Author: David Krieger

  • Peace, Memory and the Power of Poetry

    If we choose to create a world at peace, how we remember events of the past matters.  Societies often attempt to envelop important past events in shrouds of secrecy or in mythic forms.  Nations and despotic leaders are adept at painting themselves as heroic.  To learn the important lessons of the past so that we may avoid repeating them in the present or future, we must push away myths and cover-ups, bring down the walls of denial, and expose the truth.  We must not allow horrific events of the past, including wars and human rights abuses, to be justified with specious, patriotic arguments.

    To create a more decent and peaceful future, we must directly confront the lies and brutality of past wars.  This requires an honest appraisal of the past.  For this reason, museums are created that introduce new generations to what happened in the Holocaust; and about the US use of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    The arts can engage our hearts and shake us from our complacency.  They can awaken and enlighten us.  They can move us to action.  They can help us to remember, to make connections and to see the world in a new light.  Literature, painting and poetry have the power to ignite the human spirit, but to do so must be rooted in truth and compassion.

    The arts can provide the means of understanding the horrors of war.  There are many great books that tell and retell stories of war and peace.  Some of are Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace, Erich-Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front, Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, and Ernest Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms.  A powerful artistic movie that depicts the insanity of war and dispels the myth that war is glorious is The King of Hearts.  A well-known painting by Pablo Picasso, Guernica, powerfully depicts the brutality and suffering of war.

    Poetry can be an artistic form for understanding the past in a truthful light.  I will refer to five of my own poems and provide brief commentary on their meanings.  The poems may raise more questions about past events than provide ready answers.  They may open our eyes to view the world from new perspectives.

    An Irony of History

    Here is a simple poem about the atomic bombing of Japan.  It tells a very short story of proximity in time.  The atomic bombings did not happen in a vacuum.  Other events were taking place.  The poem opens the door a crack.  Perhaps it can also open our minds.

    A SHORT HISTORY LESSON:  1945

    August 6th:
    Dropped atomic bomb
    On civilians
    At Hiroshima.

    August 8th:
    Agreed to hold
    War crimes trials
    For Nazis.

    August 9th:
    Dropped atomic bomb
    On civilians
    At Nagasaki.

    The events in the poem happened within the space of three days: the US bombed civilians in Hiroshima (a war crime), agreed to hold war crimes trials for Nazis, and then bombed civilians at Nagasaki (a war crime).  It is a war crime to bomb civilians.  How ironic that the US committed war crimes in the days immediately surrounding its entering into an international treaty with other Allied Powers to hold the Nazis to account for their war crimes.  The poem leaves a question in our minds about US hypocrisy in its actions.

    Remembering My Lai

    This poem remembers the Vietnam War and the massacre of civilians that happened at the hands of US soldiers at My Lai.  Many young people may not have heard of the atrocities committed at My Lai, nor of the name of Lieutenant Calley, who was convicted of ordering the My Lai massacre, and who was soon pardoned by President Nixon.  If we don’t remember the atrocities of war, especially those we commit, we are likely to repeat them.  Thus, little changes from My Lai in the Vietnam War to Abu Ghraib in the Iraq War.

    LITTLE CHANGES

    Our brave young soldiers
    shot babies at My Lai –
    few remember.

    Lt. Calley
    sentenced to house arrest
    until pardoned by Nixon.

    Then it was gooks.
    Now it is hajjis
    little changes.

    Abu Ghraib.
    The buck stops nowhere.
    It still hasn’t stopped.

    From My Lai
    to Abu Ghraib –
    the terrible silence.

    How does My Lai compare with atrocities in more recent wars?  What happened at Abu Ghraib?  Where does the buck stop?  Why is there such disinterest and apathy among the American people?  Why the terrible silence?  What are our values?  Where is our sense of decency and our shame?

    Who Was Norman Morrison?

    Norman Morrison was a real person, an American Quaker.  He had a family.  He immolated himself in front of the Pentagon in protest against the Vietnam War.

    NORMAN MORRISON
    November 2, 1965

    Sitting calmly before the Pentagon, like a Buddhist monk,
    he doused himself in kerosene, lit a match and went up in flame.

