NEWS

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 08:33

By Marybeth Gardam
WILPF US Development Committee

April 2021

Even members of moderate means can leave a meaningful bequest to WILPF US. You can choose to leave money to larger and more prominent peace, justice, and environmental allies, or more local ones. But arguably your money won’t mean as much or go as far at those gigantic organizations as it will at WILPF US.

When I became Development Chair at WILPF US around 2014, I decided to find out from some peers at other organizations how they find and approach new major donors. Our aging members are finding it difficult to continue to support WILPF as generously as they used to do. We need to begin to find new donors who can make up the difference and help us plan beyond just survival. 

So I called the national Sierra Club Development Director and explained how important it was for our 100+ year old organization to identify progressive women donors who could become major donors to WILPF. I wondered how they managed to find new major donors. He seemed confused.  

“Well, we have over 100,000 members and we make a commitment to contact each one of them personally at least once during every year,” he said. “Frankly, our staff of development professionals has all we can do to mine our own list, without looking for anyone new outside our list.”  

It took my breath away. 100,000+ members. A professional STAFF (as in more than two!) to make contacts. People to whom one could potentially delegate such important annual contacts!  

Most big national organizations… especially those with WILPF’s longevity… have the means and resources to do that kind of development work. We have a computer list of far fewer established donors, and most of them donate less than $50. Fully two-thirds of our members don’t contribute anything beyond their dues, though I bet a lot of them donate to Sierra Club or other worthy nonprofits. 

I can’t help imagining how WILPF US would benefit if we could afford to hire even a full-time development director, let alone a staff of people to make constant fundraising emails or phone calls!

To touch base even once a year personally with our 40 or so ‘large donors’ is a stretch. But we are committed to doing it. And unlike bigger nonprofits, we don’t mail, email, or phone our regular members to ask for money more than a couple times a year. It keeps us going, but it doesn’t necessarily ensure a sustainable future. 

Bequests Close the Gap and Support Grassroots Actions

Bequests and legacy gifts have long been important for keeping our organization sustainable. They still are. And making those gifts can be possible even for those of moderate means.  

By declaring WILPF US a beneficiary on an insurance policy you don’t need, adding a simple sentence or two to your will, or making WILPF the recipient of pension fund remainders after your death, your legacy can help ensure that our work for peace goes forward and we’re still here when your granddaughters are looking to support solidarity peace work that matters. Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like WILPF will be unnecessary any time soon.   

For WILPF, bequests often help us close the gap and keep us afloat. A percentage of every bequest goes to our long-term investment accounts, as protection against hard times or to help us make large one-time purchases that we repay within weeks or months. But we don’t squirrel away much. We put your money to work, developing the kinds of time-sensitive actions and resources that support our members and branches. The balance of those bequests helps us meet the day-to-day expenses of running a national nonprofit on a very slender margin.   

Request a copy of the Bequest Brochure or contact us to inquire about how to make the simple arrangements that send WILPF a little love when your activism days are over. Invest in the future of this organization in which you have already invested your time and energy. It’s easier than you think! We’ll walk you through every step and even help you talk with your heirs about your final wishes. Contact us at bequests@wilpfus.org.  

 

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 08:22

By Nikki Abeleda (She/They)
WILPF US Inside and Out Initiative

April 2021

WILPF US launched the Building Branches from the Inside and Out Initiative and uplifted International Women’s Day through a virtual kickoff celebration on Sunday, March 7, 2021. 

Inside and Out Initiative is a WILPF US initiative based on an adaptation of the Asset Based Community Development (ABCD) framework, which is a community organizing model that assesses the community’s – or in WILPF’s case branches’ – strengths and abilities. The ABCD framework was founded by John L. McKnight and John P. Kretzmann at the Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.

Nikki Abeleda is an Associate Clinical Social Worker in California and received her Masters in Social Work from Boston College. She was hired as the Field Facilitator for WILPF US to help implement the ABCD framework to support and empower the WILPF branches. Currently, Nikki organizes and builds with several community organizations in the US that are committed to social justice, anti-Blackness and anti-racism, and dismantling oppression. Nikki’s leadership skills in community organizing and activism include: advocacy, capacity building, direct action, content creation, facilitation, and equity, justice, and inclusion work. 

