NEWS

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 08:46
Sustainable Development Goals

By Darien De Lu

April 2020

In April, WILPF is increasing online learning opportunities for members. For “sheltering” WILPF members and others, webinars on April 17 & 21 will offer insight on partnership issues that are an important part of international, national, and local work.

The April webinars will help answer the questions:

  • How do informed choices for sustainable community development support a robust economy, where more people can benefit and thrive?
  • Within the UN framework of human rights, what specific guideposts in the development process can countries rely on to get closer to achieving social justice and equality?

Even if you’re not “sheltering in place”, you’ll want to register for one – or both! – of these two webinars. Each webinar covers nearly the same material: introducing the UN Sustainable Development Goals and explaining how they are implemented by countries from the national down to the local levels, ultimately relating to local community development.

Preregistration is required for these two Maestro call webinars:

  • Friday, April 17, at 7:15/6:15 pm CDT/4:15 pm PDT.
  • Tuesday, April 21 at 9:15 pm EDT/8:15 pm CDT/6:15 pm PDT

Preregister for either or both here.

In each one-hour webinar, WILPF member Dawn Nelson relates the Sustainable Development Goals to community issues and explores how WILPF branches can apply the SDGs to local challenges for social justice.

Dawn Nelson has been attending the United Nation’s High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development since 2016. WILPF US has supported her attendance since 2018, but, initially it was entirely at her own expense. This is the annual UN meeting in New York that discusses and proposes policies for the accomplishment of the UN’s world-wide SDGs. As a committee member, Dawn also contributes to the environmental sustainability and justice advocacy work of the WILPF US Earth Democracy Issue Committee.

In recognition of her work with the UN and WILPF US, in 2018 the International WILPF Congress in Ghana chose Dawn to head International’s Environmental Working Group (EWG). The EWG has been somewhat inactive the last few years, but Dawn is in the process of reviving it. The work of the EWG is closely linked to the SDGs, because those goals cannot be sustainable if they are accomplished only through further degradation of the environment.

If you are interested in more information about the EWG, please email Dawn Nelson at environment@wilpf.org.

The SDGs as a Guidebook for Fair and Just Development

The economic, social, and environmental dimensions of development are the theoretical basis for the SDGs. The UN works within the context of human rights.  For example, SDG 1 is about No Poverty, 3 – Good Health and Well-being, and 5 – Gender Equality. They go all the way through 16, Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions and 17, Partnerships for the Goals. Goal 17 brings us to a fundamental issue with the SDGs: How – by what means and what policies – can countries attain them?

These goals can be a way for civil society to hold governments accountable to act for the benefit and liberation of all people, according to an analysis of the SDG summit by WILPF International. However, corporations are pressuring at the UN for public-private partnerships – corporate involvement – to accomplish the Sustainable Development Goals. While government or public sector costs may be reduced in such partnerships, direct consumer costs are higher, to ensure corporate profit margins. Not only do the service costs go up, but corporate administration harms community interests in other ways: Public-private partnership usually leads to a reduced public sector workforce, as well as reduced transparency and accountability to the public.

Where is the money?

While countries endeavor to reach the SDGs within the next ten years – under the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development – for most countries, progress is slow, frequently due to lack of money.

Even in the US, many communities are struggling to meet SDG 6, on clean water. In the absence of government loans or other support, some cities had turned to corporate contracts, thinking to reduce the local burden of taxes or water utility rates. Yet US residents often saw their personal water bills shoot up under ill-advised privatization of their formerly public water services. Numerous cities have since waged long campaigns to reclaim water services from those contracts.

An alternative model to get the expertise – and, possibly, even some funding – for SDG infrastructure development is public-public partnerships (PUPs). These partnerships – supported by unions and those concerned about public oversight and service-provider costs – rely on well-established public services and utilities to assist fledgling ones in struggling communities. PUPs offer numerous additional benefits over public-private partnerships, such as avoiding monopoly pricing and corporate secrecy.

Still, funding can continue to be an issue: Where to get the money to pay for the costs of construction of infrastructure? Of course, in WILPF we advocate for investments in a peace economy and divestment from a war economy.

These UN-level money and partnerships discussions are very much like what has been going on in our own US Congress: Do we bail out the corporations, or do we bail out the people? Who will gain under different models? In Congress, with the help of the 2010 Supreme Court ruling on Citizens United, well-funded corporate lobbyists have loud voices. At the UN, corporations are claiming that they should have the same right to “be at the table” as governments and nongovernmental organizations.

WILPF Responds to the Times with More Virtual and Conference Call Offerings

Discussions like these are not “academic”! Prepared with the information these webinars provide, you can be an informed voice in your community. Bringing global insights to local SDG-implementation debates is a vital function of WILPF.

These April presentations are part of WILPF’s expanded virtual events offerings, responding to the need for more at-home connections to ideas, people, and activism.  Already, on the second Thursday you can participate in to our monthly ONE WILPF call. Also, on April 7 the national Program Committee conference call/meeting is open to all WILPF members (see related article).
 
You can find more ways to connect your local activism to national WILPF work. Our issue committees welcome WILPF members to their periodic conference calls. Contact the issue committee chairs to find out how to participate.

We’re also considering a series of webinars, conference calls, and virtual panels for a weekend in July – our Virtual Mini-Congress. Can you offer a few hours to assist on tasks for planning and/or organizing for the Virtual Mini-Congress? We’re a volunteer-based organization, so if you want it to happen, lend a hand! Contact President@wilpfUS.org for more information.

 

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 08:31
People and Planet Before Profit

By Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth
Democracy

April 2020

Because of the coronavirus, organizers for this 50th Earth Day Anniversary will use the power of the internet to connect and mobilize millions worldwide in a call for transformative climate emergency actions to save our planet.

If we are now demanding a WWII-scale COVID-19 Mobilization, only a WWII-scale Mobilization can protect humanity and the natural world.

In order for all of us to survive, we all must shift into emergency mode. The goal of the Climate Emergency Campaign is to compel governments to adopt an emergency response to climate change and the broader ecological crisis.

