NEWS

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 12:33

From left: Dorothy Holland, Mary Foster, Deborah Winant, and Judith Evered. Credit: Tim Evered.

By Mary Foster, Santa Barbara WILPF group

In a special celebration on Sunday, September 18, the Santa Barbara WILPF group honored three longtime members for their many years of dedication to WILPF. Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider presented the awards from WILPF’s national office to Dorothy Holland (96), Deborah Winant (97), and Judith Evered (89). The event, which had an attendance of 75, also featured the Baile de California and dancers from the Santa Barbara Festival Ballet in a performance of three of Isadora Duncan’s dances. Sojourner Kincaid Rolle, current Poet Laureate of Santa Barbara, was the MC.

The occasion was also written up in the Santa Barbara Independent.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 09:28

Women of the WECAN International network take action outside the UN General Assembly in New York City, as part of the Global Women’s Climate Justice Day of Action, September 29, 2015. Credit: Emily Arasim.

Nancy Price, Earth Democracy

Before the COP 22 Climate Summit, November 7-18, join the worldwide call for women and girls to showcase their climate justice struggles and solutions by posting photos and statements or by organizing educational events, community projects, protests, and marches during 10 days of global mobilization, October 28-November 6.

Earth Democracy endorses and joins Women Act for Climate Justice: Ten Days of Global Mobilization, October 28–November 6, which ends the day before the COP 22 Summit opens.

This 2016 Women Act for Climate Justice campaign is being called in advance of the November 2016 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) – COP 22 Conference in Marrakech, Morocco, where, the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) says, “we must work together to ensure a sustained civil society presence and pressure to demand that all governments’ road maps ahead originate in a climate justice framework, and with respect to human, Indigenous and women’s rights, and gender, social, economic and ecological justice.”

As we know, in the year just since COP 21, the climate crisis has only intensified. It’s been the warmest year, with the hottest months. The US has not yet moved close to achieving its COP 21 pledge to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 28 percent, and atmospheric carbon may have topped 400 ppm permanently, making it virtually impossible to stay below 2 degree Celsius warming, as all nations agreed in Paris.

Read Why Women Are Key in the movement for climate justice and are disproportionately impacted by global warming and extreme weather.

It’s time to join Earth Democracy and Women Act for Climate Justice. Consult our Climate Justice+Women+Peace campaign and order cards here.

Consider ideas for planning a Branch action and submit your action here.

Consult WECAN’s Social Media Tool Kit and join their Solutions Forum to dialogue about WILPF US and Earth Democracy actions and materials.

As stated on the WECAN website: This 10-day global mobilization is so important “to show our resistance to environmental and social degradation; highlight the climate impacts our communities are facing; demand drastic change away from our unjust neoliberal economic and development systems; and demonstrate the many effective, just and safe climate solutions, strategies and political calls that are being implemented by women and girls around the world on a daily basis.”

 

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 09:21

Symposium audience and Kozue Akibayashi at No War 2016. Credit: Ellen Thomas.

By Carol Urner, co-chair emeritus of WILPF National Disarm/End War

Ending war means building peace . . . and building peace means ending war. We can’t do either by ourselves as WILPF. In September, and now in October, we continue working in coalition with other peace movement leaders to do both.

But at the same time we keep our own identity as a unique, 101-year-old international women’s peace organization (also including some wonderful men), with both ending war and building peace as our primary goals.

Ending war

In September, at least 23 WILPFers—from San Diego, California, to Burlington, Vermont—traveled to Washington, DC, to participate in a symposium organized by World Beyond War.

For four days, we focused on ending war. Fourteen of those attendees were also members of our Disarm/End Wars National Committee. Disarm member Odile Hugonot Haber spoke in a plenary session on the proposed Middle East Nuclear Free Zone, with member Alice Slater serving as moderator. In addition, our International WILPF president spoke in two plenaries: one on patriarchy and war and the other on foreign bases and war.

In October, WILPF is joining in Keeping Space for Peace! activities as our way of participating in the United Nations World Space Week. Please notify us about your own events by writing to Bruce Gagnon at globalnet@mindspring.com or to me, Carol Urner, at carol.disarm@gmail.com.

Building peace

At the same time, WILPFers everywhere are building peace in many different ways: in human rights, saving our water, challenging corporate power, normalizing relationships with Cuba, nonviolent peace building in the Middle East, and building the beloved community everywhere.