Members from six of the participating US WILPF Branches attended the virtual event: Sacramento, San Diego, Des Moines, Rockford, Boston, and Philadelphia. For International Women’s Day and Women’s History Month, members highlighted and honored women they admire. This conversation allowed for the Inside and Out Cohort to build community with one another and get to know others in different branches. Also, Nikki introduced the ABCD framework through an educational video and shared the Inside & Out Implementation plan to provide next steps for the branches.

Please stay tuned to follow the progress of the WILPF US Inside and Out Initiative. 

Resources for the ABCD framework

Cormac Russell TedTalks - Sustainable community development: from what's wrong to what's strong

 

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 08:00

The Humboldt Branch sells raffle tickets for its annual quilt project to raise funds for their scholarship and to purchase Jane Addams books. Here is this year’s quilt!

April 2021

Humboldt WILPF Goes Virtuoso!

By Carilyn Goldammer
Humboldt WILPF

Greetings to our WILPF sisters everywhere. This year during our time of COVID, our group in Humboldt County, CA, managed to turn to Zoom for both our meetings and our annual International Women’s Day community celebration. Why virtuoso? Well, getting everyone hooked up to Zoom, plus our musical celebration, required new challenges and success!

Our community celebration for IWD included our Raging Grannies, a keynote address by our local NAACP chairwoman, and our two talented musicians once again led our sing-a-long. Zooming helped reach friends in our more rural areas!

Additionally, this year we chose to join under the Humboldt “Ink People’s DreamMakers” umbrella in order to help facilitate community donations to our Edilith Eckart Peace Scholarship, as well as post events and sell raffle tickets for our annual quilt project. Our quilt donations result in a raffle that helps fund our scholarship and our Jane Addams book purchases. If you’re interested in making donations (yes, I’m hawking here!) or simply seeing our new alliance with the DreamMakers program, check out “The Humboldt Ink People DreamMaker Program” under “Edilith Eckart Peace Scholarship”.

We continue to reach out to other local groups with peace/justice/freedom projects ranging from supporting the houseless population, food distribution, immigrant support, and supporting the local annual girls empowerment camp. We wish you all health, joy, and peace.

Cape Cod Branch Honors International Women’s Day with Wise Words

By Elenita Muñiz
WILPF Cape Cod

Zoom celebration of International Women’s Day
Screenshot of WILPF Cape Cod recording its March 8 Zoom celebration of International Women’s Day. Top row, L to R: Candace Perry, Donna Pihl, Elenita Muñiz; center row, L to R: Alycia longriver Davis, Paula Schnepp, Dianne Ashley; bottom row, L to R: Chris Morin, Margy Marhdt, Jan Hively.

On March 8, members of the Cape Cod branch of Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom gathered over Zoom to record a program to honor International Women’s Day. Not in person this year, but heartfelt and joyous nonetheless, the program featured the writings of Alycia longriver Davis, who has been a member of this branch for many years. Alycia is a prolific, astute, and thoughtful writer, as everyone who reads her email reflections to the branch listserv knows well. Alycia is currently in hospice care for Stage IV cancer and we were thrilled and touched that she was able to join the call and hear the program.

Candace Perry and Jan Hively organized the event. Readers included Dianne Ashley, Irina Kosterina and her children, Margy Marhdt, Chris Morin, Elenita Muñiz, Donna Pihl, and Paula Schnepp. The program, emceed by Candace, began with a short history of International Women's Day. The readings included a short story, “The Kite,” which Alycia wrote during her early days living in Provincetown in 1994, followed by several meditations Alycia wrote for her book Opening Our Hearts. This collection of stories in Native American style, featuring the words of wise grandparents to children or poetic reflections on the gifts of nature and our world, has been adapted to become a religious education curriculum for the Unitarian Universalist Association!

We will be posting the program on the WILPF US YouTube page, but for now the recorded program (27 minutes) can be viewed through this link.

Honoring Women’s History in Town Government

WILPF Cape Cod member Paula Schnepp, who serves on the Barnstable Town Council, recently organized a proposed resolution for the council to consider. The proposal was put forth by all six women members of the council, each reading a paragraph of the motion, that the town declare the month of March to be Women’s History Month. The proclamation cites the contributions of women to the history of the town, the role of women of color, immigrants, and indigenous women, and the critical significance of women to the success of the town.

