NEWS

Post date: Fri, 12/07/2018 - 10:47

Stelle Scheller is shown here in April, 2018, with fellow WILPF members at a Tax Day event. From left to right: Sylvia Metzler, Gayle Simons, Judy Elson, and Stelle Sheller. Photo credit: Judy Elson.

By Tina D. Shelton
Co-chair, Greater Philadelphia Branch

Stelle Scheller, stalwart member of the Greater Philadelphia Branch, died in the care of hospice on November 17, 2018. Her family shared her collection of articles, letters to the editor, and protests that she participated in spanning the last four decades.

Stelle served in various positions in her Branch, and maintained a steady presence even as the Branch changed over the years. Always ready to organize and join with other peace groups to advance the cause of justice, Stelle was also a board member of the Parkway High School for Peace and Social Justice and volunteered for many years with Manna.

Why Palestine Matters

Susan LandauOn Saturday, November 17, Susan Landau, co-editor of Why Palestine Matters: The Struggle to End Colonialism, provided an engaging presentation for our branch on how the Palestinian struggle for justice is mirrored in other present-day struggles for justice. She shared how Black Lives Matter and the Dakota Pipeline Water Defenders, among others, have come to see connections between their respective movements.

Participants agreed that WILPF has been a forerunner in the understanding of intersectionality, and we left ready to delve more into the subject so we can bring it to our own circles. Learn more about the book at https://whypalestinematters.org.

Photo credit: Tina Shelton

 

Post date: Fri, 12/07/2018 - 10:30

By Edith Bell

WILPF Pittsburgh, with the support of World Beyond War, posted the following quote on a billboard on a busy street for one month:

    3% of U.S. military spending could end starvation worldwide.

The ad agency Lamar created and posted the billboard. We were so successful at raising money from local activists that we were able to have it posted on Washington Blvd. for a month, and we still had enough funds to purchase a second month in another location—coming soon!  

We have made smaller matching signs that will be posted around university campuses in the near future.

 

 

 

 

Post date: Mon, 11/26/2018 - 05:55

 February 26, 2019
 
Greetings, WILPF US Members!
    
WILPF US is moving quickly! In the under two months' time that I've been President, we've initiated and continued multiple projects. On our February 14 ONE WILPF All-Member Call, we invited branches to step up to be the site for the 2020 Congress. Just last week the final proof for Peace & Freedom magazine went to press. The national racial justice reading and discussion group resumes monthly conference calls this Thursday, and our multiple issue committees continue to be active. At the same time, in order to enhance collaborative and strategic program work, a new ad hoc committee is getting started with reviewing our program structures. And just this last weekend, numerous WILPF branches joined in the actions nationwide to seek a diplomatic and peaceful solution in Venezuela .

With March, it only gets busier! In another week, I'll be leaving for South America, joining other leaders of US peace groups in this special peace groups' delegation to Venezuela. This cooperative effort could contribute to more honest and analytical media coverage of the alternatives to DC's military-first foreign policy approach. As March continues, right after International Women's Day on March 8, participants in WILPF US's Practicum and Local to Global programs join hundreds of others in New York for the annual UN Commission on the Status of Women presentations. And on March 22, at the Women's Peace Initiative, WILPF US delegates participate with representatives of selected women's groups in a conference to explore collaborative work.

Our WPI delegation of WILPF activists is being organized by board member Nancy Price. Other board members on the delegation are Membership Development Chair, Shilpa Pandey, and I. Delegate Odile Hugonot Haber is the Middle East Committee Co-Chair. Setou Ouattara, of the Boston Branch, is part of a CTBTO (Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization) Youth Group. Barbara Nielsen bring the delegation her experience with the Disarm Comm.

Both the fact-finding delegation to Venezuela and the WPI conference are exciting opportunities for strengthening the peace movement in the US. Even though it's a challenge for me to keep up -- especially with an erratic , irresponsible, and bellicose White House driving the news feed and US politics! -- all our many projects advance important facets of WILPF. And this work will inform our 2020 WILPF US Congress.

