NEWS

Post date: Fri, 07/13/2018 - 08:36

By Jan Corderman
Des Moines Branch and WILPF US Treasurer
 
An estimated 10,000 Palestinian children have been detained by Israeli security forces and prosecuted in the Israeli military court system since 2000. Independent monitors such as Human Rights Watch have documented that these children are subject to abuse and, in some cases, torture—specifically citing the use of chokeholds, beatings, and coercive interrogation on children between the ages of 11 and 15. In addition, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has found that Palestinian children are frequently held for extended periods without access to either their parents or attorneys.
 
Because of these egregious human rights violations, WILPF US Supports H.R.4391—the Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act.
 
Congresswoman Betty McCollum (DFL-Minn.) introduced the legislation in November, 2017, to prevent United States tax dollars from supporting the Israeli military’s ongoing detention and mistreatment of Palestinian children. “This legislation highlights Israel’s system of military detention of Palestinian children and ensures that no American assistance to Israel supports human rights violations,” McCollum said. “Peace can only be achieved by respecting human rights, especially the rights of children. Congress must not turn a blind eye the unjust and ongoing mistreatment of Palestinian children living under Israeli occupation.”
 
The United States provides an average of $3.8 billion a year to Israel, making it the largest recipient of American aid. HR 4391 requires that the Secretary of State certify that American funds DO NOT support Israel’s military detention, interrogation, abuse or ill-treatment of Palestinian children. 
 
Israeli Military DetentionAt the request of the Middle East Issue Committee, WILPF US has joined the American Friends Service Committee, Amnesty International USA, Defense for Children International, the Middle East Peace Education Coalition, and others in endorsing the legislation.
 
The Des Moines Branch, along with partner organizations, has been taking this issue to WILPF members and our community to gain passage in the House. Our efforts have included an event featuring Miko Peled, the internationally known Jewish Israeli author of The General’s Son, where we discussed the issue and distributed postcards for our Congressman. We have also been showing the 21-minute documentary, Detaining Dreams (find it at YouTube) and organizing informational rallies. 
 
Let the MidEast Committee Co-Chairs Odile Hugonot Haber and Barbara Taft know if your branch can help.
 
Latest update:
On June 28, Representative Katherine M Clark (D-MA-5) became the 29th co-signer of the bill. See: H.R. 4391 at congress.gov to learn more about the bill and see if your Congressperson has signed on.
 
For more information:
Contact Odile Hugonot Haber odilehh@gmail.com or Barbara Taft beejayssite@yahoo.com.
 
 
 

 

Post date: Fri, 07/13/2018 - 08:12

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Corporations v Democracy Issue Committee
 
A new book is making waves across the country with information that is both practical and approachable… and appeals to women caught in an economy that deliberately disadvantages them. Your Corporations v Democracy Chair is delighted with the prospect of using the book and its accompanying online workbook in focused STUDY GROUPS across America, sponsored by our branches, to both educate a new generation of activists AND bring more new recruits to WILPF.
 
ScrewnomicsI remember how that is exactly what happened with our Challenge Corporate Power and WATER STUDY courses. Why not this one? The study groups Diamond is starting call themselves “EconoGirlfriends” and they enjoy a lively, youthful vibe.
 
The book, with its funny, hard-bitten approach and online workbook appeals to women who are stuck between caregiving for younger and older generations, working several jobs, and trying to make ends meet. They HAVE to be self-interested to survive.  Maybe appealing to that spirit of self-preservation will uncover new activists for WILPF! We think it could work, and we are looking to roll this out sometime in the fall for any branch interested to experiment.
 
The Author Explains
 
Screwnomics: How Our Economy Works Against Women and Real Ways to Make Lasting Change is by Vermonter Rickey Gard Diamond.  She notes:  “Screwnomics is a book for women like you who until now have wisely avoided a dismal subject.  You’d like to know more about economics, if only to hold on to more money, but something has warned you off, like a frat house late at night: hazing, secret clubs with creepy names, hoarding private privileges, taking advantage, scoring girls.
 
