NEWS

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 06:14
Synthetic image created with Craiyon Image Generator

Synthetic image created by Craiyon Image Generator

by Gloria McMillan
Chicago and Tucson WILPF branches

July/August 2024

What is your mental image of Jane Addams and the residents of Hull House? Nice ladies in lace trimmed gowns and floral-bedecked hats? Not quite. Instead, think “Mad Men”, Chicago-style! The TV show “Mad Men” is set in the male-dominated world of Madison Avenue public relations and advertising that used cut-throat tactics to destroy the competition. One of the influences for the show was Edward Bernays, who was called the “father of public relations” by the New York Times in his obituary. For the residents of Hull House and their societal field experiment, Bernays’s new techniques and technologies, detailed in his books “Crystalizing Public Opinion” (1923) and “Propaganda” (1928), could be put to a much better purpose: global peace. 

The PR core of Hull House wasn’t intuitive or even seemingly logical, but Bernays’s ideas influenced Hull House and Jane Addams’ work there. Indeed, Jane Addams and her Hull-House colleagues used every means at their disposal to make Hull House visible and to give the Women’s Peace Party (which later became WILPF) a leading role in society, according to Rima Lunin Schultz a highly-respected member of our Chicago WILPF branch. Schultz, a leading historian of Jane Addams and Hull-House, detailed at some length how Addams scrupulously guarded the Hull-House image, about which Schultz will explain at length in her article, “The Wife of Jane Addams”.

Addams, helped by her wealthy backers, hired a PR service for Hull House and Schultz says that Addams courted reporters. She especially made young women reporters feel welcome at Hull House. Addams gave them publicity opportunities by allowing the young women a hard-to-get by-line to interview her rather than limiting her interviews to more senior, higher-ranked (male) reporters. Today’s readers may think that Eleanor Roosevelt was the most-quoted woman in the global media and she was – later. But Jane Addams was the groundbreaker. So great was Addams’ fame and prestige that she was picked to nominate Theodore Roosevelt for President at the Progressive convention in 1912. At the time, Teddy Roosevelt was the main national defender of the rights of the poor and workers. Good old ‘big banking’ and ‘oil-trust-busting’ Teddy! Addams also sought headlines for the NAACP, which she helped to found on Lincoln’s birthday, February 12th, 1909.

Addams’s unparalleled ability to get and keep the national press’s attention as she uttered fiery denunciations of World War I violence caused the top nationally-syndicated newspaper war correspondent, Richard Harding Davis, to spit vitriol at Addams, calling her the “most dangerous”– yet probably “senile”– woman. We know they only pick on effective communicators. Still, this was an honor that Addams was not always sure she wanted.

Public relations sometimes gets written off for its low and obvious purposes, yet today’s WILPF should not write off such a powerful asset, and instead follow the example of Addams, who did not miss a ‘media hound’ trick. She used the press, courted young reporters and appeared at every public meeting and conference (like her several Chautauqua lectures) that her strength would allow. She was phenomenal, given her lifelong, painful spinal condition. And we will be surprised to note that the Hull-House residents (as staff were called) behaved like some of the most ‘gonzo’ of investigative reporters.

Florence Kelley was shot at in a factory once while she was inspecting it for child labor violations. The residents hounded slum lords, made unannounced forays into factories where child laborers were being poisoned by arsenic, and cornered the local sweatshop owners at swanky balls by getting themselves hired as serving maids. Addams herself ran for Sanitation Inspector of the Hull House ward and won. Occasionally Addams had to bail one of these enthusiastic residents out of the ‘tank’. This was Chicago, after all, and there was much to do.

So, what can we do today?  There are still ways to get around blackouts and information that is being purposely withheld. We can make leaflets and carry these in our backpacks and purses, just as they did in the early days of Hull House. We can enter ‘informal spaces’ where the powerful congregate. We can get on public media boards and committees that control the flow of information to the citizens. We can pursue environmental and housing justice just as they did at Hull-House by allying our efforts with the local residents’ committees. 