Earth Day and Climate Emergency  

Fifty years ago, 20 million Americans marched in the streets, rallied in parks, and sat in college and university teach-ins. On this first Earth Day, environmental activists, who had been focused on separate local and states issues, came together with anti-Vietnam War activists in a new national environmental movement (read more about the history of Earth Day). In response, President Nixon quickly created the Environmental Protection Agency and Congress passed the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Endangered Species Acts.

Twenty years later, on April 22, 1990, Denis Hayes, one of the original organizers of the first Earth Day, spoke at the National Press Club in Washington, DC, to launch Earth Day, the new global organization to now mobilize 200 million people in 141 countries.

Almost a year ago on April 22, 2019, Hayes again spoke at the National Press Club to announce an ambitious plan for the 50th Anniversary – including “Vote for the Earth,” “Earth Challenge 2020,” and the 2020 theme for Earth Day – a global demand for transformative climate action.

This year as environmental activists join with the diverse, multigenerational global climate movement, I believe it is as urgent as on the first Earth Day that anti-war/peace groups also rise up to support the demand for transformative “system change” toward a just transition from fossil fuels to green, renewable, sustainable energy, and from a war to a peace economy.

We must redirect the multi-billion dollar military budget to job retraining, new technologies, and infrastructure to move swiftly to a zero-carbon future by 2030. And, don’t forget, not only is the U.S. military the single largest user of oil and gas, it is presently exempt from the Paris Climate Agreement (read more about the military’s carbon “bootprint” here). The next president must rejoin this agreement that came into force on Earth Day 2016.

Plans for the First Digital Earth Day

Earth Day Network, the global organizer of Earth Day, is focused on new ways to mobilize using the hashtags #EarthDay2020 and #EARTHRISE to coordinate and track the global conversations, calls to action, performances, video teach-ins and more.

A major global event coordinated across digital platforms will be announced soon - expect an eAlert by mid-April. Already, Earth Day 2020 has a map of global events posted. Go to www.earthday.org/earth-day-2020/ and scroll down to map.

350.org has posted a new community activist organizing guide called "How to care for your community in a crisis". Meanwhile, many hundreds of local events worldwide already announced on Facebook have had to be cancelled. Check on status of local 350.org events near you.
    
#FridaysFutureStrike and GretaThunberg write about the coronavirus and climate activism saying: Listen to the science and local rules and guidelines; don’t put your health and safety at risk; choose other kinds of climate activism, be creative, have fun and join social media campaigns, such as:

  • email politicians
  • post on social media using the hashtags: #DigitalStrike, #Silentstrike,  #ClimateHowl
  • put a strike sign in your window and post a photo of it on social media at #climatestrike and  #fridaysforfuture
  • strike with others online with zoom
  • prepare future activities, thinking about what may be effective approaches

The Youth Climate Strike Coalition of the US Climate Strike Coalition is going online for an innovative three-day interactive live-streaming series of events from April 22- 24: Earth Day Live - A Digital Mobilization to Demand Climate Action with a focus on “Strike, Divest and Voter Registration.” The events will be accessible on computers and mobile devices in the hopes that it will encourage engagement and action among people who are secluded at home. 

What You Can Do?

Climate Justice• Watch for a mid-April Earth Democracy eAlert for different organizations’ plans for digital mobilization and how to join in.

• Order now the new, updated Climate Justice+Women+Peace cards (found at wilpfus.org/story/support-materials). Mail them to friends and family. If you don’t already have our banners, add one or more of these your collection: Climate Justice+Women+Peace, People & Planet Before Profit, and the Poor People’s Campaign “Uniting to End: Poverty, Racism, Militarism and Ecological Devastation.” The banners are all more than 6 feet wide, so on Earth Day, it may be possible to walk around your local park with one person at each end. Of course, be sure to be safe and don’t take a risk with your health.

• Pass a Climate Emergency Declaration in your city or country. (Check out this climate mobilization toolkit) and while you shelter-in-place,  meet up by conference call or zoom to discuss if you might campaign later to pass a Climate Emergency Resolution.

Before the People’s Climate March in New York City, September 2014, there was no climate group publicly organizing around the need for a WWII-scale emergency action on climate and so The Climate Mobilization was founded and the Climate Emergency Campaign launched. Since then, working with grassroots activists, political leaders, and organizations around the world, almost 1,000 Climate Emergency Declarations have been passed. (See a map of the cities and local governments across the planet that have declared a climate emergency).
    
The aim is to:   

  1. Pass declarations of Climate Emergency with commitment to reach zero emissions and begin carbon drawdown at emergency speed (10 years or less).
  2. Local elected leaders become advocates for emergency Climate Mobilization to the public, to other cities and to state and national governments.
  3. Develop and implement mobilization policy locally, after declaration is passed.

The #Climate Emergency campaign states: A climate emergency is not coming. It’s already here. Approximately 400,000 people are killed annually from its impact and millions are displaced. The Earth is a wood house in a burning field, an airplane in free fall, a chemical plant about to explode. This is an emergency accelerating by the minute. There are no ambulances on the way. No one is coming to save us.

In order for all of us to survive, we all must shift into emergency mode. The goal of the Climate Emergency Campaign is to compel governments to adopt an emergency response to climate change and the broader ecological crisis.
   

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 08:16
Earth Day 1970, Ann Arbor

Students gather for a rally during Michigan’s 1970 Teach-In on the Environment in Ann Arbor. The largest and most visible event organized to celebrate the first Earth Day, the five-day event drew an estimated 50,000 participants and included 125 seminars, speeches, workshops, panels, debates, forums, rallies, demonstrations, films, field trips, and concerts. Photo and facts from the School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan.

By Odile Hugonot Haber

April 2020

The first Earth Day was created by Senator Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin and took place on April 22, 1970, not long after 14,000 people came into the Chrisler arena in Ann Arbor for the University of Michigan’s first “Teach-In on the Environment” on March 11, 1970.

The University of Michigan event was organized by six graduate students, and it was so popular that many people could not get in, so organizers set up sound amplification outside. The Governor of Michigan gave a brief introduction, then the biologist Barry Commoner started his keynote speech. At first, he was quite moved because he had never spoken to such a large audience before and called it “the world’s largest seminar on ecology.”