Screwnomics isn’t intended to help you manage your personal finances, but it will explain the larger assumptions of a system that makes managing impossible for so many. Screwnomics is my word for the unspoken but widely applied economic theory that women should always work for less, or better, for free. But why? Where did this come from?”
 
“‘The personal is political’ wrote feminist Carol Hanisch in a 1969 essay of the same name…. The glass ceiling still in place however, turns out is actually made of green paper. Women need to talk together about who pasted this in place.”
 
“You will find in Screwnomics some big questions and big fixes, many of which were asked and proposed by women early on, but especially after the ‘70s, a period when a growing number of women were becoming scholars – historians, economists, and monetary thinkers.”
 
Diamond’s ‘Big Fixes’ include many that WILPF has already identified. In fact, she cites WILPF at least once in her book. Public banking, redesigned businesses, expanded accounting methods, and new currencies are a few of the solutions covered.  “(They) give me hope,” she says, “that transformation will happen when more women discover what’s going on, and how real change is possible.”
 
“This book is for the bit players, you and me, who only keep the whole show going, making sure everyone eats and has clean socks.”
 
Read excerpts and see the topics covered in the book here.
 
If this sounds like something you’d like to learn more about, or to start an EconoGirlfriend WILPF group, contact mbgardam@gmail.com

 

Post date: Fri, 07/13/2018 - 07:58

By Marybeth Gardam
Development Chair
 
The Development Committee is looking for two groups of members who can help in specific (NOT asking for money) ways. These are small, discrete assignments but they will make a big difference in funding our work.  
 
If you are often online and enjoy doing research, or if you have time to make just a few phone calls a month, we need to hear from you. If you know someone who is willing to help, please pass this along!
 
Card Glitch Follow-up Squad
1-2 hours per month
Report to Chris Wilbeck and Development Chair
Timeframe:  ongoing
Need: 1-3 people

 
This group of up to three people would be given regular lists of donors who contribute online or automatically through regular electronic fund transfers from their bank. These donors do WILPF a huge service by giving regularly, every month...and because the funds are drawn automatically from their checking accounts (just like PBS or other favorite charities do), this is a painless form of giving. It also helps WILPF enormously because it lets us anticipate and PLAN on a specific amount of donations coming in every month. That gives us the latitude to go the extra mile in supporting our members and branches.
 
However, because life is complicated, occasionally bank cards fail for any number of reasons. Most often it's because the donors were issued a new card and forgot to let us know about it. When this happens, months can go by before we can contact them and get them to reinstate their new card for online giving.
 
Your branch members (maybe those who are not so mobile anymore?) would do us a tremendous service by agreeing to phone a short list once a month to just remind folks whose cards have stopped working that they need to reconnect with our office coordinator, Chris Wilbeck. Some months there won't be a single call to make!!
 
Volunteers won't have to handle any private banking information. They will be given a name, a phone number, and the date at which the automatic donations stopped. They'll ask if the donor intended to stop donations...in which case we'll thank them for their past support…or if the halt to donations was unintended. If so, they will simply ask the donors to re-contact Chris, and will have her number and email on hand to offer them.
 
Easy peasy....but this simple task could help us not leave cash donations on the table!  
 
If you are interested or know someone who is, reply to mbgardam@gmail.com.
 
Research Sleuths
5 hours per week, or as much time as they can give.
Report to Development Chair
Timeframe: One-year Pilot Program
Need: Could use up to 10 people.

 
Your branch may have a member who LOVES to do online research. Think of those who are your data fiends, who are relentless about tracking down information. Please direct them our way.
 
From researching potential foundations that might support our work, to looking up contact information for potential donors, we need their help.  
 
If you are interested or know someone who is, reply to mbgardam@gmail.com.

 

Let's get started! Where's my deerstalker's cap?!!
 

 

Post date: Fri, 07/13/2018 - 07:34

By Leah Bolger
Disarm/End Wars Committee and World Beyond War

WILPF partner organization, World Beyond War (WBW), will be holding their third annual conference on September 21-22 in Toronto, Canada.