The more we do with media, the less WILPF is ‘The Invisible Woman’, we sometimes have become. Jane Addams and Hull House’s names are beginning to fade even in Chicago. We can take a lesson from those glory days, pick up some young members and get on with the work that they began with a real burst of razzamatazz. Life can be both fun and scary. History can certainly be surprising. Jane Addams was a Chicago style ‘Mad (Wo)man,’ —who knew? Those Hull House women would simply smile and say, “Go for it, WILPF!”
 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 05:58
Cherrill Spencer, Diane Blais, and Tina Shelton at No to NATO Rally

Cherrill Spencer, Diane Blais, and Tina Shelton at No to NATO Rally in Lafayette Square Park on July 7, 2024; Photo credit Tina Shelton, used with permission

by Tina Shelton
Greater Philadelphia Area Branch Co-Chair

July/August 2024
 
Greater Philadelphia Area Branch continues to advocate for peace in the Middle East, anti-racism and the peaceful transformation of our world.

Our round-up of recent activities kicks off in April when we had four Branch members participate in a planned civil disobedience action organized by Fridays at Fetterman’s — an on-going peaceful weekly vigil held outside of Senator Fetterman’s office since early December. As part of the action, the anti-war activists attempted to deliver 33,000 watermelon seeds to Senator Fetterman’s office, symbolically recognizing the lives lost in Gaza at that time. These actions have and will continue to be a presence against our Senator’s intractable stance in support of the perpetrators of genocide.

Those involved attended a training in nonviolent disobedience prior to the event. The action resulted in 18 arrests, including the detention of WILPF member Sylvia Metzler. Other WILPF members Laurie Pollock, Tremaine Smith and Tina Shelton were part of support teams. The Branch is an endorsing organization of Fridays at Fetterman’s and is engaged in efforts to support changing the narrative and raising up voices of peace.

Also in April, members participated in action against Day and Zimmerman, a weapons supplier for Israel Defense Forces. On April 5th, WILPF and other groups opposed to the ongoing genocide in Palestine, made possible by US weapons, protested outside the offices of Day and Zimmerman, announcing the delivery of a ‘Cease and Comply’ letter to stop the use of their armaments in Gaza. Tara Vassefi from the DC, Maryland and Virginia (DMV) Branch was also a part of this action.

Sylvia Metzler
Photo of Sylvia Metzler, seated, with hat holding Let Gaza Live sign; Credit: Robert Boucher, permission granted

Branch activities continued as we encouraged each other to attend our National Congress at the end of May and participated in training for our continued diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) work. We also supported the Vets for Peace in their Maine to DC Peace Walk 2024 when they came through Philadelphia. As part of the coalition that welcomed and planned events for the walkers, our members were able to both support and be inspired by the walkers. Activities included actions at Day and Zimmerman (again), in front of Israel Bonds Fund, at the Navy Yard, as well as a film screening about Daniel Ellsberg, whose life is being honored by the walkers.

In June, we participated in the World Beyond War Peace Wave, the Poor People’s Campaign in DC on June 29th and the Philadelphia Task Force for Reparations also held on June 29th. Members of our Branch have committed to join the work of being research team members for the Reparations Task Force. Also in June, our Branch participated in legislative advocacy against a bill that would make divestment efforts more difficult, which is of great concern right now as pressure from the public mounts, including pressure from student activists on college campuses.

Our Branch continues to be grateful for MEPJAC member Genie Silver’s weekly curated email keeping us abreast of the most important news coming from Israel and Palestine, not just the mainstream’s top stories.  And, in July, WILPF member Tina Shelton joined with other WILPF members in DC for the “No NATO, Yes Peace” actions that our National Board has endorsed. We were heartened to hear and see the enthusiasm for pushing back against the destructive power of the US led military aggressor that NATO is. In particular, witnessing the Resist NATO actions led by younger folks of color illustrates that the movements for peace are growing. Specifically, the increasing diversity of the movement in support of Palestinian lives, especially among the young people in our country, reveals a growing dissatisfaction with the world as we know it. A growing people-power movement is one that the Greater Philadelphia Branch is proud to be a part of!
 

