Category: Sunflower

  • Sunflower Newsletter February 2014

    Issue #199 – February 2014

    Facebook Twitter More...

    The Sunflower is a monthly e-newsletter providing educational information on nuclear weapons abolition and other issues relating to global security. Help us spread the word and forward this to a friend.

    Please donate to help sustain this valuable resource.

    Subscribe to the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Sunflower newsletter and Action Alert Network.

    • Perspectives
      • An Open Letter to College and University Presidents by David Krieger
      • The Fragility of Our Complex Civilization by John Scales Avery
      • Nukes Are Nuts: The Sequel by David Krieger
    • US Nuclear Weapons Policy
      • Enhanced Military Capabilities of U.S. Nuclear Bomb
    • Nuclear Proliferation
      • Temporary Nuclear Deal With Iran Takes Effect
    • Nuclear Insanity
      • Strategic Deterrent Coalition
      • Land-Based Nuclear Missile Officers in Multiple Scandals
      • North Korean Leader May Not Be Consistently Rational
    • Nuclear Testing
      • National Cancer Institute to Study Health Effects of First Nuclear Test
      • 60th Anniversary of Largest U.S. Nuclear Test
    • War and Peace
      • Latin American and Caribbean Nations Proclaim Zone of Peace
    • Resources
      • Eight Ways You’re Wrong About Iran’s Nuclear Program
      • New Nuclear Disarmament Community Online
      • Banning Nuclear Weapons: A Pacific Islands Perspective
    • Foundation Activities
      • Noam Chomsky to Deliver NAPF 2014 Kelly Lecture
      • Peace Leadership Training in San Diego
      • Mexico Conference on Humanitarian Impacts of Nuclear Weapons
      • Nukes Are Nuts Video Contest Announced
    • Quotes

     

    Perspectives

    An Open Letter to College and University Presidents

     

    You are in a unique position of leadership to influence today’s youth to achieve a better tomorrow for America and the world. I am writing to enlist your help in educating young people to understand the survival challenges that face humanity in the 21st century.

    Education is driven by values. Young people must learn to live with reverence for life, as did Albert Schweitzer, and to support equitable and nonviolent solutions to social problems, as did Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. Young people must be imbued with compassion, commitment and courage. They must learn to use their imaginations to find creative and cooperative solutions to the great issues of our time. And they must find joy in the process and take time to celebrate the miracle of living on the only planet we know of in the universe that supports life.

    To read more, click here.

    The Fragility of Our Complex Civilization

     

    Cultural evolution depends on the non-genetic storage, transmission, diffusion and utilization of information. The development of human speech, the invention of writing, the development of paper and printing, and finally, in modern times, mass media, computers and the Internet: all these have been crucial steps in society’s explosive accumulation of information and knowledge. Human cultural evolution proceeds at a constantly-accelerating speed, so great in fact that it threatens to shake society to pieces.

    The great and complex edifice of human civilization is far too precious to be risked in a thermonuclear war. It has been built by all humans, working together. By working together, we must now ensure that it is handed on intact to our children and grandchildren.

    To read more, click here.

    Nukes Are Nuts: The Sequel

     

    Nuclear weapons are monstrous and obscene explosive devices that have no function other than to threaten or cause mass annihilation. They kill indiscriminately and cause unimaginable suffering. The world knows well the death, destruction and lingering pain caused by these weapons at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nuclear weapons could end civilization and have no place in a civilized society. Nukes are nuts!

    To read more, click here.

    US Nuclear Weapons Policy

    Enhanced Military Capabilities of U.S. Nuclear Bomb

     

    Over 2 1/2 years ago, the Federation of American Scientists claimed that the planned Life Extension Program for the B61 nuclear bomb would provide new military capabilities to attack targets with greater accuracy and less radioactive fallout. In January, former U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff, Gen. Norton Schwartz, confirmed that the B61-12 would indeed have new military capabilities.

    Critics claim that “the increased accuracy and lower yield options could make the B61-12 more attractive to use because of reduced collateral damage and radioactive fallout.” The development of the B61-12 contradicts the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review, which declared that Life Extension Programs for U.S. nuclear weapons would “not support new military missions or provide for new military capabilities.”

    Hans M. Kristensen, “General Confirms Enhanced Targeting Capabilities of B61-12 Nuclear Bomb,” FAS Strategic Security Blog, January 23, 2014.