The conference will be held at the Ontario College of Art and Design (OCAD) and the theme this year will be war and its relationship to international law. This conference will explore how the rule of law has been used both to restrain war, and to legitimize it—and how we can redesign systems to abolish the institution of war and uphold human and ecological justice.

WBW believes that international law will be a critical component of a new global security strategy to replace the one we have now based on war and militarism. All participants will receive the fourth edition of the World Beyond War seminal publication, A Global Security System: An Alternative to War.

Ray Acheson, Director of Reaching Critical Will, will be a featured speaker as well as Christine Ahn, the founder and international coordinator of Women Cross DMZ. WILPF US is a sponsor of the conference. On the Sunday after the conference, there will be a Blue Scarf March in celebration of the International Day of Peace.

The full program, a list of all speakers, and more information can be found at worldbeyondwar.org.

For more information:

Contact Leah Bolger, Disarm/End Wars Committee and World Beyond War, at leahbolger@comcast.net


 

 

Post date: Fri, 07/13/2018 - 07:21

The Humboldt WILPF Branch with their banner at a local “Families Belong Together” march.

By Sue Hilton
President, Humboldt Branch

We've been pretty busy here in Humboldt this month, gathering for the Poor Peoples Campaign, marching to keep families together, and celebrating the Fourth of July with a book sale supporting peace.

Like many other branches, we have been participating in our local PPC gatherings. Gatherings here were small but committed, and the local organizer really appreciated having us there with our banner. Our local Raging Grannies, which includes several WILPF members, brought song sheets relevant to the monthly topic and encouraged everyone to sing along.

Later in June we joined a much larger "Families Belong Together" local march. Attendance estimates ranged from 1,500 to 3,000, pretty good for our small county. The Raging Grannies sang briefly.

The march was partly sponsored by Centro Del Pueblo, a local immigrant-rights organization which we've supported in various ways for a few years now. One of those ways has been in helping gather signatures for a countywide Sanctuary Ordinance. We heard just after the rally that the Ordinance has qualified for the ballot this fall, so there will be more work to do on that.

We also held our annual Fourth of July Book sale. We made some money, which we'll use for our annual Edilith Eckart Memorial Scholarship grant and for buying the Jane Addams peace prize books for local schools and libraries. And we made connections with lots of people during the event, from a woman who wants to be a Raging Grannie to a local man working on Middle East Issues and folks from the League of Woman Voters.

We appreciate our local community as well as our WILPF community, and we appreciate everything everyone is doing to support people and the planet in very difficult times.

 

Post date: Tue, 07/10/2018 - 09:19

Brenda McGowan, Rockford IL Branch, and Mary Hanson Harrison, WILPF-US President, at the June 23 Poor People’s Campaign Rally in Washington, DC. Photo: Phoebe Sogren.

By Mary Bricker-Jenkins
Chair, ad hoc WILPF4PPC Committee
 
“This is a movement, not a moment,” Rev. Dr. William Barber reminded us as we gathered on the mall with about 5,000 others from around the country at the June 23 rally. That message resonated for us WILPF-US members, who brought with us the energies of the twenty-one branches that had worked in their communities during the forty days to change the nation’s moral narrative.
 
Our delegation was led by our Section President, Mary Hanson-Harrison, who also carried the Iowa state banner. She was joined by Mary Bricker-Jenkins, chair of the ad hoc WILPF4PPC Committee, and our host Moya Atkinson—a once and future WILPFer. (Hosting the president has consequences!)  Katherine Flaherty of the DC/Northern Virginia Branch returned to carry the WILPF PPC banner she’d carried at the launch of the campaign in May. Dianne Blais of Fairfax, VA, having just completed her term as president of the Virginia League of Women Voters, was there to bring her energy to WILPF.  From California we welcomed Phoebe Sogren, and from Rock Creek, Illinois, Beth McGowan with her sister Jill and husband Stan Arnold. Spotting our banner, Judy Elson and friends came to greet us. And we sought out in the crowd our brothers and sisters of the Triangle, NC Branch—many of whom had been arrested earlier in the week with Rev. Barber for “demonstrating without a permit” as they took a spirited but disciplined two-by-two walk from the PPC tent to the capitol.
 
