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Vol. XVII,
No.1 Fall, 2002
Dialoguing
Letter From Eva Blenesi
on
Dangers of Our Time
Dear Stephen,
I am extremely grateful for sending me over the Spring Issue
of the Nonviolent Change. Indeed, it is vital nowadays
to deal with all sensitive issues that journal tackles very rightfully.
Also as a former fellow of the Global Security Fellows Initiative
Program from Cambridge, also a participant of the André
Salama international Workshop from Haifa, or as a scholar dealing
with ethno-political conflicts and more important as civic human
rights activist who has been long time engaged in promotion of
the culture of peace, of accommodation of differences and mutual
understanding I can fully associate myself with the spirit of
your publication and I consider very worth while and necessary,
both as a forum of theoretical debates and a means to let a wider
public know about action oriented plans.
I must tell you that I have first hand experience growing up
in a dictatorship (Romania), then emigrating to Hungary in early
1989 I had the chance to experience a different system, also
because of travelling a lot in different countries in the West.
However, my experience in the last 12 years taught me that democracy
can be as dangerous as dictatorship in terms of its threat to
basic values. The trap is that the dichotomy of black and white
is being replaced by a more nuanced, thus more sophisticated
and hypocritical surface thus the dangers are not recognizable
so easily. My first hand experiences and my research findings
also reinforced my conviction of how anti-democratic forces can
use democratic institutions, individuals for unlawful, un-democratic
purposes. In sum, basic values as well as meta values are constantly
challenged, scholars and people who have deep concern about these
problem are not listened to and valued almost at all, or in such
an extent as they should. The rise of the right is a real danger
worldwide, likewise and the authoritarian, non-cooperative leadership
type who is engaged in defending the country's interest against
the alien, the alterity, the terrorist. I think there is a big
crises on all levels, and many self-appointed defenders know
how to benefit of the uncertainties on the cost of thousands
and thousands. It is time that people realize all these dangers
and seriously engage themselves in developing techniques both
for rescuing and preserving vital and spiritual values.
Thank you again for sending me the copy.
Lots of regards,
Eva Blenesi
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Letter Peace
Action Education Fund, of April 4, on
The Israeli Palestinian
Conflict
The Peace Action Education Fund
welcomes President Bush's call for Israel to withdraw from the
Palestinian cities it has overtaken in recent days, as well as
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's agreement that U.S. envoy
General Anthony Zinni will be allowed to meet with Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat. We also welcome President Bush's plan to
send Secretary of State Colin Powell to the region. The Administration's
involvement in resolving this terrible conflict is both needed
and long overdue, particularly as the United States is the major
foreign and military aid donor to Israel.
"The President must also
turn his attention to the role that U.S.-supplied weaponry has
played in the conflict. The Peace Action Education Fund has long
advocated a curb on arms transfers, such as the implementation
of an arms trade code of conduct. Arming a party to a conflict
raises the level of lethality, taking lives instead of addressing
root causes of the problems. We renew our call for a halt to
arms sales to the Middle East.
According to the Friends Committee
on National Legislation, U.S.-supplied attack helicopters have
been used to carry out extrajudicial executions, disperse demonstrators
and target residential areas. All these actions are in violation
of international laws and norms. There are reports of U.S. helicopters
and F-16 fighter jets being used to attack Palestinian radio
stations, President Arafat's headquarters, and Palestinian Authority
police and security buildings. U.S. laser guided missiles have
been used against civilians. Other equipment includes many thousands
of rifles, grenade launchers and ammunition. U.S. weapons and
military aid have only added fuel to the fire of this terrible
situation.
Violence has also been used by
the Israeli Defense Forces against international human rights
and peace activists. Attacking unarmed civilians is never acceptable.
The courageous work of these monitors, as well as that of the
Israeli and Palestinian peace movements, need support. They represent
the best chance for a brighter future.
While the President's announcement
gives some hope that the current level of bloodshed will be stopped,
the situation remains grave. The United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights and the international human rights community
have called for human rights monitoring, cooperation with humanitarian
agencies, an end to detentions of medical personnel and attacks
on their facilities, and free access of the media. We call on
the President to make respect of human rights for all Palestinians
and Israelis a top priority.
We will continue to monitor this
situation closely and will send action alerts as appropriate.
