an invitation to all present to talk with children about peace and justice. The morning included a book making activity for the children, led by the Chicago Childcare Collective. ChiChiCo’s goal is to have fun with kids while their parents participate in and lead organizing efforts to defend their rights and build a better Chicago.

Two members of the Jane Addams Peace Association Board were in attendance, Margaret Harrington Tamulonis from Burlington, Vermont, and Jan Corderman from Pleasant Hill, Iowa. Margaret observed after touring Hull House for the first time, “There is such wonderful enthusiasm here from both the children and adults. It’s exhilarating to be in Hull House where Jane Addams rocked the cradle of social democracy in America. It’s such a positive event and I’m committed to get the word out about the Jane Addams Children’s Book Awards.”

WILPFers from the area were in attendance along with four of Jane Addams' cousins, eight or nine times removed! They shared their pride and joy in knowing that small connection with someone they admire. A tour of the Hull House Museum, Addams’ living quarters, was included in the day. Following the program, Ria Kulenovic and Robin Lloyd met with WILPFERS to discuss the upcoming 100th Anniversary Celebrations to be held in 2015.

Branches are encouraged purchase the 2013 set of award books to donate to schools, libraries, and children's programs. The books will be available after the awards ceremony, which will be held at JAPA headquarters on October 19. To reserve a set, contact Linda Belle, JAPA Executive Director, 777 United National Plaza-6th Floor, New York, NY 10017 (japa@igc.org).

Photos: Main Photo - Susan Freiss and Jennifer Petersen with their students from Stoner Prairie Elementary School in Wisconsin. Second Photo - (from left to right) Jamie Addams, her daughter, Ruby Jane Addams Montgomery, Stacey Blair and her daughter Anna Blair, descendents from Jane Addams family and living near Chicago. Third Photo - (on the left) Ann Fleischli (on the right), Mary Sanderson of the Madison, Wisconsin branch tour Hull House Photos courtesy of Margaret Harrington.

Post date: Mon, 06/03/2013 - 10:43

WILPF members joined in Marches Against Monsanto, which took place in 436 cities in 52 countries on May 25, 2013. WILPF Raging Grannies led a crowd of 500 protesters in original songs against genetically engineered foods in San Jose, CA. Around the country others participated as individuals or branches, braving the rain in Des Moines, IA, and turning out in Cleveland, OH; Missoula, MT; Sacramento; Monterey, San Francisco; and Davis, CA (where they blocked the employee entrance at Monsanto's headquarters). Children carried signs and dressed as bees and butterflies to call attention to the environmental threat posed by Roundup and other chemicals.

Image credit: Raging Grannies lead a crowd of protestors. Photo courtesy of Kim Kinoshita

Post date: Fri, 05/10/2013 - 10:56

Peace & Justice Center's racial justice coalition put together two "Making Whiteness Visible" workshops in early April led by Sha'an Mouliert. This coalition is working with Conversations on Race Now (CORN), Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and individuals who have been working for racial justice in the area for many years. One of the workshops was open to the public and the other was by invitation only for law enforcement officers and allies held at the Burlington Police Station. The public workshop had over 50 people in attendance and several people also stood as peacemakers outside to ensure the event was safe. The private workshop had over 20 people in attendance including representatives from seven police departments. Thank you to everyone who attended and supported these events!

Photo: Courtesy of Peace & Justice Center, Burlington, VT

Post date: Thu, 05/09/2013 - 10:41

By Nancy Price, Chair, Earth Democracy Issue Committee

The CA Earth Democracy Team, Jean Hays, Randa Solick, Mathilde Rand, and Nancy Price, has continued giving Workshops since the highly successful inaugural workshop in Fresno reported in the last eNews.

The second Workshop was held in San José, April 12–13 and the following weekend in  Santa Cruz, April 19–20.  In each city, those who attended have taken some kind of  action to move forward.

San José being a very large city with lots of activities, the workshp drew a small, very attentive group of about 20 people—mostly workshop presenters and local WILPFers who met on Friday evening.

Kenneth Rosales, Sierra Club-Loma Prieta Chapter Conservation Program coordinator, spoke on the San José Cool City (a Sierra Club initiative) and San José Green Vision Program; Councilmember Barry Chang, from the neighboring city of Cupertino, spoke about long-term toxic pollution from the local Lehigh Cement Factory, now owned by a German Corporation, that could not operate in Germany if creating such pollution as they are in Cupertino. They can do so in the US with lighter environmental laws and little enforcement. Mr. Chang and the Sierra Club have sued Lehigh Cement for air and water pollution in particular including mercury, a very serious threat to public health, especially young children. Fishing in local streams and lakes is prohibited due to the mercury pollution.