That election-year gathering -- and the set of position questions we're compiling for our members to reference and raise with candidates this year -- will give us the opportunity to highlight additional WILPF issues often ignored by candidates. Our goal is to help inform voters about topics such as safe food and water, the UN sustainable development goals, and the multiple costs of the US nuclear weapons policy,

I'm asking WILPF members to stand up and speak out! Below I list several ways for you to participate and respond. Also, in this fast-moving world, I hope you'll all watch for upcoming eAlerts -- such as the recent ones on Venezuela developments -- and closely read the monthly eNews. To improve our communications with members, we'll regularly get the eNews out early in the month (and that means we'll be firm about receiving eNews submissions by the deadline!).

I know that you already act in many ways to encourage and support the better world that WILPF advocates. I hope you'll stay open and responsive to the urgency of these times, when so much is at stake. And, in the rush of it all, let's keep space for personal relationships and small joys! Art and culture, nature and exercise, and good food shared with others -- these all are part of the satisfying world we want everyone to be able to live each day.

My thanks to each of you for your caring work!


Darien De Lu
WILPF US President

 
Participate and Respond!
 
Propose your city for the 2020 WILPF Congress
Invigorate your branch with the excitement and team work of congress planning! Is your branch ready to showcase local WILPF programs and other community initiatives by hosting the congress? Also, make your suggestions for congress cities and themes! Send to President@WILPFUS.org

Promote racial justice
Gain insight and skills through reading and discussing -- or simply listening -- on the Racial Justice Group monthly conference c alls : fourth Thursday of each month at 5 PM Pacific time / 8 PM Eastern time. Pre-registration required!
Register here: (You will get a reminder message by email with the call-in info.)

  • Thursday, February 28, White Fragility: Why It's So Hard for White People to Talk about Racism, the 2018 book by Robin DiAngelo.
  • Thursday, March 28, Carol Anderson's 2016 book:  White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide.

Question Presidential and Congressional candidates nationwide
As the 2020 elections approach, what issues would you like candidates to be aware of and address? Send in your good questions! Please classify each question by a general topic area and, if you can, incorporate related key statistics and other information, with references and citations.

For example, you might say, (Topic: Military Budget): "The Trump 2020 military budget request of $750 billion [per Politico:  https://www.politico.com/story/2019/02/24/trump-defense-congress-pentago... ] is a massive increase over his 2019 proposal of $716 billion for "national security" [per DOD:  https://dod.defense.gov/News/News-Releases/News-Release-View/Article/143... ], and the 2019 increase accompanied his proposed cuts to the EPA budget of $2.8 billion -- about 1/3 -- and to Medicare and other entitlements of $1.7 trillion [per Newsweek, https://www.newsweek.com/trump-2019-budget-white-house-803642 ], so what are your proposals for reining in ballooning military funding and protecting federal funding for the financial security, health, and safety of families in the US?"

Of course, the citations are for individual reference - not to be asked as part of the question! National WILPF will edit and refine the questions and circulate lists of them, sorted by topics, to you the members. By raising these carefully crafted questions at candidate events, we can inform the public and ourselves about candidate positions.

Send your questions to Info@WILPFUS.org.

Join in the next Program Committee conference call on April 2
That's the first Tuesday, now at a new time: 5 pm Pacific time / 8 PM Eastern time.
Hear updates on issue committee projects and learn about long term plans, including possible Women's Peace Initiative developments. Make your individual and/or branch work more effective by coordinating with national activities! Watch for call-in information.

 

Post date: Mon, 11/19/2018 - 06:20

Grant Seeking Materials for WILPF US

WWINGS Project Grant 11-2018
Mini Grant Program Request  9-2018
WILPF US Budget 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 09:33

WILPF US Membership Development Chair Shilpa Pandey with two friends from African Sections.
 
By the ONE WILPF Call Team

Back from Ghana…the audio reports from our delegates are now posted on the WILPF Website. Feel free to listen to them at your convenience.    

The WILPF International Congress in Accra, Ghana, took place in early August 2018 and WILPF US sent a delegation of members to represent us officially. Other members from WILPF US also attended.

Ghana Delegation
The US Delegation, US members, and international WILPF friends.

The ONE WILPF Call on October 13th was devoted to reports back from our delegation and members. They summarized workshops they attended, described the hospitality and ambiance provided by our newest African Sections, and reported on the decisions made at Congress, especially regarding the new Restructuring Plan for internal governance across the world.