Here’s a collection of photos from the June 23 DC Rally.
 
Like most rallies, this one featured blessings from leaders of many faith traditions, energizing music, and a few—very few—messages from “luminaries.” Unlike most rallies, most of the speakers were people directly affected by the campaign’s current conditions of concern: systemic racism, poverty, environmental devastation, and the war economy. Testimonies illustrated the tragic consequences of inaction and revealed the common roots of these conditions.
 
Meanwhile, rallies were held around the country in support of the June 23rd event, and WILPF-US was active. From Santa Cruz, CA, Randa Solick referred to the week’s ravages of immigrant families as she wrote, “That [WILPF-PPC] banner was so useful! We had about 50 people, good rally, Grannies sang, marched with signs around the town clock/post office, music and relief at doing SOMETHING after this miserable week.”
 Greeley, CO Branch
The Greely, CO Branch held a rally the day before—a warm-up for the DC crowd.

Linda Lemons of the Des Moines Branch reported on their final rally held on June 18: “Sixty or seventy people gathered for our last Poor People’s Campaign Rally on the steps of the Iowa State Capitol. The theme of the rally was ‘A New & Unsettling Force:  Confronting the Distorted Moral Narrative.’ Ministers or speakers from various faiths shared their messages with us. Together we read the Poor People’s Campaign Demands addressing the evils of Systemic Racism, Poverty and Inequality, Ecological Devastation, and the War Economy. Singing songs, clapping and enduring the heat together created a sense of support and unity.” Photos of the Des Moines event can be viewed here.

Three videos from the Des Moines Branch rally can be viewed on YouTube: 

And Cherrill Spencer reported, “We in the Peninsula/Palo Alto branch held our weekly sidewalk demo in support of all the PPC aims on Friday 22nd at our usual very busy intersection in Palo Alto.”  Perseverance furthers!

So where have we been, what have we done, and where do we go from here? Those are the questions that all of us involved in the campaign are asking. As Rev. Dr. Barber said, this is a movement, not a moment. To be a movement, we are obliged to take stock before stepping out again. Have we shifted the conversation in the country and in our communities? Are we clearer about the interlocking conditions of racism, poverty, the war economy, and ecological destruction? Do we have a vision of a future for WILPF, our branches, and our country that will address the needs of those directly affected by these? Do we understand more deeply how they affect each of us?

These are questions that our WILPF-US ad hoc Committee for the PPC will be asking ourselves this month. We ask each member and each branch to reflect on them as well. Our participation in the Poor People’s Campaign has been intended to draw upon and expand our local capacity for nonviolent fusion direct action. Have we developed our skills, leadership, and partnerships through this work?  Are we ready to press our demands?

Will we join Barber and Theoharis, and the thousands of others who stood before the Capitol in DC on June 23rd and promised, “We’ll be back!”?

Post date: Tue, 07/10/2018 - 08:18

By Dawn Nelson
 
WILPF Earth Democracy is developing an agenda to integrate the work from this issue committee into broader WILPF work. WILPF Earth Democracy issue committee member Dawn Nelson will attend the 2018 High-Level Political Forum (HLPF) on Sustainable Development at the United Nations to observe national reports and civil society engagement on sustainable development goals (SDGs) to identify innovative ways for WILPF membership to engage on issues of poverty and environment in the United States.
 
Taking place in mid-July, the 2018 HLPF theme this year is "Transformation towards sustainable and resilient societies," and at the forum 47 nations will review progress towards the SDGS. Achieving the SDGs is a necessary conversation and a moral imperative for any developed nation that allows extreme poverty. The US is one such nation, as detailed in a special UN report recently released about the extensive poverty in the United States, a report that Nikki Haley, US Ambassador to the UN, denied as true.

“For one of the world’s wealthiest countries to have 40 million people living in poverty and over five million living in ‘Third World’ conditions is cruel and inhuman.”
—Philip Alston, UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.