For immediate action, see the
Friends Committee on National Legislation's web site: http://www.fcnl.org/
Tracy Moavero
Policy Director, Peace Action Education Fund, 1819 H St. NW #425,
Washington DC 20006 (202)862 9740 x3004, tmoavero@peace-action.org,
http://www.peace-action.org/.
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Letter from Wade
Davis on
We Need A Global
Declaration of Interdependence
(Reprinted from
the The Globe & Mail , July 6, 2002 and provided by
June Zaccone, National Jobs for All Coalition, ecojmz@earthlink.net).
On Sept. 11, in the most successful act of asymmetrical warfare
since the Trojan horse, the world came home to America. "Why
do they hate us?" asked George W. Bush. This was not a rhetorical
question. Americans really wanted to know -- and still do, for
their innocence had been shattered. The President suggested that
the reason was the very greatness of America, as if the liberal
institutions of government had somehow provoked homicidal rage
in fanatics incapable of embracing freedom. Other, dissenting
voices claimed that, to the contrary, the problem lay in the
tendency of the United States to support, notably in the Middle
East, repressive regimes whose values are antithetical to the
ideals of American democracy. Both sides were partly right, but
both overlooked the deeper issue, in part because they persisted
in examining the world through American eyes.
The United States has always looked
inward. A nation born in isolation cannot be expected to be troubled
by the election of a President who has rarely been abroad, or
a Congress in which 25 per cent of members do not hold passports.
Wealth too can be blinding. Each
year, Americans spend as much on lawn maintenance as the government
of India collects in federal tax revenue. The 30 million African-Americans
collectively control more wealth than the 30 million Canadians.
A country that effortlessly supports a defense budget larger
than the entire economy of Australia does not easily grasp the
reality of a world in which 1.3 billion people get by on less
than $1 a day. A new and original culture that celebrates the
individual at the expense of family and community -- a stunning
innovation in human affairs, the sociological equivalent of the
splitting of the atom -- has difficulty understanding that in
most of the world the community still prevails, for the destiny
of the individual remains inextricably linked to the fate of
the collective.
Since 1945, even as the United
States came to dominate the geopolitical scene, the American
people resisted engagement with the world, maintaining an almost
willful ignorance of what lay beyond their borders. Such cultural
myopia, never flattering, was rendered obsolete in an instant
on the morning Sept. 11. In the immediate wake of the tragedy,
I was often asked as an anthropologist for explanations. Condemning
the attacks in the strongest possible terms, I nevertheless encouraged
people to consider the forces that gave rise to Osama bin Laden's
movement. While it would be reassuring to view al-Qaeda as an
isolated phenomenon, I feared that the organization was a manifestation
of a deeper and broader conflict, a clash between those who have
and those who have nothing. Mr. bin Laden himself may be wealthy,
but the resentment upon which al-Qaeda feeds springs most certainly
from the condition of the dispossessed.
I also encouraged my American
friends to turn the anthropological lens upon our own culture,
if only to catch a glimpse of how we might appear to people born
in other lands. I shared a colleague's story from her time living
among the Bedouin in Tunisia in the 1980s, just as television
reached their remote villages. Entranced and shocked by episodes
of the soap opera Dallas,the astonished farm women asked her,
"Is everyone in your country as mean as J.R.?"
For much of the Middle East, in
particular, the West is synonymous not only with questionable
values and a flood of commercial products, but also with failure.
Gamel Abdul Nasser's notion of a Pan-Arabic state was based on
a thoroughly Western and secular model of socialist development,
an economic and political dream that collapsed in corruption
and despotism. The shah of Iran provoked the Iranian revolution
by thrusting not the Koran but modernity (as he saw it) down
the throats of his people.
The Western model of development has failed in the Middle East
and elsewhere in good measure because it has been based on the
false promise that people who follow its prescriptive dictates
will in time achieve the material prosperity enjoyed by a handful
of nations of the West. Even were this possible, it is not at
all clear that it would be desirable. To raise consumption of
energy and materials throughout the world to Western levels,
given current population projections, would require the resources
of four planet Earths by the year 2100. To do so with the one
world we have would imply so severely compromising the biosphere
that the Earth would be unrecognizable. In reality, development
for the vast majority of the peoples of the world has been a
process in which the individual is torn from his past and propelled
into an uncertain future only to secure a place on the bottom
rung of an economic ladder that goes nowhere.