How to listen to the reports: The recording of this call is now posted at the ONE WILPF Call page of our website. The call includes announcements, presentations, and questions from members. Just scroll down to the 2018 calls and click on the link for the October 13th call.  

Next ONE WILPF Call

Please note that our next ONE WILPF Call will be on Thursday, November 8th at 7pm eastern, 4pm pacific. Read the separate eNews article about this call, which includes WILPF US Board Candidate Statements and a 2019 planning discussion. Be ready to submit ideas for 2019 Solidarity events.

Pre-registration is REQUIRED.
Pre-registration link.

You can call in with only your phone, or using both your phone and your computer for a fuller communication experience.  

All voices will be muted during the general part of the call and open during Break Out Rooms.
PRESS 5 on your PHONE keypad if you have any technical problems.
PRESS 1 on your PHONE keypad during Q&A to raise your hand and get on the stack, or to vote in real time polls.

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 08:03

© Rawpixel Ltd.

By the ONE WILPF Call Team

Join the Thursday, November 8th ONE WILPF Call and be ready to weigh in on important events you or your branch are planning to work on in 2019. Help us identify priorities for action and synergies across branches and cities. The call is at 7pm eastern/4pm pacific. Pre-registration is required.

Bring along some great ideas for activism and for some solid Solidarity Events we can work on together, as ONE WILPF. We want to hear YOUR creative ideas for actions that will matter

Find out about how Program informs our fundraising efforts and makes WILPF sustainable…and what part you play in that process.

We will also hear a short statement from as many of the US WILPF Board Candidates running for office as are able to be on the call. This is your chance to hear directly from the candidates about their plans for moving WILPF US forward!

There will be a few announcements, too. 

Let’s plan together NOW…for unified, visible projects and activism in the new year and beyond!

Pre-registration is REQUIRED.

Here is the pre-registration link.

You can call in with only your phone, or using both your phone and your computer for a fuller communication experience. 

All voices will be muted during the general part of the call and open during Break Out Rooms.

PRESS 5 on your PHONE keypad if you have any technical problems.

PRESS 1 on your PHONE keypad during Q&A to raise your hand and get on the stack, or to vote in real time polls.

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 07:55

Rally for Environmental Justice with Al Gore and Rev. William Barber held on August 13, 2018, at the Belews Creek Coal Ash Pond, Stokes County, NC.

By Lib Hutchby and John Wagner
Triangle Branch, North Carolina
Earth Democracy Issue Committee

   
The Triangle Branch (NC) is in alliance with over forty organizations speaking out to stop destruction of the state’s natural resources, educate citizens on several imminent crises, support preservation and conservation, and stop fracking. So far, Governor Roy Cooper has been unresponsive.  

The organizations working together include: The NC Environmental Justice Network, the Rachael Carson Council, Appalachian Voices, Clean Water for NC, the Dogwood Alliance, Waterkeepers Alliance, APPL, BXE, WILPF-Triangle Branch, and many more. We are making every attempt to speak with Gov. Cooper about our concerns, but he has not replied to a single letter sent or hand-delivered, nor has he scheduled appointments requested.

Fossil fuels must be left in the ground. As Al Gore said recently in Greensboro, NC, “The stone age didn’t end because there were no more stones.” Humans, like foraging birds, will be left to find nourishment from oil-soaked soils, and our drinking water will have been used for fracking and in drilling mud, or it will be laced with chemicals for which we have not found treatment—unless we prevent this contamination, now!

 A Just Florence RecoveryThe state of North Carolina is literally in the grip of corporate money and influence. As you read on, you will see the ways this summary of what’s happening in NC is like so many other states where the energy corporations dominate and investors are making a profit at the expense of people and the planet. Here’s the state of affairs:

 

Eastern North Carolina: Flooding and Contamination

Flooding and contamination are prevalent In the eastern part of the state, where people were still recovering and slowly rebuilding from the impact of Hurricane Mathew’s severe flooding in 2016, compounded by the effects of the flooding of huge factory hog and poultry operations. Massive lagoons of hog waste flowed into yards, neighborhoods, drinking water sources, streams and rivers. This fall, in 2018, those same areas have again been flooded and impacted by contamination caused by Hurricanes Florence and Michael.