The resolution was adopted unanimously, with applause and a virtual standing ovation from the [male] Barnstable Town Council chair! Well done, Paula! Thank you for all the work you do.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/08/2021 - 06:57

By Jan Corderman
WILPF US Treasurer

April 2021

We’re inviting you to join WILPF’s Development Committee. Our committee's job is not simply to raise money. The committee is responsible for overseeing the organization's overall fundraising to carry out our current plan and to help create and establish the next one that incorporates a series of appropriate vehicles including special events, direct mail, and social media – all to ensure the financial viability and stability of our beloved organization.  

Our seven members who currently serve on the committee have a big job. That’s why we’re looking for energetic WILPFers who are passionate about our mission, creative, well organized, and eager to reach out to external audiences (donors, foundations, etc.) in addition to those peace activists we work with every day in our branches and sister organizations. 

Please join us!

By contributing your leadership skills, you will enjoy the satisfaction of helping steer us to support even more peace activism in our communities and our world.

You may even decide to run for the Development Committee Co-Chair position at the next election cycle!

Interested? Contact me at: jancorderman@msn.com; 515-205-4504.
 

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 08:30
Peace & Freedom

We want to hear your thoughts about the first virtual Peace & Freedom issue!

April 2021

All Are Invited to Half-Hour Calls Before and/or After Program Meeting on Tuesday, April 6!

By Darien De Lu
President, WILPF US

Another month, another chance to ask your WILPF questions! And another chance for me to meet you!

Again, this month I invite you to our monthly chance to freely ask questions, and to take a little time to talk with me and other WILPF members. These conversations are during the half-hour before and after the monthly Program Committee meetings. Stay on for as little or as long as you like to hear the buzz!

Also, WILPF US members are all welcome to call in to listen in to the Program Committee meeting, which starts at 5 pm PT / 8 pm ET and will continue until about 7 pm PT / 10 pm ET. Learn about the projects of the issue committees and how to connect! Also, you can look at our issue committee webpages to find answers!

This month is a standard Program Committee meeting; in May the meeting will be particularly designed to be informative for all WILPF members.

So maybe, this month, you will choose not to listen in to the meeting, but you’ll call in for the Before/After conversations. If so, just call in during the half-hour before and/or the half-hour after those meeting times, so starting at 4:30 pm PT / 7:30 pm ET and all ending about 7:30 pm PT / 10:30 pm ET.

This is your chance! Instead of emailing me, call in! You can –

  • Ask questions
  • Share ideas
  • Talk with other WILPFers nationwide.

To get the zoom password and link for the Before and After conversations emailed to you, you must register (even if you do so after the start times). Use this Zoom link to preregister.

 

Make Space to Participate and Take Action in WILPF Anti-Racism Initiatives

By Darien De Lu
President, WILPF US

Multiple nationwide WILPF anti-racism initiatives will be available for branches and members, including at-large members. Start thinking now about how you and/or your branch will integrate this work locally.

WILPF US is looking at offering various ways to support our members in studying and better understanding the many effects racism has on us, our society, the focuses of our political work, and the functioning of WILPF US. We’ll be offering resources and more; and I hope you, as individuals, and all of our branches will regularly set aside time to use these materials.

In the last year, we all have been reminded again and again and in multiple ways of the ways racism negatively manifests in every aspect of US society. BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color) have no need of such reminders, but many whites do. Also, it should not be surprising that the pervasive economic effects of racism have led to it being intertwined with classism. In both cases, the reaction of many in our “color-blind” and “class-free” society has been to deny or minimize these influences and, even, their existence.

As WILPF US President, I see it as critical that WILPF members study, discuss, and act to support anti-racism – both individually and in branches or other local groups. Please watch for eNews articles and eAlerts about the various ways you, within WILPF, can become better informed. Also, consider joining Showing Up for Racial Justice – SURJ meetings and/or working with other anti-racism groups in your area.

Photo: Group of women protesting against racism in Miami, Florida, on May 31, 2020. Photo credit: Tverdokhlib / Shutterstock.com.
 

What Did You Think of Our First Virtual Peace & Freedom Magazine?

Please tell us your responses to our virtual Winter/Spring 2021 issue of Peace and Freedom magazine sent to you in January!

WILPF US is likely to alternate between hard copy and virtual issues of P&F, and we want to support our members in being able to access the digital-only editions. So how are we doing?

How well were you able to view and read the latest issue of P&F? Did the instructions work for you? Did you download the PDF to read the issue or use Yumpu to read it? What do you think of the Yumpu platform? What advantages did you find with the virtual P&F? What suggestions do you have for us?

Please email your comments to info@WILPFUS.org, using a subject of P&F.
 