    I imagine McNamara, stiff and unflinching, as he watched
    from above.

    To his wife, Morrison wrote, “Know that I love thee,
    but I must go to help the children of the priest’s village.”

    When it happened, the wife of the YMCA director said,
    “I can understand a heathen doing that, but not a Christian.”

    Few Americans remember his name, but in Vietnam
    children still sing songs about his courage.

    Norman Morrison’s troubling death by public suicide raises many disquieting questions: Why would he do this to himself?  Why is he remembered in Vietnam, but hardly remembered in America?  Why did he choose to immolate himself under Robert McNamara’s window at the Pentagon?  Who was Robert McNamara?  Was he a war criminal?

    What Was Zaid’s Misfortune?

    Like Norman Morrison and Robert McNamara, Zaid was a real person, an 11-year-old Iraqi child whose parents, both physicians, were killed in front of their medical clinic.  He became a victim of war, an orphan of war.  War creates misfortune.  In war there are no winners.  To be macho about war is foolish.

    ZAID’S MISFORTUNE

    Zaid had the misfortune
    of being born in Iraq, a country
    rich with oil.

    Iraq had the misfortune
    of being invaded by a country
    greedy for oil.

    The country greedy for oil
    had the misfortune of being led
    by a man too eager for war.

    Zaid’s misfortune multiplied
    when his parents were shot down
    in front of their medical clinic.

    Being eleven and haunted
    by the deaths of one’s parents
    is a great misfortune.

    In Zaid’s misfortune
    a distant silence engulfs
    the sounds of war.

    War kills children and makes orphans of them.  Why do so few people in America care about Zaid’s misfortune?  He is but one victim among many, but shouldn’t we care about the pain, suffering and cruelty initiated and carried out in our names?  Why are we so silent about war?  Why do we think war is an acceptable means of resolving conflicts?  Why is Zaid’s misfortune also our misfortune?

    Yet Another Hiroshima Day

    Each year there is an opportunity to remember what happened at Hiroshima on August 6th, the anniversary of the bombing.  It is an opportunity to consider the importance of the day, not only for what happened, but more importantly, for what could happen in the future.  The life of every person on the planet is threatened by nuclear war.

    ANOTHER HIROSHIMA DAY HAS PASSED

    And there are still nuclear weapons in the world.

    They are still on hair-trigger alert, weapons
    with no concern for you or me or anyone.

    They are weapons with steel hearts.
    There is no bargaining with them.

    They have nothing to say or perhaps
    they speak in another language.
    They do not speak our language.

    They have only one battle plan
    and that is utter destruction.

    They have no respect for the laws of war
    or any laws, even those of nature.

    Another Hiroshima Day has passed
    and the shadow of the bomb still darkens
    the forests of our dreams.

    Hiroshima and Nagasaki were nightmares for those beneath the bombs and for humanity.  If we don’t recognize that, we won’t awaken from our too comfortable complacency before it is too late.  Nuclear weapons cannot control themselves.  We humans must control them.  But can we really do that?  We thought we could control nuclear power, but then there was Chernobyl and then Fukushima.  Do we really believe that we humans are capable of controlling nuclear weapons?  Is this illusion of control not really a form of hubris, one that could lead to the demise of humanity?  With each Hiroshima Day that passes are we not continuing to play Nuclear Roulette with the human future?

    The Arts Matter

    We are fortunate to live in a time in which we have the possibility to transition from cruelty to kindness, from selfishness to community, from nation to world, from war to peace, from nuclear threat to nuclear zero, and from killing to nonkilling.  May the arts, including the poetry of peace, help to open our eyes and hearts, sharpen our senses, and put us in touch with the truth, beauty and responsibilities of our common humanity, so that we may become a part of the solution so desperately needed to our global malaise.  In short, may the arts restore and deepen our humanity and make us worthy of the sacred gift of life.

  • Bulldozers

    In Desert Storm, an American War,
    the U.S. military put bulldozer blades on its tanks
    and buried Iraqi soldiers alive in desert sands.
    This deserves more than a footnote in the annals
    of human cruelty.