Consider the key indices of development. An increase in life
expectancy suggests a drop in infant mortality, but reveals nothing
of the quality of the lives led by those who survive childhood.
Globalization is celebrated with iconic intensity. But what does
it really mean? The Washington Post reports that in Lahore, one
Muhammad Saeed earns $88 (U.S.) a month stitching shirts and
jeans for a factory that supplies Gap and Eddie Bauer. He and
five family members share a single bed in one room off a warren
of alleys strewn with human waste and refuse. Yet, earning three
times as much as at his last job, he is the poster child of globalization.
Even as fundamental a skill as literacy does not necessarily
realize its promise. In northern Kenya, for example, tribal youths
placed by their families into parochial schools do acquire a
modicum of literacy, but in the process also learn to have contempt
for their ancestral way of life. They enter school as nomads;
they leave as clerks, only to join an economy with a 50-per-cent
unemployment rate for high-school graduates. Unable to find work,
incapable of going home, they drift to the slums of Nairobi to
scratch a living from the edges of a cash economy.
Without doubt, images of comfort
and wealth, of technological sophistication, have a magnetic
allure. Any job in the city may seem better than backbreaking
labor in sun-scorched fields. Entranced by the promise of the
new, people throughout the world have in many instances voluntarily
turned their backs on the old. The consequences can be profoundly
disappointing. The fate of the vast majority of those who sever
their ties with their traditions will not be to attain the prosperity
of the West, but to join the legions of urban poor, trapped in
squalor, struggling to survive. As cultures wither away, individuals
remain, often shadows of their former selves, caught in time,
unable to return to the past, yet denied any real possibility
of securing a place in the world whose values they seek to emulate
and whose wealth they long to acquire.
Anthropology suggests that when peoples and cultures are squeezed,
extreme ideologies sometimes emerge, inspired by strange and
unexpected beliefs. These revitalization movements may be benign,
but more typically prove deadly both to their adherents and to
those they engage. China's Boxer Rebellion of 1900 sought not
only to end the opium trade and expel foreign legations. The
Boxers arose in response to the humiliation of an ancient nation,
long the center of the known world, reduced within a generation
to servitude by unknown barbarians. It was not enough to murder
the missionaries. In a raw, atavistic gesture, the Boxers dismembered
them and displayed their heads on pikes.
However unique its foundation, al-Qaeda is nevertheless reminiscent
of such revitalization movements. Torn between worlds, Mr. bin
Laden and his followers invoke a feudal past that never was in
order to rationalize their own humiliation and hatred. They are
a cancer within the culture of Islam, neither fully of the faith
nor totally apart from it. Like any malignant growth they must
be severed from the body and destroyed. We must also strive to
understand the movement's roots, for the chaotic conditions of
disintegration and disenfranchisement that led to al-Qaeda are
found among disaffected populations throughout the world.
In Nepal, rural farmers spout rhetoric not heard since the death
of Stalin. In Peru, the Shining Path turned to Mao. Had they
invoked instead Tupac Amaru, the 18th-century indigenous rebel,
scion of the Inca, and had they been able to curb their reflexive
disdain for the very indigenous people they claimed to represent,
they might well have set the nation aflame, as was their intent.
Lima, a city of 400,000 in 1940 is today home to 9 million, and
for the majority it is a sea of misery in a sun scorched desert.
We live in an age of disintegration. At the beginning of the
20th century there were 60 nation states. Today there are 190,
many poor and unstable. The real story lies in the cities. Throughout
the world, urbanization, with all its fickle and forlorn promises,
has drawn people by the millions into squalor. The populations
of Mexico City and Sao Paulo are unknown, probably immeasurable.
In Asia there are cities of 10 million people that most of us
in the West cannot name.
The nation state, as Harvard sociologist Daniel Bell wrote, has
become too small for the big problems of the world and too big
for the little problems of the world. Outside the major industrial
nations, globalization has not brought integration and harmony,
but rather a firestorm of change that has swept away languages
and cultures, ancient skills and visionary wisdom. Of the 6,000
languages spoken today, fully half are not being taught to children.