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 05:51
WILPF Fundraising

 

by Jeneve Brooks, PhD
WILPF US Strategic Support and Initiatives Coordinator

July/August 2024

Your WILPF Sisters on the Development Committee are hard at work, strategizing and acting on innovative ideas to raise more money for WILPF US. Learn more about the Development Committee’s structure, our current efforts and ways you can help sustain WILPF for another 110 years!

Who We Are and What Do We Do?

The Development Committee consists of Co-Chairs Martha Collins and Marybeth Gardam, President Darien De Lu, Treasurer Barbara Nielsen, Interim Membership Committee Chair Eileen Kurkoski, Earth Democracy Chair Nancy Price, and three independent contractors: Development Steward Mary Hanson Harrison, Development Researcher Keilah Joyner and myself, Strategic Support & Initiatives Coordinator Jeneve Brooks. We meet every other Monday to strategize various fundraising efforts like planning special events, our twice a year appeals (End of Year as well as Spring Appeal) for WILPF and brainstorming next action steps with social media campaigns. The Development Co-Chairs also report our efforts to the WILPF Board monthly and at regular Finance Committee meetings.

Right now – our three paid development staff (including myself) all work part-time and are committed to working dutifully to make WILPF US more sustainable. As the Development Steward and former WILPF US President, Mary Hanson Harrison is in touch with current WILPF US members and donors and creates strategies to encourage sustained giving, bequests, and continued relationship-building among major donors and grantors.  She is also working on a video project for WILPFers to reflect on their activist legacies.

I am responsible for bringing in new donors to WILPF US, which includes reaching out to new progressive women donors. With the help of Keilah, I have created qualified contact lists for over 700 potential new donors in 20 cities where WILPF US has branches or where we would like to target for revitalizing branches like Chicago.  Every month, I email these women, inviting them to special events such as Congress or webinars (like our recent Juneteenth webinar and our Equinox events), and then I follow up with targeted personalized notecards to try to schedule one-on-one meetings.

I am also responsible for looking for new grants, and since joining WILPF I have secured a grant for our CSW program from the Griffin Family Foundation as well as submitted letters of inquiry and grant applications to other funders. I am always on the lookout for new grant opportunities. 

How Can You Help? 

While WILPF may appear to be a wealthy organization, compared to small local mutual aid organizations or city-wide groups. However, for a national organization, our budget is quite conservative, while our costs for communication and outreach are significant.  WILPF’s mission is controversial, so not everyone will support us. And we have mostly women members and donors, who consistently earn less than men so have less discretionary funds for donations. Every dollar makes a difference to us. Here are some things you can do to help:

  • If you have an idea for a grant or any other fundraising activity, please reach out and contact me at wilpfus.jenevebrooks@gmail.com or call me at (917) 330-1906.
    • (A quick note about Melanie Gates and the $1 billion that she has agreed to give away to support women’s rights: Currently, there are no open opportunities for this money for organizations of our size and mission. Based on this AP news article, there will be an open call in the Fall 2024, but I will need to see the full scope of the request for proposals to see if we are eligible.)
  • Consider becoming a recurring donor. We previously made the case in the 2024 Spring Appeal but it bears repeating — that recurring donations allow us to better plan our budget, as we can then accurately predict income against anticipated expenses. Please become a recurring donor today. 
  • Please promote/share our social media events, attend them and support any special events that WILPF US hosts with small registration donations. We have initiated a Self-Care for Activists event for the Fall and Spring Equinoxes and raised almost $1,500. Your support and enthusiastic sharing of our special events going forward can make a difference and help draw more attendees and donations (every extra donation dollar helps).

Thank you again for your belief and support of WILPF US! We are stronger together and I look forward to hearing from you about how we can raise more money for WILPF US!