We Need Your Photos for the New Website!

By Leni Villagomez Reeves

Share the good times and the struggles! Please send in your photos for the new WILPF website.

You know you have photos – probably lots of photos from various WILPF activities and actions. No doubt there are some that are too good to keep to yourselves and some that bring back memories. Share them with your fellow WILPFers. We all want to see them.

Now is a good time to get your WILPF pictures in so that you and your actions can be shown on the new website when it launches. You’ll want to identify the branch and activity, and credit the photographer, of course.

Sooner is better than later, since the new website is being designed right now.

Send your photos to Michael Ippolito: michael@teamgood.org

 

 

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 08:07

By Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth Democracy

April 2021

Calling all WILPF branches and members to celebrate Earth Day on April 22. This year’s theme is “Restore Our Earth.” What are you planning? What is your community planning? Let’s all commit to living as if Earth Day is every day!

It’s time to plan an event or find out what is going on in your community and how you can join in. With warmer weather and following proper protocols, we can all be outdoors together with friends and family to celebrate Mother Earth and learn how we can restore the earth.

Join in with our colorful WLIPF banners and your homemade signs. Ideas: “There is no Planet B.” “The oceans are rising – are you?” “Don’t fool with Mother Nature“End wars – Restore the Earth” “It’s too damn hot” Be creative!

You can register events on the Earth Day Map here and find an event near you here.

Please send your good quality, high resolution pictures of your participation with the photographer’s name and names of those in the picture to nancytprice39(at)gmail.com and we’ll post them at our Earth Democracy page.

What follows is information about virtual online Earth Day events you’ll want to plan to view and "participate” in.

EARTH DAY – Three Days of Climate Action – April 20-22

Thousands of organizations are coming together April 20-22 for THREE DAYS OF CLIMATE ACTION learning how together we can RESTORE OUR EARTH. Go to the main website.

Explore the website, especially Our Work to learn about the issues and actions EARTHDAY.ORG focuses on year round: Climate Action, Science and Education, People and Communities, Conservation and Restoration, and Plastic and Pollution. Also browse through News + Stories and sign up for email updates.

Complete details of the three days of Climate Action are here but they include:

On April 20, the four-hour digital global youth climate summit is led by Earth Uprising, in collaboration with My Future My Voice, One Million of US and hundreds of youth climate activists. There will be panels, speeches, discussions, and special messages with today’s youth climate activists.

On April 21, Education International will lead the “Teach for the Planet: Global Education Summit.” This will be a multilingual, virtual summit that spans several time zones and it will feature prominent activists from every continent. It is focused on the crucial role that educators play in combating climate change and why we need transformative climate education now.

On April 22, parallel to the Biden Administration’s global climate summit, earthday.org will produce a live digital event that includes segments taking place around the world starting at noon Eastern Standard Time. There will be panel discussions and special performances focused on the Restore Our Earth theme which examines natural processes, emerging green technologies, and innovative thinking that can restore the world’s ecosystems.

Earth Day to May Day – ED2MD - 10 Days of Action

Last year labor, democracy, and climate movements planning to mobilize for Earth Day’s 50th Anniversary struggled with the onset of COVID-19 and its lockdowns. The grand plan for a large mobilization from Earth Day to May Day was put on hold. Read about the origin of the Earth Day to May Day - ED2MD movement here.

This marks an important strategic reorientation. The relationship between labor and the environmental movement has been on and off again over the years (see "Teamsters & Turtles: An On-Again, Off-Again Relationship"). Last year, the Labor Network for Sustainability still managed to organize virtual Earth Day to May Day events but this will be an ongoing emphasis going forward.

This year, beset by the pandemic and the cumulative impact of the broader social, economic and political crises of our times - "Earth Day to May Day" (ED2MD) again emphasizes the underlying unity between the wellbeing of working people and of our planet – a framing again being raised by a network of labor, community organizing and academic projects in 2021. You can put your event on the map here.

Watch a video of Roberto Clack, Warehouse Workers for Justice’s Executive Director, about Earth Day 2 May Day and why his organization, a workers center, is centrally involved in connecting workplace and environmental issues.

Uniting to End RacismAlso on the website is the Declaration of the 2020s, a statement that recognizes that the outcomes of our struggles in this "Decisive Decade" will largely determine the future of humanity and our capacity to face down the multiple, overlapping existential threats before us. Interested organizations and individuals may use the website to register and advertise their own events and also sign the Declaration.