Within a single generation, we are witnessing the loss of half
humanity's social, spiritual and intellectual legacy. This is
the essential backdrop of our era.
In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, I was asked at a lecture
in Los Angeles to name the seminal event of the 20th century.
Without hesitation I suggested the assassination of Archduke
Ferdinand in 1914. Two bullets sparked a war that destroyed all
faith in progress and optimism, the hallmarks of the Victorian
age, and left in its wake the nihilism and alienation of a century
that birthed Hitler, Mao, Stalin and another devastating global
conflict that did not fully end until the collapse of the Soviet
empire in 1989.
The question then turned to 9/11,
and it struck me that 100 years from now that fateful date may
well loom as the defining moment of this new century, the day
when two worlds, long kept apart by geography and circumstance,
came together in violent conflict. If there is one lesson to
be learned from 9/11, it is that power does not translate into
security. With an investment of $500,000, far less than the price
of one of the baggage scanners now deployed in airports across
the United States, a small band of fanatics killed some 2,800
innocent people. The economic cost may well be incalculable.
Generally, nations declare wars on nations; Mr. Bush has declared
war on a technique and there is no exit strategy.
Global media have woven the world into a single sphere. Evidence
of the disproportionate affluence of the West is beamed into
villages and urban slums in every nation, in every province,
24 hours a day. Baywatch is the most popular television show
in New Guinea. Tribesmen from the mountainous heartland of an
island that embraces 2,000 distinct languages walk for days to
catch the latest episode.
The voices of the poor, who deal each moment with the consequences
of environmental degradation, political corruption, overpopulation,
the gross distortion in the distribution of wealth and the consumption
of resources, who share few of the material benefits of modernity,
will no longer be silent.
True peace and security for the 21st century will only come about
when we find a way to address the underlying issues of disparity,
dislocation and dispossession that have provoked the madness
of our age. What we desperately need is a global acknowledgment
of the fact that no people and no nation can truly prosper unless
the bounty of our collective ingenuity and opportunities are
available and accessible to all.
We must aspire to create a new international spirit of pluralism,
a true global democracy in which unique cultures, large and small,
are allowed the right to exist, even as we learn and live together,
enriched by the deepest reaches of our imaginings. We need a
global declaration of interdependence. In the wake of Sept. 11
this is not idle or naïve rhetoric, but rather a matter
of survival.
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Namaste from Deepak Chopra
Date: Fri, Sep 6, 2002, 12:54 PM
Dear Friends,
I recently attended a conference on peace and human progress
hosted by Nobel Peace Laureate Oscar Arias and the Senate of
Puerto Rico. The conference was attended by several other Nobel
Laureates and also representatives from various governments.
I had the privilege of giving a keynote speech at this conference
and in the final meeting agreed to play the pivotal role in the
creation of a global strategic alliance for peace and human progress.
I think it is very important and urgent that we address the moral
issues of our time. The moral issues of our time are not the
extramarital sexual adventures of our politicians nor the eating
disorders and eccentricities of Hollywood celebrities. The important
moral issues of our time are war, weapons, violence in all its
forms, economic disparities, extreme and abject poverty, ecological
devastation, prejudice, racism, and sexism. Every 2
seconds somewhere in the world a child dies from hunger or other
preventable diseases. Less than 4% of the world's annual military
expenditures would cure this situation. Since the end of World
War II, more than 32 million civilians, mostly women, old men
and children have perished as a result of hatred and ignorance
and the sale of weapons sold by merchants of death and destruction.
By the year 2000, the military expenditures of the world were
equivalent to 35% of total yearly income of nearly two billion
people. Our hearts seem to be immune to the procession of televised
imagery that continuously portrays a strange mixture of fiction,
news and advertisement that constantly feed our addictions to
adrenaline.
Organized religion has failed to achieve its highest purpose
because it has so often fostered divisiveness and xenophobia,
at times manipulating people through fear and violence. Unfortunately,
our religions are the legacies of our tribal ancestors whose
ideologies and conceptual frameworks have generally failed to
progress with our understanding of modern cosmology or evolution.