 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 05:42
Gloria McMillan

Gloria McMillan at the July 17th Jane Addams Branch meeting
 

July/August 2024

The July 17th Jane Addams Branch meeting is available to watch, as host Gloria McMillan, originally from Chicago, gave a presentation about Jane Addams, the ‘Invisible Woman’, providing history the media doesn't share, and ideas for improving media attention in the present.

We have made great progress by using new communication channels and technologies via WILPF! Looking back at the legacy of Jane Addams and Hull House residents, Gloria examined how they were able to get national coverage for the issues they were working on, and different methods they used to do this.

First, Gloria led a deep dive to explore even more avenues of effective communications, looking back to how the Hull House field lab functioned as a social experiment developing a surprising  peace tool. She also explored how both external and internal media are both crucial to WILPF’s growth into the future.

The interactive two-way Zoom session, also ventured into the importance of social space. The Hull-House studies of Urban Social Mapping show how policed urban and rural spaces are. Who gets to go where to be heard is as important as what is being said. WILPF’s ability to crack the social space barrier was a real success because each new space in which we become visible means we have a new audience! Policing of social space includes barriers to media coverage that are as large now as when Hull-House began.

Gloria also encouraged members to join the new e-list for the Cultures, Communications and Sensitization Committee. Email her at scifi200111@gmail.com to be added to the list.

A transcript of the talk is also available on site.

The next meeting will be on August 22, 2024. Register here.

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 05:33
Women, Money & Democracy Committee

WILPF US Women, Money & Democracy Committee members Gwen Hallsmith (center with guitar) and Dianne Blais (in pink with WILPF sash) demonstrated and sang in front of the Chicago Federal Reserve Building in the heart of the Chicago financial district during the MAYDAY FOR MONEY event; Credit: Maybeth Gardem

By Marybeth Gardam of the W$D Committee and Lucille Eckrich of Alliance for Just Money. 

July/August 2024

From May 17-19th, the WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee, co-sponsored (with our ally The Alliance For Just Money, allies at Move To Amend, and our partner An Economy of Our Own), an event in Chicago that called for a total reform of the monetary system in the United States.

The WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee was well represented at the MAYDAY FOR MONEY event in Chicago.  Committee Chair Marybeth Gardam and W$D members Mary Sanderson (Madison WILPF), Dianne Blais (the Jane Addams Branch), Gwen Hallsmith, the Madison WI Raging Grannies and Lucille Eckrich (who organized the Mayday For Money event for Alliance For Just Money) showed up to signal the need to rethink how our currency works, how to separate it from the debt-money system we have now and how we can work together to demand a more just system.  

The event featured a demonstration in front of the Chicago Federal Reserve. Members of the Alliance for Just Money attempted to deliver a copy of a letter they had already sent to the Federal Reserve, calling for the Federal Reserve to relinquish their right to print money and return that right to the US Treasury Department, where most Americans believe it still resides.  A rally the next day in front of the Alexander Calder sculpture in the financial district featured speakers from all over the US and international representatives as well.

A public reading of a play about monetary reform and creating a more equitable system was performed Saturday night, and on Sunday morning two wonderful teach-ins were held. (The recordings of both will be available soon at the Alliance For Just Money website.)

The WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee (with our ally The Alliance For Just Money and our partner An Economy of Our Own) co-sponsored the Chicago event that called for a total reform of the monetary system in the US. You can learn more about why the WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee is calling for a transformation of our monetary system by viewing a recorded webinar we presented in February 2022, in collaboration with Alliance For Just Money.  The webinar, titled “The Future in Our Pockets” does a great job of explaining what confuses most people about our monetary system, and how changing the system could help us defund militarism, polluters and lobbyists who work against the interests of regular Americans.

Stay tuned for more educational awareness programs and projects from the WILPF Women, Money & Democracy Committee, and our allies. W$D meets by zoom every 3rd Tuesday of the Month at 8pm EST.  

