A. MORE ON U.S. DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
The U.S. public is far more interested in supporting development and
hunger assistance in poor countries, but labor under serious misconceptions
about foreign aid.
Studies by the University of Maryland and the Harris organization
show that the average citizen believes the U.S. is spending 16
to 18% of its entire budget on foreign aid. The actual amount
is less than one percent. Half of that is military aid. Less than
a fifth goes to sustainable development assistance. Moreover,
these polls show that most people think we should contribute about
as much as our major trading partners. In reality, we spend less
than one-fifth as much per capita as Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
and the Netherlands; one third as much as Germany, Austria, Belgium,
France, and Switzerland; less than half as much as Britain, Australia,
Finland, and Canada. In other words, most people believe we actually
give 80 or 90 times as much in foreign aid as we do. Most people
think we should contribute 3 to 5 times as much as our government
currently spends. (For more information: www.bread.org The Reality of Aid, Island Press, 1997, offers a good overview
of the downward trend in development assistance. Per capita development
assistance spending data: Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development.)
B. MORE ON TARGETING OF CIVILIANS
US policies governing military operations emphasize safeguarding
of civilians in war zones. Unfortunately, "collateral damage"
is so frequent an occurrence in war, even by US military forces,
that a euphemism was coined for the problem. In the Gulf War,
US military planners consciously and systematically targeted the
electrical, water, and sewage infrastructure of Iraq. As a result,
according to teams from the Red Cross, the UN, and Harvard University,
more than a million civilians, mostly children, have died since
the Gulf War because of this US policy. Many religious and civic
groups have emphasized one or more of these issues in the past
few years. A good source of the statements of more than two dozen
religious denominations on tragedy in New York, Wash. DC and Pennsylvania
can be found at www.sojo.net One final note: many commentators have noted that numerous modern
weapons are by their very nature indiscriminate, including fuel-air
explosives, cluster bombs, some uses of helicopter gunships, and
of course, nuclear weapons.
C. ADDITIONAL EXAMPLES OF U.S. POLICY AND TERRORISM
US policy in recent decades may have helped sow the seeds for
terrorism in the world in our support for dictators including
the Shah of Iran, Pinochet in Chile, Marcos in the Philippines,
the generals in Guatemala, the apartheid regime in South Africa,
and for the decade before the Gulf War, Saddam Hussein in Iraq.
Our financing of guerrilla and terrorist forces has been equally
wide-ranging, from the Mujahideen in Afghanistan (who have since
trained terrorists in other parts of the world) and the contras
who blew up schools and clinics and killed their staff all over
Nicaragua, to support for a dozen movements working to overthrow
governments unfriendly to US interests. The US has been complicit
in the violence of Israeli policy toward Palestinians and in the
violence to civilians and especially children in our ten year
boycott of Iraq.
D. MORE ON THE PLEDGE OF NONVIOLENCE
US peace groups have long used a commitment or pledge as a
valuable tool to help people bring the skills and insight of nonviolence
into their daily life. In 1996, the Families Against Violence
Advocacy Network made a pledge the centerpiece of their program
with families, classrooms, and groups. Since then, over 450,000
people have signed FAVAN pledges and committed themselves to evaluate
on a regular basis their experience in living with it FAVAN pledges
and other resources on their web site, www.ipj-ppj.org/).
Such a commitment was chosen as a key Decade for Peace activity.
Tens of millions of people across
the globe signed pledges of nonviolence!
These two efforts have provided new insights into using this potent
tool to support ongoing commitment to nonviolence in families,
classrooms, community groups...
E. MORE ON THE DECADE FOR PEACE
In the late 1990´s twenty Nobel Peace Prize Laureates -- the
largest number ever to support a single initiative -- launched
an appeal "for the children of the
world," noting that all too many children grow up in
a "culture of violence ...on streets, at school, in family
life, in the community" as well as between nations.