He began: “What a wonderful thing you have done! At a time when the whole country has begun to ask why, in the wealthiest, the most scientifically advanced nation in the history of man, the heavens reek, the waters below are foul, children die in infancy, and we and the world which is our home are threatened with  nuclear annihilation.” He made the point more than once that “We are in a crisis of survival.” Pollution was already quite visible at the time, and Earth Day was indeed started as a matter of survival 50 years ago.

According to Adam Rome’s book, The Genius of Earth Day: How a 1970 Teach-In Unexpectedly Made the First Green Generation, the original environmentalists thought the environmental crisis was a grim challenge but also realized it could present a great opportunity for consciousness raising, and for people to change their habits and practices. Already there was an emerging consciousness about the state of our planet.
 
Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring was the first to sound the alarm. Carson had become worried about the effects of pesticide use and wrote a series of articles in The New Yorker in 1962 which were turned into the book. This was called a “watershed moment” for the ecological movement.
 
In 1969, Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson came up with the idea of a national day to focus on the environment after he witnessed the ravages of a massive oil spill in Santa Barbara, California. Nelson was hoping to capture the vibrant youth who had been active in the anti-war movement and redirect their activist energy to an environmental movement.
 
Even before this, intellectuals in the 1950s, such as the historian Arthur Schlesinger and the economist John Kenneth Galbraith, had begun to advocate for a new liberalism. They saw that a surge of many new material goods in the US marketplace had a downside. “Earth Day also convinced many Americans that the pollution, sprawls, fall-out,..were not separate issues,” writes Adam Rome, and this called for a new consciousness.
 
Rome explains that the Ann Arbor event had many ripple effects and other teach-ins sprouted up all over the country and internationally.
 
He shows how, after an annual Earth Day was called for, “tens of thousands of people made Earth Day happen on universities, and college campuses, at schools and in cities and towns.” Buttons saying: “Give Earth a chance” proliferated everywhere and “many found the experience to be exhilarating and life-changing.”
 
Vance Packard, a best-selling social critic of the time, saw that the great unmet challenges involved the provision of public goods. He was quoted as saying, “A person can’t go down to the store and order a new park. A park requires a unified effort and gets you into voting, and public spending and maybe soak-the-rich taxes.”

Ann Arbor’s Citizens Mobilize for Community Common

In the late 1990’s, public land in Ann Arbor city center was going to be sold to a private contractor for a convention center. Citizens for many years had expressed the need for a park in the center of the city. The land was valuable, and the city had planned a convention center at first, but then it proved to be not financially sound. The convention center was set aside, but then the city continued to plan with out-of-town contractors to have a huge building constructed there as an “iconic” building. The city secretly put in underground parking, four floors deep, so contractors could be lured to build on the public land.
 
The building that was planned was huge, and its construction spoiled the character of Ann Arbor as a charming “tree town” that was easy to live in. Officials in City Hall had planned the building of some new, very tall buildings around the edge of the city. So not only was the city leadership neglecting to build a central park in the heart of our city, but they were proposing urban skyscrapers. The citizens were alarmed by these sudden developments; they felt overwhelmed, offended, and shocked.
 
In November 2015, a group called “The Ann Arbor Committee for the Community Commons” initiated a petition to amend the city charter and designate this public land as “a community commons” which would include a central park with a small civic center, public building,  and a playground. A hundred people or so started collecting signatures to get a “park in the center of the city.” The petition to amend the city charter was signed by 6,000+ citizens.  Because 200 people had signed twice, the city refused it and the petition had to be redone, but finally the second petition with 8,000+ signatures was accepted in June 2018 by the city clerk. It was listed on the ballot in June and was voted on November 6, 2018—and it won.
 
The resolution became part of the city charter, and the citizens did indeed get a park. By organizing and advocating, the people got their commons, and did the opposite of the Joni Mitchell lyric—they unpaved the parking lot and put up paradise! A city commission was formed, and they hosted a few open public events to entice the citizens to get involved with ideas and suggestions to create “the Park” and “the Commons.”

New Book Offers Ideas about ‘Commoning’
 
Free, Fair, and Alive coverWhat can cities do to respond to the new demands of citizens as commoners? What institutional adaptations would facilitate such a role? Those of us who are looking for answers can find some in a new book by David Bollier and Silke Helfrich, Free, Fair and Alive: The Insurgent Power of the Commons.
 
They write: “Commons are living social systems through which people address their shared problems”; and “It is about sharing, and bringing into being the durable social systems for producing shareable things and activities.” They affirm: “The very act of commoning as it expands and registers on a larger culture, catalyzes new political and economic possibilities.” (Free, Fair and Alive, 14-15). Because any idea of the commons is about people, relations, and social structures, the commons is indeed a transformative perspective.

In short, the common includes our lands, our planet, and the fact that we have finite resources and land use. As Silvia Federici defines it in Re-enchanting the World: Feminism and the Politics of the Commons: “The commons means shared property, in the form of a shared natural or social wealth-lands, waters, forests, system of knowledge, capacity for care-to be used by all commoners, without any distinctions, but which are not for sale.”

The commons is the principle on which life brought us to this planet, it represents nature and natural evolution. It’s our shared inheritance. The deterioration of the environment is visible, and we will all suffer with the drastic changes that are now accelerating. As the environment is in crisis due to climate change, many millions of people will be affected and we are realizing that what affects one person somewhere, affects all of us everywhere. Our land is our inheritance and we need to care for it, and support all the beings on it, as we are all part of the bio-concentric web of life.
 
These thoughts move us forward to a new level of collective consciousness, in which we will need to develop the values of caring, helping each other, and facilitating collective actions for survival. This movement is now developing all over the earth, leading to visions of new economies, and new infrastructures that will facilitate these multifaceted collective developments.
 
The most advanced proponents have called for Earth Regeneration, and a network called "Regenerative Communities Network" operates as a living laboratory for the design of bioregional economies. They are joined by a multitude of small non-governmental organizations working to offer solutions.
 
The center of the city, the community commons, is one dot in a line of forward advancements that are needed for our cities and towns to advance life on earth and support visionary developments to protect and safeguard citizens as well as all nonhuman life on earth. We must have the resilience and the courage to move forward into uncharted territories.