In our Disarm/End War National Committee, our two current priorities have been abolition of nuclear weapons and banning of militarized drones. Nuclear weapons abolition includes successful efforts like our work with Physicians for Social Responsibility and the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) on the nuclear weapons ban treaty. Many of our members also work on restoring of earth destroyed by our use of depleted uranium weapons and nuclear power industries.

We also seek to bring those branches (and at-large members) working on banning drones into closer contact with each other to share creative strategies, successes, and failures. And we welcome other women and branches with passion for any other disarmament issue to contact our committee via Ellen Thomas at et@prop1.org and to join our 60-plus-member WILPFUS Disarm/End Wars team!

And, THANKS to the Jane Addams Peace Association and to the WILPF US Mini-grant Committee for financial support of our committee’s projects. We’d keep working hard even without your support, but that support has made so much of what we are doing as unpaid volunteers possible. And thanks for US government Social Security and Medicare, as well!

 

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 08:47

Portion of No War 2016 poster. Credit: World Beyond War.

By Odile Hugonot Haber, Program Chair, Middle East Issue Committee


A large group of WILPF members and around 200 peace activists attended the World Beyond World conference in Washington, DC, that convened September 23-26, 2016.

“World Beyond War is a global nonviolent movement to end war and establish a just and sustainable peace.”

Our US president, Mary Hanson Harrison, was present and our International WILPF president, Kozue Akibayashi, was invited to speak at the conference, before her visits to Detroit and Ann Arbor, where she also spoke. Kozue Akibayashi is a feminist scholar working on the issues of gender and peace. She has long protested US and Japanese militarism, together with the women on the Island of Okinawa, where there is a large US base that is only used by US military, due to a bilateral agreement between US and Japan.

The conference offered three days of speakers on many issues of peace and justice. It followed our Hague Centennial Anniversary, where Leah Bolger first distributed the booklet A Global Security System: An Alternative to War. At this conference, the 2016 edition was presented.

On the final day, the conference held an action in front of the Pentagon. Twenty-one activists attempted to deliver a petition, signed by more than 23,000 people, to President Obama, US Secretary of Defense Carter, and German Chancellor Merkel calling for the closing of a drone relay station at the US Air Force Base at Ramstein, Germany, which has been linked to the deaths of civilians. Activists in Germany also tried to deliver this petition to Merkel.

Then, on Tuesday, September 27, more than 130 female activists from 38 countries pressed UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to lead a process of bringing North and South Korea to peace. The open letter was co-sponsored by Women Cross DMZ and WILPF.

We hope that many of our branches will follow this lead and demand the closing of the US bases of Okinawa, and all US bases; the end of wars and the creation of a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (MW WMD-FZ); and nuclear abolition and the decrease of the US military budget, with the passing of the proposed legislation H.R. 1976 the Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act of 2015 .

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 08:39

WILPF International President Kozue Akibayashi, WILPF US President Mary Hanson Harrison, Clare Hanrahan, Dianna Carlson, and Ellen Thomas say farewells at Reagan National Airport. Credit: Ellen Thomas.

By Dawn Nelson


The Ann Arbor WILPF Branch had the pleasure of hosting International WILPF President Kozue Akibayashi for dinner before her guest lecture at the University of Michigan International Institute in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Tuesday, September 20. Longtime WILPF members Alan and Odile Hugonot Haber graciously prepared a delicious meal at their home on the old west side, and a small group of local WILPF members enjoyed dinner and conversation in celebration of the International Day of Peace. Dr. Akibayashi remarked that she was very happy to have a chance to visit a part of the US she doesn’t usually have the opportunity to see, as she is so often on the West and East Coasts when visiting the States. 

Her guest lecture, titled “A Gender Perspective on Peace and Security: The Experiences of Women in Okinawa,” was co-sponsored by the International Institute, along with the Ann Arbor Branch of WILPF. Additionally, the U-M Center for Japanese Studies faculty and staff were very happy to hear Dr. Akibayashi would be visiting the campus, and shared news of the event with university students and community networks in the local area. The event was well attended, and the audience very appreciative of the rich information Dr. Akibayashi shared about women’s experiences in Okinawa.

We were very happy to enjoy this time with her, and look forward hopefully to future occasions.

Other highlights of Kozue Akibayashi’s US visit

On September 19, Kozue Akibayashi joined the ONE WILPF all member call. She spoke briefly and informally to members on the call and then took questions and engaged in dialogue with call participants.

