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  • Local SB Poets and Musicians Shine a Light on Peace and Politics

    Dave Starkey reading original poem

    A Good Year for Peace
    by David Starkey

    You will think I am being ironic,
    toying with your sense of balance,
    like a prankster pulling too hard
    on one rope of a swing,
    but, no, listen. Is not the jackass
    in face paint and Viking horns
    lodged like a wad of gum in a Virginia jail?
    His cronies—not enough, but some—
    they, too, stew in their holding cells,
    quieted like the air after heavy rain.
    Even the timid Vice-President
    stood his ground in the name
    of order, clutching the remnants of law
    to his chest like a sash of merit badges.
    And the bulbous buffoon,
    though he lurks like a cartoon villain
    in his Mar-a-Lago lair,
    is momentarily deprived
    of his accustomed sting.
    In his place, an aged man
    who would rather give than take,
    his slight stutter a token
    of good will. Yes,
    his priests would deny him
    the right to worship, yet still he is present
    every Sunday, kneeling and humble
    before God, his liver-spotted hands
    firmly clasped in prayer.

     

    Emma Trellis, Santa Barbara Poet Laureate

    The Function of a Wing
    by Emma Trelles

    They will arrive as red masked druids, ghost
    The edge of the abandoned golf course, sandhill
    Cranes poised between the tall grass and oaks lathered
    In moss, a fading, this pocket of homes long past
    Afternoons of stickball and running along paths,
    Hearts alert to the pulse of clouds shining
    Despite how loneliness drifts beside us all.
    Each day’s arc is a wing, a wish hurling
    Across the sky, and also time, because what is the clock
    But a ship of travel we must board upon our first breath?
    I have read about a girl who pinned her healing to the making
    Of cranes, and how they navigate by starlight, instinct, the ancient
    Maps scored inside the lace of their bones. They know how to dance.
    They arrive as themselves. A newborn will curl around her mother’s temples
    In peace, a place where no harm will descend in its terrible light, its cell-stripping forms,
    A place of quiet, and journey that is a kind of returning to love.

    Simple Colors
    by Sojourner Kincaid Rolle

    Sojourner Kincaid Rolle, SB Poet Laureate 2015-2017

    This is the map of our body
    that which contains us –
    What seems naked deceives us
    indivisible hues sheathed in rugged cloth.
    We know what lies beneath.
    It keeps coming back to this:
    even as boys die where they fall;
    their blue bodies decomposing
    on concrete facades
    and girls striding forth in pubescent bravado
    bleed from wounds inflicted by unguarded forces
    those who deign constrict their tongues
    Our inconsolable grief a muffled scream.
    Where beyond the horizon might hope live?

    We know women of all allegiances
    who lay battered on the threshold of safe places;
    their sacred vows dishonored and heaved asunder.
    Yet like iridescent smoke from a sacrificial pyre
    their wounded spirits still rise.
    Swirling in the manner of a zephyr,
    Cradling grace for generations to come.

    We know men who never stand to battle;
    who never declare their brother a foe.
    Men who worship life as treasure;
    who never prize their purpled hearts.
    Men who weep bold tears when others die.
    Men who gently tend memorial gardens .

    On some far hill, a dim golden beam is reflected
    In some sequestered place,
    a flickering light maintains
    and there, men of all stations
    women of all creeds
    descendants of all ancestry
    life after life hold fast to an eternal vision.
    The mingled colors
    the vibrancy of our universe
    the vein of our existence
    the map of our one body
    the container of us all.

  • Local SB Poets and Musicians Shine a Light on Peace and Politics

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    Dave Starkey reading original poem

    A Good Year for Peace
    by David Starkey

    You will think I am being ironic,
    toying with your sense of balance,
    like a prankster pulling too hard
    on one rope of a swing,
    but, no, listen. Is not the jackass
    in face paint and Viking horns
    lodged like a wad of gum in a Virginia jail?
    His cronies—not enough, but some—
    they, too, stew in their holding cells,
    quieted like the air after heavy rain.
    Even the timid Vice-President
    stood his ground in the name
    of order, clutching the remnants of law
    to his chest like a sash of merit badges.
    And the bulbous buffoon,
    though he lurks like a cartoon villain
    in his Mar-a-Lago lair,
    is momentarily deprived
    of his accustomed sting.
    In his place, an aged man
    who would rather give than take,
    his slight stutter a token
    of good will. Yes,
    his priests would deny him
    the right to worship, yet still he is present
    every Sunday, kneeling and humble
    before God, his liver-spotted hands
    firmly clasped in prayer.