    Nuclear Proliferation

    Temporary Nuclear Deal With Iran Takes Effect

     

    Under a short-term agreement that went into effect on January 20, the United States granted Iran “limited, targeted and reversible sanctions relief for a six-month period.” The deal, which will expire in July 2014, was the result of Tehran’s agreement to suspend its uranium fuel-enrichment and other parts of its nuclear program, and disable thousands of centrifuges.

    However, Western nations, particularly Israel, remain skeptical of Iran’s long-term intentions. Iran continues to be adamant that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.

    Rick Gladstone and Thomas Erdbrink, “Temporary Nuclear Deal With Iran Takes Effect,” The New York Times, January 20, 2014.

    Nuclear Insanity

    Strategic Deterrent Coalition

     

    The newly formed Strategic Deterrent Coalition, led by Albuquerque business leader Sherman McCorkle, seeks to raise awareness of the U.S. nuclear weapons complex and protect the massive budgets of these facilities. The coalition’s primary goal is to defend the nuclear triad (intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine, and long-range bombers) against sensible proposals to eliminate one or more of its component parts in a post-Cold War world in which the U.S. and other nuclear-armed states are obligated to negotiate in good faith for Nuclear Zero.

    Michael Coleman, “New Coalition Defends U.S. Nuclear Complex,” Albuquerque Journal, January 9, 2014.

    Land-Based Nuclear Missile Officers in Multiple Scandals

     

    Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has begun a campaign to define and remedy troubles that plague the U.S. nuclear force. A progressively worsening scandal was revealed in January that started with missile officers around the country being investigated for illegal drug use. That investigation quickly grew to include accusations of at least 92 out of the 500 missile officers cheating on proficiency tests. Hagel has summoned top officials to the Pentagon and said he will form an expert group of military outsiders to perform a broader review of the U.S. nuclear force.

    Secretary Hagel reported to top officials that “personnel failures within this force threaten to jeopardize the trust the American people have placed in us to keep our nuclear weapons safe and secure.” The problem, however, is not simply a personnel issue. It is the unnecessary and insane nuclear mission that is at the heart of the low morale of missile launch officers and their generals alike.

    Robert Burns, “Hagel Vows to Get to Bottom of Nuke Missile Ills,” Associated Press, January 23, 2014.

    North Korean Leader May Not Be Consistently Rational

     

    Navy Admiral Samuel Lacklear, head of U.S. military forces in the Pacific, has expressed concern about Kim Jong Un’s decision-making abilities, saying that the North Korean leader has made the Pacific region a “very dangerous place.”

    Admiral Lacklear’s comments come after a series of actions, including the execution of Kim’s uncle, Jang Song Thaek, and increased military and nuclear productivity that has antagonized the U.S., raising fears and anxieties among senior military officials.

    Rachel Oswald, “U.S. Commander: North Korean Leader May Not Be Consistently ‘Rational’,” Global Security Newswire, January 23, 2014.

    Nuclear Testing

    National Cancer Institute to Study Health Effects of First Nuclear Test

     

    After nearly seven decades, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) is conducting a study to determine the health effects of the 1945 Trinity Site atomic test on New Mexico residents. The study is designed to determine the specific radiation doses to which the “Trinity downwinders” were subjected during the test. It was prompted by the conclusion of a 10-year study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that found radiation levels at homes near the Los Alamos National Laboratory were almost 10,000 times the accepted levels.

    NCI scientists will be focusing on the diets and lifestyles of New Mexico residents who were children at the time of the blast. The NCI study notes that diets are important in studying radiation levels because contaminated foods, including dairy products, can be a significant source of radiation.

    Dennis J. Carroll, “Downwinders Welcome Study of Trinity Blast’s Impacts,” Santa Fe New Mexican, January 25, 2014.

    60th Anniversary of Largest U.S. Nuclear Test

     

    March 1 will mark the 60th anniversary of Castle Bravo, an atmospheric nuclear weapon test conducted by the United States near Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands in 1954. The hydrogen bomb had a yield of 15 megatons, 1,000 times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. It was the largest weapon ever tested by the United States.

    Radioactive fallout from the explosion heavily contaminated Rongelap and Utirik atolls, but the residents of these islands were not evacuated for three days. A Japanese fishing vessel, the Lucky Dragon, was in the radioactive fallout path, which created a strong reaction against atmospheric nuclear testing among the people of Japan.