    Rachel Corrie, a young American, stood
    before an Israeli bulldozer that threatened the home
    of a Palestinian family. She refused to give way.
    This deserves more than a footnote in the annals
    of human courage.

  • Misiles Listos

    Son jóvenes y brillantes militares
    listos  a poner fin al Planeta.

    Creen esar ahí para salvar al mundo, sin darse cuenta
    de que son instrumentos de un sistema enloquecido.

    Permanecen en sus búnkers, siempre alertas
    Sujetando en sus manos las llaves del futuro

    El futuro es oscuro como sus búnkers, excavados
    en la tierra. Y ahí se aburren.

    No pasa nada. Día tras día, permanecen en alerta
    haciendo nada.

    Listos para cumplir órdenes, listos para hacer
    su parte trayendo el mundo a su fin.

    Son instrumentos de un sistema enloquecido.


     

    David Krieger es Presidente de Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

     

    Traducción/adaptación de Rubén D. Arvizu, Director para Américas Latina de Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

    Click here for the English version.

  • Missileers

    They are bright young women and men
    ready to bring the world to an end.

    They believe they are saving the world, not
    seeing they are instruments of a system gone mad.

    They sit in their bunkers, always alert,
    holding the keys to the future in their hands.

    The future is dark from their bunkers, deep
    in the earth.  They grow bored.

    Nothing happens.  Day after day, they remain
    alert to nothing.

    They are ready to follow orders, ready to do
    their part to bring the world to an end.

    They are instruments of a system gone mad.


     

    Vaya aquí para la versión española.

  • Weapons that Terrorize and Vaporize

    Nuclear weapons are insanely powerful. They cause extreme suffering and widespread death, and cannot distinguish between combatants and civilians. They are long-distance killing devices, cowardly in conception. They are capable of destroying cities, countries and civilization. They threaten the future of humanity and all complex forms of life. Nuclear weapons have zero redeeming qualities, and our global goal must be zero nuclear weapons.

    The nine nuclear-armed countries are all engaged in modernizing their nuclear arsenals. The United States plans to spend $1 trillion on modernizing its nuclear arsenal over the next three decades. It will upgrade its nuclear warheads and replace its land-based, sea-based and bomber-based nuclear delivery systems. It will make its nuclear weapons smaller, more accurate, and thereby more usable. It will modernize weapons whose primary purpose is to annihilate whole populations and whose effects cannot be contained in time or space.

    The United States and other nuclear-armed countries are planning to modernize weapons that terrorize and vaporize.

    In addition, there are far better ways to spend $1 trillion than on preparing for global annihilation, including providing food for the hungry, shelter for the homeless, healthcare for those in need, and education for all children.

    Humankind appears to have gained little wisdom from the use of nuclear weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or from the more than 2,000 nuclear tests conducted since the onset of the Nuclear Age. At the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, we are dedicated to awakening humanity to the peril of reliance on nuclear weapons.

    The United States led the way into the Nuclear Age, and we believe it should provide leadership in bringing the Nuclear Age to an end by fulfilling its legal obligations under international law to negotiate in good faith for an end to the nuclear arms race (modernization) and for total nuclear disarmament. If not the United States, who might lead? If not now, when?

    At the moment, leadership for nuclear disarmament is coming from the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), one of the world’s smallest countries. The RMI has brought lawsuits against the nine nuclear-armed countries, calling upon them to fulfill their legal obligations for nuclear disarmament under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and customary international law. We are proud to be a consultant to the Marshall Islands in these Nuclear Zero lawsuits.

    Join us in working for peace and a world free of nuclear weapons.

  • NAPF: A Voice for Peace

    When we created the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation in 1982 we believed that peace is an imperative of the Nuclear Age.  That is, peace is no longer just desirable; in a nuclear-armed world, it is essential.  An important part of our work at the Foundation is to awaken people to the extraordinary dangers of living in the Nuclear Age.  We are always seeking new ways to break through the complacency of our time through education and advocacy.