For more information about how to join the meetings and participate, contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com

Learn more about: 

Post date: Thu, 08/01/2024 - 05:22

Left to right:  Chicago WILPF Branch leaders:  Gloria Pierce, Rev. Zenobia Sowell, Carron Little, Marybeth Gardam, Martha Collins, Dianne Blais, Clarence Beals. Credit: Marybeth Gardam

by Gloria McMillan and Marybeth Gardam

July/August 2024

On Friday, May 17th at the Greek Isles Restaurant in Chicago’s South Side, WILPF Chicago leaders who had been meeting virtually for a year were able to come together in person for a pop up event that blended organizing and socializing!

Rev. Zenobia Sowell, co-pastor of the Bethel Mennonite Church was joined by her congregants Gloria Pierce and Clarence Beals, along with Carron Little of the Chicago Women’s History Center. Representing WILPF US was Marybeth Gardam of Iowa, Martha Collins of the Milwaukee WI Branch, and Dianne Blais of the virtual Jane Addams Branch. Not present but very much involved in the Chicago Branch Restart effort was Gloria McMillan of Tucson AZ WILPF Branch.

Women, Money & Democracy Committee

Left to right, Rebecca Alwin and Joy Morgen of Madison WI Raging Grannies, Dianne Blais of the virtual Jane Addams Branch, and Marybeth Gardam in front of the historic Jane Addams Hull House Museum; Credit: Marybeth Gardam

Meeting locations for the newly relaunched branch were discussed and both the Women’s History Center and Bethel Mennonite Church offered rooms to get the branch up and running. The branch is planning to meet in person soon and will begin by alternating between the two locations. 

Earlier in the day, part of the group toured the nearby Jane Addams Hull House Museum, which was exceptionally inspiring and the perfect prompt for the Chicago Branch Relaunch gathering.  

Anyone in Illinois interested in joining the WILPF Chicago Branch, contact Gloria McMillan at scifi200111@gmail.com.  
 

Post date: Mon, 07/01/2024 - 11:41

President's Corner

July 1, 2024

We are just recovering from the sad performances of the two Presidential leading candidates in 2024’s first official "encounter" between them. No debate took place, and no Fourth Estate spokeswoman or man stepped beyond politely following up on unanswered questions. (Data collection suggests that candidate Trump told more lies than the large number of times candidate Biden stated that Trump had lied.) Did the Fourth Estate duo ever say that someone’s statement was a lie? What responsibility do the media have here?

In terms of unanswered questions, we in WILPF have plenty – as to why most of the biggest issues are unmentioned (ranging from taking more action on carbon-based fuels to reversing militarism to affordable housing). We see national politics degraded to a condition of superficiality and cant. For me, instead of dismaying, this situation feels familiar, because since thirty years ago I was prepared by science fiction novels that portrayed such a situation. Now it’s steadily available for all on the "main-screen" media outlets!

Yet still – in a U.S. Presidential "event"? I thought that five or six lies per night might be the political limit. I guess it’s just another form of inflation!

Embracing Life, Seeing Our Responsibility

We – humans oriented to activism – have a responsibility here, as these two men talk about their support for huge global military spending. It’s time that we in the peace and Earth stewardship movements see ourselves as part of the immune system of a larger life form: the Earth. National Public Radio talked about a new book by Ferris Jabr, Becoming Earth: How Our Planet Came to Life. The author presents the concept that we humans do not simply inhabit a living planet: We are one of the interdependent parts of organism Earth.

After multiple examples of how this planet – as a living thing – has expressed and shaped itself into a complex and life-supporting system through the intricate effects of different forms of life, Jabr spoke of the role – even the responsibility – of humans. Will we take action to stop the forces of environmental devastation in their headlong disruption and destruction of climate and biosystems that evolved over millennia? As Wall Street, propelled by the petrochemical and arms industries, careens onward, will we defend ourselves and our mother planet to halt matricide?