Further Reading:

The Magna Carta Manifesto: Liberties and Commons for All, by Peter Linebaugh

Red Round Globe Hot Burning: A Tale at the Crossroads of Commons and Closure, of Love and Terror, of Race and Class, and of Kate and Ned Despard, by Peter Linebaugh

Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist, by Kate Raworth

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 07:48

Credit: United Nations official logo (see logo guidelines).

By AHR Issue Committee Members

April 2020

The AHR Issue Committee and Communities Working Toward Racial Justice would like to announce a new initiative they are working on: The United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent 2015-2024.

According to the UN’s website “In proclaiming this Decade, the international community is recognizing that people of African descent represent a distinct group whose human rights must be promoted and protected. Around 200 million people who identify themselves as being of African descent live in the Americas. Many millions more live in other parts of the world, outside of the African continent.”

YouTube Videos to Watch

To learn more about this important international initiative, view the following videos:

International Decade for People of African Descent (2015 - 2024) (5 Minutes)
 

Danny Glover on the Decade for People of African Descent (5 Minutes)

 

International Decade for People of African Descent (3 Minutes)
 

Recommended Read for Communities Working Toward Racial Justice

The Color of LawRichard Rothstein argues that it is government policies at the various levels of government that have added to social struggle for people of color, most often seen in our major cities.  Published in 2017, The Color of Law possesses fascinating insight about segregation in America, doing so with an exacting precision.

The next AHR Committee Call is on Thursday, May 7 at 5pm PT, 8pm ET featuring more information about Communities Working Toward Racial Justice. Register for the call here.

The Advancing Human Rights (AHR) Issue Committee works to ensure compliance at the national, state and local levels with international human rights treaties signed and ratified by the US government. The international treaties to which the US is a party are the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the Convention Against Torture. We also work for the ratification of those treaties which have not yet been adopted by the US: The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the International Covenant on Economic, Cultural and Social Rights. We aim to increase public understanding of and US compliance with Security Council Resolutions on women, peace, and security: 1325, 1820, 1888, 1889, 1960, 2106, and 2122 as well as to promote awareness and implementation of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Human rights are rights that we all have simply because we are human. They are the basic claims that we have to dignity and respect without regard to our race, nationality, gender, gender identity, sexuality, age, religion, (dis)ability, language, income, immigration status, or other statuses. Human rights include civil, cultural, development, economic, environmental, political, sexual, and social rights. Examples of human rights include housing, health, education, food, water, freedom from discrimination, freedom from torture, and freedom of expression.

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 07:14

Graphic provided by Cherrill Spencer.

By Robin Lloyd and Cherrill Spencer
DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

April 2020

Dear DISARM activists (and all WILPF members):

We hope you are well and staying home. We are all seeking to understand the challenges and opportunities that the coronavirus plague imposes on our global health and civic society.

What can WE do?

Will the virus so decimate our health and capacity that the war machine will be seen as a cruel extravagance which will totter and fall…or….will the crisis accelerate hostility and walls and defensiveness leading to accidental or intentional military exchanges?

The world is on the cusp of momentous decisions.   

In an appeal issued on March 23, 2020, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged warring parties across the globe to lay down their weapons in support of the bigger battle against COVID-19: the common enemy that is now threatening all of humankind.   

“The fury of the virus illustrates the folly of war”, he said. “That is why today, I am calling for an immediate global ceasefire in all corners of the world. It is time to put armed conflict on lockdown and focus together on the true fight of our lives.”

The ceasefire would allow humanitarians to reach populations that are most vulnerable to the spread of COVID-19, which first emerged in Wuhan, China, last December, and has now been reported in more than 180 countries. It is the most vulnerable - women and children, people with disabilities, the marginalized, displaced and refugees - who pay the highest price during conflict and who are most at risk of suffering “devastating losses” from the disease. Furthermore, health systems in war-ravaged countries have often reached the point of total collapse, while the few health workers who remain are also seen as targets. The UN chief called on warring parties to pull back from hostilities, put aside mistrust and animosity, and “silence the guns; stop the artillery; end the airstrikes”. This is crucial, he said, “to help create corridors for life-saving aid. To open precious windows for diplomacy. To bring hope to places among the most vulnerable to COVID-19.” (UN News)

What can WE do to support this appeal?

We suggest talking with our circles of concern locally and nationally. It is crucial that our focus on peace and disarmament be heard far and wide. Use the arguments in Guterres’ appeal to help you write to your congressional representatives.

This is a time when more Americans will be open to cutting military spending. Let us take advantage of the moment.

Some Ideas for Homebound Activism

Fortunately, we can still work on issues from home while the coronavirus is circulating. For example:

We're not broke1. Explore US military, nuclear weapons and space force budgets and demand that those funds be diverted to Trump’s  coronavirus response funding  (as of late March those budgets are sitting at 2 trillion dollars!). Be sure to listen to Marylia Kelley’s excellent speech about nuclear weapons costs on the March 2020 ONE WILPF Call reached here.

2. Study the work of our anti-war allies to raise consciousness about the environmental and economic impacts of militarism: Abolition 2000, Black Alliance for Peace, Code Pink, Extinction Rebellion, Mayors for Peace, Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament, Peace Action, Physicians for Social ResponsibilityPoor People's CampaignRaging GranniesVeterans for Peace, World Beyond War, … and let us know if there are others who should be included on this list, currently posted on the WILPF US Disarm page.

3. Preparefor Hiroshima-Nagasaki Days during August Nuclear-Free Future Month. This year we have many hundreds of paper cranes which were donated to WILPF US by atomic bomb survivors in Japan last year and are sitting in our national office. Contact Chris Wilbeck at the WILPF US office and ask her to ship some paper cranes to your branch (your branch will pay for the shipping), to use in your 75th Anniversary of the Bomb events.

