Jul 5, 2015

Simplicity Day

“As you simplify your life, the laws of the universe will be simpler; solitude will not be solitude, poverty will not be poverty, nor weakness weakness.”
-- Henry David Thoreau

Simplicity Day on July 12th celebrates the birthday of Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) who encouraged us to simplify our lives.

Here is a great video from this website on the "Story of Stuff" The Story of Solutions explores how we can move our economy in a more sustainable and just direction, starting with orienting ourselves toward a new goal.




Check out all our many other resources about this remarkable movement: Simple Living Resources from LPF

Jun 13, 2015

World Refugee Day



Now when they had departed, behold,( an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, "Rise, take the child and his mother, and flee to Egypt, and remain there until I tell you, for Herod is about to search for the child, to destroy him." And he rose and took the child and his mother by night and departed to Egypt and remained there until the death of Herod. (Matthew 2:13-15)

World Refugee Day
, observed June 20 each year, is dedicated to raising awareness of the situation of refugees throughout the world.

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

World Refugee Day - UN
World Refugee Day - Wikipedia

May 9, 2015

The Origins of Mother's Day

It has been over 140 years since Mother's Day first came into being, yet few people know that it was originally conceived as a day for mothers to protest injustice and war. Over the years the activist observance of this holiday became squelched by its commercialization by flower and card companies who turned it into billion-dollar industry. There has been a recent movement to return Mother's Day to its original meaning. Check out LPF's Women's Peace Resources.
read more:
The Original Anti-War Mother's Day
Soap to Ploughshares: How to return Mother's Day to its original meaning.
Mothers' Day Proclamation: Julia Ward Howe, Boston, 1870
Mother’s Day for Peace: A Dramatic Reading of Julia Ward Howe’s Mother’s Day Proclamation
Mother's Day Proclamation
Original Mother's Day a war protest


Three more takes on the origins of Mother's Day . . .

CODEPINK : Julia Ward Howe's Mother's Day Proclamation - 1870
www.codepink4peace.org
Arise then...women of this day! Arise, all women who have hearts! . . . Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have taught them of charity, mercy and patience.


The Radical History of Mother’s Day
www.nationofchange.org
There’s a good number of us who question holidays like Mother’s Day in which you spend more time feeding money into a system that exploits our love for our mothers than actually celebrating them. . . .


Mother's Day: The Radical Roots in the U.S.A.
www.allvoices.com
Mother's day in the U.S. was originally associated with two radical women activists Julia Ward Howe and Anna Maria Jarvis. Howe was well known as an abolitionist, suffragist and author . . . .






Apr 28, 2015

Nuclear Nonproliferation in the Spotlight


The United Nations has begun its
 Review Conference on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The Conference has been held every five years since the Treaty went into effect in 1970 to assess the implementation of the Treaty and make recommendations on ways to further strengthen it.   

The NPT is a landmark international treaty whose aim is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons and weapons technology, to promote cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and to further the goal of achieving nuclear and general disarmament. 

The 2015 NPT Conference is being held at UN Headquarters in New York from April 27 to May 22.
  All but five countries in the world are signers of the Treaty, widely regarded as the most successful -- and the most widely adhered to -- international arms control agreement. 

The 2015 Review Conference
 plans to consider a number of key issues: promoting and strengthening non-proliferation safeguards; nuclear energy safety and security; regional disarmament and non-proliferation; measures to further strengthen the review process; larger issues of nuclear disarmament; and expanding public involvement and disarmament education. 

For a brief, reliable summary of the challenges faced in the 2015 NPT Review Conference, 
see "Background and Key Resources on the 2015 NPT Reviewat: http://www.armscontrol.org/  
See also: http://fas.org/nuke/control/npt/
For UN and US perspectives on the NPT treaty, nonproliferation, and the 2015 Review Conference (as well as an overview essay from wikipedia), see:
UN:  http://www.un.org/en/conf/npt/2015/    
US:  http://www.state.gov/t/isn/npt/
wiki:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_on_the_Non-Proliferation_of_Nuclear_Weapons
Lutheran Peace Fellowship, the NPT Review Conference, and subsequent work:
t LPF”s Director was a speaker at the 1995 NPT Review Conference, where we got an inside view of this important process.  Our work on the NPT was one in a series of high level leadership roles LPF has played in global and US peace issues, and supporting Lutheran involvement:
t Our leadership and resources were key to helping Lutherans gather more petition signatures for a global landmines ban than any other denomination or secular group in the US.  LPF’s landmines worship resource was mailed to every ELCA pastor and leader.  The Campaign to Ban Landmines, of which LPF is part, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997.
t LPF played a key role in gaining ratification of the Chemical Weapons Treaty in the U.S. Senate in 1997. (One congressional staff member said it may not have been ratified without our contribution!)
t In 1998-99, LPF’s resolution supporting the UN Decade for Peace was approved by 31 synods (a record number) and the Churchwide Assembly.  The ELCA set up an Inter-Unit Task Force including LPF that met monthly for 10 years to encourage nonviolence education and resources.  LPF’s director was named the US delegate to UN Decade meetings in India to plan what grew into the largest peace education effort in UN history.  
t Nonviolence education became LPF's focus for the Decade and beyond. We led 100s of workshops and forums, and over 70 in-depth leadership trainings around the country. . .  
t In 2008, we reach a dramatic milestone: a million people have used LPF computer activities and leaders guides on budget priorities, hunger, biblical peacemaking, and nonviolence!  
ð In 2015, LPF work on those issues is again growing. We're happy to help you stimulate educational efforts and to find and share information about activity in your area. Send us an email or give us a call. . .

