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Showing posts with label World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World. Show all posts

Monday, May 5, 2008

Nonviolence Still the Way




Martin Luther King has had a huge impact on my life. I was still a child during the height of the civil rights movement, and I remember watching the Freedom Rides on TV and begging my mother to let me go to the South. She assured me that there would still be injustices to fight when I got older, and sadly enough, she was certainly right about that.

I was seventeen when King was murdured, and already an antiwar activist in my high school. But it was in the early eighties, when I took part in nonviolent direct actions against nuclear power and nuclear weapons, that I began to read his writings and study his ideas. I became a nonviolence trainer and have had the great privilege of introducing new activists to this form of struggle for nearly three decades.

King, who during his lifetime was reviled, criticized, spied upon by agencies of the government and spat upon by proponents of segregation, would be surprised to find himself now, forty years later, nearly canonized. He would be the first to acknowledge that when we talk about “King” we let him stand in for the courage and accomplishments of a whole movement of dedicated people, men and women, black and white: Fannie Lou Hamer, Bob Moses, Rosa Parks, John Lewis, Ella Baker…the list could go on and on and still never name the thousands of ordinary, unsung hera/os who marched, sat in, rode buses, and went to jail in the fight for civil rights.

King was himself a man of extraordinary vision, courage, and political astuteness, as well as a great writer and orator. He was a deeply moral and religious man who never wavered in his faith that love and justice were forces stronger than hate and violence.

He was also a great strategist. He understood that change does not come easily, and that nonviolence is not the same thing as passivity or inaction. In his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” he wrote:

“Nonviolent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer be ignored… I have earnestly opposed violent tension, but there is a type of constructive, nonviolent tension which is necessary for growth.”

Nonviolent direct action causes trouble. It makes visible the contradictions between our professed values and our actions. It actively challenges the structural violence inherent in oppressive systems. And it is generally unpopular with the authorities, as King was during his lifetime.

Today, on the 40th anniversary of his death, in the town of Bil’in in the Occupied Territories of the West Bank of Palestine, ten nonviolent protesters were injured by the tear gas and rubber bullets with which the Israeli army responds to the weekly demonstration against the wall. They are direct inheritors of King’s legacy.

Two weeks ago, on the anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the streets of Washington D.C. were filled with protesters blocking the entrances to corporations that profit from that war. Veterans hung the American flag upside down—the signal of distress—on the Archives building on the Mall. College students spent their spring break taking nonviolence training and marching in the streets instead of partying on the beaches. They too, inherit his legacy.

A thousand different movements for human rights, for peace and social justice have drawn on his thoughts and his example.

When we remember how King stood for peace and brotherhood, let us also remember that he spoke out against the structural injustice of poverty and took an unpopular stand against the violence of war in Vietnam. When we quote his “I have a dream” speech, we might also remember some of his challenging words which apply as aptly today as they did forty years ago. Substitute ‘Iraq’ for Vietnam’:

“As I have walked among the desperate, rejected and angry young men I have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve their problems.… But they asked -- and rightly so -- what about Vietnam? They asked if our own nation wasn't using massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about the changes it wanted.”

“Increasingly, by choice or by accident, this is the role our nation has taken -- the role of those who make peaceful revolution impossible by refusing to give up the privileges and the pleasures that come from the immense profits of overseas investment.”

“A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”

King was murdered before he ever got to see his dream realized. Today, although we are far from ending his three evils of racism, militarism, and poverty, a black man is running for the highest office of the land, and that is itself a victory. But we have a long way to go. King believed, above all, that the universe is on the side of justice. It’s up to us to prove him right.


Resource: Washington Post: Starhawk


Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Blogging for a Cause and Cash

Hey Changemakers,

We're excited to announce that as of today we are starting to hire bloggers for Change.org's forthcoming social action blog network!

If you're interested in blogging on an issue you're passionate about for an audience of hundreds of thousands and becoming a leading voice for social action, we strongly encourage you to apply.

Each blogger will lead an online community focusing on a different social, political, or environmental issue, maintain a daily blog covering news and offering commentary, convene leading nonprofits and activists working on the issue, and help people translate their interests and passions into concrete action.

Positions are part-time and paid. For more information, go to www.change.org/bloggers. We hope to hear from you!

Here's the featured activity around Change.org this week:
  1. Featured News: Oil Prices to Double by 2012
    The price of oil is likely to soar to $225 a barrel by 2012 as supply becomes increasingly tight, a Canadian bank reported last week. This is more than double the current all-time high of more than $100. The report noted accelerating depletion rates in many of the world's largest and most mature oil fields. "Whether we have already seen the peak in world oil production remains to be seen, but it is increasingly clear that the outlook for oil supply signals a period of unprecedented scarcity," said Analyst Jeff Rubin. "Despite the recent record jump in oil prices, oil prices will continue to rise steadily over the next five years, almost doubling from current levels."

  2. Featured Changemaker: Amy Sample Ward
    Our Changemaker of the Week is Amy Sample Ward, a blogger, activist, and new media consultant dedicated to supporting and educating nonprofits about evolving web technologies. Amy is a community organizer and event coordinator for Portland Net2 and the Portland 501 Tech Club, through which she brings together social changemakers interested in social technology and trains nonprofit technology staff on new resources. Her personal blog is at www.amysampleward.org.

  3. Featured Action: Tell Congress to End "Abstinence-Only" Sex Education
    The Center for Disease Control just released a national study revealing that one in four girls and young women in this country are infected with an STD. This is the result of spending 10 years and $1.5 billion on "abstinence-only" sex education rather than investing in comprehensive sex education. Experts in every relevant field have overwhelmingly declared these programs to be a total failure, and now the infection rates are proving it. Political and religious agendas have no place in the classroom. Tell congress to stop recklessly funding these discredited programs and to provide teens with comprehensive sex education.

  4. Featured Nonprofit: Oceana
    Oceana is the largest international group focused solely on ocean conservation. Oceans cover 71 percent of the globe, but pollution, habitat degradation, overfishing and global warming are threatening this indispensable natural resource. At risk is not just a food supply, but also a wealth of magnificent species and the prime controller of our climate. Oceana's worldwide team of scientists, economists, lawyers and advocates work together with governments, corporations and fishermen around the world to create and enforce laws and policies that will help restore the health of our oceans. Join their efforts by making a donation today.

  5. Featured Change: End Global Poverty
    Over 1 billion people worldwide live on less than $1 a day, and nearly half the world's population lives on less than $2 a day. This epidemic of poverty spans across the globe - from Haiti to Ethiopia to Bangladesh - and touches all the world's cultures, ethnicities and religions. Although overwhelming in scope, there are concrete steps we can take to reduce poverty and signs that current efforts are having an impact. These steps go far beyond simply dumping aid on a country, and instead focus on addressing the many interwoven elements that can together help curb chronic poverty - including children's education, women's rights, improved healthcare, access to clean water and sanitation, and job creation. Join this community today to help do your part to stop global poverty.
Have a great week!

- The Change.org Team
 Working together for a living planet