Several members of Disarm took part in a stimulating planning meeting via the web sponsored by ReThink Media, which is coordinating a collaborative publicity effort for the 75th anniversary of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Here is a description of ReThink Media taken from their website, rethinkmedia.org:  it is a unique, non-profit organization focused on building the communications capacity of nonprofit think tanks, experts, and advocacy groups working toward a more constructive US foreign and national security policy, the protection of human and civil rights, and strengthening our democracy. In collaboration with 65 other groups working towards peace and nuclear disarmament they have written a position statement, it is an internal document that can be used for creating public facing materials - like talking points, graphics (we are using one of their graphic designs in this eNEWS article), and eventually things like model Letters To the Editor and Op-eds.  We will be urging our president to sign on to their Position Statement on behalf of WILPF US.   

4.  Call and write/fax your Representatives and ask them to support HR-2419, which says take the money from nuclear weapons and put it into human needs!  

5.  Call and write/fax your Senators and ask them to support the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons!  

6.  Share these links and this information with your friends on Facebook, Twitter and by email!

Update on Spring Events

Due to the crisis, many activist events that WILPFers were going to, have been cancelled or postponed.

  •  Alliance for Nuclear Accountability DC Days, April 19-22, is canceled but may be rescheduled to the fall.
  •  The World Conference in New York City won’t be happening April 24-26 - but the organizers are planning to hold an online conference, and you can keep track of their plans at World Conference 2020.
  • The UN’s review of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which is 50 years old this year, is about to be postponed. We had an accredited WILPF-US delegation ready to attend this review at the UN in New York City; we hope we can attend the postponed conference when it occurs.
  • The Stop the Nuclear Arms Race conference in Tennessee (May 22-25) has not been canceled yet, but keep an eye on nukewatchinfo.org.
  • The World Beyond War conference in Ottawa (May 26-31) has not yet been canceled. But WBW is urging us to call for the cancellation of CANSEC, Canada’s biggest annual weapons expo, which is due to take place at the same time as the Conference. What an obscenity if the weapons bazaar takes place and millions of dollars are exchanged to bomb and destroy people in the midst of this health crisis!  

As Ray Acheson, Director of Reaching Critical Will, says in an International WILPF response to the coronavirus crisis: “Compassion, care, and collective action will see us through this crisis, and will be the bedrock upon which we can build a world beyond capitalist exploitation, militarised security, and environmental destruction. The time to start imagining and structuring that world is now.”

Inset graphics credits:
1. Drop the MIC Campaign.   
2. rethinkmedia.org   

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 06:38

Opening of UNIDIR’s project “Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone”. From a UN Office of Disarmament Affairs report on October 17, 2019.

By Odile Hugonot Haber
Co-chair, Middle East Committee

April 2020

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) first endorsed calls for the establishment of a Nuclear Weapon Free Zone (NWFZ) in a resolution approved in December 1974, following a proposal by Iran and Egypt. From 1980 to 2018, that resolution had been passed annually, without a vote by UNGA. Endorsement for the proposal has also been incorporated in a number of UN Security Council Resolutions. In 1991, United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 endorsed the goal of establishing a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (WMDFZ) in the Middle East region.

In 2010, the promise of a WMDFZ appeared likely to emerge, with the UN Secretary-General calling for progress on the goal and endorsing the idea of all states in the region convening to discuss the idea at the UN Middle East conference in Helsinki scheduled for December 2012. Though Iran agreed to attend the conference, Israel refused, and the United States cancelled the event just before it was going to take place.

In response, some nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) convened a conference in Haifa on December 5-6, 2013, saying “if Israel does not go to Helsinki, then Helsinki will come to Israel.” Some Knesset members were present. Tadatoshi Akiba, a mathematics professor and former mayor of Hiroshima who represented the Japanese organization “Never Again,” spoke at this conference. At least two WILPF US members were present in Haifa, Jackie Cabasso and me. Both Jackie Cabasso and I wrote reports which appeared in the Spring/Summer 2014 issue of Peace & Freedom (“USA Missing in Action on Nuclear Disarmament,” 10-11; “The Haifa Conference: Israelis Draw Line in Sand Over Nukes, 24-25).
    
Starting in 2013, President Obama began discussions for an interim agreement between Iran and the P5+1 (China, United States, United Kingdom, Russia, France, and Germany, with the European Union). After 20 months of negotiations, The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)—also known as the “Iran Nuclear Deal”—was accepted as the final framework in April. The historic nuclear deal was officially received by the United Nations and signed in Vienna on July 14, 2015. It limited the Iran Nuclear program and included enhanced monitoring in exchange for relief from sanctions.

For a detailed account of the history, see this Timeline of Nuclear Diplomacy With Iran from the Arms Control Association.

We in WILPF US supported the negotiations and agreement, and issued a statement on 8/4/2015 that was published and distributed during the concurrent NPT review in Vienna.

We had hoped to move forward on this issue in the subsequent Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review conference which occurs every five years. But at the 2015 meeting, state parties were unable to reach consensus on an agreement that would have advanced the work toward non-proliferation and disarmament in the Middle East. Any movement forward was completely blocked since they could not come to any agreement.

Then, on May 3, 2018, President Trump announced that the US was getting out of the Iran agreement and US sanctions were re-imposed and intensified. Despite European opposition, the US pulled out of the deal completely.

In spite of this, a recent meetings coverage document from the United Nations did give us some hope that something was going to move forward:

The United Arab Emirate’s delegate anticipated a positive outcome from the Conference on the Establishment of a Middle East Zone Free of Nuclear Weapons and Other Weapons of Mass Destruction, to be held from 18 to 22 November [2019] at Headquarters. He invited all regional parties to participate in its effort to hammer out a legally binding treaty that would prohibit nuclear weapons throughout the region. Echoing that perspective, Indonesia’s representative said that achieving such a zone is an important endeavour and called for the full and meaningful participation of States in the region.

This is especially important since recently, “[o]n 5 January 2020, in the aftermath of the Baghdad Airport Airstrike that targeted and killed Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, Iran declared that it would no longer abide by the limitations of the deal but would continue to coordinate with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) leaving open the possibility of resuming compliance.” (From the Wikipedia page on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which references a 5 January 2020 BBC article, "Iran rolls back nuclear deal commitments".)

In the same UN meetings coverage document, the representative of the United States (John A. Bravaco) said his country “supports the goal of a Middle East Free of weapons of mass destruction, but efforts to that end must be pursued by all regional States concerned in an inclusive, cooperative and consensus-based manner that considers their respective security concerns.” He added, “In the absence of the participation of all regional States, the United States will not attend that conference and will regard any outcome as illegitimate.”