Several superfund sites are also located in these areas, with contamination from Dupont/Chemour’s persistent defluorinated compounds including GenX. The state is also facing the start of fracking as state agencies finalize their hopelessly weak fracking regulations.

Less well known, but extremely serious threats are from the Enviva Corporation and other wood pellet companies. These companies are clearcutting valuable bottomland hardwood forests, grinding them into wood pellets that are shipped overseas to become a false “green and sustainable” alternative to Europe’s coal-fired power plants. The effects of this clearcutting and burning of old-growth forests are worse for the global climate than the burning of coal!

Proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline Is “a Con”

The Atlantic Coast Pipeline (ACP) is proposed to carry fracked gas from West Virginia and the Marcellus shale, across Virgina and North Carolina. It will devastate the environment. Duke Energy has a monopoly as a utility. Third party solar installations are considered illegal, and, during the Obama administration, Duke Energy and Dominion partnered to invest in a 600-mile fracking gas pipeline called the Atlantic Coast Pipeline.

The Triangle Branch of WILPF has worked for years to stop fracking and is now trying to prevent the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Mountain Valley Pipeline from cutting gashes across our state.

Robert Zullo’s article in the Virginia Mercury newspaper called it “The con at the heart of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline.” The ACP is posed to drill under the Blue Ridge Parkway and the route includes crossing the Appalachian Trail, flattening mountain ridges of old growth forest, crossing or going under rivers, creeks—over 300 bodies of water in NC alone. Preparations to drill under the Tar River are imminent. This river is the home of a federally endangered species of mussels found nowhere else on the planet.

“What you’re left with, in Virginia and in NC, for example, is a regulated utility using its captive customers to bear all the risk of a multi-billion-dollar boondoggle that the utility has never studied whether it needs it and the utility is going to make customers pay for it regardless of whether they ever use it,” said Will Cleveland, an attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center.

Theresa "Red" Terry is known for the five-week tree-sit she and her daughter endured on her own land to protest the separate Mountain Valley Pipeline, which will be extended into North Carolina and renamed Southgate. Terry isn’t a lawyer but a resident who understands the implications for her home and her state. As she puts it, “Dominion is buying their own gas so they can have permission to rape our property; I would love to look at anyone else and say ‘I would love to make money. I’m taking it from you.’”

Creeks are also vital resources. They refresh larger waters that serve as the sources for human consumption and provide a home for a wide array of wildlife. For example, along Swift Creek’s upper stretches—designated an Outstanding Resource Water by the state —you can find 10 state and federally listed rare, threatened, and endangered species, part of a trove of more than 50 fish species, 16 freshwater mussel species, and seven crayfish species. Yet the low water flows of small rivers and streams leave them vulnerable to pollution. They don’t have a voice of their own, except the voices of those of us who take the time to know them, and to speak on their behalf.

All three compressor stations for the ACP have been located in areas that will result in extreme violations of environmental justice. North Carolina’s compressor in Northampton County is in a county that is 58 percent African American. The ACP ends in Robeson County next to the SC border. This county has the most racially diverse population in the state, and has the largest population of indigenous people east of the Mississippi. The pipeline’s terminus is right in the center of the homeland of the Lumbee Tribe. However, the final environmental impact statement from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) ignored the severe impacts to communities of color and indigenous populations along the pipeline and concluded that “no disproportionate impacts will result from the pipeline.”

The Triangle Branch of WILPF has worked for years to stop fracking and we are now trying to prevent the Atlantic Coast Pipeline and the Mountain Valley Pipeline from cutting gashes across our state. As you read this, hundreds of miles of trees through West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina have been cleared. Now, tree-cutting is resuming and preparations to drill under the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Appalachian Trail, and the Tar River in NC are about to begin.

Landowners are fighting, but they are having their lands seized by eminent domain.

