Showing posts with label Peace Organisations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peace Organisations. Show all posts

Friday, 1 June 2018

The Religious Society of Friends, Peace and Social Justice

This article has come from the journal, The Friend, which is published by the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain.






‘Conchies’ play goes to Edinburgh Fringe

A play about a community of conscientious objectors will be performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival


A scene from the play. | Photo: Courtesy of Ian Sharp.

A Lincolnshire pacifist community that included several Quakers 
is the subject of a play being taken to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival this August.
Ian Sharp’s play Remembrance, which premiered last year, tells the story of a community of conscientious objectors (COs) that grew up around the villages of Legsby and Holton-cum-Beckering during the second world war.
The production will be presented at Edinburgh Meeting House and has Quakers in the cast, including the ninety-nine-year-old sole surviving CO of the community, Donald Sutherland.
Playwright Ian Sharp told the Friend: ‘The play is based on several interviews I did with surviving members over many years and some from the 1980s that I stumbled on. It tells the story of the community, its ideals and how the community broke up, mainly via their testimonies and with other scenes. One of our cast is the son of two “Conchies”. as they were called.’
Remembrance premiered last December at the Broadbent Theatre in Wickenby, where it sold out for three nights. One of the performances was specifically for people with family connections to the conscientious objectors, including musician Damon Albarn, whose grandfather was a member, and the actor Jim Broadbent, whose father Roy founded the Legsby community.
Ian Sharp said: ‘There wasn’t a dry eye in the house.’
Another member was Francis Cammaerts, who later become a key figure in the French resistance movement. His nephew is Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse.

Monday, 28 May 2018

The horrors of war versus the horrors of peace --- and the horrors of peace and bureaucracy.

War Memorial should ditch weapons manufacturers: Anti war organisation
By Sally Whyte
20 May 2018 — 7:29pm

The Australian War Memorial risks making war a source of entertainment instead of being a site of commemoration, the parent organisation of last year's Nobel Peace Prize winners has told a parliamentary committee.

Last year's Nobel Peace prize winners, the International Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons, grew out of the Medical Association for the Prevention of War, which has used the federal inquiry into Canberra's national institutions to take aim at the memorial's sponsorship arrangements with weapons manufacturers.




The Australian War Memorial and its director Brendan Nelson 
have been criticised by an anti-war group.

The association's president, Canberra-based retired GP Dr Sue Wareham, has taken particular issue with the audio visual elements of the memorial's exhibitions. Dr Wareham was one of the founding members of ICAN and is a board member of the Australian arm of the organisation. ---

In particular, Dr Wareham singles out 
  1. the lack of peace movement materials on display and 
  2. the prospect of recent border patrols to recent asylum seekers reaching Australian shores being recognised at the memorial. 
  3. The inquiry will cover the ways in which the capital's galleries, museums and other institutions receive funding from private sponsorship. The association believes that the memorial should have a policy against accepting funding from weapons companies that profit from ongoing conflicts.


"It's particularly blatant when one walks into the theatre at the War Memorial and it's named BAE Systems theatre. BAE Systems is Britain's biggest weapons manufacturer, they're selling a lot of material to Saudi Arabia at the moment," Dr Wareham said.
"There's BAE Systems alongside our people who have fought and died in the defence of freedom and there's BAE Systems sponsoring, helping, assisting the Saudi Arabian government, which is contributing to a humanitarian disaster in Yemen."

Dr Wareham said the memorial shouldn't be expected to raise its own revenue, and that its plans should be scaled back to be more affordable.
"One of the things our organisation would like to see is that the AWM plans are a little less grandiose and actually get back to the basic function of commemoration of our war dead, which doesn't require a huge and grandiose budget."
Dr Sue Wareham OAM, is national president of the Medical Association for the Prevention of War, which believes the War Memorial should not accept funds from weapons companies.
Photo: Rohan Thomson

According to the submission, the audio visual elements now used at the memorial, as well as interactive activities where children can dress up a nurse or pretend to be in a trench "[run] the risk of blurring the distinction between commemoration and understanding on the one hand, and entertainment on the other. Entertainment is not a part of the purpose or mission of the AWM."

The association believes the memorial sanitises the reality of war, and its current direction doesn't do enough to make people think twice about going to war. The submission also took issue with the suggestion that the memorial may include exhibitions relating to Australia's border patrol to deter asylum seekers.

"Proponents who regard the AWM as a suitable place to display Australia’s rejection of boatloads of desperate people have simply lost the plot."

The memorial has defended itself in the wake of the criticism.

"The Australian War Memorial refutes the notion that any parts of its displays are 'entertainment'. Exhibits and displays are developed to engage all visitors and cater to a range of learning styles including those of children," a spokesman said.