    Emma Trellis, Santa Barbara Poet Laureate

    The Function of a Wing
    by Emma Trelles

    They will arrive as red masked druids, ghost
    The edge of the abandoned golf course, sandhill
    Cranes poised between the tall grass and oaks lathered
    In moss, a fading, this pocket of homes long past
    Afternoons of stickball and running along paths,
    Hearts alert to the pulse of clouds shining
    Despite how loneliness drifts beside us all.
    Each day’s arc is a wing, a wish hurling
    Across the sky, and also time, because what is the clock
    But a ship of travel we must board upon our first breath?
    I have read about a girl who pinned her healing to the making
    Of cranes, and how they navigate by starlight, instinct, the ancient
    Maps scored inside the lace of their bones. They know how to dance.
    They arrive as themselves. A newborn will curl around her mother’s temples
    In peace, a place where no harm will descend in its terrible light, its cell-stripping forms,
    A place of quiet, and journey that is a kind of returning to love.

    Simple Colors
    by Sojourner Kincaid Rolle

    Sojourner Kincaid Rolle, SB Poet Laureate 2015-2017

    This is the map of our body
    that which contains us –
    What seems naked deceives usindivisible hues sheathed in rugged cloth.
    We know what lies beneath.
    It keeps coming back to this:
    even as boys die where they fall;
    their blue bodies decomposing
    on concrete facades
    and girls striding forth in pubescent bravado
    bleed from wounds inflicted by unguarded forces
    those who deign constrict their tongues

    Even as a bright mosaic of children,
    shades of pink  beige and brown,
    suckle at the fountain of knowing
    their waning innocence
    draws fire from a reckless discontent
    their precious hearts skipping beats
    like stick figures dancing on hard ground
    their open mouths choked with muted sound
    their last breaths shrouded in grotesque horror

    Our mourning cries but a hollow echo
    Our inconsolable grief a muffled scream.
    Where beyond the horizon might hope live?

    We know women of all allegiances
    who lay battered on the threshold of safe places;
    their sacred vows dishonored and heaved asunder.
    Yet like iridescent smoke from a sacrificial pyre
    their wounded spirits still rise.
    Swirling in the manner of a zephyr,
    Cradling grace for generations to come.

    We know men who never stand to battle;
    who never declare their brother a foe.
    Men who worship life as treasure;
    who never prize their purpled hearts.
    Men who weep bold tears when others die.
    Men who gently tend memorial gardens .

    On some far hill, a dim golden beam is reflected
    In some sequestered place,
    a flickering light maintains
    and there, men of all stations
    women of all creeds
    descendants of all ancestry
    life after life hold fast to an eternal vision.
    The mingled colors
    the vibrancy of our universe
    the vein of our existence
    the map of our one body
    the container of us all.

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  • NAPF IS HIRING A NEW PRESIDENT

    NAPF IS HIRING A NEW PRESIDENT

    THE ORGANIZATION
    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (NAPF) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization with consultative status to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Our mission is to educate, advocate, propose, and pursue denuclearizing actions with the intention of achieving a just and peaceful world, free of nuclear weapons. Our work includes informed commentary and public stands on current policies that heighten or reduce risks of the use of nuclear weapons by calculation or mistake.

    THE POSITION
    NAPF is seeking an Executive Director to lead the Foundation forward. The ideal candidate is someone with a deep commitment to the total elimination of nuclear weapons and someone with demonstrated experience in fundraising who will make this aspect of his or her work a priority.

    It is highly preferable that the candidate live in or near Santa Barbara, although the Foundation is prepared to consider candidates who would continue to live outside the area. Finding that special leader who possesses the above qualifications is our top priority. Salary will be negotiated on the basis of experience and circumstances.

    Applications for this position will be accepted until September 1, 2021 or until the position is filled.