Similarly, our current state of evolution demands that we re
examine our notions of nationalism. Tribalism has taken on the
garb of nationalism so that mass murder during wartime is rewarded
with medals of honor. Einstein called "nationalism an infantile
disease, the measles of humanity." Erich Fromm said, "Nationalism
is our form of incest, is our idolatry, is our insanity. Patriotism
is its cult." [Flag waving patriotism is devisive.] These
are harsh words but unless we are prepared to honestly look at
our outmoded beliefs, our unquestioned ideologies and ourselves,
there may be no hope for us.
In regards to the Chopra Foundation, the new strategic plan is
rapidly taking place. A number of notable goals and objectives
are being considered. For example, the Chopra Foundation is going
to take a leading role in the creation of the Global Strategic
Alliance for Peace and Human Progress so that we can influence
public opinion and ultimately public policy. We need a critical
mass of people that will no longer participate or tolerate a
culture of violence that is based on profound indifference to
the pain of our fellow beings and lack of respect for life. It
took a critical mass of awareness to ban cigarette smoking in
public places. Today the relatives of people who have died from
cigarettes are suing tobacco companies. It is quite conceivable
that the day may come when the manufacturers of weapons will
be held accountable when an innocent child dies at the hands
of a gun. Today governments label the deaths of thousands of
innocent people as "collateral damage" so that we can
numb ourselves to the anguish and images of horror through the
use of words. The only way to create the critical mass of awareness
is to create a strategic global alliance of people and organizations
that are contributing to spiritual growth as well as the betterment
of humanity and the environment. Many Nobel Laureates, representatives
of international humanitarian agencies, and influential people
from governments around the world have greeted this idea with
great enthusiasm. The critical mass would be created through
a very concrete engagement of educational institutions, the entertainment
industry, news media, and information networks, including the
Internet. Some of the best-known representatives in the entertainment
industry and international news media have already agreed to
participate.
To restate our goal --- we want to create a critical mass of
awareness that influences public opinion and policy so that we
can take remedial measures and create a new culture where violence,
weapons, poverty, ecological and
environmental degradation and devastation can be addressed as
the major epidemics of our time that need to be addressed with
great urgency. In this process it will be important not to think
in terms of an us versus them psychology. There is only one of
us - we are one body in one world. In the tangled hierarchy sinner
and saint, divine and diabolical, sacred and profane are different
faces of our collective Being. Therefore angry activism driven
by rage, however justified it seems, is really not going to work.
I believe that the tangled hierarchy wants us to move to the
next state of evolution and very strongly desires us to take
that quantum leap of creativity.
There are many other exciting things on the horizon. I hope you
will participate in some way by becoming a voice in our Foundation.
If you wish to participate in any way in this endeavor, please
send an email to foundation@chopra.com <mailto:foundation@chopra.com>
with your ideas and how you would like to participate. The world's
consciousness is demanding an authentic spirituality that is
based on a scientific understanding of the domain of awareness
where we experience our universality. This is none other than
our inner self. It has been waiting patiently, inviting us to
enter the luminous mystery in which all things are created, nurtured,
and renewed. When we enter this luminous mystery of existence,
we experience great wonder, humility and love. Where there is
wonder humility and love, there is the opportunity for healing.
Namaste,
Deepak Chopra
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"Not In
Our Name Statement" From Prominent Americans On The War
On Terror
Reprinted from
The Guardian, Friday June 14, 2002 and provided by the
PJSA list serve
Let it not be said that people in the United States did nothing
when their government declared a war without limit and instituted
stark new measures of repression. The signers of this statement
call on the people of the U.S. to resist the policies and overall
political direction that have emerged since September 11 and
which pose grave dangers to the people of the world.
We believe that peoples and nations
have the right to determine their own destiny, free from military
coercion by great powers. We believe that all persons detained
or prosecuted by the US government should have the same rights
of due process. We believe that questioning, criticism, and dissent
must be valued and protected. We understand that such rights
and values are always contested and must be fought for.
We believe that people of conscience
must take responsibility for what their own governments do -
we must first of all oppose the injustice that is done in our
own name. Thus we call on all Americans to resist the war and
repression that has been loosed on the world by the Bush administration.
It is unjust, immoral and illegitimate. We choose to make common
cause with the people of the world.
We too watched with shock the
horrific events of September 11. We too mourned the thousands
of innocent dead and shook our heads at the terrible scenes of
carnage - even as we recalled similar scenes in Baghdad, Panama
City and, a generation ago, Vietnam. We too joined the anguished
questioning of millions of Americans who asked why such a thing
could happen.