Kozue also spoke on Wednesday, September 21, in celebration of the International Day of Peace, at Wayne State University, in Detroit, courtesy of the WSU Center for Peace and Conflict Studies.

She was one of the speakers at the World Beyond War conference, September 23-26. Video of her presentations, as well as presentations by other WILPF members, are available on the World Beyond War website. For photos and more reports on the conference, visit the WILPF US Facebook page .

And, the Santa Cruz and San Jose Branches hosted Kozue on September 27 and 28. Read about that visit in an earlier WILPF US news story .

 

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 08:33

Submitted by the Development Committee of WILPF US

Thank you to the first four branches that donated to keep WILPF US strong

In August, WILPF branches received a letter requesting YOUR help to raise money for WILPF US. Four branches responded with donations. Their generosity is extra special, because their dollars go to support ALL our branches. It’s a sisterly gift to keep all our sister branches strong and support the program work being done all over the US. We are grateful to Detroit Branch, Santa Cruz Branch, Des Moines Branch, and Tucson Branch. Thank you so much!

The Development Committee will be making calls to follow up on our letters. Please take our calls, and let’s talk together about how to share the responsibility for widening the circle and adding more donors to WILPF US. Fundraising at WILPF is everyone’s job. The Development Committee is just the means for organizing the effort.

We have about 1,400 members, and we’re growing. But our members cannot continue to be the sole support of our organization. We can’t carry the whole burden. We have to reach out, and YOU, our branches, are the only way we can do that. You are our eyes and ears into your communities. We’re looking forward to doing some brainstorming with you. Talk to you soon!

New branches! WILPF is growing!

In the last few weeks, we’ve been contacted by members who are working to start new branches in their areas of the country. That’s pretty darn exciting! We hope by the end of the year to solidify the details. Last year we restarted our branch in Houston, TX. This year, we added one in Ojai, CA! Two more just getting underway are in Rochester, NY and Gainesville, FL. It only takes 10 like-minded women (and men) to start a new WILPF Branch. Let us help you get a new branch started in your neck of the woods! Contact us at info@wilpfus.org.

ONE WILPF all member call scheduled

The next ONE WILPF call will be Thursday, October 13, at 4 pm pacific, 7 pm eastern. Put it on your calendar now. More details to follow. Preregistration is required for this Maestro Conference & Social Webinar Call. Planned speakers will discuss the World Beyond War conference held September 23-26 in Washington, DC, and collaborative plans going forward.

ONE WILPF calls are a great way to connect with other branches and members, plan collaboratively across all of WILPF US, get to know one another better, and share solutions and resources. And the technology is easy to use! Have questions? Want to suggest topics for future calls? Contact us at 1wilpfcalls@gmail.com.

Buy WILPF a Cup of Coffee!

You’ve probably been meaning to buy WILPF a cup of coffee, as part of our new SUSTAINER PROGRAM. It’s NOT too late! For as little as $5 a month you can invest in the work our members do so tirelessly for peace and justice in the world. If you haven’t yet signed up to be part of this effort, please do! So far we’ve raised just $900 a year with this program. We need many more of you to be WILPF Sustainers. So . . . go ahead. Buy WILPF a cup of coffee! Read more about how it works here.

Tell us about you & WILPF

We’ve been asking members to share stories about how they came to know about and to join WILPF. What led you to WILPF? What keeps you here? Be as creative as you wish, in 1,200 words or less. We want personal stories of commitment and of your own quest for a more peaceful and just world. Tell us about yourself, your passions for WILPF’s issues, and what your hopes are for WILPF’s next 100 years.

Our members are our greatest asset. Let’s get to know one another better!

Send your stories to GROWINGWILPFCHAIR@gmail.comin under 1,200 words, please.

Thanks so much for all you do for WILPF and for peace in your community. We appreciate you!

The Development Committee of WILPF US

Dixie Hairston (Dallas, TX), Brandy Robinson (Portland, OR), Robin Lloyd (Burlington, VT), Marybeth Gardam (Winter Haven, FL), Nancy Price (Davis, CA), Mary Hanson Harrison (Des Moines, IA), and Eileen Kurkoski (Boston, MA).

(If you want to be part of this dynamic group of WILPFers leading WILPF’s capacity-building efforts for the twenty-first century, contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com. We have exciting, fun, creative work for you, and we need your most innovative ideas!)