    If you are interested in applying for this position, please send a resume and cover letter explaining your interest and
    qualifications to Sandy Jones (sjones@napf.org).

  • Bernard Lown, a founder of IPPNW and long-time member of the NAPF Advisory Council, died at age 99. Rest in peace, Dr.

    “The deadly nuclear shadow will not vanish without public education, arousal and involvement. Politicians do not respond to the insistent beckoning of history. They rise to the challenge only when a powerful, public opinion perseveringly clamors for change.”

    He was a giant in cardiology, and in health and humanitarian advocacy for the abolition of nuclear weapons and nuclear war.

    https://apnews.com/article/boston-nobel-prizes-lithuania-massachusetts-2ce00f16b928b60fe3ec4b3858e7fc23

  • Nukes Are Illegal, Now What?

    Nukes Are Illegal, Now What?

    By Robert C. Koehler

    Let’s not forget: We are standing at the edge of global change. I believe what’s visible in this fleeting moment is our own evolution. http://commonwonders.com/nukes-are-illegal-now-what/

  • GROUND BREAKING TREATY MAKES NUCLEAR WEAPONS ILLEGAL UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW

    GROUND BREAKING TREATY MAKES NUCLEAR WEAPONS ILLEGAL UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW

    Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons will soon into force.

    January 22, 2021 – In what many are calling a new chapter for nuclear disarmament, the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) will enter into force, effective January 22, 2021. This landmark treaty prohibits nations from developing, testing, producing, manufacturing, transferring, possessing, stockpiling, using or threatening to use nuclear weapons, or allowing nuclear weapons to be stationed on their territory. It also prohibits assisting, encouraging or inducing anyone to engage in any of these activities.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (NAPF), a Santa Barbara-based non-profit and partner organization with the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) was involved in the initial negotiations leading up to the nuclear ban treaty at the United Nations in 2017. David Krieger, President Emeritus of NAPF commented on the treaty’s entry into force, “The entry into force of this long-awaited treaty is the culmination of more than 75 years of effort on the part of survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and many more nuclear abolitionists throughout the world. At a minimum, this treaty delegitimizes the possession, threat and use of nuclear weapons. This day marks the beginning of the end for these weapons of mass annihilation. It will be remembered in history.“

    Despite their catastrophic humanitarian and environmental consequences, nuclear weapons were the only weapons of mass destruction not subject to a comprehensive ban. The TPNW closes this crucial gap in international law and now, nuclear weapons will join land mines, chemical and biological weapons as weapons of mass destruction that are declared illegal by the international community.

    While the treaty is only binding on the states that ratified it, it is expected to grow in influence over time. A nation that possesses nuclear weapons may join the treaty, so long as it agrees to destroy them in accordance with a legally-binding, time-bound plan. Similarly, a nation that hosts another nation’s nuclear weapons on its territory may join, so long as it agrees to remove them by a specified deadline.

    This effort to ban nuclear weapons has been led by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, which is made up of more than 500 non-governmental organizations from 103 countries. NAPF has been a Partner Organization of ICAN since the campaign began in 2007. ICAN received the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and for their ground-breaking efforts to achieve the TPNW.

    Beatrice Fihn, Executive Director of ICAN, commented, “This is just the beginning … States that haven’t joined the treaty will feel its power too — we can expect companies to stop producing nuclear weapons and financial institutions to stop investing in nuclear weapon-producing companies.”

    The treaty was approved by the 193-member U.N. General Assembly on July 7, 2017 by a vote of 122 in favor, the Netherlands opposed, and Singapore abstaining. Of note, among countries voting in favor was Iran. The original five nuclear powers – China, France, Russia, UK and the United States – and four other countries known to currently possess nuclear weapons — India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel — boycotted negotiations and the vote on the treaty.

    Not only did the U.S. boycott the negotiations in 2017 and refuse to sign the treaty, the Trump administration urged countries that had already ratified the treaty to withdraw their support. The treaty still has the potential to significantly impact U.S. behavior regarding nuclear weapons issues. While the new Biden administration’s most immediate task will be to get control of the Covid-19 pandemic and lessen its impact on the U.S. economy, there are many nuclear weapons issues that Biden will need to tackle, beginning with extending the New START nuclear agreement with Russia which is set to expire on February 5, 2021.