    Rongelap Atoll continues to have high levels of radiation in many areas, and many Rongelap natives believe it is not yet safe to return to their homeland 60 years later.

    For more information on the Castle Bravo test and its consequences, visit the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization’s page here.

    War and Peace

    Latin American and Caribbean Nations Proclaim Zone of Peace

     

    On January 28 and 29, the Heads of State and Government of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) gathered in Havana, Cuba, to sign a proclamation of their region as a zone of peace.

    The proclamation contains the nations’ “permanent commitment to solve disputes through peaceful means with the aim of uprooting forever threat or use of force in our region.” The proclamation also declares a “commitment of the States of the region to continue promoting nuclear disarmament as a priority objective and to contribute with general and complete disarmament, to foster the strengthening of confidence among nations.”

    To read the full CELAC proclamation, click here.

    Resources

    Eight Ways You’re Wrong About Iran’s Nuclear Program

     

    The National Interest has published a report by Yousaf Butt that debunks eight false assertions about Iran and its nuclear program.

    The report begins, “Oft repeated but false assertions about Iran’s nuclear program – and the recent deal to tamp it down – may end up being more dangerous than the program itself. These wrong statements reinforce each other, get amplified in the media, and are fueling a march to military action.”

    To read the full report, click here.

    New Nuclear Disarmament Community Online

     

    NAPF’s Geneva Representative, Christian N. Ciobanu, is developing a unique online nuclear disarmament community on Goodwall.org, “the social network to do good.” The social network will be officially launched on February 6, 2014, but the beta version is online now.

    Members of the community can write, comment, follow posts and stories, and share them on their Facebook and Twitter accounts.

    To join Goodwall.org, click here. For further information, please contact Christian N. Ciobanu at christian.ciobanu@graduateinstitute.ch.

    Banning Nuclear Weapons: A Pacific Islands Perspective

     

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), of which NAPF is a member, has published a new report entitled “Banning Nuclear Weapons: A Pacific Islands Perspective.” The report details the ongoing humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific. March 1 will mark the 60th anniversary of the infamous “Bravo” nuclear test at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands, which spread radioactive fallout over inhabited islands. From 1946 to 1996, at least 315 nuclear test explosions were conducted across the Pacific region by France, the United Kingdom and the United States.

    The author of the report, Nic Maclellan, said, “Pacific island nations – which understand all too well the horrific effects of nuclear weapons – are perfectly placed to play a leadership role in the process to negotiate a ban on nuclear weapons, which will help ensure that no one else suffers as they have suffered.”

    To download a copy of the report, click here.

    Foundation Activities

    Noam Chomsky to Deliver NAPF 2014 Kelly Lecture

     

    Professor Noam Chomsky will deliver the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 13th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future on February 28 at 7:30 p.m. in Santa Barbara, California. Professor Chomsky will speak on “Security and State Policy.”

    Tickets are sold out, but the lecture will be live audio streamed courtesy of KCSB. To listen to the lecture live at 7:30 p.m. Pacific Time on February 28, go to kcsb.org. If you live in the Santa Barbara area, you can also tune in to KCSB on the radio at 91.9 FM.

    Video of the lecture will be available as soon as possible following the event.

    Peace Leadership Training in San Diego

     

    From January 6-10, NAPF Peace Leadership Director Paul K. Chappell presented his five-day Peace Leadership Training as a graduate course at the University of San Diego School of Leadership and Education Sciences. Attended primarily by a select group of Ph.D. students and community activists, the course covered the type of leadership that is needed today, the type of leadership taught by Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. The course focused on nonviolence and new ways to wage peace.

    To read testimonials from the course, click here.

    For more information on Peace Leadership lectures and trainings, click here.

    Mexico Conference on Humanitarian Impacts of Nuclear Weapons

     

    NAPF Director of Programs Rick Wayman, New York Representative Alice Slater and Geneva Representative Christian N. Ciobanu will attend the Second Conference on the Humanitarian Impacts of Nuclear Weapons, which is hosted by the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs. They will attend the official government conference as observers, with many opportunities to speak with representatives of countries around the world who are concerned about this issue. They will also participate in strategy sessions with representatives of dozens of non-governmental organizations from around the world.