Taking into account the heavy human toll of the pandemic, the grossly inadequate state responses to it, the extreme burden on frontline communities, 2020's difficult but ultimately successful electoral battle against authoritarian populism, and new organizing opportunities, ED2MD is embarking on a broad public awareness and educational campaign that prepares the way for the struggles of the coming years. 

Remember this existential struggle is about ending wars and creating a peace economy that Ellen Thomas’ “Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act” now in the House of Representatives would accomplish. Committing to acting as if Earth Day is every day includes advocating for this important piece of legislation.

Starting April 1, 2021, links to two conferences and many other events (including those organized by United Electrical) will be shared online at www.EarthDayMayDay.org.

Two Conferences with Strong Online Components Anchor ED2MD

One conference hosted at George Mason University (VA), "The Next System and the Academy: Systemic Crises, Movements, and Change," features Amy Best (Sociology, George Mason), Roberto Clack (Warehouse Workers for Justice, Illinois), Diane Fujino (Asian American Studies, UCSB), and Gar Alperovitz (Next System Project).

The other, the “Post Capitalism Conference: Building the Solidarity Economy,” organized at Humboldt State University (CA), features Margaret Kimberly (Black Agenda Report), John Foran (Sociology, UCSB), and Kali Akuno (Cooperation Jackson).

The interlocking issues explored in these conferences will continue to be raised by a network of labor, community, organizing and academic projects throughout 2021.

 

 

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 05:18

A film still from the documentary No Defense: The U.S. Military’s War on Water by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sara Ganim.

By Marguerite Adelman
WILPF Burlington Branch and VT PFAS and the Military Coalition

April 2021

More than 650 towns contaminated. Millions of Americans affected. The largest-known polluter of chemicals that are nearly indestructible…is also the regulator that has failed to act. The award-winning documentary No Defense holds the military accountable, exposing their role role in the contamination of our ecosystems with PFAS, a forever chemical.

Thanks to the Vermont International Film Festival (VTIFF) and WILPF Burlington Branch, WILPF members and friends in Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Maine can see the award-winning documentary film—No Defense—for free, anytime between April 16th and 25th. This powerful film, not yet released for distribution, is about PFAS contamination at the former Wurtsmith Air Force Base (a Department of Defense Superfund Site) in Oscoda, Michigan. Oscoda has waited years for cleanup. The people who are suffering, who are blowing the whistle, and who are fighting against the U.S. military, tell their stories in this one-hour film that has already won five film awards. (Find out more about the film and filmmakers at www.nodefensedoc.com).

For decades, it’s been documented that PFAS, known as forever chemicals, are harmful to life. Yet our military continues to use them at hundreds of sites across the country, contaminating ground water, drinking water, rivers and lakes, fish, and wildlife. The documentary, by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sara Ganim, is one of the first to focus on the military’s use of PFAS and the contamination they have caused at communities and bases across the United States and abroad. For WILPF members, the film brings together our concerns about the military and war and how these intersect with so many social and global issues from social to economic to environmental justice.

How to Participate in Viewing the Film

No DefenseThere are two parts to participating in viewing No Defense. First, you will need to register to see the film on or after 4/2/21. Click on vtiff.org/vtiff-now/split-screen/ and then go to No Defense to register for the film. You’ll get directions on how to view the film between April 16th and 25th. While the film is free, donations are welcome and will be split between the filmmakers and WILPF Burlington and the Vermont International Film Festival.

Second, you are invited to participate in a one-hour, film discussion after you’ve viewed No Defense. Mark your calendars for Earth Day, Thursday, April 22, at 8 PM (EDT). You can register for this Zoom discussion at: http://bit.ly/3bJHtnS. The discussion will be led by Anthony Spaniola of Need Our Water (NOW), Marguerite Adelman of WILPF Burlington, and Nancy Price of the WILPF US Earth Democracy Committee. Anthony Spaniola served as a consultant to the film and was also featured in it.

The film and discussion are part of WILPF Burlington’s VT PFAS and the Military Coalition, as well as the Earth Democracy Issue Committee. On March 21, the newly designed website Military Poisons premiered in an hour webinar, entitled "Combating Military Poisons and Valuing Water". The webinar is available on the WILPF US YouTube Channel.

As WILPF members, we need to advocate that the military be included in all climate agreements and state and national environmental legislation. Arm yourself with the knowledge that you need to be a powerful advocate for our climate and our ecosystems.