From this, we can understand that unless Israel moves forward on this issue, nothing will happen. Remember that Israeli activists had hoped to move Israeli people and had organized in the streets of Tel Aviv as well as organizing conferences like Haifa.

But in the UN document, the Israeli representative’s statement is: “As long as a culture of non-compliance with arms control and non-proliferation treaties persists in the Middle East, it will be impossible to promote any regional disarmament process.” He said, “We are in the same boat and we must work together to reach safe shores.”

Before the WMDFZ becomes an international issue, it must be taken on by the local countries and developed regionally. It will take time to build on transparent demands and to develop a very precise culture of checks and balances, in which verifications must take place. In the present climate of war and armament, it is not possible to develop this infrastructure. This is why many activists are now pressing for an international peace conference in the Middle East.

The most recent positive development is that on October 10, 2019, the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) launched their project on the “Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (WMDFZ)” on the margins of the current session of the First Committee On  Disarmament.

According to a UN press report about the launch of the project, “Dr. Renata Dwan, the director of the UNIDIR opened the event by outlining this new three-year research initiative and how it aims to contribute to efforts of addressing weapons of mass destruction threats and challenges.”

The next NPT Review conference (scheduled for April-May 2020) is soon upon us, though it may be delayed or held behind closed doors in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Whenever and however it happens, all 50 or so WILPF sections worldwide need to pressure our UN representatives to move this issue forward.

Genie Silver of the Middle East Committee has already drafted the following letter to United States Ambassador Jeffrey Eberhardt from WILPF US. WILPF branches can use language from this letter to write your own letters and to educate the public about this important issue.

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 06:30

For many years Robin Lloyd has opened her Rochester, VT, family farm yearly to a gathering of WILPF members where we relax, hear informed talks, and discuss issues of the year. In support of Hibakusha and the 75th anniversary (2020) of the nuclear bombings in Japan, we made a banner and took a picture we sent to Japan. Photo by Eileen Kurkoski.

By Eileen Kurkoski
WILPF US Secretary

April 2020

Hear the drum roll? WILPF’s exciting California speaking tour on military contamination of water partly took place, despite coronavirus concerns. And WILPF expects to connect with a different segment of women by collaborating with a new feminist economics organization.

The highlights from the WILPF US January Board Meeting give details on these plans and more, as well as providing updates and changes necessitated by the pandemic which have occurred since the January meeting

We look forward to doing more, if we can raise more money.

January Board Meeting Highlights

1. “The Pentagon: Exposing the Hidden Polluter of Water” Tour. Board member and organizer, Nancy Price, has updated the Earth Democracy page of our WILPF website, including information about the 20 planned stops of the Tour and more, on the special Military Poisons website. [Due to the health emergency, the March tour took place in the first three cities and with media interviews.]  

Pat Elder was the tour’s key speaker. He has researched the health effects on local communities of chemicals used on military basses. WILPF contracted a publicist to film the tour, and World Beyond War and Veterans for Peace posted announcements about the tour. Many thanks go to the Patagonia Foundation for their grant, funding most of the tour.

2. WILPF is collaborating with An Economy of Our Own. The impressive advisors for this new group are women dedicated to seeking generative change in the economic status of women, particularly women of color. AEOO is gathering educational tools and resources for Econo-Consciousness-Raising groups and preparing local public events on women’s economic concerns. WILPF hopes to participate with AEOO in two conferences; the first conference will be in June in Washington D.C. and the second in November in California.

3. Plans for the WILPF US Congress 2021 have started. A pre-Congress committee has been formed, consisting of board members Eileen Kurkoski, Nancy Price, Mary Hanson Harrison, and Darien DeLu; as well as Detroit (2014) Congress Coordinator, Laura Dewey, and Jane Doyle. They are discussing and researching options. Mini-virtual congress gatherings this year in July are being discussed. [Additional volunteers are needed for the virtual congress! Contact President@WILPFUS.org.]

4. Consistent with WILPF's goals of challenging oppression and building peace and justice, and mindful of Mexican revolutionary Benito Juarez’s statement that peace results from respect for other people’s rights – the Board took a strong stand in opposition to the unilateral and crippling US sanctions against Cuba. The Board voted to endorse the “Call to Action for International Days of Action Against sanctions and Economic War – March 13-14, 2020.” The Board also approved a second item from the Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issue Committee, endorsing the Second National Conference for the Normalization of US-Cuba relations, March 21-22 in NYC [which subsequently was postponed to November 2020].

Both items oppose unilateral sanctions against countries that have not violated international law, and these are especially in regard to US sanctions against Venezuela, Iran, Cuba, and North Korea.

5.  The annual UN Commission on the Status of Women had planned to address the Beijing Declaration (the goals set by the UN Women’s Conference there), now 25 years later. WILPF’s CSW Programs – with five Practicum students, two Local to Global WILPF members, and two faculty – and other WILPF US leadership were preparing for the busy and interesting March 8-14 week.  [Unfortunately, due to the coronavirus, the March 2020 CSW was cancelled, along with the two WILPF programs.]

6. 2020 Budget: Where do we want to spend our money?
After numerous meetings, the Finance Committee could not set up a balanced budget; the projection is a deficit of $25,969.

Our 2020 WILPF Budget includes these foundational components, and we want to build from them.

a. Programs, Initiatives & Branch & Member Support:
Coalition Dues & Memberships,
Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) Practicum & Local to Global, CSW Parallel Presentation(s),
Leadership Institute,
One WILPF & Solidarity Events,
WILPF for Poor Peoples’ Campaign (PPC),
Program Chair(s), Disarm, Middle East, Cuba/Bolivarian, Earth Democracy, Advancing Human Rights, Women Money & Democracy, Membership Development, WILPF Women In Network Growing  Stronger (WWINGS), 2021 WILPF US Congress.
Grants, Mini-grants
b. Communications – e-newsletter, Peace & Freedom magazine, website, functioning office
c. Basic structures – board, office, part-time contracted employees, branches, International Congress
(We pay yearly membership dues of about $20,000 to support International WILPF).
The Board discussed the substantial organizational benefits of having an executive director. However, we realize we would need much more money to hire one.