The numerous onslaughts against the planet – from the Amazon to the Bakken shale to the ocean floors – are abuses of our source of life, our Mother Earth. This socio-economic environmental mayhem also reflects the prevailing mistreatment of women and mothers. In the U.S., mothers are officially cherished (on Mothers Day) and cited in political speeches. Yet in practice – like most of "nature" – they are frequently harmed by government underfunding and laws and – more and more – by court decisions.

Connecting Mother Nature to Mothers and Children 

It’s not such a leap from the contempt for nature and its wonders to the political disregard for women’s and mothers’ concerns, including a key one: children. In this latest Presidential event, abortion was an issue – but with no mention of support for the securing women’s reproductive freedom. By ignoring the needs of mothers, the candidates also ignored the needs of their children. 

Support for reproductive freedom – for mothers ability to choose, if they wish, to have children and raise them healthily – takes many forms: clean water, safe food, housing, even good jobs. Yet we see how responses on even the most direct forms of support for mothers and children were minimized. The question on childcare was dodged by one candidate, the Childcare Tax Credit was weakly defended by the other, and renewal of the expansion of the Child Tax Credit was unmentioned. You’ll recall that credit: It helped pull millions of children out of poverty, especially when combined with the "economic impact payments" during the COVID pandemic;in 2021 our country enjoyed the largest one-year drop in child poverty on record.

We may ask why do the candidates, and the corporate media outlets so rarely address the issues that most affect the lives of women and children in the United States. WILPF branch meetings can productively discuss and analyze this question! Meanwhile, WILPF members can work to influence 2024 election coverage and its conversation preferences.

WILPF positions are strongly pro family, pro woman, and pro child – for the reproductive freedom that gives meaningful choices! What tactic will you and/or your activist group choose to direct the public’s focus to the many issues that affect women and children? Vigiling with information, letters to the editor, grocery store leafletting – or continuing the conversations that perhaps you’ve been having, across the issues and connecting the issues?

Claiming the Terrain of the Positive While Addressing the Difficulties

In our WILPF Congress a month ago, I talked about the crippling effects of fear. When we speak up with people about our issues – family health, safe workplaces, women’s priorities, a clean environment, justice and peace for all! – we can replace those fear narratives about job insecurity, violence, and crime.

Looking into local issues, our activism can expand the public discourse on ways to reverse the poverty rates – and the toxic exposures and other life-shortening factors that so often accompany being poor. We can call on candidates to approve funding for better jobs – Green Jobs – satisfying and reasonably paid ones. 

Our country has the money! We can’t let the military-corporate-industrial monster block serious discussion of Moving the Money. Paid skills training, work our society needs, jobs that can help restore a sense of purpose and hope in many unengaged and unfulfilled souls – those are campaign issues!

Alongside the Poor People’s Campaign, we call for redistributing Pentagon cash – and the nuclear arms billions of the "Department of Energy" – to fund human needs! It’s past time for the local Congressional candidates to have to answer questions about why Congress continues to vote overwhelmingly for the nearly trillion dollar annual National Defense Authorization Act. Moving some of that money – to education, more care (and caring), and actions addressing carbon reduction all will make our communities much more secure

Supporting Schools as Places of Learning for Future Informed Citizens

I spoke of disregard for mothers’ concerns, including children. Some claim that children are protected by classroom book banning. Yet at the same time that popular attention is directed there, the media sidestep the educational decline in many public schools.

We know democracy depends on an educated electorate, to see through big-money campaigns and increasing "content" manipulation. Remember civics? That class barely exists these days! That’s just one feature we want to bring back to primary and secondary public education. Cuts like those can’t simply be blamed on the lack of money.

Much of federal funding for schools was designed to address the complications of poverty and racism. But, somehow, the funds are often spent otherwise. We can bring more local attention to what is being done with education money. Questionable uses must be tracked, not ignored.