 

 

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 08:18

Submitted by WILPF US National Nominating Committee
 

Elections for your board representatives are coming soon. Look for the envelope with your ballot materials around the third week of October. Members will be voting for three positions: Treasurer, Membership Development Chair, and At-Large. On your ballot packet envelope, the mailing label will include your membership expiration date. If you’re not sure if your dues are current, contact the WILPF office at 617-266-0999.

Although the board positions are not contested, your participation in the election sends a vote of confidence to the candidates. These women are highly qualified for positions on our board, and they deserve your vote. Their resumes and statements will be posted by October 7 on the WILPF US website. Ballots must be postmarked on or before November 19.

On October 22, you’ll have an opportunity to meet the candidates and ask them questions via conference call. The Nominating Committee welcomes your suggestions for questions to be put to the candidates.  Send your questions to nominatingcommittee@wilpfus.org.

  Meet-the-Candidates Conference Call
  Date: Saturday, October 22
  Time: 1:00 pm Pacific Time, 3:00 Central, 4:00 Eastern
  Call-in number: 1-641-715-3670
  Access code: 107284


Please email the Nominating Committee at nominatingcommittee@wilpfus.org to ask any other questions not answered on the website above.

Post date: Tue, 10/04/2016 - 06:55

Dear Members,

We are in the process of finalizing the WILPF Program Strategic Plan document which we developed this year. We invite you to take one last look at the document, discuss it with your members, and provide us with your feedback. Please join us in a conversation on how we can work collaboratively for a stronger and more focused WILPF US.

Draft Program Strategic Plan 

Creating a WILPF US Program Strategic Plan

Thank you.

Maureen N. Eke, Program Chair
eke1mn@cmich.edu

Odile Hugonot Haber, Program Chair
odilehh@gmail.com

 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 09/12/2016 - 06:30

Become a Sustainer with a continuing PLEDGE of support.  It’s painless. 

We can’t succeed with dues alone.
We are assessed $15 by International WILPF for every member.
So out of the $35 dues you pay once a year, WILPF US keeps only $20. 

Click here to support WILPF with a regular monthly pledge of support.

It costs money to run an organization like WILPF.   

40 branches across the US … and growing, Issue Committees to support, mini-grants to administer, budgets to oversee, communications to support, liaison with our United Nations programs and with WILPF International….. and ongoing support and communication with our branches and members.
There’s a lot of moving parts to keep YOU our members informed, engaged and supported, keep up our national visibility, and support our partners and collaborators. 

It costs even more money to GROW one …

  • To increase membership
  • Add new branches in strategic locations
  • To expand the work we do for peace
  • And to support the work that you, our members do, in communities across America. 

Here are some options for you!

What kind of difference could your regular $5 donation make?

OPTION 1 -  RECOMMENDED
1 cup of coffee a week
If half our 1400 members bought WILPF a cup of coffee once a week, it would look like this:
$5/ week = $182,000 a year… That is more than half of our annual operating budget!
Put me down for $5 a week.

OPTION 2
1 cup of coffee a month

If half our 1400 members bought WILPF a cup of coffee once a month, it would look like this:
$5/month =  $42,000 a year towards our annual operating budget!
Put me down for $5 a month.

OPTION 3  -  Be a Sustainer
2 cups of coffee a week
If half of our 1400 members bought WILPF a cup of coffee twice a week, it would look like this:
$10/week = $364,000… we’d be covering our operating budget easily!
Put me down for $10 a week. 

OPTION 4
2 cups of coffee a month
If half our 1400 members bought WILPF a cup of coffee twice a month, it would look like this;
$10/month = $84,000 a year towards our operating budget!
Put me down for $10 a month. 

The Price Tag for Activism

Our ordinary basic annual organizational budget is approximately $300,000.           

We can’t cover that just with our dues, even with the recent increase.  Why not?
We are assessed $15 by International WILPF for every member.
So out of the $35 you pay once a year, WILPF US keeps $20.
With only about 1400 members (and growing) that’s only about $28,000 a year.
That’s just not enough to keep us moving forward and shaping the initiatives the issues demand. 

Wow, I didn’t know that!   Put me down to be a SUSTAINER!  

Gaining more members would help

We’re challenging our branches to recruit more deliberately. But the fact is that we’re ALL going to have to contribute more than our dues to keep WILPF strong. Some of us contribute major gifts each year to WILPF. Some don’t contribute anything above our dues. 

To stay successful, we ALL will need to contribute what we can. 