There are no plans for a memorial for Operation Sovereign Borders, the spokesman said, clarifying that comments by memorial director Brendan Nelson about all Defence personnel, including border protection, "were made in the context of the proposed extension to the Memorial being considered by Government next year."

The Memorial said it will continue its funding arrangements with weapons companies.
"The overwhelming majority of cultural institutions rely on partnerships and corporate support to supplement revenue and support continued operations. These arrangements commonly and understandably involve acknowledgment or recognition of the supportive individual or organisation," the spokesman said.
"The Memorial highly values the support of its corporate partners which allows investment directly back into the development of the Memorial’s galleries, exhibitions, programs, collection and staffing."

Sally Whyte is a reporter at The Canberra Times
     Source from the Canberra Times: https://www.canberratimes.com.au/politics/federal/war-memorial-should-ditch-weapons-manufacturers-anti-war-organisation-20180517-p4zfvb.html

:::::::::::::

PS: Among the complexities of war and peace, how many fewer people would there be to participate in the Invictus Games if there were no manufacturers of arms and weapons such as Lockheed Martin.


:::::::::::::::

The Editor of this blog does not regard her country
as having a compassionate immigration & border protection policy.
However, there are organisations within Australia that do.

The Editor does not have expertise in immigration & refugee matters.
However, there are organisations in Australia who do.
Message this blog with your email details if you wish to be placed 
in touch with these organisations. 

Thursday, 8 March 2018

Female Nobel Laureates call for an end to the Rohingya genocide


New post from Ecumenics and Quakers


by Maurizio
07.03.2018 - Dhaka, Bangladesh - TRANSCEND Media Service

Nobel Women Peace Laureates Call for an End to Rohingya Genocide

Visiting women Nobel laureates Tawakkol Karman of Yemen, Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland and Shirin Ebadi of Iran met with Prime Minister #SheikhHasina

As three Nobel peace laureates—Tawakkol Karman of Yemen, Shirin Ebadi of Iran, and Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland – conclude their visit to Bangladesh on the six-month anniversary of the current Rohingya crisis, the three women are calling for an immediate end to the “genocide” of the Rohingya people.

This week, the three women Laureates ­––in partnership with Bangladesh women’s organization Naripokkho­­––spent time listening to stories, meeting over 100 women refugees in the Cox’s Bazar area, and travelling to “no man’s land”, where thousands of Rohingya have been stranded between Myanmar and Bangladesh.

After hearing testimonies describing how security forces burned villages, tortured, killed and systematically raped women and girls—as well as reports from humanitarian organizations and UN officials—the Laureates concluded that the on-going attacks on the Rohingya of Rakhine State amount to crimes against humanity and genocide.

The Laureates are calling on Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and the Myanmar military to put an end to the killings and the persecution of the Rohingya people.

“She must stop turning a deaf ear to the persecution of the Rohingya or risk being complicit in the crimes,” said Tawakkol Karman. “Wake up or face prosecution.”

As women committed to peace, the Laureates are urging Aung San Suu Kyi to exercise her personal and moral responsibility stop the genocide. “If she fails to do so, her choice is clear: resign or be held accountable, along with the army commanders, for the crimes committed” added Karman.

The Laureates heard how Rohingya women have been twice victimized: for being Rohingyas and for being women. They described stories of horrific violence and systematic mass rape.

“My 18-year old daughter had her breasts cut off and she died,” a Rohingya woman in the Thyankhali camp told the Nobel peace laureates.

“My baby was only 1-year and 6-months old. The military tore her from my arms and slaughtered her in front of me,” said a Rohingya survivor of rape. She then passed around a photo she had of her child. She wanted everyone to see her little girl.

The laureates heard stories of children being thrown into fires and drowned in rivers. They heard stories of houses and complete villages being burned to the ground and children being shot while running to the forest to seek shelter and safety.

“The torture, rape and killing of any one member of our human family must be challenged, as in the case of the Rohingya genocide,” said Mairead Maguire. “Silence is complicity.”

The Nobel peace laureates were impressed by the strength and resilience of the women who had survived such horrific crimes. One woman at the Thyankhali camp told them, “Why should we feel shame? We were tortured. We don’t need to feel shame about that.”
Another woman at Camp Kutupalong said, “We are not afraid of anything. We want our stories to be told.”

The Laureates are calling for the perpetrators of these heinous crimes to be brought to justice before the International Criminal Court.

“With over a million Rohingya displaced, countless dead or missing, and rape and sexual violence being used as a weapon of war, it is well past the time for the international community to act,” said Shirin Ebadi.

The Laureates met with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, government officials, human rights organizations and humanitarian agencies. They extended their thanks to Prime Minister Hasina and to both the Government and the people of Bangladesh for their exemplary acts of compassion for the Rohingya refugees.