This Appeal -- which gained the support of virtually every
living Nobel Peace Laureate -- called for beginning the new millennium
with a decade-long effort "to teach the practical meaning
and benefits of nonviolence in our daily lives... in order to
reduce violence and build a new culture of nonviolence."
In late 1999, the UN designated the years 2001-2010 as "The
International Decade for a Culture of Peace and Nonviolence for
the Children of the World."
Ten million people belong to institutions and groups that
endorsed the Decade for Peace, from religious denominations like
the Episcopal Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America
(ELCA) to the City of Seattle and major youth advocacy groups.
The United States government has not appropriated funds or even
designated staff to help citizens respond to the challenge of
the "culture of violence" in our world. On the Decade
for Peace, see Decade for Peace Resources, www.forusa.org, and www.nobelweb.org The Fellowship of Reconciliation has published a superb Decade
manual of activities, readings, and resources.
F. CHALLENGING THE MYTHS OF "NONVIOLENCE'
One problem in speaking about nonviolence is that most people
have learned inaccurate or misleading information about what the
term entails. Nonviolence, for example, does not mean avoiding
conflict or seeking only to win at the expense of the opponent,
rather, it is the active search for "win-win" solutions.
One's opponent need not be nonviolent for us to find this approach
both morally and practically effective. Nonviolence does not mean
being passive or powerless; on the contrary, as Gandhi, Martin
Luther King, Jr. and others showed, it involves a different conception
of power that is more effective than customary efforts to use
power. For more information check out Nonviolence: Cultivating the Way of Peace: ways to nonviolence -overviews, activities and ideas for leaders, www.nonviolence.org brings together web sites of many groups and their insights on
nonviolence. Walter Wink's new anthology, "Peace is the Way"
(Orbis Press) is a great source of insight, as are his other books,
e.g. "Engaging the Powers" (Fortress) and "The
Powers That Be" (Doubleday). "From Violence to Wholeness"
is a fine discussion / activity guide esp. for church groups (see www.paceebene.org)
G. A PERSONAL NOTE FROM THE DIRECTOR OF LPF
Fourteen years ago I completed a masters degree specializing
in conflict studies and international security. I'd spent the
previous decade as a teacher and group worker serving people in
the highest crime areas of New York and Oakland. I had intervened
in many conflicts involving guns and knives, have counseled dozens
of victims, and been injured myself.
I know and have felt the desire for revenge. Yet the longer
I do this work the more skeptical I am of the utility as well
as the morality of retribution and revenge. Those feelings are
an inevitable stage in the healing process. But most people coming
out on the other side, rebuild their lives on something else.
People like Martin Luther King, Jr. -- himself a victim of
numerous death threats and bombings -- understand this well. As
King put it shortly after his home was bombed during the Montgomery
bus boycott: "Let's not become panicky. If you have weapons,
take them home; if you do not have them, please do not seek to
get them. We cannot solve this problem through retaliatory violence.
We must meet violence with nonviolence. Remember the words of
Jesus: 'he who lives by the sword will perish by the sword.'"
This is the only sound response to violence as an individual.
It says a lot about what we need in our public policies as well.
I expect strong, fair enforcement of laws from my government.
I also want my government to take the lead to address the roots
of violence whether among youth in our cities, or in conflicts
around the globe.
Glen Gersmehl, executive dir., Lutheran
Peace Fellowship.
back to
Thoughts
in a time of tragedy
NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES' APPEAL - Official
Website
Alternative versions of the nobel resolution for a:
City Council, Community
Group, Church, College or University
Bush
is Walking into a Trap
by Robert Fisk - 9/16/01 - The Independent
Federation of American Scientists - Terrorism
and Threat Assessments
For more information on
Lutheran Peace Fellowship workshops on nonviolence or other issues
raised here, please contact Lutheran Peace Fellowship, 1710 11th
Ave., Seattle, WA 98122 / 206-349-2501
lpf@ecunet.org &
www.LutheranPeace.org