Mar 15, 2015

Anniversary of the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero

This year marks the 35th anniversary of the assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero in El Salvador. Romero was assassinated while saying mass on March 24, 1980 in a small chapel in a cancer hospital where he lived. I had the honor of visiting this site on an LPF Study Trip to Central America back in 1998. In my account of the trip, I wrote "The assassinations of Archbishop Romero and the Jesuit priests were powerful historical facts to me before this trip, but the experience of visiting the sites of these atrocities was overwhelming. The photographs of the carnage and the victims' blood-stained clothes on display impressed upon me the great sacrifices made here in the struggle for justice and peace." - Alan Forsberg

In the videos and links below, learn more about this remarkable man and how he became the voice of the Salvadoran people when all other channels of expression had been crushed by the repression.

Oscar Romero of El Salvador: informal adult education in a context of violence

Celebrating Monsignor Romero

Oscar Romero - Resources

Archbishop Oscar Romero : Quotes

Remembering the Assassination of Archbishop Oscar Romero 

Archbishop Oscar Romero - The Last Sermon (1980)

Prophets Of A Future Not Our Own - Prayer

Romero - 1989 film about Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero (youtube part 1 of 11)

More short Youtube videos:



Mar 9, 2015

MORAL MONDAY AND THE FORWARD TOGETHER MOVEMENT IN NORTH CAROLINA

The Wake County Chapter of LPF has actively participated in the Moral Monday and Forward Together Movement which began in North Carolina on April 29, 2013. They have attended the weekly demonstrations and will continue their weekly involvement when the movement resumes in April.  Two members did civil disobedience and were arrested in 2013 and one member was a presenter at one of the events.


The movement was in response to several actions that a newly elected conservative legislative majority was doing to a tradition of caring for the least fortunate. The movement was grounded in a yearning for social justice that enlisted many thousands of people to protest those choices. The protesters were a wide range of citizens, with many religious progressive movements represented. On that first Monday, 17 protesters were arrested. Each Monday, multitudes of protesters gathered at the state legislature building while the general assembly was in session. The protests were characterized by engaging in civil disobedience by entering the state legislature building and then being peacefully arrested. As the movement built momentum, 924 people were arrested in 2013.



The movement encompasses a broad coalition, including advocates for immigrant rights, LGBT rights, criminal justice, worker’s rights, environmental issues and others. They were responding to the conservative faction within the General Assembly who chose to deny emergency unemployment benefits to 170,000 hard-working people; refused to expand Medicaid and give affordable health care to 500,000 North Carolinians; revised the tax code to raise the burden on poor and working class families while easing it for the wealthiest 11 percent and corporations; drastically cut funding from public education; repealed the Racial Justice Act; and passed a voter suppression law that makes it harder for people of color, the elderly and students to cast ballots.



The movement was formed under the leadership of Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II and the North Carolina NAACP. Rev. Barber often says: “We’re not asking people to go left or right. We’re asking them to go deeper.” North Carolinians suffer as a result of legislative changes he calls extremist, and this suffering should worry everyone, regardless of political party. The movement is about the moral fabric of our entire society. People are advocating for the type of democracy that places the common good at the center of public policy. They demand that we must have a society that articulates the connection between the moral call for justice and the constitutional call for the common good. The movement continues to go FORWARD TOGETHER NOT ONE STEP BACK.

In 2014 people from the movement met with their congressional leaders and they continued to gather weekly while the legislature was in session. On February 8th 80,000 people participated in an annual march called HKonJ (Historic Thousands on Jones Street). It was reported to be the largest Civil Rights protest in the South since the Selma-to-Montgomery marches in 1965. On February 14, 2015 the Moral Monday Movement participated again in the HKonJ Assembly. The movement will begin to gather weekly at the legislative building weekly beginning in April.

The Moral Mondays Movement has spread to Georgia, South Carolina, Florida, and Missouri. Rev. Barber has also gone on to do training across the country in how other organizers can learn lessons from North Carolina's Moral Monday movement, including advising in the civil protests surrounding the police shooting in Ferguson, Missouri.

read more . . . Can Moral Mondays Produce Victorious Tuesdays?

Thanks to Sue Woodling for submitting this article.

Feb 27, 2015

March 8 marks International Women’s Day Inspires Women to “Make It Happen”

Speak up for women’s rights or equality, and you’ll get different reactions depending on who’s listening. It’s par for the course for an activist, isn’t it? We need inspiration, resources, and kindred spirits to sustain and encourage us. International Women’s Day (IWD) March 8 reminds us there’s a global sisterhood and its supporters: to honor women, celebrate women’s achievements, and continue to press for justice and equality.


Women Made the Movement Happen

In 1908 in New York City, 15,000 women marched to demand shorter work hours, better pay and the right to vote.

In 1908 in Great Britain, the Women's Social and Political Union adopted a purple-white-green color scheme to show solidarity with Suffragettes.

In 1910 in Copenhagen, 100 women from 17 countries formed the first International Women’s Day.

In 1915 in Bern, Switzerland, the movement took on the cause of peace. At a demonstration to urge the end of World War I, women on both sides of the conflict took part.

The United Nations has observed IWD on March 8 since 1975. Issues have included rape as a weapon of war, sexual assault, domestic violence, and physical sexual violence.

Women in Action Today
  • Visit the International Women's Day website, a global hub for news, events, and resources. Learn from selected videos. See their “Make It Happen” theme page for action ideas -- including “Paint it purple.”
  • Explore LPF’s Women's Resources, a five-part treasure trove to affirm women and girls’ empowerment.Who in your church would be most interested? How can you support women’s efforts to “make it happen”?
  • Share this blogpost with others. Join in to inspire change, stop violence and nurture peace with women! 
-- Lily R. Wu

(Illustration from IWD 2011 on their 100th anniversary.)