Brief updates on local campaigns were given by San José WILPF member Joan Bazar on food labeling campaigns (now in at least 20 other states); Paula Rochelle on water issues, particularly on bottled water; and Lois Fiedler on the electronics industry’s toxic pollution from both manufacturing and the impact of electronic waste.

Joan Bazar reported that the San José Branch tabled earlier at the Cupertino Earth Day Festival and engaged kids in drawing what they wish to protect and save in their environment—a touching collection of insects, flowers, trees, water, family, sea creatures, water and "everything”—and their pictures can be found on the Earth Democracy Flickr slideshow along with pictures of the workshop in Santa Cruz.

The Guardianship for Future Generations workshop was given in Santa Cruz on Friday April 19 with 35 people attending and April 20, with 12 people...all attending  reported on the lively participation and good discussion. Many who attended want to  continue to work on local ordinances and agreed to first on a thorough review of the actual language used in the cities where Precautionary Principle and the Rights of Nature ordinances already been implemented – Ecuador, Bolivia, and Berkeley, Santa Monica, and San Francisco, CA for example.
 
Randa Solick reported that on Saturday, Santa Cruz County progressive Supervisor John Leopold attended for a few hours and encouraged them  to work out ways to present these ideas to the Board of Supervisors....and those at the workshop agreed to take him up on this suggestion.

We look forward to more Workshops in the Fall.

Jean, Mathilde, Nancy and Randa

Photos: High school volunteer Claire Lu at San Jose WILPF table encourages girl to draw what she wants to protect. Photos by Joan Bazar

Post date: Thu, 05/09/2013 - 10:11

Editorial by Maria Butler, PeaceWomen Director

This month has been another busy one with the adoption of the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) and the Open Security Council Debate on conflict-related Sexual Violence. We also saw the G-8 countries endorse a declaration on preventing sexual violence. On April 2nd, States (by majority, not consensus) adopted the first ever Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). It includes a legally binding criterion on preventing gender-based violence (GBV) which makes it part of the mandatory export assessment process. As part of the risk assessment process, States will be required to take into account the risk of the weapons, ammunition, parts, or components being used to commit or facilitate serious acts of gender-based violence or violence against women and children. This creates a platform for prohibiting the transfer of arms, if there is a risk they will be used to facilitate GBV.

From PeaceWomen’s perspective, the GBV provision is not perfect, but it is certainly much stronger than the extremely weak language in previous drafts. We, as civil society, can and will move forward with implementation. (See our summary of ATT and Gender here) I have hailed the inclusion of this GBV provision as historic. I also know without the enormous amount of work by key colleagues and bridge builders within WILPF and our partner organizations that we would not have this provision to work with going forward. I recall sitting in a café close to the UN with Ray (Director of WILPF disarmament work) and Rebecca (then of IANSA-Women Network) plotting our earlier engagement in the ATT process from a gender perspective. Right then, I committed PeaceWomen to work on this (without any funding) because I believed it was critical to link preventing armed violations against women (VAW) and implementing a women, peace and security agenda.

One step led to the next: a joint policy paper; a side event with the CEDAW Committee; one article to another; a State champion in Iceland. The small meetings and the mountain of emails continued, our campaign “Make it Binding” grew, the advocacy strategy evolved, the politics changed, and at some points we achieved great strides towards our end goal. At others, we hit dead-ends but that did not slow down our momentum, as we journeyed from the prep conferences to the first negotiation conference in July 2012 through the final negotiations last month. Together all these approaches and efforts (as well as other ones I am not aware of) resulted in the final Treaty Text including an important provision on GBV and VAW. I believe that without WILPF’s advocacy and work at the international and national level, the Treaty would have been gender-blind or worse, it would have undermined existing international law.

102 States supported our position to strengthen the GBV provision during the March negotiations. Before I walked over to the Group of Friends on Women, Peace and Security meeting last week at the Canadian Mission to the UN, I took out the list of WPS Friends (43 member states) and the list of 102 states who supported strengthening GBV in the ATT. Do you think all, or at least most, of the “friends” would have supported the ATT GBV provision? I had thought the numbers would be close. But in fact, only 70% matched up. This provides a challenge and an opportunity for WILPF to close this gap. Who are those so-called friends of 1325 who didn’t provide support? Bangladesh, Chile, Colombia, Japan, Jordan, Rep of Korea, Morocco, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Tanzania, USA, and Zambia. This requires some further analysis and is an issue PeaceWomen will take up in the upcoming weeks.