7. Program 2.0 progress: Branches got a survey, asking which topics they have covered in the last 2-3 years and their likely interests for the next 12-18 months. Their responses will inform the long-term plans the Issue Committees leaders make.                         

8. Should we evaluate the make-up of our board? To explore this proposal an ad hoc committee will form, including two board members and two to three non-board members. Board Members Volunteers: Jan Corderman, Shilpa Pandey

9. The Board formed an ad hoc committee on how to make our board service more enjoyable. Mary Hanson Harrison agreed to head it up and is looking for more help. Some ideas brought up included having an in-person board meeting at the 2021 Congress, singing briefly at meetings, bloopers and successes in activism, and light political jokes.

10. Should we change how we reach out to non-WILPF members? The board began a discussion regarding who should get the e-News and e-Alerts and if non-members should be allowed on One WILPF calls. Right now e-Alerts and One WILPF calls are only for members. Should the e-News offer a link to One WILPF calls, for non-members? Darien plans to talk with our technology specialist regarding the feasibility of making some changes. Also, we’re reprinting more copies of our WILPF US brochure.

You can find a list of board minutes on our National Board webpage. Do you want to listen in to a board meeting? On that same page you’ll find how to pre-register to receive call-in information and the agenda for the next board meeting.

For further information on volunteer opportunities regarding any of the committees mentioned, please contact secretary@wilpfus.org.


                                                                                     

 

Post date: Mon, 03/30/2020 - 06:23

Actions like this July 2, 2019, demonstration in Palo Alto to protest immigrant family detention and deportation are halted because of COVID-19, but the branch is stepping up its virtual presence. Photo by Jack Owicki / probonophoto.

By Judy Adams
Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch

April 2020

As the organizer of the Peninsula/Palo Alto Branch’s weekly peaceful sidewalk vigil/demonstrations every Friday from noon to 1 pm, I announced their postponement until the COVID-19 crisis was over—just before the shelter-in-place regulations for California were announced.

However, as all WILPF US branches are doing now, I have been stepping up the branch’s “virtual” presence and peace actions with email, Facebook posts, and providing volunteers the opportunity to participate in get-out-vote activities from the safety of their homes, such as making phone calls or sending out letters and postcards.

I am also working to arrange branch meetings using the Zoom platform to avoid personal contact during the pandemic. It is important to encourage members to keep in contact via branch email and phone calls, to provide encouragement and allow us to have a change in focus from virus conversations and concerns.

A note on events and COVID-19: Our branch and San Jose WILPF were co-sponsoring a local event as part of Pat Elder’s CA tour on the dangers of PFAS on or near military bases, which would have included Marylia Kelley of Livermore’s Tri-Valley CAREs, which studies nuclear contamination of military/research facilities. But out of a concern for the safety of attendees, the San Jose Peace Center canceled all events at the Center. Joan Goddard, of our San Jose WILPF branch, went to the center to distribute materials about PFAS contamination provided by Nancy Price and Pat on the afternoon of the event, to people who didn’t see the cancellation announcement. We hope to have Pat out again after this crisis is over, and to work again with our San Jose sisters.

Our main task now is to keep up our email and Facebook posts on peace, justice, and nuclear disarmament issues, and also to help communicate Poor People’s Campaign concerns as they transition to a virtual June 20, 2020 action. We also continue to work diligently on transferring information from WILPF’s petitions in support of the 2017 UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons for Ellen Thomas!  

I am also working with my city, Menlo Park (which I recruited in 2018 as a Mayors for Peace city), to plan events commemorating the 75th anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, including a film on the Hibakusha and speakers at the city library. And with the help of a local art gallery owner who has started a nonprofit for Menlo Park public art, and the participation of local school children (assuming the pandemic has ended in August), we are helping plan a project to make paper crane installations around the city. Paper cranes from WILPF might be contributed to this project.

 

 

Post date: Fri, 03/27/2020 - 06:15

The June 20 Mass Poor People's Assembly and National Moral March on Washington is going digital!

WILPF US is an Organizing Partner, and we are all in!  

Take a look at the above video and click on this WILPF-specific link to RSVP and for updates.

Click here to listen to our latest One WILPF call, in which WILPF members Mary Bricker-Jenkins and Jan Corderman provide additional information about the Poor People’s Campaign, the June 20 action, and other aspects of the united work of the PPC and WILPF.

Join the largest digital and social media gathering in this nation’s history of poor and low-wealth people, moral and religious leaders, advocates, and people of conscience!

 

Post date: Mon, 03/23/2020 - 13:04


Monterey Lanterns

Darien Elyse De Lu
WILPF US President
 
You're likely following the news, and you know how serious the situation is. I write to tell you: WILPF US continues, with a vision for the world. We're here, working on the issues you, our members care about; holding out for a just and peaceful planet, green and diverse.
 
With this message, I encourage you all: Embrace our WILPF traditions and the ancient ones, of powerful women. Of course, you men members, join in, too. Let's all of us become/continue connected, engaged, and safely active
 
You in Action, with WILPF
 
Whether it's called Covid19, SARS 2, Novel Corona Virus, SARS-CoV-2, or by some racist designation, we know this pandemic illness forces us to change our daily activities and interactions and how we do activism. And we know that taking action is an important counter to depression!
 
WILPF US will offer special webinars in April, as well as our monthly ONE WILPF Call. Also, the April 7 national Program Committee conference call/meeting -- at 5 pm PT/7 pm CT/8 pm ET -- is open to all WILPF members. Be sure to read the upcoming April eNews for how to preregister and more details. Watch for short-notice announcements via upcoming eAlerts.
 
Are you able and ready to do more? We're here! All of our national-activism issue committees have periodic conference calls, to which WILPF members are welcome. (Also, see ways to be active locally, below.)  Find out how to participate by contacting the issue committee chairs. Read about each of the issue committees on the Our Work webpages.
 
Be Free with Kindnesses!
 