    In January, NAPF sent out an action alert encouraging President Obama to send a U.S. delegation to the conference in Mexico. Thus far, the U.S. has played a negative role, discouraging countries from examining the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons and actively choosing not to participate in such international forums. Click here to take action.

    Nukes Are Nuts Video Contest Announced

     

    NAPF’s 2014 video contest has officially launched. The contest is open to people of all ages around the world. To enter, make a video of 30 seconds or less about why you think nuclear weapons are nuts (as in “crazy”). Top videos are eligible for cash prizes and Nukes Are Nuts gear.

    For more information and full contest rules, click here.

    Quotes

     

    “To modernize your nuclear weapons stockpile and assure that they continue to stay secure and safe, it takes money, it takes resources.”

    — U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel.

     

    “The pressure is on for the U.S. to rebuild a cold war nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years…[but] as the threat goes down, we plan to spend more. In an age of budget constraint, it is hard to see how an increase in nuclear weapons spending is needed or aids American security.”

    Jon Wolfsthal, Deputy Director of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, in an essay on the Huffington Post.

     

    “One man in the right makes a majority.”

    Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), 16th U.S. President. This quote appears in the book Speaking of Peace: Quotations to Inspire Action, edited by NAPF President David Krieger.

    Editorial Team

     

    Scott Berzon

    Neil Fasching

    David Krieger

    Grant Stanton

    Carol Warner

    Rick Wayman

     

  • Sunflower Newsletter January 2014

    Issue #198 – January 2014

    Facebook Twitter More...

    The Sunflower is a monthly e-newsletter providing educational information on nuclear weapons abolition and other issues relating to global security. Help us spread the word and forward this to a friend.

    Please donate to help sustain this valuable resource.

    Subscribe to the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s Sunflower newsletter and Action Alert Network.

    • Perspectives
      • Missile Launching in the Dark by David Krieger
      • The Doublespeak of Nuclear Disarmament by Kate Hudson
    • US Nuclear Weapons Policy
      • Nuclear Weapon Protestors Face Decades in Prison
      • Budget Soars for U.S. Nuclear Weapons Modernization
    • Nuclear Disarmament
      • South Africa, the Nation that Gave Up Its Nuclear Weapons
    • Nuclear Proliferation
      • Russia Plans to Revive Rail-Mobile Nuclear Missiles
    • Nuclear Insanity
      • Congressman Supports Use of Nuclear Weapons Against Iran
      • Israeli Nuclear Whistleblower Still Held in Israel
    • Resources
      • Nuclear Famine: Two Billion People at Risk
      • The Morning of August 6
    • Foundation Activities
      • NAPF to Welcome Noam Chomsky to Santa Barbara
      • Peace Leadership in Canada
    • Quotes

     

    Perspectives

    Missile Launching in the Dark

     

    In the early morning hours of December 17, under cover of darkness, the Air Force launched a Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile from Vandenberg Air Force Base. It was a test of a nuclear-capable missile. Despite the claims of the Air Force, such tests do not make us safer or more secure- only more terrifying to others, and when it comes to nuclear weapons we should be terrifying ourselves. These are weapons that could destroy civilization, and yet we have the hubris to play Russian roulette with them and continue to do so more than 20 years after the end of the Cold War.

    The Air Force seems excessively proud of its ability to have “successfully launched” the nuclear-capable Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile. Is it pride in their ability to obey orders and carry out a mission fully capable of ending civilization should they be called upon to launch nuclear-armed Minuteman III missiles? The Air Force views its test launches as providing “data to ensure a safe, secure and effective nuclear deterrent.” But neither the Air Force nor anyone in authority can assure that nuclear deterrence will be safe, secure or effective.

    To read more, click here.

    The Doublespeak of Nuclear Disarmament

     

    It’s easy to say you want a world without nuclear weapons. Nearly everyone does: even David Cameron. It’s like saying there should be no global poverty: the hard part is taking action to do something about it.

    Imagine if David Cameron returned from his recent trade-boosting visit to China and had to concede, shamefaced, that he hadn’t mentioned trade with the UK. Worse still: what if he returned and boasted of the fact that he hadn’t mentioned trade with the UK? Well this is precisely what the Foreign and Commonwealth Office has just done following a UN meeting on nuclear disarmament.

    To read more, click here.