Photo: Courtesy of PeaceWomen, Maria Butler
 

Post date: Wed, 05/08/2013 - 06:38

Eliminate Nuclear Weapons and the Nuclear Chain: Stop Drone Assassinations and End Wars

By Carol Urner, Co-Chair, DISARM/End Wars

Thanks to all of you in WILPF who have been doing so much, and in so many ways, to make our world a better place. True we still have a long way to go, but it feels like we are making progress even in our work of demilitarizing our nation and ending wars.

In April, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton introduced HR 1650, which, for the first time calls on Congress and the Administration to help rid the world of nuclear weapons by 2020!  WILPF women also continued to challenge nuclear power and the whole nuclear chain. In this photo WILPFers and friends wearing masks of ousted  NRC chief Gregory B. Jaczko  read his parting call for phasing out nuclear power  to NRC commissioners at a Vermont Yankee hearing in Brattleboro VT. Jaczko has warned that all existing plants are unsafe. Also see news on Branch Actions to stop drone assassinations and to shift tax money from waging war to ensuring human security and human rights.

In May, we will continue our work in promoting the new version of this bill as well as supporting the creative projects of US Branches and members determined to abolish nuclear weapons and cut the nuclear chain.

In May, we will also continue to press for an end to assassination by drones, building on the successful national April campaign in which WILPF Branches and members actively participated. Contact Marge Van Cleef at mvc@igc.org with questions or event reports. Watch for more action resources later in May!

Work with us on these and other DISARM/End Wars issues about which you care most. You don’t have to be a committee member to participate, but you are certainly welcome to join. Contact Ellen Thomas at et@prop1.org and/or Carol Urner carol.disarm@gmail.com, our current co-chairs, for information and support.

Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington, DC House Delegate, introduced her latest version of the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act on April 18, two days after meeting with five WILPFers during the Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days. Read her statement here. The bill would require the United States to negotiate an international agreement to disable and dismantle its nuclear weapons by 2020 and to redirect the funds to human and infrastructure needs. She apparently revised it further after five WILPFers met with her during Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days. The bill now incorporates the same goals as the US Conference of Mayors. It also supports phasing out nuclear power as the USA switches to truly green energy. We expect to support this new bill vigorously during the coming two years and will seek help from WILPF members and Branches.

Latest word is that international NGOs at the UN for 2013 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treat meetings are inviting Delegate Norton to join Representatives John Conyers and Barbara Lee (both WILPF members), Ed Markey, Dennis Kucinich (still UN representative) and Carolyn Maloney in Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament. Members have been meeting at the UN in Geneva in person and by Skype/Internet to push forward on nuclear abolition treaty negotiations. International NGOs are delighted with the bill and it is already posted on the Basel Peace Office web pages.

ANA DC Days (April 14–19) included a two day leadership planning retreat in which the two co-chairs actively participated. Ellen Barfield (former co-chair), Coralie Farlee (WILPF-DC Coordinator), Ellen Thomas (co-chair and treasurer) and Carol Urner (co-chair) attended. We also gained a new DC member (Pam Moffat) and a renewal by an ANA member who joined in 2010. Basic 2013 ANA fact sheets can be found here.

Representative Edwin Markey has now introduced the 2013-14 SANE Act. The bill may not express the sense of urgency felt by WILPF, Mayors for Peace—or among many other members of ANA—but it supports almost all of ANA’s Asks expressed in the fact sheets and in meetings with Congress and Administration, Anyone who does not accept these basic precautions might be judged insane.
 
Coralie was able to meet with Sister Megan Rice during DC Days and she, Ellen Barfield and Ellen Thomas will update us on the Plowshare three trial for entering the top level Y-12 security site at Oakridge, Tennessee which began on May 7. Ellen Barfield and Ellen Thomas are both attending the trial in Knoxville. Read, if you haven’t yet done so, the amazing article published in the Washington Post. For background on the trial itself visit the partial transcript of the pre-trial hearing taken down by Pastor Ralph Hutchinson, the ANA affiliated "watch dog” at Oakridge Tennessee Y-12.
 
During DC Days Coralie Farlee, Ellen Thomas and Carol Urner all visited briefly with new WILPF member Charmaine White Face who was in DC seeking a sponsor for a moratorium on uranium mining on Native American lands. (We think we’ve found one to introduce the bill!). Other Lakota Sioux traveling with Charmaine are campaigning for a return to the original matriarchal Lakota Sioux culture where grandmother elders guided tribal decisions and actions. Sounds like a natural companion for WILPF! See Truth Out story on their April 9 visit to the United Nations in New York.