Seeing It All Coming Together  

In Brockton, an outlying town in the Boston area, supplemental funds appear to have been used questionably or very poorly – if not illegally. So, despite those federal allocations, public education is still struggling after "virtual learning" during the pandemic. Earlier this year, WILPF’s Boston Branch arranged to hear several insiders’ perspectives about the situation at the Brockton High School.

That school, which enrolls over 4,300 students, not long ago was reputed for its educations excellence. But this largest high school in New England has suffered many reverses. In Massachusetts, a state with a reputation for good funding for quality public education, Brockton High School chose to cut hundreds of teachers’ jobs. Subsequently, large numbers of students have been left sitting in the multiple school cafeterias for one or more "classes", idle and disengaged, due to teacher shortages. No surprise, this school has mostly Black and Latinx students – many the children of immigrants.

Just sometime last year the school said that it had finally achieved full staffing. Yet, after years of underfunded programs, many parents had moved their children out of Brockton High. Large drops in enrollment led to new funding losses, and then subsequent school budget deficits led to more cuts of hundreds of teachers. (As of October 2023, almost 200 positions were still unfilled.) 

Sadly, it gets worse. Having seen Pandemic-era coping strategies, the school is implementing impersonal and commercialized computer-based learning. The district says it can save a lot of money, using fewer teachers. 

Confronting Ignorance, Militarism, and Extremism with Analysis and Interconnection

It’s not only that learning for these low-income students, stuffed into cafeterias and placed in front of screens, appears to be considered optional. Under the current conditions, student unrest increases. Given inadequate supervision, "out-of-control behavior" flares, including fights. In response, four of the School Committee members requested that the National Guard come to their school; they urged a militarized response to students acting out because classrooms are understaffed.

In this election year, Brockton’s situation has gained international media attention, becoming the plaything of extremist responses and right-wing media. You can guess the angles: violent immigrants, "woke" teachers, blame on BIPOC families. It is crucial that other voices be heard in situations like this. By joining other community members in support of the children we want to nurture, we prepare skilled and thoughtful voters for the future.

Voters need better issue information and analysis; WILPF can help. Look over the many links, documents, and issue background on WILPF’s issue committees’ pages. The actions of WILPF members and allies can publicize the fullness of issues, raising unstated ones and revealing interconnections.

 And for those WILPF members who want to support new voters and voting in general, find ideas, fact sheets, and how-to on a variety of Get Out the Vote approaches on our Freedom to Vote pages.

Mobilizing for Four Months

We’ve heard it before, but this year we can’t deny it: These elections are too important for us to "sit this one out". We can’t let heartbreak, anger, despair, or even a feeling of exhaustion make us give up on the planet or the children. Choose a direction, build on and with the efforts of others, take some action!


Darien Elyse De Lu
WILPF US President

 

 

Post date: Tue, 05/28/2024 - 11:33

President's Corner
WILPF 35th Congress Logo

The WILPF Congress Counters the Disease of Busy-ness and Statement on Student Uprisings on Gaza

May 23, 2024

How many of us have busy calendars and long to-do lists, often including “political work”? And how often does the weight of those responsibilities serve to allow – or impel – us to put aside the possibility of taking action on other political work? 

Perhaps we’re so busy with other matters that we feel we have no time for political work.

Isolation & Walling Off Our Hearts

I believe the effect of our excessive busy-ness – even when it is political work – is to “wall off” our human responses and feelings from the deeply disturbing daily news. With our hearts already so hurt, we seek to protect them from further assaults. But, when we do that, a further and serious effect is that we grow numb. Seeking some kind of emotional experience, we use distractions, and we misinterpret the experience to believe we’re happy. For many of us, the distractions become a kind of addiction.

Few of us – especially after the isolation created by the COVID pandemic – have the multiple close relationships, especially politically aligned relationships, that are important to create a supportive place for our emotional expressions. Coping alone with our unprocessed trauma, we embrace the modern disease of busy-ness, constructing over-filled lives that isolate us and wall off our hearts and our emotional responsiveness.

It doesn’t have to be that way!

We have alternatives. I’m writing to tell you about an important one: our WILPF Congress.