    United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, commented, “Entry into force is a tribute to the survivors of nuclear explosions and tests, many of whom advocated for this Treaty.” He went on to describe the entry into force as “the culmination of a worldwide movement to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons. It represents a meaningful commitment towards the total elimination of nuclear weapons, which remains the highest disarmament priority of the United Nations.”

    The treaty is a clear indication that the majority of the world’s countries no longer accept nuclear weapons and do not consider them legitimate. It demonstrates that the indiscriminate mass killing of civilians is unacceptable and that it is not possible to use nuclear weapons consistent with the laws of war.

    ICAN will be having a compelling and inspiring online event beginning at 12:00 PM (PST) celebrating this once in a lifetime treaty. Register at https://www.icanw.org/studio_2221

    If you would like to read the treaty in its entirety go to http://undocs.org/A/CONF.229/2017/8

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s mission is to educate, advocate, propose and pursue denuclearizing actions with the intention of achieving a just and peaceful world, free of nuclear weapons. The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is a non-partisan, non-profit organization with consultative status to the United Nations. For more information, visit wagingpeace.org.

  • Don’t miss Studio 22.21: Entry into Force Day, ICAN’s online event

    Don’t miss Studio 22.21: Entry into Force Day, ICAN’s online event

    Don’t miss International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)‘s online event on January 22, the day the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons enters into force.  https://www.icanw.org/studio2221

  • U.S. to Launch Minuteman III Missile Test Just Five Days After 50th Country Ratified Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons

    U.S. to Launch Minuteman III Missile Test Just Five Days After 50th Country Ratified Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons

    For Immediate Release

    Contact: Sandy Jones  (805) 965-3443; sjones@napf.org

    U.S. TO LAUNCH MINUTEMAN III MISSILE TEST JUST FIVE DAYS AFTER 50TH COUNTRY RATIFIED TREATY ON THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

    SANTA BARBARA, CA– Early tomorrow morning, between 12:01 a.m. and 6:01 a.m., the United States will launch an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile from Vandenberg Air Force Base. While the Air Force maintains that missile tests are planned many months in advance, the timing of this test is questionable, at best.

    This test will take place just five days after Honduras became the 50th country to ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). With the 50th ratification, the treaty will enter into force on January 22, 2021. The treaty prohibits the possession, testing, use, or threat of use of nuclear weapons.

    Rick Wayman, CEO of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, a non-profit based in Santa Barbara committed to the abolition of nuclear weapons and solving the most dangerous technological, social, and psychological issues of our time, commented on the timing of the missile test. He noted, “This past Saturday, the world took an important step toward the elimination of nuclear weapons with the 50th ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Now, in addition to its diplomatic undermining of the treaty through threatening letters, the U.S. government plans to demonstrate its active defiance of the treaty’s provisions by testing a nuclear-capable missile.”

    Wayman further commented, “While most of the world’s countries are evolving to a view that nuclear weapons are unacceptable under all circumstances, the U.S. is testing a nuclear missile built to fight the Cold War; one which is designed to cause the indiscriminate slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people.”

    The military will track the unarmed ICBM as it travels to a predetermined target, typically some 4,200 miles away near the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands. Between 1946 and 1958, the United States detonated 67 nuclear bombs on, in and above the Marshall Islands — vaporizing islands, creating craters into its shallow lagoons and exiling hundreds of people from their homes and their land.

    #                                         #                                         #

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s mission is to educate and train people of all ages and backgrounds to solve the most dangerous technological, social, and psychological issues of our time, and to survive and thrive in the 21st century. The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is a non-partisan, non-profit organization with consultative status to the United Nations. For more information, visit wagingpeace.org.

  • Celebrating the 50th Ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons

    Celebrating the 50th Ratification of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons

    Setsuko Thurlow
    Setsuko Thurlow at the 2015 NAPF Evening for Peace.

    The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons has entered into force! This truly marks the beginning of the end of nuclear weapons! When I learned that we reached our 50th ratification, I was not able to stand. I remained in my chair and put my head in my hands and I cried tears of joy. I have committed my life to the abolition of nuclear weapons. I have nothing but gratitude for all who have worked for the success of our treaty. I have a powerful feeling of solidarity with tens of thousands of people across the world. We have made it to this point.

