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AFWW Newsletter #20  April 2011 Women on the Frontlines 
 
New!
Women of Liberia
Key to Ending War
Women of Tahrir Square
Nobel Peace Laureates
Code Pink
Quotable Quote 

"I think we should commit ourselves to fighting for something that is so big that we will never live to see it because otherwise we're not fighting for something big enough."

Abigail Disney, Producer of documentary film "Pray the Devil Back to Hell." Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice, March 2011.

 


A Good Movie

 

See "The U.S. vs. John Lennon."   John didn't just sing songs. He was an Activist, Visionary, and Revolutionary.  So revolutionary that he frightened the U.S. government. Watch and appreciate Lennon's work to lay a foundation for a future without war.  



A Good Book  

  

Gene Sharp, Waging Nonviolent Struggle. 20th century practice and 21st century potential.


This book is a vast repository of information about nonviolent struggle, the ultimate "how to."



 

 

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A Future Without War

Believe in it.

Envision it.

Work for it.

And we will achieve it.

QuickLinks
!! This newsletter celebrates women!!  
 

Its theme, its focus, is on how women can be, are, and should be on the front lines of a great, historical change in which, to paraphrase the visionary Martin Luther King, Jr., the people of the world unite to bend the arc of history toward nonviolence. Reading about what women have done and are doing may inspire you. The essay "Changing the Biological Chemistry to Nonviolence Movements" may cause you to think about nonviolence protest in a new way.   

 

Women of LiberiaWomen of Liberia Win Peace

 

Are you a skeptic, quite sure it would be impossible to abolish war?  Maybe you think most especially that there is no way for a nonviolent strategy to succeed in changing how we live for the better if it means ending war.

 

Skeptics tend to feel nonviolence can't work for a variety of reasons. Often it's because they're unaware of successful applications. The media do not place much emphasis on nonviolent successes.

 

A remarkable contemporary example comes out of Liberia, a small country in West Africa. Christian and Muslim women banded together. Their story is told in a fine documentary film Pray the Devil Back to Hell. Read the inspiring story of what Liberia's women accomplished.  It serves as both metaphor and model for how citizens united and unafraid can end the madness of war.

A viewing guide stressing the principles of nonviolent direct action

is available, download it from the AFWW site.

 

When asked if working to abolish war might be too big a goal, too ambitious, Abigail Disney, the producer of "Pray the Devil Back to Hell" said, "I think we should commit ourselves to fighting for something that is so big that we will never live to see it because otherwise we're not fighting for something big enough."

(in a talk at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice, March 2011).

 

Dr. Judith Hand

Peace Ethologist Judith Hand --  Women, Nonviolent Actions, Women as Key to Ending War

 

Evolutionary biologist and peace ethologist Judith Hand was inspired by the women of Liberia and the successful struggle of the women of the United States to win the vote. She offers essays on putting women on the front lines of nonviolent actions of civil disobedience whenever circumstances allow. This simple tactic changes the chemistry of the interaction from one between two opposed male groups to one in which male defenders of the status quo are being challenged by women: their mothers, daughters, and grandmothers, who are seeking peaceful change.

 

Read her thoughts on the potential advantages of this change in tactics in the essay "Changing the Biological Chemistry of Nonviolence Movements: Women on the Front Lines".

 

A blog by Dr. Hand explores why women are not only the key to ending poverty, they are also key to ending war. Visit the blog at afww.wordpress.com.

 

She is also now on Facebook.   

 

 

Women of Tahrir Square

Women of Tahrir Square, Egypt 2011

 

Estimates are that 25% of the protesters in Tahrir Square were women. The Egyptian revolutionaries remained remarkable peaceful, one of the great strengths of their struggle. "Peaceful!" "Peaceful!" was a cry often heard.

 

AFWW is of the opinion that the presence of these women might have been an important contributor to keeping the activists nonviolent ... thus strengthening the validity of the protest and also winning the world's admiration.

 

Reporting by Western mainstream TV Media conveyed the impression that all, or nearly all, the revolutionaries were men. But to be true and to learn something important, history needs to explore and then consider the possible effect women might have had.

 

If one knows where to look, some insightful information is available. If you are curious, check out the following:

 

 

"Egyptian Women Play Vital Role in Anti-Mubarak Protests" Spero News - RFE/RA. http://t.co/I2PnwWa 

 

"Revolutionary Women" Beenish Ahmed, The American Prospect http://tinyurl.com/4fenueg 

 

"Photo Story: Women of Egypt." Global Post http://tinyurl.com/4gouryz

 

"The Unseen Factor: Egypt's Women Protestors." Deutsche Welle http://tinyurl.com/48626l9

 

Nobel laureatss

Women Nobel Peace Laureates

 

Our seven living women Nobel Peace Laureates are definitely on the frontlines. Five are pictured here, left to right: Jody Williams, Betty Williams, Shirin Ebadi, Mairead McGuire, and Wangari Maathai

 

Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland, is another example of powerful women on the march. She is quoted in a Nobel Women's Initiative newsletter as follows: there is "...the need for women to be front and centre in the peace processes...."

 

Women do need to be involved in peace processes. They also need to play a prominent role in nonviolent direct action, to help prevent events from erupting into violence. And when we have abolished war, women will have been full partners with men in leading the way.  

 

Read about the 2010 Delegation to Israel and Palestine at www.nobelwomensinitiative.org.

 

Code Pink

The Women of Code Pink

The women of Code Pink have put themselves forward for years as protestors against many elements of the war machine. Medea Benjamin, Jodie Evans, Diane Wilson, Starhawk and about 100 other women kicked off Code Pink on November 17, 2002. Since then they have been willing to court derision and arrest, they call on the women of the world to rise up. They are a consistent voice of conscience and protest against "business as usual." They are most definitely women on the front lines. Explore their mission, goals and planned actions at www.codepink4peace.org.

"There is no development strategy more beneficial to society as a whole - women and men alike - than the one which involves women as central players."  

                                             U.N. Secretary General, Kofi Annan






A Future Without War
 
Contact Info
A Future Without War Dr. Judith Hand P.O. Box 270074, San Diego, CA 92198 info@afww.org