But the mourning had barely begun,
when the highest leaders of the land unleashed a spirit of revenge.
They put out a simplistic script of "good v evil" that
was taken up by a pliant and intimidated media. They told us
that asking why these terrible events had happened verged on
treason. There was to be no debate. There were by definition
no valid political or moral questions. The only possible answer
was to be war abroad and repression at home.
In our name, the Bush administration,
with near unanimity from Congress, not only attacked Afghanistan
but arrogated to itself and its allies the right to rain down
military force anywhere and anytime. The brutal repercussions
have been felt from the Philippines to Palestine. The government
now openly prepares to wage all-out war on Iraq - a country which
has no connection to the horror of September 11. What kind of
world will this become if the US government has a blank cheque
to drop commandos, assassins, and bombs wherever it wants?
In our name the government has
created two classes of people within the US: those to whom the
basic rights of the US legal system are at least promised, and
those who now seem to have no rights at all. The government rounded
up more than 1,000 immigrants and detained them in secret and
indefinitely. Hundreds have been deported and hundreds of others
still languish today in prison. For the first time in decades,
immigration procedures single out certain nationalities for unequal
treatment.
In our name, the government has
brought down a pall of repression over society. The president's
spokesperson warns people to "watch what they say".
Dissident artists, intellectuals, and professors find their views
distorted, attacked, and suppressed. The so-called Patriot Act
- along with a host of similar measures on the state level -
gives police sweeping new powers of search and seizure, supervised,
if at all, by secret proceedings before secret courts.
In our name, the executive has
steadily usurped the roles and functions of the other branches
of government. Military tribunals with lax rules of evidence
and no right to appeal to the regular courts are put in place
by executive order. Groups are declared "terrorist"
at the stroke of a presidential pen.
We must take the highest officers
of the land seriously when they talk of a war that will last
a generation and when they speak of a new domestic order. We
are confronting a new openly imperial policy towards the world
and a domestic policy that manufactures and manipulates fear
to curtail rights.
There is a deadly trajectory to
the events of the past months that must be seen for what it is
and resisted. Too many times in history people have waited until
it was too late to resist. President Bush has declared: "You're
either with us or against us." Here is our answer: We refuse
to allow you to speak for all the American people. We will not
give up our right to question. We will not hand over our consciences
in return for a hollow promise of safety. We say not in our name.
We refuse to be party to these wars and we repudiate any inference
that they are being waged in our name or for our welfare. We
extend a hand to those around the world suffering from these
policies; we will show our solidarity in word and deed.
We who sign this statement call
on all Americans to join together to rise to this challenge.
We applaud and support the questioning and protest now going
on, even as we recognise the need for much, much more to actually
stop this juggernaut. We draw inspiration from the Israeli reservists
who, at great personal risk, declare "there is a limit"
and refuse to serve in the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.
We draw on the many examples of
resistance and conscience from the past of the US: from those
who fought slavery with rebellions and the underground railroad,
to those who defied the Vietnam war by refusing orders, resisting
the draft, and standing in solidarity with resisters. Let us
not allow the watching world to despair of our silence and our
failure to act. Instead, let the world hear our pledge: we will
resist the machinery of war and repression and rally others to
do everything possible to stop it.