    As I sat in my chair, I found myself speaking with the spirits of hundreds of thousands of people who lost their lives in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I was immediately in conversation with these beloved souls — my sister, my nephew Eiji, other dear family members, my classmates, all the children and innocent people who perished. I was reporting to the dead, sharing this good news first with them, because they paid the ultimate price with their precious lives. Like many survivors, I made a vow that their deaths would not be in vain and to warn the world about the danger of nuclear weapons, to make sure that no one else suffers as we have suffered. I made a vow to work for nuclear disarmament until my last breath. And now we have reached a milestone in our decades’ long struggle — the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons will become international law!

    I have a tremendous sense of accomplishment and fulfillment, a sense of satisfaction and gratitude. I know other survivors share these emotions — whether we are survivors from Hiroshima and Nagasaki; or test survivors from South Pacific island nations, Kazakhstan, Australia and Algeria; or survivors from uranium mining in Canada, the United States or the Congo. All those who have been victimized by the barbaric behavior of nine nations who continue to develop more horrendous weapons, prepared to repeat nuclear massacres far more devastating than the atomic bomb that leveled my hometown, Hiroshima. For the victims and survivors, this initial success with the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons is tremendously uplifting. I celebrate this moment with my brothers and sisters across the world who have been victimized, and still raise their voices, and still survive.

    We also celebrate with those people across the world who recognize the ultimate evil of nuclear weapons, instruments of radioactive violence and omnicide that have kept the entire world hostage for all these 75 years. We celebrate with the global community of anti-nuclear activists who have come together and have worked for the success of this treaty. I am especially grateful to my dear colleagues in the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. ICAN laid the groundwork to collaborate across the divide of diplomacy and activism, to achieve something of profound and lasting importance.

    I also want to acknowledge how moved I am that in the preamble to the treaty, hibakusha are identified by name. This is the first time in international law that we have been so recognized. We share this recognition with other hibakusha across the world, those who have suffered radioactive harm from nuclear testing, from uranium mining, from secret experimentation. And furthermore, the treaty recognizes that indigenous people have been disproportionately affected by the production of nuclear weapons. We in hibakusha and indigenous communities uniquely understand that not only the use of nuclear weapons in war but also the testing and production of nuclear weapons causes death and unspeakable suffering through invisible radioactive contamination. And here the treaty recognizes that women and girls are more susceptible to the effects of radiation — that there are gendered implications to radioactive violence.

    I am moved to acknowledge the positive obligations of the treaty as well — such as victims assistance and environmental remediation which will be a hallmark for taking responsibility for the inter-generational effects of radiation. It is vitally important that we all understand that the nuclear age will continue far beyond the nuclear weapon age. We will need to contain and care for radioactive materials into the far future.

    But for now, in this joyous present moment, we can rejoice in making our first move. I cannot truly express with words my feelings of overwhelming gratitude. How we have struggled in spite of being confronted by indifference and ignorance! How we have struggled in spite of being ridiculed by nuclear armed and nuclear dependent states! In spite of that and more, we have made it to this point — nuclear weapons are now illegal under international law!

    Nuclear abolitionists everywhere can be incredibly encouraged and empowered by this new legal status. Now, with greater intensity and purpose, we will push forward. While this is a time to celebrate, it is not a time for us to relax. The world is ever more dangerous. Yes, we have made it to this point, but we have a long path to cover until we reach our goal of the total elimination of nuclear weapons.

    It is unlikely that I will see that day. It is unlikely that any atomic bomb survivor with their own lived memories will bear witness on that day but with the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, we can be certain that that beautiful day will dawn. And on that day, we hibakusha, test survivors, indigenous people and others, victim to the inter-generational cruelty of radioactive poison, will be remembered and someone alive at present will report to us. Because of our work, our solidarity, our love for this world, we will be a part of a much greater celebration in spirit, when nuclear disarmament will be achieved as part of a greater movement that encompasses peace, justice, equality and compassion for all.