As we bear witness to the impacts of the war economy on society, we must remember that working for peace is also a fight for justice. With the United States pulling out of the Human Rights Council and the denial that poverty exists in the US, it is clear that the American people must remember who we are as a nation.
 
The Poor People’s Campaign clearly articulates a peace economy begins with investing in social and economic wellbeing for all people. Achieving the SDGs is a way to measure that progress and take empowered action. WILPF Earth Democracy will bring the lessons learned at the HLPF to lead discussion on these topics in the coming months. Stay tuned!
 
 

Post date: Tue, 06/05/2018 - 11:00

Joanne Steele, Rick Wayman, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Robin Lloyd, and Ellen Thomas, at Norton's office on May 21, 2018.

By Ellen Thomas
Co-Chair, Disarm/End Wars Committee

Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton met with Robin Lloyd and Ellen Thomas, the co-chairs of the WILPF-US Disarm/End Wars Committee, on May 21, 2018, during Alliance for Nuclear Accountatility DC Days. At this meeting,  Ms. Norton became the first US legislator to sign the “Congressional Pledge,” a US version of the ICAN Parliamentary Pledge, which supports joining the United Nations Treaty to Prohibit Nuclear Weapons.
 
The purpose for meeting with Ms. Norton was to discuss critical revisions to the nuclear weapons abolition bill which she has introduced into the House of Representatives since 1994, incorporating new language about the UN nuclear weapons ban treaty, and fine-tuning other language to make the bill more enticing to other legislators.

This session's bill, HR-3853, aims at redirecting the funds from nuclear weapons production, modernization, etc. to transforming the war economy to provide carbon-free, nuclear free energy, health care, education, environmental restoration, and other human needs to the American people. 

We urge you to send a letter to your Representative now in support of the "Nuclear Weapons Abolition and Economic and Energy Conversion Act" (Support the Nuclear Wapons Ban Treaty). We will send out an eAlert as soon as the bill is reintroduced next session, so everybody can jump into action. 

Contact Ellen Thomas at et@prop1.org for more information

Disarm-End Wars Unites with the Poor People’s Campaign to End the War Economy

The Disarm-End Wars Committee was linked to Week 3 of the Poor People's Campaign, which focused on Militarism and the Proliferation of Gun Violence, during its 40 Days of Moral Action the last week of May (read the PPC’s A Moral Agenda Based on Fundamental Rights).

U.S. Military spending in 2017 was $610 billion dollars (see U.S. Defense Spending Compared to Other Countries), with this figure accounting for 54% of the discretionary budget. The military budget approved for 2018 is $700 billion, and proposed budget for 2019 is $716 billion!  (Bigger is the New Better: The $700 Billion World-Beating 2018 Pentagon Budget).

In 2016, the average income of the CEOs of the top five military contractors was over 18 million dollars (CNBC piece on salaries of defense company CEOs) while  the average earnings of an Army private in combat was $24,000 (Chron article on The Average Salary of a US Soldier).
 
There were 23,000 active duty military families who were on food stamps in 2013, according to the U.S. Census Bureau (When Active-Duty Service Members Struggle to Feed Their Families, an NPR story). Meanwhile, according to Forbes, the Department of Defense cannot account for $21 trillion dollars (Has Our Government Spent 21 Trillion of Our Money Without Telling Us?), an amount that would fund food stamps throughout the United States for 235 years!
 
Addressing this distorted morality by the US government, WILPF-US DISARM-End Wars Committee stands with the Poor People’s Campaign in:

  • demanding an end to military aggression and war-mongering
  • demanding a stop to the privatization of the military budget and any increase in military spending.

 

Post date: Tue, 06/05/2018 - 09:56

Katherine Flaherty of WILPF DC Metro, Camille Dantzel , a PhD candidate at Howard University, and WILPF US Board member Marybeth Gardam joined hundreds on the Capitol lawn in DC at the kickoff launch for the Poor People's Campaign on May 14, 2018. They held the WILPF4PPC Banner aloft and marched to 1st Street where they witnessed around 150 arrests.