 
While DISARM/End Wars members were meeting in DC, WILPF life member Jackie Cabasso represented the DISARM/End Wars committee at the demonstrations seeking removal of British nuclear weapons from Faslane Trident Base in Scotland. On April 17–18 she attended the Abolition 2000 annual meeting in Edinburgh and then the Nonproliferation Treaty Preparatory Committee in Geneva April 20–May 3.The document on the civil society-parliamentarian seminar in Edinburgh on April 19 gives a good glimpse of the struggle for nuclear weapons abolition in Scotland and the wider world. See it here. We expect a report back from Jackie in May. We also expect useful reflections on these April meetings from our other two WILPF member advisers, Alice Slater and Ray Acheson.

The 2013 UN Preparatory Committee concluded on May 3 and in 2014 will again meet at the United Nations in New York. It is time now for those who wish to attend to begin saving for transport and housing and to study up on past and current history of the NPT. The best way to understand what happened at the 2013 Prep Com is to skim through the daily NPT News in Review edited by Ray Acheson and Beatrice Fihn of WILPF Reaching Critical Will.

We continue to press for the Helsinki meetings on a Middle East Nuclear and WMD Free Zone. Odile Hugonot Haber (odilehh@gmail.com), who is also co-chair of the Middle East Issue Committee, is tracking progress for all of us. The Arab nations threatened boycott of the NPT sessions if the Helsinki meetings are not held this year and Egypt’s delegate did walk out when satisfactory progress was not made. Odile has shared with us the statement of the Iranian delegate to the United Nations on this matter. In WILPF, our own experience is teaching us that pursuit of nuclear energy is a tragic mistake for any nation, including our own.

During all of May, we will be actively preparing for Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Fukushima days and August Nuclear Free Future month. WILPFer Cecile Pineda, author of Devil’s Tango: How I Learned to Dance the Fukushima Step-by-Step has offered to do a speaking tour in northern California during that month, starting with Hiroshima-Nagasaki Days. She is currently available to speak on the west coast after successful tours arranged by WILPF members and Branches in New England and the Great Lakes region.

We are proud of the work members and Branches have been doing to close nuclear power plants across the country, and to stop generation and shipment of highly radioactive nuclear waste. The frequently arrested Shut it Downers protesting Vermont Yankee this time brought masks and words of Gregory Jaczko to a public hearing of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (see photo above).

The whole month of April was designated for Drone actions around the country. Go to Know Drones. Elsewhere events are listed by state (see right hand column). Pittsburgh and Boston WILPF events are already posted on the web. However we know many more WILPFers were involved from Fresno, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Portland, Sacramento, San Diego, St Louis, Tucson and probably more, and they all have stories to tell. Please send your own reports to WILPFer Marge Van Cleef at mvc@igc.org who was a key national organizer. Continue to help Marge and her national No Drones committee investigate drone research in universities and think tanks. On April 30, the final day, at-large WILPF members Ellen Barfield and Beth Adams were arrested at Hancock CIA AFB in Syracuse. Bruce Gagnon, with whom our Branches work on Keeping Space for Peace was also arrested. Read his blog on the event here.

April 15 was Tax day and we are still getting Branch reports to put up on the Global Day of Action on Military Spending web pages for summaries of actions around the world supporting USA tax actions re cutting military spending. Go directly here and scroll down to the United States for pages of reports on US Tax Day actions. Peninsula, Portland, Santa Barbara, St. Louis and Tucson were among the Branches passing out flyers at Post Offices. They were also visiting local Congressional offices, writing letters and holding “town meetings” insisting that our tax money should be going for human security, human rights and human needs—not for drones, nuclear weapons   and other instruments of war and killing.

We are proud of all the work that WILPF women do to care for our planet, challenge corporate personhood, advance human rights, build the beloved community and preserve life on earth. And it isn’t just WILPFers who are movers and shakers. We have so many companions along the way, including Veterans for Peace, Code Pink, War Resisters League, Fellowship of Reconciliation, WAND, AFSC, FCNL, Peace Action and all those grass roots peace and justice groups, churches, colleges and communities across our land. How can our causes fail with so many wonderful peace builders in our land?

Photo 1 (top): by Mary-Ann DeVita Palmieri. From left, front, Christopher Miller and Ron Bellamy of the NRC; back, Linda Pon Owens, Anneke Corbett, Susan Lantz, and Connie Harvard of the Shut It Down Affinity Group

Photo 2: Photo courtesy of Ellen Thomas. L to R Coralie Farlee  (WILPF DC coordinator), Pamela Moffat (WILPF DC member), Ellen Barfield (WILPF at-large, Baltimore), Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (Delegate, Washington, DC) Ellen Thomas (WILPF at-large, Tryon NC), in front Carol Urner. Portland OR Branch).

 

 

Post date: Wed, 05/01/2013 - 18:37

WILPF is nearing our 100th anniversary. Over the years, our work has changed but our core committment to peace has strengthened.

What does WILPF mean to you? Tell us about it by responding in the comments below!

 

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