    The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons has opened a new door, wide. Passing through it we begin a new chapter in our struggle — with a mighty embrace of gratitude from those we have lost, and a heartfelt welcome from those who are yet to come. The beginning of the end of nuclear weapons has arrived! Let us step through the doorway now!


    Setsuko Thurlow is a survivor of the US atomic bombing of Hiroshima, and a member of the NAPF Advisory Council.

  • Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons Will Enter Into Force Soon

    Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons Will Enter Into Force Soon

    For Immediate Release                                                      

    Contact:

    Sandy Jones: (805) 965-3443; sjones@napf.org

    TREATY ON THE PROHIBITION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS WILL ENTER INTO FORCE SOON

    Historic step makes the world a safer and more secure place in which to live.

    New York– On October 24, 2020, Honduras became the 50th country to ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW). With this 50th ratification, the treaty will enter into force on January 22, 2021, at which time it will become illegal to possess, use, and threaten to use nuclear weapons.

    Jaimaica and Nauru have also recently ratified the treaty. A complete list of countries that have signed and/or ratified the treaty can be found at https://www.icanw.org/signature_and_ratification_status.

    The TPNW opened for signature on September 20, 2017 at the UN headquarters in New York. Article One of the treaty prohibits states parties from developing, testing, producing, manufacturing, transferring, possessing, stockpiling, using or threatening to use nuclear weapons, or allowing nuclear weapons to be stationed on their territory. It also prohibits them from assisting, encouraging or inducing anyone to engage in any of these activities.

    The treaty is a major advance toward creating a safer and more secure world. Rick Wayman, CEO of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation (NAPF), a Santa Barbara-based non-profit that works for the abolition of nuclear weapons, played a key role in the initial negotiations leading up to the nuclear ban treaty in 2017. Wayman was thrilled at the ratification, saying, “Today the world has moved a big step forward to finally eliminating the long-standing existential threat posed by nuclear weapons.”

    While the United States chose to boycott the negotiations in 2017 and has refused to sign the treaty, the treaty still has the potential to significantly impact U.S. behavior regarding nuclear weapons issues. Previous weapon prohibition treaties, including the Chemical Weapons Convention and the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, have demonstrated that changing international norms leads to concrete changes in policies and behaviors, even in countries not party to the treaty.

    Wayman went on to say, “International law and legal norms are vital to changing nations’ behavior. The upcoming entry-into-force of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons makes it clear that nuclear weapons are illegal.”

    This effort to ban nuclear weapons has been led by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), which is made up of over 500 non-governmental organizations from 103 countries. NAPF has been a Partner Organization of ICAN since the campaign began in 2007. ICAN received the 2017 Nobel Peace for their efforts to draw attention to the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of any use of nuclear weapons and their ground-breaking efforts to achieve a treaty-based prohibition of such weapons.

    The treaty expresses in its preamble deep concern “about the catastrophic humanitarian consequences that would result from any use of nuclear weapons.” It further recognizes “the consequent need to completely eliminate such weapons, which remains the only way to guarantee that nuclear weapons are never used again under any circumstances.”

    Another important aspect of the TPNW is that it creates obligations to support the victims of nuclear weapons use and testing and to remediate the environmental damage caused by nuclear weapons. Wayman further commented, “The upcoming entry-into-force of the TPNW marks a huge milestone in using the law to end nuclear weapons. At NAPF, we are educating and training people of all ages to address the tangles of trauma that fuel and sustain the desire for nuclear weapons in the first place. The root causes of nuclear weapons are in many cases the same root causes that lead to wars, mass shootings, racism, and many other serious issues.”

    The treaty is a clear indication that the majority of the world’s countries no longer accept nuclear weapons and do not consider them legitimate. It demonstrates that the indiscriminate mass killing of civilians is unacceptable and that it is not possible to use nuclear weapons consistent with the laws of war.

    The treaty can be read in its entirety at http://undocs.org/A/CONF.229/2017/8

    #                                         #                                         #

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is committed to the abolition of nuclear weapons. Its mission is to educate and train people of all ages and backgrounds to solve the most dangerous technological, social, and psychological issues of our time, and to survive and thrive in the 21st century. The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation is a non-partisan, non-profit organization with consultative status to the United Nations. For more information, visit wagingpeace.org and peaceliteracy.org.