Before there was the word intersectionality -- describing the special harms from intersecting oppressions, like racism, ablism, classism, and sexism -- WILPF had been focusing on connections and intersections for decades. In WILPF, we access analysis, address connections, and encourage global and local action. Currently, we see a devastating global effect from the intersections between animals, environment, and health -- and we see the people most subject to intersecting oppressions being the most at risk. 
 
The national and international failures to take needed action are heart-breaking. Refugees are trapped in primitive camps, immigrants remain in detention, low risk prisoners stay crowded in jails and prisons, and the US homeless continue homeless. Around the world, people and countries pushed into poverty confront this crisis with little more than human determination.
 
But WILPF members are stepping up. One member organizes calls across the county, connecting 200 people for mutual aid initiatives. Another works with a team toward the goal of distributing 10,000 family food boxes by the end of the month. Others are sewing up protective masks.
 
If you're able to manage your own situation, help others locally: Inform yourself, reach out, help out. We can all call others, offering human contact and information. For the emotional and mental health -- as well as physical health -- of ourselves and others, let's practice daily "distant socializing". (For this more helpful expression, I acknowledge Pacifica network radio station, KPFA.) 
 
Sheltering in Place with a Good Read
 
That's right:  Stay home! We're protecting our own health and the health of our communities by minimizing the risk of physical contacts.  Sure, many of us may be "binge viewing", as a way to cope with the trauma of these times.  But I know that many WILPF members are avid readers: wouldn't you rather be reading?
 
Nourish brain and spirit! Rise out of the sadness, disorientation, anxiety, and data fog! Instead of surfing the web for yet one more article about the current news, seek out a broader perspective from thoughtful, informative, and progressive periodicals and books.  
 
Remember the "classic" progressive magazines, like The Nation, Mother Jones, Yes!, Monthly Review, and Jacobin -- all with informative websites. (And, as it's name implies, Yes! magazine is devoted to positive contents.) Also, you can inform yourself from collected past WILPF eNewses on our website.
 
For books - including E-books -- there are many good and radical publishers and distributors.  Consider ones like OR Books, PM Press, and Haymarket Books. (The last has two special offers just now: half off selected (paper!) books during Women's History Month and ten featured E-books for free.)
 
I must add that, even before this crisis, alternative news and media face tough economic times -- at the very time when we need them most! If you can, support them financially -- including your favorite news"papers" and listener-supported radio stations.
 
Through Two World Wars, a Prior Pandemic, and Over 100 Years
 
WILPF endures (and, yes, we, too, appreciate your financial support!). You, WILPF members and allies, are what makes WILPF strong. We count on you to keep yourselves and our movement safe and active.
 
Many of us connect with local branches and other local groups. While staying involved, protect your activist communities! Continue to meet virtually and/or electronically! Use options, including no-dollar-cost services.  In addition to familiar ones like FreeConferenceCall and Zoom, note the others listed in the resources below (especially under Event Alternatives, on the first website).
 
Many phone lines are unusually busy, as is the internet. So plan remote meetings to start when carriers are less congested, at 15 or 45 minutes past the hour rather than on the hour/half-hour. (Thanks, Free CC, for that tip.)
 
Organizing and Information Resources from the Left
My thanks to our ally, InterOccupy, for helping us hear about these community-focused alternatives. Note--in these unpredictable times, if something doesn't feel right (or left!) to you, research further before continuing.

Keep on Moving Forward
 
The current limitations on contacts and economic activities may last for many months. Remember, in Montgomery, Alabama, the civil rights bus boycotters maintained solidarity for over a year. We can face this time, supporting each other.
 
Let us show the courage, resourcefulness, and group spirit that people in Cuba showed during the Special Period there. Cuba's population resolutely united through years of their Special Period, coping with shortages and hardships. They transformed institutions and practices; they used resources creatively, to benefit the majority of the people.
 
Cuba is a small island, still threatened by a powerful country. In this health crisis, the entire world is threatened by powerful forces: ignorance; recalcitrance; and individuals, within influential global systems, who often seek their own benefit, heedless of the costs to the planet and to fellow human beings.
 
Now let's demonstrate that humans do respond usefully to crises. This is our dress rehearsal for rising to the still greater threat: the climate crisis. 
 
Leading our lives, making our choices free of fear, is our ideal -- one we aspire to. Tho' fear is a powerful motivator, we make better choices when moved by compassion, caring, and hope. Adding good information, analysis, insight, organizing, and energy, we can build the kind of wealthy society we envision.
 
Enjoy this offering of enthusiasm, hope, and aspirations -- a recording to listen to more than once. This virtual presentation, put together by the Commission on the Status of Women's Non-Governmental Organizations, was a sort of consolation prize after the cancellation of the 2020 CSW, scheduled for March 9-20 of this fateful year. In the presentations, women from all over the world share their inspiration and determination; remind us, at this 25-year anniversary, of the reverberations of the Beijing Women's Conference and Declaration and Platform for Action; and excite us about the upcoming (even if, perhaps virtual) Generation Equality Forum -- a global gathering, convened by UN Women.
 
Let Us Wake
 
Together, we are ringing the national alarm clock. WILPF US is up and running. I've checked with our primary independent contractors, who keep our operations going. They're all doing well, coping with working from home (along with variously numerous family members in a small space!). Likewise, our national WILPF leaders are doing OK and continuing in their activism as well as their frequently vital "day jobs".
 
Thank you to our workers -- paid and unpaid! That includes you, the WILPF members, active in your communities.
 
I began writing this on the first California morning of a glorious, flowering Spring. In the midst of confusion and calamities, we can still feel fortunate to be in a place to read this message, alive on a remarkable green and blue planet.
 
As President, I have the privilege of sharing an additional hopeful message from years ago, the far-sighted author of which is unknown to me:
 
@,.-:*'``'*:-., @ ,.-:*'``'*:-.,@
 
...imagine a new future, to dream in new directions. This is a gift we give to ourselves.
 
The world is on the edge, whatever prophesies may or may not say.
 
Stare deeper into the abyss, and wake up from the nightmare. Imagine a world where all are free and living in harmony with our planet.  
 
@,.-:*'``'*:-., @ ,.-:*'``'*:-.,@
 
 
Health, Wealth, Happiness....and the time to enjoy them!
 
Darien's Signature

Darien Elyse De Lu 
WILPF US President

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