 

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 05:02
Santa Clara, Cuba

Group of people marching against the US blockade of Cuba in Santa Clara, Cuba, on May 1, 2019. Photo credit: Julio Rivalta / Shutterstock.com.

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

April 2021

WILPF US supports a new bill in the US Senate (S.249) that would end the US blockade of Cuba. We urge our senators to support and co-sponsor this bill, and encourage all WILPF members to contact your senators regarding this bill.

The U.S.-Cuba Trade Act of 2021, (S.249, sponsored by Wyden, Leahy, Durbin) would repeal the major statutes that exist in law to impose sanctions on Cuba. These include the Helms-Burton Act and the Torricelli Act (“Cuban Democracy Act”), as well as other provisions that affect trade, travel, and investment with Cuba.

There are many sophisticated economic arguments we could produce to establish that the US blockade of Cuba harms both countries, not just Cuba. I do not think that is necessary to make these kinds of arguments here in WILPF. We can see that siege warfare is cruel and immoral, without having to be told that ending the blockade will promote US agricultural exports.

Senate Bill 249 can go forward to the floor of the Senate for a vote – if it has enough support! Please contact your senators right away and urge them to support and co-sponsor this bill.

Some Important Links and a Sample Letter

Here are some links for more information:

Text of S.249

Senator Ron Wyden's press announcement when the bill was introduced.

Bill tracker at congress.gov

Here’s a sample letter to send to your senators:

Dear [Senator’s Name]:

We urge you to co-sponsor and support the U.S.-Cuba Trade Act of 2021 (S.249: Wyden, Leahy, Durbin).

This bill would repeal the major statutes that exist in law to impose sanctions on Cuba.  These include the Helms-Burton Act and the Cuban Democracy Act, as well as other provisions that affect trade, travel, and investment with Cuba.  

For sixty years, U.S. policy toward Cuba of diplomatic isolation and economic sanctions has hurt the people of Cuba while also harming the U.S. national interest. A growing majority of people living in the United States, including a majority of Cuban-Americans, want all U.S. citizens to have the right to travel to Cuba, and freedom to trade with Cuba as part of a new policy based on engaging with the Cuban people freely and respecting their right to self-determination.  

Ending the blockade would be good for the U.S. economy; it would expand demand for U.S. products, help the tourist travel and airline industries, and create jobs for people living in the United States. Experts estimate that the blockade costs the U.S. economy over $1 billion annually and that ending the restrictions could create thousands of jobs for people living in the United States.

In addition to Cuban medical expertise, medicines, and vaccines for dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, the blockade has deprived U.S. citizens of Cuba’s other medical breakthroughs. Cuba has developed the first meningitis B vaccine. Most recently Cuba released CimaVax EGF, a vaccine that allows some lung cancers to be a survivable chronic disease. And Heberprot-P, developed in Cuba to utilize recombinant growth factor for the treatment of ischemic diabetic foot ulcers, vastly reduces the need for amputation. This is an enormous problem in the U.S. 

The policy of isolation of Cuba is misguided, ineffective, and immoral. It has no international support, as demonstrated by an annual UN General Assembly vote in which only the U.S. and Israel consistently vote in favor of the blockade/embargo, while for 29 consecutive years over 185 countries have voted for a resolution calling for an end to the economic, commercial, and financial blockade imposed by the United States against Cuba.
    
The U.S. blockade of Cuba is a policy that has harmed the people of Cuba. There is not one single Cuban family that has not suffered the consequences of this. The travel ban is also an infringement on the rights of U.S. citizens.  

We have a moral and economic obligation to end this failed policy. Please co-sponsor and support S249, the U.S.-Cuba Trade Act of 2021.

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 04:54

Image by pasja1000 from Pixabay.

By Marybeth Gardam
ONE WILPF Call Team

April 2021

The next ONE WILPF call on Thursday, April 8 (4 pm PST / 7 pm EST) will have two wonderful speakers offering insight and action plans to redirect short term and longer term public funding towards the public good. We have a rare opportunity in this moment to support a bold, people-centered agenda.

You won’t want to miss it – register for the call now!

Long Term:  Move the Money - A Campaign to Cut Defense Spending

Paul DordalReverend Paul Dordal will describe the work of a group of concerned citizens in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. They have started a growing coalition of organizations and individuals that believe a reduction in the bloated military budget is the only way to assist the millions of those in dire need. Even a modest reduction of 10% over time would create the kind of revenue their city and other municipalities could use to ensure that our population has their basic needs met.