With today’s challenges to peace, economic justice, and human rights,
there has never been a more urgent time for WILPF to regenerate and rededicate itself
to create a meaningful progressive presence

in communities across America.


OKAY, I’m ready to buy WILPF a cup of coffee now

WILPF budget details

Our $300,000 annual operation budget pays for all the ways we support peace & freedom around the country.

Communications – Monthly E News, Frequent E Alerts, 2 or more issues of Peace & Freedom each year, Brochures, Handouts, Reports from Issue Committees and National, the Maestro ONE WILPF All Member Calls (free to us, but time-consuming to plan and steer!). We use editorial consultants, graphic design consultants, conference calling services, and website gurus that keep our messaging updated and fresh.

Website Maintenance –  Our public face, with lots of security considerations, hosting costs, and graphics that make us look as good as the work we’re doing! 

Program SupportMini-Grants that provide seed money for important projects at the branch, issue committee and campaign level.   The most exciting part of what we do is enable YOUR activism! Our exciting annual UN Practicum in Advocacy Program is our best Recruiting tool for engaging young leaders of tomorrow. And our Local 2 Global Program facilitates the participation of up to 4 of our WILPF members a year to attend the annual CSW meetings in NYC every year, to bring back to their communities a deeper understanding of how local issues connect with the global issues we address in our eloquent and inspiring Manifesto.

Support Materials – We need to design and print new recruiting materials, new donor materials, new program materials. That’s what it takes to support our work and GROW our network of peacewomen.

Administrative Costs – We maintain a small staff and a Boston office, we pay utilities and computer support costs.  We are obligated to maintain several kinds of insurance under our corporate charter.  And we have a part time book keeper who helps us stay in IRS compliance! These are costs we rely on our members to fund.

International Support – We are assessed $15 for every one of our current members which goes directly to support International WILPF and our wonderful UN Programs, Peacewomen and Reaching Critical Will.  WILPF US also has representatives on our International Board who require travel costs to attend those international meetings. 

Partner Support – WILPF maintains strong working collaborations with partners in other NGOs and Peace Organizations, activist groups and environmental coalitions.   Many of those require annual support and travel to Board Meetings or National/International meetings.  We should do more of this, in order to raise our visibility, but we do as much as we can afford.

 

Post date: Fri, 09/02/2016 - 09:48

Legislative luncheon organized by the Des Moines Branch in 2013, from left: Maggie Rawlands, Cecilia Munzenmaier, Marybeth Gardam, Rep. Kelley, Jan Corderman, Sherie Teha, Carolyn Ulenhake Walker. Courtesy Marybeth Gardam.
 

By Marybeth Gardam, Development Chair

As the Development Chair of WILPF, I am asking WILPF members, old and new, in branches and at-large, to email me and tell me exactly what being part of WILPF means to you.

I want you to really think about it. No formulaic answers, please.

Recall for me how you came to join WILPF, what inspired you most about your time in WILPF, and which WILPF women leaders provided you with your own roadmap to activism. What skills have you learned at WILPF? What memories of successes or solidarity moments keep you going? What would you like to see WILPF accomplish in the world or in your community? What are your hopes for the future of WILPF?

Send your comments to me at GROWINGWILPFCHAIR@gmail.com—in under 1,200 words, please.

I’ll start us off.

In 2000, when we left Macon, Georgia, to move to Iowa, in pursuit of my husband’s career goals, I had already been involved in peace and justice work. I helped create a coalition of people in Georgia who worked with migrant farmworkers. Formalizing our efforts into a recognized body was important. For one thing it helped PROVE to the governor that there WERE migrant farmworkers in Georgia—a fact he had been denying loudly. And it gave us more power speaking TOGETHER than any of us had individually. Together, the People of the Road Coalition was able to pressure the state of Georgia to build a second Migrant Health Center in the state and to create a Migrant Camp Health Aide Program that issued cherished certificates to women who completed basic health training to be able to take temperatures and blood pressures and to distribute information to migrant workers and their families. Along with saving lives, the program empowered women in the camps who, until then, often had no real status.

I was also active on the parish council of my very diverse urban church, which had been the “Black Catholic Church” in town during segregation. It was a privilege to work alongside the strong, committed African American leaders of our small, intimate faith community. I learned a lot and have never before or since felt that strong a sense of “community” in church.

I served as director of the Central Georgia Peace and Justice Center during the turbulent period of the Nicaraguan war, generating donations and information about what was really happening in Central America.