    LOGO BUG PAGESI believe that complacency has four principal elements: apathy, conformity, ignorance and denial.  Together these four elements form the acronym ACID, and they are corrosive to a decent human future, or to any future at all.  We must transform apathy to empathy; conformity to critical thinking; ignorance to wisdom; and denial to recognition of the threats that nuclear weapons pose to our common future.

    We are seven decades into the Nuclear Age and the world has nine nuclear-armed countries possessing over 15,000 nuclear weapons, far more than enough to destroy civilization and the human species.  The leaders of these nine nuclear-armed countries are all engaged in modernizing their nuclear arsenals.  The US alone is planning to spend $1 trillion on modernizing its nuclear arsenal over the next three decades.  This is insane.  It will make the weapons smaller and more accurate, and thereby more likely to be used.

    When we stand alone our voices may be weak, but when we come together and unite we have the potential to be the most powerful force on Earth.  People power is far more potent than nuclear weapons.  Nuclear weapons are equal opportunity destroyers, but the people united are a superpower that can take charge of our planet.

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, with its 75,000 members, is a valuable voice for peace.  Our purpose is to find better ways to resolve our differences than by making sacrificial lambs of our children and to lead in finding the way out of the nuclear weapons era, which could make sacrificial lambs of us all.

  • NAPF: Una Voz por la Paz

    Cuando creamos la Nuclear Age Peace Foundation en 1982, lo hicimos con la creencia de que la paz es un imperativo de la era nuclear. Es decir, que la paz ya no es sólo deseable; en un mundo con armas nucleares, es esencial. Una parte importante de nuestro trabajo en la Fundación es lograr que la gente tenga consciencia de los extraordinarios peligros de vivir en la era nuclear. Siempre estamos buscando nuevas formas de motivación en esta época de auto-complacencia a través de la educación y el ejemplo.

    La auto- complacencia se conforma con cuatro elementos principales: la apatía, la conformidad, la ignorancia y la negación. En conjunto, estos cuatro elementos forman uno muy corrosivo que está en contra de un futuro humano decente, o ni siquiera de  un futuro. Debemos transformar la apatía con la empatía; la conformidad con el pensamiento crítico; la ignorancia con la sabiduría; y la negación con el reconocimiento de las amenazas que las armas nucleares representan para nuestro futuro común.

    Han pasado siete décadas en la era nuclear y el mundo tiene nueve países con armas nucleares que en conjunto poseen más de 15.000 de ellas, mucho más que suficiente para destruir varias veces la civilización y la especie humana. Los líderes de estos nueve países con armas nucleares están involucrados ahora en la modernización de sus arsenales nucleares. Tan sólo EE.UU. tiene la intención de invertir mil millones de   dólares en la modernización de su arsenal en las próximas tres décadas. Esto es una locura.  Las armas serán más pequeñas, manuables  y más precisas, y por lo tanto con mayor probabilidad de que se utilicen.

    Cuando somos solos nuestras voces pueden ser débiles, pero cuando nos unimos tenemos el potencial de ser la fuerza más poderosa de la Tierra. El poder del pueblo es mucho más potente que las armas nucleares. Ellas son destructoras de todo el esfuerzo humano, pero las personas unidas son una superpotencia que puede hacerse cargo de nuestro planeta.

    La Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, con sus 75.000 miembros, es una voz valiosa para la paz. Nuestro objetivo es encontrar mejores formas de resolver nuestras diferencias. Ser líderes para encontrar la forma de eliminar las armas nucleares, y no transformar a la raza humana en corderos para el sacrificio.

    David Krieger es Presidente de la Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
    Ruben D. Arvizu es Director para América Latina de la Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

  • 2016 Kelly Lecture Introduction

    [February 18, 2016] – Welcome to the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 15th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future.  I want to thank our principal sponsor for this event, the Santa Barbara Foundation, as well as those of you who have supported the work of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation over the past three decades.  If you are not familiar with the Foundation’s work, please visit the Foundation online at www.wagingpeace.org.