Marches, rallies, calls, letters, and meetings with the NC Department of Environmental Quality with the Governor’s staff must have fallen on deaf ears. Economic analysis proving the pipeline to be unnecessary have been ignored. Neither the ICPP, nor the devastating effects of recent hurricanes accelerated by the Climate Crisis, have changed the minds of the North Carolina Governor, who could stop the ACP construction tomorrow. There are court cases that challenge various aspects of the ACP, but at this point, all construction can proceed while the cases are brought to trial.

WATER is still LIFE and we still require CLEAN AIR for breath.

We persist!! Thank you for your support as we go forward, no turning back, standing strong for justice for the Earth.

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 07:33

By Odile Hugonot Haber
Co-Chair, Middle East Committee

The total population in Yemen is 27.4 million and 18.8 million are in dire need of food. OXFAM reports one civilian is killed every three hours.

“Over a third of [Yemenis] are at risk of starvation if Saudi and UAE bombing campaigns continue,” says Lise Grand, the United Nations coordinator for Yemen, who has warned that “the world has only 3 months to halt the slide toward catastrophe."

The death and food insecurity numbers that you see in many media sources are conservative and, in some cases, grossly inaccurate, according to this Washington Post article.

WILPF Members, This Is What We Can Do (and Ask Others to Do)

Contact your Senators and Representatives and tell them you want them to:

1. Call for urgent immediate ceasefire
2. Suspend arms sales to the Saudis
3. Open the seaports for food and medications for the Yemeni people

You can also join Code Pink with this demand:

This is the moment to mobilize. We have a real shot at ending at ending US complicity in the Saudi-led war on Yemen. We can save millions of lives. Tell your Senators to vote yes on the Sanders-Lee-Murphy resolution S.J.RES.54 to invoke the War Powers Resolution of 1973.

PeaceAction is also supporting this legislation.

Use this number to call your Senators now: 1-833-STOP-WAR

After you tell your Senator you want them to support the resolution, indicate that you would like to get a response back.

Text of Resolutions and Amendment

Here is the full text of H. Con. Res. 138 (introduced by the House, the Senate concurring) and its sponsors:

The Murphy Amendment

Here is a press release about the Murphy amendment to the FY 2019 Defense Appropriations bill that would cut off US support for the Saudi-led coalition’s war in Yemen until the Secretary of Defense certifies that the coalition’s air campaign is not violation international law and US policy related to the protection of civilians. The amendment came in the wake of a horrific school bus bombing, which killed 44 children and 10 adults and highlighted the coalition’s repeated strikes on innocent civilian targets.

If you’d like to learn more, here is some further reading:

  1. Valentine M. Moghadam’s Peace and Freedom article “The History Behind Yemen’s Humanitarian Crisis” in the Spring/Summer 2018 issue (beginning on p. 8).
  2. My previous eNews article, Yemen Has Become 'Hell on Earth'.
  3. US Supplied Bomb that Killed 40 Children on Yemen School Bus, by Julian Borger, The Guardian, August 19, 2018.
  4. US allies have killed thousands of Yemeni civilians from the air. After 22 died at a wedding, one village asks, 'Why us?' By Sudarsan Raghavan, The Washington Post, July 26, 2018.

Please call your representative immediately. It is URGENT!

 

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 07:07

By Marybeth Gardam

With the torture and murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi, children being imprisoned at the border, and the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, the 70th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights—possibly the most important declaration ever penned—seems critical to study today.

Amnesty International produced a fabulous animated video teaching about the Declaration quite a while ago. It's animated and creative…and fast paced.

It is now available on Youtube.

This December 10th could be a good opportunity for branches to bring this video to the attention of their community, perhaps with a facilitated discussion of where the United States stands on the protection of human rights right now.

There is a month to plan an event, so if your branch is interested you might consider asking individual members to hold 'house parties' to show the video and have informal discussions with members of the community (not just with other WILPF members). You can discuss where WILPF is on human rights and our role in the creation of the United Nations via the League of Nations.

Each house party could be a recruiting opportunity, and if you put a donation jar out, you might also collect some donations for your branch.

Then members who hosted the parties could report at your next branch meeting how it went.

UDHR logoYou can also direct people to the 70th Anniversary webpage #standup4humanrights, which provides other ideas for action, including an invitation for anyone to record themselves reading an article of the Declaration in their own language.

It's hard to imagine a time more uniquely suited to talking about Human Rights!