From Boston to Sacramento, Des Moines to Tucson, New Jersey to North Carolina, WILPF members rallied, marched, and engaged in civil disobedience in support of the first two weeks of the Poor People's Campaign’s 40 Days of Action. Week One’s theme was “Somebody’s Hurting Our People: Children, Women, and People with Disabilities in Poverty” and Week Two’s theme was “Linking Systemic Racism and Poverty: Voting Rights, Immigration, Xenophobia, Islamophobia, and the Mistreatment of Indigenous Communities.”

WILPF branches and members have committed to continuing to participate in week three and four activities, with weeks five and six still to come. The campaign’s 40 Days of Action will finish with a Global Day of Solidarity and Sending Forth Call to Action Mass Rally in Washington DC on June 23.

Here is a summary of reports from weeks one and two:

Several California branches reported involvement, including Sacramento, Monterey, Oakland, and Fresno. The Sacramento Branch reported around 200 people at the California State Capitol building at the first event. According to a WILPF participant, “The morning was devoted to training for those who were going to participate in the direct action, then sign making, with a rally scheduled for 2pm which started ON THE DOT (first time in my life I’ve seen that!) and ended at 3pm for the direct action to begin.  Beautifully organized.  I was really impressed with the signs.”

From Monterey, it was reported that Judy Karas attended the Friends Committee on Legislation Lobby Day at the state capitol in Sacramento. We supported SB 1392, a measure to get rid of the extra year enhancements for prisoners' sentences, SB 982, which would increase the Earned Income Tax Credits for those in poverty in the state, and supported AB 3131, which requires local governing bodies to have to discuss and approve any purchase of military equipment by sherriff/police depts., etc. Several other bills were also discussed, including the concept of an oil severance tax for California, and we had good talks with the legislators' reps. We learned about how bills progress, what the opposition to key bills is and what the opposition's arguments are. Judy Karas writes, “I urge that WILPF members set up appointments to meet with their elected officials--either in state capitals or at home. Raise issues related to the PPC, as we did.”

At a later State Capitol event in Sacramento, Oakland Branch WILPF member Phoebe Anne Sorgen was arrested and provided the following account:

I was released yesterday around noon after 15 hours in custody. The first hours with the highway patrol were rather comfy. Not so for the many hours in the filthy county jail, partly because of sleep deprivation and because we did not sing in jail (having been advised that doing so might delay our release) and the air quality and crowding in jail was tough, and the cops nasty. In my experience (atypical as I'm white), cops have treated inmates of conscience with more respect than other prisoners. Not this time because they wanted to discourage us from returning. The cop who released me said so. I'm grateful that they "kept it real" and that I had a home to return to, did not have to post bail, had a public defender and support team waiting outside, and if necessary can dip into retirement savings for the five misdemeanors they charged me with. So I'm not complaining. Just a heads up that—while there was no physical brutality—the most frail amongst us may not want to risk arrest in this case.There are other important ways to get involved, such as supporting those who choose to risk arrest. Large attendance at the Sacramento rallies is much needed this Tues and the following 3 Mondays. (Good to see Tova at the rally.) If you plan to risk arrest, get adequate sleep the night before (my only regret) and have a good breakfast.

The Fresno Branch sent word out to partner groups in our peace, social justice, and faith communities that we will hold a weekly demonstration in front of our Federal Courthouse building. Many involved people in our area are gathering in Sacramento at our State Capital, but we wanted to be sure to have a local action for those who cannot make to Sacramento. About 25 people gathered and our local Raging Grannies sang three songs. Our local branch’s Legislative Committee has been preparing a letter regarding Gaza which we will be delivering in person to our Representatives offices. Our Committee chooses a topic each month, so we will incorporate the PPC Moral Revival issues into our next letters.

Humboldt organized a small contingent of Raging Grannies and reported that future events would include speakers and media coverage.