    US Nuclear Weapons Policy

    Nuclear Weapon Protestors Face Decades in Prison

     

    On January 28, three nonviolent protesters against nuclear weapons, Sr. Megan Rice, 83, Michael Walli, 63, and Gregory Boertje-Obed, 57, are scheduled to be sentenced in U.S. District Court in Knoxville, Tennessee, for the supposed crime of sabotage. They face decades in prison for their moral and courageous acts of protest..

    Roots Action has launched a campaign to encourage the judge, Amul R. Thapar, to show leniency in the sentencing of the protestors. Roots Action’s message reads in part, “The action taken by Megan, Michael and Greg was done from a commitment to nonviolence and from an allegiance to the future for our children and our planet, trying to insure that life will not be terminated by a nuclear war.”

    To send a letter to Judge Thapar, click here.

    Budget Soars for U.S. Nuclear Weapons Modernization

     

    The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that just in the past year, the projected budget for modernizing existing nuclear programs has increased by roughly $19 billion. The GAO report compared National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) budgets from 2012 to the current projections to arrive at the $19 billion figure. This huge increase also leaves out several other areas of significant cost for which NNSA has not provided figures.

    Notably missing are the figures for the construction of the Uranium Processing Facility in Tennessee and the Chemistry and the Metallurgy Research Replacement-Nuclear Facility in New Mexico. It’s not clear how much additional funding will be needed for these projects, but there’s no question that the existing budgets are underestimated significantly.

    A report released December 20 by the Congressional Budget Office estimates the cost of the Obama administration’s plans for the U.S. nuclear arsenal from 2014 to 2023 to total $355 billion.

    Frank Munger, “GAO: NNSA’s Modernization Costs Jump $19B, but the Budget Numbers Don’t Mesh with Plans,” Atomic City Underground, December 13, 2013.

    Nuclear Disarmament

    South Africa, the Nation that Gave Up Its Nuclear Weapons

     

    Former South African President F.W. de Klerk wrote an op-ed published in the Los Angeles Times detailing his thinking behind the decision to get rid of South Africa’s nuclear weapons in 1989.

    De Klerk wrote, “Nuclear weapons had no value in the kind of border wars we were fighting, and the prospect of using them against neighboring countries was too appalling to be contemplated.”

    He continued, “The international community must take concrete steps to control, and finally eliminate, nuclear weapons as a thinkable option. This will require greater support for the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and more rapid movement by existing nuclear weapons states toward the reduction and dismantling of their stockpiles. The world should realize that real security does not lie in increasing our power to destroy others; it lies in our ability to live with others on the basis of peace and justice.”

    F.W. de Klerk, “South Africa, the Nation that Gave Up Its Nukes,” Los Angeles Times, December 22, 2013.

    Nuclear Proliferation

    Russia Plans to Revive Rail-Mobile Nuclear Missiles

     

    Gen. Sergei Karakayev, commander of Russian strategic rocket forces, has indicated that Russia intends to revive its rail-based Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) capability in response to U.S. plans to develop a conventional long-range strike capacity. Russia considers missiles that can be moved around by train to be easier to protect from elimination by an adversary than traditional silo-based missiles.

    Russia has not had a rail-based ICBM capability since retiring its final Soviet-era system eight years ago.

    Russia May Revive Rail-Mobile ICBMs to Counter U.S. Prompt-Strike Arms,” Global Security Newswire, December 18, 2013.

    Nuclear Insanity

    Congressman Supports Use of Nuclear Weapons Against Iran

     

    In a statement on C-Span, Republican congressman Duncan Hunter of California said that if the U.S. had to hit Iran, “you don’t do it with boots on the ground, you do it with tactical nuclear devices.” This remark goes a step further than those made by GOP donor Sheldon Adelson in October, who said that a nuclear device should be detonated in the desert of Iran to send a warning. Hunter said that his opinion is formed by his own service spent in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Hunter’s statement had no lack of opponents. Kingston Reif of the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation responded, “The first use of nuclear weapons against Iran would guarantee a mad Iranian dash to acquire nuclear weapons to deter future such US attacks.”

    Ben Armbruster, “Congressman Says U.S. Should Use Nuclear Weapons if it Attacks Iran,” ThinkProgress, December 4, 2013.

    Israeli Nuclear Whistleblower Still Held in Israel

     

    Mordechai Vanunu, an ex-technician at Israel’s Dimona nuclear plant who leaked information about Israel’s nuclear weapons program in 1986, continues to have significant restrictions placed on his life after having served 18 years in prison. Vanunu is still restricted from talking to the media and foreigners, and is not allowed to leave Israel.