The Pittsburgh Move the Money Coalition is working with Reps. Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan, who have established the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus in the US House of Representatives. These efforts are spreading to communities around the country.

Rev. Dordal, an ordained priest in the Syro-Chaldean Church of North America, currently serves full-time as the Director of Spiritual Care at a large healthcare system in Pittsburgh. He also serves as adjunct faculty in the Doctor of Ministry in Integrative Chaplaincy degree program at Vanderbilt Divinity School. He leads the Pittsburgh Move the Money Campaign Steering Committee. Paul is a member of Veterans For Peace and the co-director of Christian Alliance For Peace.

Shorter Term: The American Recovery Act – An Opportunity to Influence the Dialogue

Activists around the country need to act NOW to influence decisions that will be made about how the moneys that your city and county receive will be spent. Who needs to be part of that process and how could it work in your community?

Nancy PriceWILPF’s own Nancy Price will discuss how her town – Davis, CA – is pressing for a values-driven distribution of their share of the American Recovery Act funding, to be sure that the funding addresses the real and unmet needs of the underserved and communities of color who have been disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 epidemic.

The March-April Congressional Recess is a major opportunity for our communities to mobilize in their home districts and make our voices heard for supporting a bold and aggressive people-centered agenda. The Frontline, an alliance of indigenous, black, Latino, labor, and frontline action organizers, want folks to contact DEMOCRATIC members of Congress who are either already supporting the President's recovery program or who are neutral, leaning left. They ask that when we contact these members we ask them to support the THRIVE Agenda, which has been put forward by the Democratic Party and endorsed by a long list of national organizations including WILPF US (through the W$D Committee's recommendation).

They are offering lots of good videos for skills training here.

And their Recess Toolkit is accessible here.

How to Register for ONE WILPF Calls

Registration for ONE WILPF Calls is open to all members and the public.

If you have never been on one of the calls before, please be sure to register.

These calls are AUDIO calls, not ZOOM calls, and you should plan to join the call with both your phone and your computer. Once you register you’ll get a reminder email 2 days, then 2 hours before the call begins. That email will have the dial in phone number (DON’T use the “JOIN WITH YOUR COMPUTER” button), instead click the link to join the “Social Webinar”.   

 

Post date: Thu, 04/01/2021 - 04:45

Photo & design by Eileen Kurkoski.

By
Eileen Kurkoski, Coordinator of the Anti-Racism Team
Joan Goddard & Janice Hawkins, Anti-Racism Team members    

April 2021

Starting Saturday, May 1 at 12 noon ET, 9 am PT, WILPF is offering a 7-week study and discussion group about personal and systemic racism based on Paul Kivel’s book, Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice, 4th edition. This is a great opportunity to learn and grow for racial justice.

WILPF US members have a long tradition of opposing injustice. Uprooting Racism provides a supportive, practical, go-to guide for helping white people understand their own bias and work with others for equal opportunity, democracy, and justice in these divisive and turbulent times.  This guide for serious self-study will change you and your WILPF work. Are you ready?

Paul Kivel’s broad coverage of many aspects of personal and systemic racism and his self-study exercises offer those in our group much to ponder and discuss. For more information, here is a review of the book from Real Change News.

To get the most out of the experience, please try to commit to attending all the sessions. Most of the 1 1/2 - 2 hour discussion sessions over seven weeks will cover one of the six sections in Kivel’s book. Depending on the interest of the group, other materials may be offered or included; the WILPF Anti-Racism team can draw from a resource list we’ve been compiling.

Our understanding of the myriad expressions and effects of racism is deepening with the help of thinkers like Kivel, Carol Anderson, Isabel Wilkerson, Ibram X. Kendi, and others. You can find Kivel’s Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice, 4th edition in libraries, order it from your local brick-and-mortar bookstores or from Kivel's website (at a discount). Or – with a quick web search – choose from a variety of smaller online sellers.

Of course, you can read the book without joining the study group – and we hope you will! This book will give you a valuable background for WILPF’s upcoming nationwide Unpacking Racism program, for both branches and individual members.

Here is the application to join the group starting May 1.

Apply now to be included in WILPF’s book study group and to get the most out of this experience. Email your application to Eileen Kurkoski, eileen4wilpf@gmail.com, or call for more information (617-928-0958).

 

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