Des Moines, IA, reported on a week two event: Showing up For Racial Justice (SURJ) took the lead on organizing an event that started our State Justice Building. Over 60 people came together, including at least 7 WILPF members. We began our rally by singing songs, led by a member of local clergy. We then walked to a monument, titled Shattering the Silence, which was built to memorialize when Iowa, in 1837, even before it became a state, freed a slave and established the precedent that all people would be free in Iowa. We also sang some songs and then a SURJ member lead us in making a public commitment to not be silent when we saw racial injustices. We then marched back to the Justice Building singing a song reclaiming our dignity and humanity. WILPF members, along with members from Catholic Peace Ministry, Methodist Federation for Social Action, Veterans for Peace, Iowa Peace Network, and a member from the Poor People’s Campaign are preparing an event for next Tuesday. In the process we are building our Poor People’s Campaign Coalition in Iowa.

About 30 people including 10 Raging Grannies took part in the Tucson, AZ, WILPF and friends rally for the Mother's Day kick off of the Poor People's Campaign in front of the federal building. Our new WILPF banner wasn't ready but we used the "Peace and Planet Before Profit" one and several people made posters: “Fight Poverty Not the Poor,” “End Systemic Poverty in the Wealthiest Nation in the World.” One friend had Facebook Live going during the rally.

At least one Tucson activist is planning to be in D.C. and committed to taking part in the civil disobedience arrests. A teach-in was held later in the week at the Global Justice Center on the subject "Someone is Hurting Our People," focusing on Women, LBGTQ, Children, and those who are disabled. For week two, WILPF, Code Pink, Veterans For Peace, and Raging Grannies held our Moral Monday/Poor People's Campaign event in front of the Federal Courthouse as a vigil against "Operation Streamline" during the afternoon rush hour. We got lots honks of support from cars and interest from people passing by. A teach in later that week was planned with a Palestinian speaker coming from the group “Southern AZ to Palestine Solidarity Alliance.”

In Boston, MA, a PPC kick off rally was held at the State House with over 200 participants. At 2 pm, a five-piece band walked up to the House steps followed by 75 people holding signs. Twenty-four more people were trained in civil disobedience just before this, making a total of 180 thus far. The talks were inspiring, moving and informative. When the speakers finished sharing, members sang with the band then followed them to the head of State Street and Beacon Street. There 100 people stopped, blocking traffic, singing and chanting for more than one hour. Twelve people were ready to go with the police but the police did not bother them. Another event was held across from the State House for week two, and more than 225 people arrived to listen to musicians, singers, and several speakers representing Blacks, immigrants, Muslims, and indigenous Americans. After the rally more than half of the attendees went into the State House for a teach in, and 20 people trained in CD were ready to stay later than 5 pm when the doors are closed to the public.

On May 14th, the first week of the PPC theme, "Our People: Children, Women and people with disabilities living in Poverty,” the Essex County, NJ branch met at the United Methodist Church in Trenton for more updated training at 11am. About 45 people were in attendance. After a few songs, we were asked to join several groups according to our interest and to brainstorm our roles within the rally. By 1:30 pm, we were ready to congregate outside the church with our signs and posters. As we marched toward our destination, the State House Annex Steps, we were encouraged to sing along to "Everybody's got a right", "When the poor have won their rights", "This little light of mine", 'It's gone on far too long.” We arrived at the State House to find an additional 30+ supporters already waiting. PPC began the ceremony with singing, two women told their stories of hardship within our system, and a member of the clergy spoke on poverty. We left the plaza toward the street, again led by the singers to sing. We stopped at the sidewalk and watched the nonviolent direct action supporters form a line, holding signs and posters in the street. They stopped traffic in both directions, and did not speak to the police except through a pastor (mediator). At first there was one patrol person, then two, and so on until they asked the resistance leaders to go with them to the station.

See the Triangle Branch, NC, eNews item for a week one report in which three WILPF members were arrested. At a week two event, several more WILPF members—Brenda Hines, Mary Jenne, Ruth Zalph, and Lucy Lewis—were among the 13 persons arrested and charged with second degree trespassing when they refused to leave the State Capitol after being asked to. More than 150 people had gathered in Raleigh opposite the State Capitol to hear a dozen powerful speakers address the week's theme, “Linking Systemic Racism and Poverty.” Following the rally, 100 rally participants moved into the Capitol to the offices of Senate Leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore to find closed doors. When they were refused meetings, those gathered outside read their demands—including what can be done to address systemic racism in areas including education, criminal justice, environmental degradation, voting and elections, immigration in NC, and Islamophobia—while the group chanted and sang. By midnight the protestors had been released with orders for court dates.