With our busy-ness, I realize some of us will say, “How can I possibly make time for the multiple days of the Congress?” The short answer is this: As a caring person seeking to bring the values of WILPF into the world, in the society of the U.S. today – in your life, you need what our Congress provides.

No matter how busy your life is, to support the caring person you are, you want to make time and space for what our Congress provides! When you participate in our Congress, you’re reminded of what matters – and what you have the agency to influence. If your heart is hurting, the human connection with like-minded WILPFers is likely to be healing and nourishing.

You can put your heart into your life and work, in a world where your action matters. In our value-filled Congress – in contrast to the U.S. popular culture, which often commodifies and flattens the differing values of most facets of life – you can find renewal.

You, as a WILPF member – as someone outside of the cultural-political mainstream – want and need a different kind of cultural and political space, shared with others!

You and your activist heart are at risk of being trapped in our distracted and narrowed society. At our Congress we’ll speak to the political you – and to the whole you. Together, we’ll be re-minded about the importance of our advocacy.

On issues, our Congress goes beyond the news flashes on the electoral horse race, the latest extreme weather disaster reports, the daily tally of far Right initiatives or new incidents of gun violence, or even the crushing reality of suffering in photos from around the world. We support you by offering the lively exchange of information, ideas and analysis about the fundamental issues of our times.

We are not alone: Student Uprisings, Unreported Global Movements

Of course, our WILPF Congress isn’t the only place for such exchanges and issue insights. Right now, on campuses across the U.S., tens of thousands of students are gathering for occupations, vigils, and demonstrations that can provide such exchanges. And they’re under attack. Our Congress is a place of safety, where we practice and protect nonviolence and the WILPF International Code of Conduct.

WILPF supports the pro-peace and pro-justice for Palestine student movement, and it’s important that we, too, speak up. At our Congress you’ll hear about other movements in the U.S. and abroad – movements that rarely get corporate news coverage. And it’s important that we speak up about them, too – sharing with others the suppressed news about them. We’ll invoke those movements, for the wisdom and inspiration they give us.

Right now, the activist students are inspiring me. I invite you to read my newly released President’s Statement: “Inspiration from the Nationwide Student Uprisings in Support of Justice in Gaza and What We Must Learn and Remember”.

Beyond the Intellect

Our Congress features items to support the emotional and even spiritual side of us. With “culture breaks” we nourish those human parts with songs and poems. With conversational spaces, our exchanges – from casual to profound – speak to the human need for personal contact. Even simply being in a place that acknowledges and addresses the yearnings of our hearts – so often denied, buried, or walled off – even that affirmation helps us re-open our heart connection.

Probably, to be fully present to our world and times, we should make time regularly to feel and cry. At Congress, we’re not planning organized crying, although – with an open heart – you may well cry when hearing some of the speakers. Yet another way to feel, express, and release some of the turmoil of our hearts is through dancing. Join us to dance together – in the privacy of your own home!

Your Agency, Our Advocacy, and Effective Action

Our Congress program planners have put together thoughtful and eye-opening presenters. You, in company with other members, can move beyond the data of most news coverage to information. Information comes from an understanding of context and contributes to the strategic assessment that grounds realistic advocacy.

Yet, in our busy-ness infected society, information and strategy are not enough to support action. It is when our hearts connect us to our lives and our principles that we become able to be effective. We have worked for months to develop a Congress program that offers comprehensive ingredients for success. WILPF has worked for over 100 years to develop a community of activism that supports our effective action.

You can still register for the Congress! Let go of the fear and distraction holding you back. Embrace the call of your heart for informed action, and be drawn to the wide-ranging presentations and other scheduled program features. Now is the time to step beyond busy-ness to engagement. Register today!

This is your life, you are in charge of the schedule.
 

Darien Elyse De Lu
WILPF US President

 

 

 

 

Post date: Fri, 05/24/2024 - 12:43

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Please note that this page is still being revised. Please check back regularly for updates.

 

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