    Looking to the future requires us to take a hard look at our past and present.  And when it comes to issues of “War, Peace, Truth and the Media,” our record as a country has not been admirable or even decent.  In my lifetime, our political leaders have lied us into at least two wars – Vietnam and Iraq – and our mainstream media has often furthered the rush to war rather than support international law and the sanctity of peace.

    Let me say a few words about Frank Kelly, for whom this lecture series is named.  He was a co-founder of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and served as its Senior Vice President from our founding in 1982 until his death in 2010 at the age of nearly 96.  His life spanned most of the 20th century and intersected with some of the most important people and issues of his time.

    In creating the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Frank and I shared the belief that peace is an imperative of the Nuclear Age.  Peace is no longer just desirable; it is essential for humanity’s future.

    Frank was a journalist, a soldier during World War II, a speech writer for Harry Truman, an assistant to the Senate Majority Leader, and the vice president of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.  The Center is where Frank and I met, and where he also met Robert Scheer.

    Frank believed that everyone deserves a seat at humanity’s table.  He believed in democracy and in the inherent value of every person.  He believed, in short, in humanity’s future.  This lecture series honors Frank and his vision that “we can shape a more promising future for our planet and its inhabitants.”

    Our lecturer tonight, Robert Scheer, is one of our country’s most distinguished journalists.  He speaks truth to power.  In the 1960s he was a Vietnam War correspondent, managing editor, and editor in chief for Ramparts Magazine.

    In the 1970s through the early 1990s he was a correspondent for the Los Angeles Times and launched a nationally syndicated column that is now based at Truthdig.com, which he founded in 2005.  He currently serves as editor in chief of Truthdig.com.

    He is also a professor of clinical communications at USC’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.  Among his many books are With Enough Shovels: Reagan, Bush and Nuclear War.   His most recent book, about corporate and government data-collection and the destruction of democracy, is They Know Everything about You.

    The title of Mr. Scheer’s lecture tonight is “War, Peace, Truth and the Media.”  This is a topic of considerable importance for obvious reasons, but particularly since no war in the Nuclear Age is trivial when nuclear weapons are lurking in the background.  If the stance of the media toward war is docile and deferent to authority, this helps support war and defeat peace.  On the other hand, if the media finds and reports the truth, war is less likely to be embraced.

    America needs more journalists like Robert Scheer, and we are very pleased to have him with us for this 15th annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future.  The video of his lecture will soon be available at the Foundation’s www.wagingpeaace.org website.

  • Archbishop Desmond Tutu Endorses NAPF for the Nobel Peace Prize

    Archbishop Desmond TutuI’m writing to share some meaningful news with you. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, world-renowned spiritual leader and social activist, has endorsed the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation for the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize. This is truly a significant achievement as Archbishop Tutu is himself a past recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize and one of the world’s great moral leaders. We are honored by his belief in our work.

    In his endorsement, Archbishop Tutu cited our continued global efforts (since 1982) to abolish nuclear weapons. He also endorsed the Aegean Solidarity Movement and the Club of Rome, Dr. Herman Daly and Pope Francis, saying, “What the nominations have in common is that they represent collective responses to the realities of globalization‚ finite resources and security. They underscore the inter-dependent nature of our human family.”

    We will of course continue to do all we can in pursuit of a more peaceful world, free of nuclear weapons. We seek this for the people of today – our human family – and also for those of the future, so that they may all live in a peaceful and just world, free from the threat of nuclear annihilation.

    Thank you for your continued support and engagement with the Foundation’s mission.

    Sincerely,

    David Krieger
    President
    Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

    Vaya aquí para la versión española.

  • Our Purpose is to Love

    Our purpose is to love and love some more.
    To fail to love would be a mortal crime.
    We don’t know what the future holds in store,
    but surely this: we will each run out of time.
    So we are charged to love beneath the sun
    while we live on this sacred planet Earth.
    Fast running time will not stop for anyone.
    By our love we show our worldly worth.
    In my garden I watch the seasons flow
    as time moves on passing through the years.
    We each have our faith and our fiery fears
    and through it all we know what we will know.

    When we love we pull our planetary weight.
    There is no time or place on Earth for war or hate.

    David Krieger
    February 2015