The Laureates also expressed deep appreciation to the Bangladeshi government and to the various humanitarian agencies that have met the extra-ordinary challenge of setting up the Refugee and Relocation Camps for over one million Rohingya refugees.

As a result of their visit to Bangladesh, the Nobel Laureates are calling for:

  • An immediate end to the genocide against the Rohingya in Rakhine, and an order to the Myanmar military to immediately stop all acts of sexual violence.
  • Justice for Rohingya victims: perpetrators of crimes must be brought to justice through the International Criminal Court (ICC).
  • Bangladesh, as the only country in South Asia to have ratified the Rome Statute, should, along with other states parties, the UN Security Council and the Human Rights Council, refer the case to the ICC.
  • Alternatively, the ICC Prosecutor should open an independent investigation into crimes against humanity and genocide perpetrated in Rakhine State.
  • A voluntary, safe and dignified return. There should be no forced repatriation. When Rohingya do return to Rakhine State, they should be offered security and be granted full citizenship.
  • The government of Myanmar to take immediate action to address the systematic discrimination of the Rohingya in Rakhine State, and ensure the Rohingya's right to nationality, land ownership, freedom of movement and other fundamental rights.
  • A comprehensive arms embargo on Myanmar to ensure that there are no sales of weapons or other military equipment.
  • The international community to increase its support to Bangladesh’s humanitarian response.
  • Bangladesh to ratify the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention, as a major step to give protection to refugees and set an example in South Asia.
Mairead Corrigan Maguire, co-founder of Peace People, is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment. She won the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize for her work for peace in Northern Ireland. Her book The Vision of Peace (edited by John Dear, with a foreword by Desmond Tutu and a preface by the Dalai Lama) is available from www.wipfandstock.com. She lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland. See: www.peacepeople.com.

The original article can be found on our partner's website here

Maurizio | March 7, 2018 at 11:06 am | Categories: Uncategorized | URL: https://wp.me/pqqtS-Ol

Monday, 27 November 2017

THE 2ND WORLD MARCH FOR PEACE & NON-VIOLENCE SCHEDULED FOR 2ND OCTOBEER 2019 TO 8 MARCH 2020 STARTING IN MADRID


The 2nd World March for Peace and Nonviolence to start in 2019


From Ecumenics and Quakers
21.11.2017 – Madrid, Spain – Rafael de la Rubia

This post is also available in: SpanishItalianCatalan


The 2nd World March for Peace and Nonviolence was announced during the Conference for Nonviolence that took place between the 15th and 18th of November in Madrid, Spain.  It is scheduled to start on the 2nd of October 2019 (International Nonviolence Day) and end on the 8th of March 2020 (International Women’s Day).  The March will start and end in Madrid.
The conference was organised by World without Wars and Violence with support from PNND(i), the Peace Culture Foundation, WILPF (Spain), the Spanish campaign “Nonviolence 2018”, Ecologists in Action, Pressenza and the Spanish Peace Research Association among others and was held in several locations of the Spanish capital: from the symbolic Congress of Deputies to the more humble district of Vallecas, passing through the Madrid City Council in Cibeles Square.  The organisers’ interest was to introduce the subject of nonviolence in its various expressions in all social fields, from national, to city and neighbourhood level.  This will be strengthened by the development of the 2nd World March which will try to impact all sectors of society with the subjects of peace and nonviolence.
Global security was the subject tackled on the 15th of November, in the Clara Campoamor Hall in the Spanish Congress of Deputies, including the increasing risk of the use of nuclear weapons and its relationship to the recent Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons(ii) the ratification of which is currently underway in the United Nations but without Spain’s support.  In this session, Congress Deputy Pedro Arrojo(iii) announced that 50 colleagues from the Podemos parliamentary block had joined the PNND network.  There was also a meeting between Congress Deputy Pablo Bustinduy and Alyn Ware(v), the international coordinator of PNND, on the subject of how New Zealand managed to get and maintain a defence agreement with Australia and the United States which respected the decision of the New Zealand people to reject the presence of nuclear weapons on their territory.  Arrojo also announced the activation of an international network of parliamentarians to support the 2nd World March.
This is an abbreviation of the original article.

Thursday, 13 July 2017

UNIVERSAL PEACE FEDERATION : INTERFAITH PEACEBUILDING


Interfaith Peacebuilding

Interfaith
This age of globalization needs enlightened leaders in each faith who can examine their sacred writings and traditions and identify the aspects that can benefit all humanity as well as those that preserve each religion's identity. UPF calls on people of faith to honor the Divine indwelling in a way that encourages understanding, respect, and cooperation among people of all faiths for the well-being of our communities and peace in the world.
UPF has an Office for Interfaith Understanding & Cooperation among Religions in Jerusalem, c/o Dr. Nurit Hirshfeld.
INTERFAITH ORGANIZATIONS