But in 2000, starting fresh in a new place and exhausted from so much peace and justice work, I imagined reinventing myself. I signed up for writing courses at the University of Iowa and enjoyed them so much I had to pinch myself. By the end of the summer of 2001 I was determined to devote myself to writing full time. Then 9/11 happened . . . and I found myself unable to turn away from more peace organizing. I started a women’s group called Women for Peace in our little town, and we eventually had 200+ women standing with us on protests against military intervention in Afghanistan and Iraq. It was a wonderful way to get to know my neighbors, and I formed a strong support network among those wonderful women.

When we moved again in 2003 to the state capitol, Des Moines, I missed my “tribe” but again deluded myself into believing I could now avoid peace work and concentrate on the writing I wanted to do. Wrong. Instead, I became the state coordinator for STAR*PAC, Stop the Arms Race Political Action Committee, arranging public forums with all the major presidential candidates for the 2004 election, where the public could ask questions about peace and militarism.

After the election, I was actively pursued by Maggie Rawlands of the Des Moines Branch of WILPF. Maggie was gently relentless in her pursuit. She would call me every month to remind me when their meeting was and invite me to attend. She would ask if I needed a ride, if I wanted to meet for coffee or dinner before the meeting. Eventually, I ran out of excuses. And, in WILPF Des Moines I found a group of women who would in time become my family.

Having moved from New Jersey to Georgia and then to Iowa, we were without extended family. We knew not a soul in the Midwest in 2000. And I had left my Cedar Rapids Women for Peace two hours away. The WILPF women welcomed our 13-year-old daughter at our meetings when I was forced to bring her along. They protected her at protests and helped me teach her how to do phoning to get people out for lobby days and protests and events we held. They became surrogate grandmothers to her and surrogate moms to me. Their passion and dedication, from the days of the Vietnam War resistance, were deeply meaningful to me.

WILPF had the structures in place that I had been struggling to create with Women for Peace. When I left Cedar Rapids, and my co-leader did as well, Women for Peace pretty much devolved into other kinds of activism. It had been held together by the sheer tenacity of those of us who founded it. I appreciated the longevity of WILPF, and the fact that it already had bylaws and a board and the strength and support of a network of other branches in other cities, and an international connection to women peace activists all over the world. Only one who has tried and failed to establish that kind of long-term effort can fully appreciate a group that’s already done that hard work!

With the increasing move to the corporatized RIGHT of the Catholic Church, WILPF became my church, my faith community . . . and my faith was placed in those women and their passion for peace and social/economic justice, which matched my own.

The leaders of that branch who will always be important to me are: Maggie Rawlands (that ruthless pursuer of new members and huge activist against Corporate Personhood); Sherry Hutchison (a Quaker who, well into her 90s, stood every week in all kinds of weather at a peace vigil downtown); Carolyn Ulenhake Walker (who retired after working in an inner-city school to be an environmental activist with WILPF and Sierra Club); Judy Lonning (a shy, retiring school teacher who morphed into a vocal advocate against PROFITS OVER PEOPLE dynamics in many local issues); Diane Krell (who used her own vast connections in town to raise awareness and support for WILPF); Willa Tharp (the quiet efficient treasurer whose careful record-keeping let us efficiently run events and track members); and many, many others, including our current WILPF US president, Mary Hanson Harrison.

When I moved from Iowa to Florida, we settled close to my husband’s job in an ultra-conservative part of a very conservative state. Reaching out as a board member of WILPF US has kept me sane and in touch with “my tribe”—women like me who value peace, sisterhood, liberal values, human rights, feminism, and radical participatory democracy.

In an era of online virtual organizing, WILPF puts a human face on peace work, providing substantive support for each other, as well as for the work in which we engage. We are a consistent and recognizable local face in our communities, which leaders and politicians, corporate interests and absentee “landlord” corporatists have come to respect, if only for our persistence. What WILPF offers progressive women is a chance to be united in their organizing in a nonpartisan way, to amplify their voices, strengthen their impact, and bring their dreams for activism to life.

That’s what WILPF means to me. And, while I support other organizations, too, I regard as a privilege the opportunity to contribute to WILPF, with my annual dues AND as many contributions as I can afford over the course of the year. After all, if WE as WILPF members don’t support the work of this great organization, how can we expect others to support our work?

I think I’ll give Maggie a call. It’s been a while!

 

 

 

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