    Vanunu recently asked the Israeli High Court to allow him to leave Israel. However, the Israeli government claims that expert reports and secret information, presented to the court in a closed-door hearing, prove that Vanunu’s information is still relevant and its revelation would endanger state security. The court is not expected to rule on the matter in the near future.

    Yonah Jeremy Bob, “Vanunu Pleads with High Court to Allow Him to Leave Israel,” Jerusalem Post, December 25, 2013.

    Resources

    Nuclear Famine: Two Billion People at Risk

     

    International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) and its U.S. affiliate, Physicians for Social Responsibility, have released a new report concluding that more than two billion people – a quarter of the world’s population – would be at risk of starvation in the event of a limited nuclear exchange, such as one that could occur between India and Pakistan, or by the use of even a small number of the nuclear weapons held by the U.S. and Russia.

    “A nuclear war using only a fraction of existing arsenals would produce massive casualties on a global scale – far more than we had previously believed,” said the report’s author, IPPNW co-president Ira Helfand.

    To download a free copy of the report, click here.

    The Morning of August 6

     

    Tadashi Hasegawa was a Hiroshima atomic bomb survivor who spent his life speaking out against nuclear weapons. He recently wrote a book about his experiences and had it published in Japan. Before he died last year, his family promised him to translate his book into English. The book is entitled “The Morning of August 6, I Was 14 Years Old.”

    Click here for a free download of the book and to see video of an interview with Tadashi.

    Foundation Activities

    NAPF to Welcome Noam Chomsky to Santa Barbara

     

    The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation will welcome Professor Noam Chomsky to Santa Barbara to deliver the 13th Annual Frank K. Kelly Lecture on Humanity’s Future on February 28, 2014.

    Professor Chomsky, a long-time critic of nuclear weapons and U.S. nuclear policy, will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Lobero Theatre in downtown Santa Barbara.

    For more information and to purchase tickets, click here.

    Peace Leadership in Canada

     

    NAPF Peace Leadership Director Paul Chappell spoke in December 2013 in New Brunswick, Canada on the principles of nonviolence at the workshop on Building Non-Violent Indigenous Rights Movements. Held at the Wabanaki Resource Center at St. Thomas University and sponsored by the Wabanaki Confederacy and The Land Peace Foundation, the first part of this workshop focused on how nonviolence training could be applied to the current struggle against fracking as Indigenous tribes resist the Government of New Brunswick’s appropriation of tribal lands for shale gas exploration.

    Chappell discussed both the philosophy of nonviolence and the actions of Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. He also explored the history of different kinds of nonviolent protests.

    “I was inspired to learn how Gandhi stood up for himself, with strength and nonviolence and was able to move so many people to action,” said Juisen Bartibogue, Mi’kmaq Nation, 19, of Burnt Church, New Brunswick. “I saw how nonviolence is the only way for us to be able to achieve our goals and to make a lasting peace.”

    Attorney Sherri Mitchell, a graduate of the summer 2013 NAPF Peace Leadership training, spoke during the second half of the workshop on strategy building for unified movements. A member of the Penobscot Tribe and executive director of the Land Peace Foundation, Mitchell has been an advocate for indigenous rights for over two decades, working to protect the rights of her own tribe and those of Indigenous people across the Americas.

    Mitchell said, “The battle over dwindling resources has caused aggressive attacks on Indigenous rights and these workshops will provide the practical skills to create strong and effective opposition to these attacks.”

    To see a picture from this event, click here.

    Quotes

     

    “We must ask the question, which might sound naïve to those who have elaborated sophisticated arguments to justify their refusal to eliminate these terrible and terrifying weapons of mass destruction — why do they need them anyway?”

    Nelson Mandela speaking at the United Nations General Assembly in 1998.

     

    “We are obliged by our consciences to act when we know, and we are free to do so. … As long as one nuclear bomb or energy facility exists, all of life remains its potential victim.”

    Sister Megan Rice, in an email interview from prison with Global Security Newswire.

     

    “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”

    Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. This quote appears in the book Speaking of Peace: Quotations to Inspire Action, edited by NAPF President David Krieger.

    Editorial Team

    Scott Berzon David Krieger Carol Warner Rick Wayman