For more information, contact Marybeth Gardam at mbgardam@gmail.com

 

 

Post date: Wed, 11/07/2018 - 06:58

By the WILPF US Development Committee

What drives our successful actions? YOU do! Planning NOW for success will allow you to have greater impact in your communities.

Ask any major funder what moves them to invest in an organization and most will prioritize one thing above others: Action with Impact.  

That’s right. They want to see not only what we did, but what impact it had.
 
So the Development Committee is asking members and branches to plan and report in a new way on their actions.    

Why? Because the way you plan, evaluate, and document your work affects our ability to obtain grants and major gifts.  
   
Why Short Timeline Events Are Low Impact

Planning must be a more strategic and long-term effort. Flexibility in scheduling is good and important, but we can’t continually allow so much flexibility that we agree to take on an event or protest or community forum with only a month or two to get it off the ground.

Of course our expert and experienced members can organize an event in a month or two. But should we?

Such a short timeline almost always guarantees less visibility and low impact.   

With only a month or two to plan:

  • the audience will likely be limited to ‘the usual suspects,’ with no time or energy to reach out beyond our members and ‘friends.’
  • the number of WILPF members who work on the event preparation will be a very small contingent, so the majority of the branch will feel little to no investment in the event’s success.
  • no energy will be dedicated to media outreach and little to ally engagement/collaboration, so even without a dedicated mailing to a large segment of the community, no one will hear about the event outside your inner circle. If a tree falls in the woods and no one hears it……

For all of these reasons and more, the final impact for the branch, the members, and the community for such efforts is very ‘light.’    

An astute evaluation might question the gain compared to the effort. And what will have changed because you held this quickly planned event?   

You can have the best speaker in the world, on the most urgent topic, but without enough lead time to get the word out, that speaker will be wasted. She might have had a much more important impact with a larger crowd elsewhere.

The Importance of Collaboration

Close on the heels of impact measurement for importance to funders, is the amount and quality of collaboration an organization undertakes. The public outcry for organizations to combine efforts, not duplicate them, has filtered to funders. And with good reason. This is a sensible thing to expect.

Co-sponsorships have been the way that many of our branches expand their reach and visibility. They are becoming much more important and we’re being asked to reach out to new allies on a consistent basis. Many funders today ONLY fund events or actions that combine two or more organizations that cross issues, combine goals, share resources, and intersect in types of members.

The sheer act of meeting together in a consistent and frequent way in the lead-up to plan an event is important in itself. You are creating new relationships that become more critically important as forces seek to divide us. So don’t leave your old peace allies behind…. But put MOST of your energy into connecting and building bridges with NEW, younger, more culturally and economically diverse groups. This may call for some creativity. If you need suggestions and materials, let WILPF-US help!  

Bring an idea, and let the other organization lead. But don’t give up your visibility or your identity. Be the wind beneath their wings. Promote their organization and goals…but without allowing WILPF’s name, logo and information to get sidelined.

Share the concept as soon as it arises and before it is cast in stone. When you are meeting with new allies, suggest a collaboration that involves them from the start. Plan it together, so neither of you owns it. Provide warm bodies, voices, and signs…and invest dollars in the effort if you can.

Reach out to groups that might only peripherally be interested in peace issues, but whose interests in violence prevention, gun control, single-payer healthcare, women’s rights, food insecurity, and civil, labor, and human rights are in alignment with yours. In this way, their members learn about WILPF, and your members learn you can depend on them as allies.  

Looking Farther Ahead & Documenting Your Impact

In 2019 we’ll be asking branches and issue committees to look farther ahead—to plan for the next two years of a project, not the next two months.
 
We’ll be asking you to stretch your collaborations and reach out in new ways. We’ll be requesting that you plan an evaluation process as you plan your event.

And we’ll be hoping you can invigorate more members to be part of the planning and execution, inspire more members of the public to come out and learn something they didn’t know before they attended your event.  

We’ll also be asking you to document carefully who was there, how many people worked on the event, how many people attended, what new partners you gained, and to measure carefully what impact you had in your community.   

Failing to plan is planning to fail.    

So let’s start to work with a long-term plan that takes you, your issues, and WILPF farther into the future.

 

Pages