View a slideshow of photos from some of the WILPF branches PPC activities here.

Please continue to write summaries and take photos of your actions, and send them to nancytprice39@gmail.com with the subject line “PPC photos.” Include a caption and photo credit. Your action can be PPC-specific or include the PPC in your other WILPF-US program events.

More extensive accounts of Branch PPC involvement will appear in the next issue of Peace & Freedom, and in the July eNews.

 

 

Post date: Tue, 06/05/2018 - 09:23

By Zala Zbogar
Congress Coordinator (Geneva)

We are excited to gather with all of you in Accra, Ghana, for The 32nd WILPF Triennial International Congress to be held August 20-22. This year's Congress is the first to be hosted in Africa. With expanding WILPF membership in the region and our growing community, it is not to be missed!

The theme of the Congress is "Building a Feminist Peace Movement".

To help you prepare, here are some important pieces of practical information and key dates, including activities that will be taking place before the Congress.

Registration

The deadline for all registrations is June 15. 

All delegates and alternates were asked to register by June 1, 2018. If you are in this group and haven't yet registered, please do so immediately and forward the receipts to Chris Wilbeck at chris.wilpf@gmail.com

Once you have registered, you will most likely have to apply for a visa, for which WILPF International and WILPF Ghana will provide you a visa invitation letter.

Don't forget to check if you are up to date on your vaccines!   

Congress Website

Click here for the Congress website. Practical information, as well as supporting documents and registration, is available on the Congress website on the MyWILPF forum. Don't have an account or forgot your password? Please contact membership@wilpf.ch.

Key Dates

Friday, August 17: Suggested arrival date for delegates

Saturday, August 18: “Feminist Peace Movement in Africa”—pre-Congress Public Forum. This forum will look at the historic and current realities of women working for peace across Africa. There will be space to network, connect, and strengthen links within and across the movements for peace. There are no registration fees attached to this event and all WILPF members are warmly invited to attend. More information to come on the website!

Sunday, August 19: Gertrude Baer seminar and pre-Congress IB meeting.

Organized by Young WILPF Ghana, the Gertrud Baer seminar will take place at the University of Ghana. The seminar is structured so that newcomers to WILPF can gather, learn more about the organization, and thoroughly discuss a variety of topics.

Gertrud Baer was born in Germany and joined the Suffrage Movement in 1908, when she was eighteen years old. After German women won the vote in 1918, Baer devoted all her energy and work to the aims of WILPF. When the Second World War ended, she moved to Geneva to be the representative of WILPF at the UN, and her permanent presence there promoted the image of WILPF within the international community. She performed this task until 1972. This seminar was named after her because of her many contributions to WILPF, which began at a young age.

Monday, August 20-Wednesday, August 22: Congress Meeting Dates

Thursday, August 23: Suggested departure date for delegates

Other Opportunities to Engage

At Congress in Accra, workshops will be an important activity to find new grounds for collaboration and strengthen our WILPF community.

We have mapped possible themes that could be developed during the workshops at Congress based on the demands from Sections and the WILPF Sections Speak report. We will be in touch shortly with a survey so that you can let us know of your top five preferences, or suggest another topic.

There will also be space to contribute to the marketplace, evening activities, and more, to take advantage of our time together. More information on this coming soon!

See you in Accra!

If You Can’t Travel to Ghana

From WILPF-US President Mary Hanson Harrison: In Ghana, we will be making a decision on the future of WILPF regarding the Constitution and By-Laws that is very important to our vision and mission! If you can't come to Ghana, your input on the reorganization plan is important. Please review and compare the two plans and send your remarks and feedback to me at harrison0607@msn.com.

March 18, 2018 version
June 4, 2018 version

 

 

 

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