From: Michael Albert, Laurie Anderson,
Edward Asner, actor, Russell Banks, writer, Rosalyn Baxandall,
historian, Jessica Blank, actor/playwright, Medea Benjamin, Global
Exchange, William Blum, author, Theresa Bonpane, executive director,
Office of the Americas, Blase Bonpane, director, Office of the
Americas, Fr Bob Bossie, SCJ, Leslie Cagan, Henry Chalfant,author/filmmaker,
Bell Chevigny, writer, Paul Chevigny, professor of law, NYU,
Noam Chomsky, Stephanie Coontz, historian, Evergreen State College,
Kia Corthron, playwright, Kevin Danaher, Global Exchange, Ossie
Davis, Mos Def, Carol Downer, board of directors, Chico (CA)
Feminist Women's Health Centre, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, professor,
California State University, Hayward, Eve Ensler, Leo Estrada,
UCLA professor, Urban Planning, John Gillis, writer, professor
of history, Rutgers, Jeremy Matthew Glick, editor of Another
World Is Possible, Suheir Hammad, writer, David Harvey, distinguished
professor of anthropology, CUNY Graduate Centre, Rakaa Iriscience,
hip hop artist, Erik Jensen, actor/playwright, Casey Kasem, Robin
DG Kelly, Martin Luther King III, president, Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, Barbara Kingsolver, C Clark Kissinger,
Refuse & Resist!, Jodie Kliman, psychologist, Yuri Kochiyama,
activist, Annisette & Thomas Koppel, singers/composers, Tony
Kushner, James Lafferty, executive director, National Lawyers
Guild/LA, Ray Laforest, Haiti Support Network, Rabbi Michael
Lerner, editor, Tikkun magazine, Barbara Lubin, Middle East Childrens
Alliance, Staughton Lynd, Anuradha Mittal, co director, Institute
for Food and Development Policy/Food First, Malaquias Montoya,
visual artist, Robert Nichols, writer, Rev E Randall Osburn,
executive vice president, Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
Grace Paley, Jeremy Pikser, screenwriter, Jerry Quickley, poet,
Juan Gumez Quiones, historian, UCLA, Michael Ratner, president,
Centre for Constitutional Rights, David Riker, filmmaker, Boots
Riley, hip hop artist, The Coup, Edward Said, John J Simon, writer,
editor, Starhawk, Michael Steven Smith, National Lawyers Guild/NY,
Bob Stein, publisher, Gloria Steinem, Alice Walker, Naomi Wallace,
playwright, Rev George Webber, president emeritus, NY Theological
Seminary, Leonard Weinglass, attorney, John Edgar Wideman, Saul
Williams, spoken word artist, Howard Zinn, historian
For more information, Contact
the Not In Our Name Statement, nionstatement@hotmail.com
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Maralee Niehoff
In Favor of the
Brave: A Commentary
August 9th, 2002
Recently, I have been
thinking so much about the scandal of sexual abuse that has taken
place within the Catholic Church. I hurt for all the people who
have had their lives and faiths forever effected by this abuse.
I am appalled by the attempts of many within the orthodoxy of
the church who knew of the abuse and worked to cover it up. For
anyone, let alone a priest, to use their power as an adult and
their role as trusted leader of faith to break the sacred trust
of a child is horrendous.
While I have no doubt that most people would agree with me in
believing that this abuse and injustice is wrong, we don't all
speak up. I have friends and family members who do not want to
consider or discuss the possibility that ministers of God could
do such things. In many ways I cannot blame them, and I can understand
their silence because speaking of such things seems to carry
such immediate risk. This is true even for perpetrators who are
caught in an addictive cycle, who know what there are doing is
wrong and want to tell, but feel that they cannot stop.
However, silence comes at a cost.
Silence costs all those who have already been damaged by abuse,
allows abuse to continue, and tarnishes the reputations of all
those who work to bring people closer to God in and out of the
church. So, I am glad that some have chosen to speak the truth
with bravery. I want to say thank you to those individuals who
have long known of this injustice and have spoken up even at
the cost of great personal hardship. It is not easy to do the
right thing or remember that many support you when you are in
the midst of the trial, so please remember that you are supported!
I am proud to say that one of
the brave is a member of my family! The Reverend Thomas Doyle
is my nephew and a long-time Catholic priest. For many years
now he has been a voice for those who have been abused by members
of the priesthood. Through speaking and writing he has consistently
drawn attention to this issue, and he has suffered much personal
hardship for his stand. I thank him and all those like him who
have been willing to do what was right rather than conform to
the popular out of denial, shame, and self-interest. I say to
all of you brave individuals, keep going strong and do not be
discouraged or weary in your well-doing!
I also want to encourage all people
everywhere to be brave. Catholic or not, all people who talk
with God can understand that sexual abuse is wrong, particularly
by those who are to help us be closer to God. Do not be afraid
to speak up if you know of injustice and please encourage all
those brave men and women in and out of the church who have used
their positions as priests, community leaders, and citizens to
continue to stand up for what is right. Let them know that you
care for them and support them. Encourage them to show the true
love of God and to shine the light of God in all the dark places.
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