Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Peace Action Website

From the Peace Action website, http://www.peace-action.org/abt/abtpa.html, an article about what Peace Action is about:

We give ordinary people the tools to change the world.

At Peace Action we believe...

that war is not a suitable response to conflict.

that every person has the right to live without the threat from nuclear weapons.

That America has the resources to both protect and provide for its citizens.

Our target issues

What we do at Peace Action…

We are the nation's largest grassroots peace network, with chapters and affiliates in 30 states. We organize our grassroots network to place pressure on Congress and the Administration through write-in campaigns, internet actions, citizen lobbying and direct action. Through a close relationship with progressive members of Congress, we play a key role in devising strategies to move forward peace legislation, and, as a leading member of United for Peace and Justice and the Win Without War coalition, we lend our expertise and large network to achieving common goals.

Peace Voter Campaign
Citizen Movement

Given the right tools, ordinary people can change the world.

At Peace Action, we recognize that real change comes from the bottom up and we are committed to educating and organizing at the grassroots level. Together, we have the power to change the world.



Thursday, January 10, 2008

Tolstoy: An Inspiration to Gandhi

From the Ideas section of the Sunday, January 6, 2007, Toronto Star, page ID3, is this article about how Tolstoy's writing and the letters between the two men confirmed for Gandhi his belief in non-violent action:

WAR AND PEACE
A tale of two giants bound by pacifism

Gandhi, assassinated 60 years ago this month, was overwhelmed by Tolstoy's writings

Daniel Aldana Cohen
Special to the Star

Sixty years ago this month, history's most famous pacifist was felled by an act of senseless violence. Just after 5 p.m. on January 30, a Hindu nationalist named Nathuram Godse shot Mahatma Gandhi three times in the chest. He died the following day.

Yet while Gandhi's life and message of non-violence are well-known, a crucial chapter in his philosophy's genesis is largely forgotten. The story features the Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, includes a bridge from Russia to Canada, and begins nearly 20 years before Gandhi's birth with the Crimean War (1853-56).

In his early 20s, growing tired of his (apparently) full life of gambling and whoring, Tolstoy went to visit his brother, an army officer stationed in Central Asia. Tolstoy signed up and joined in imperial forays against the local Muslim population of the Caucasus mountains. He then moved on to the Crimean War, where he fought with an artillery unit during the Siege of Sevastopol.

Already a budding writer, he penned thinly fictionalized dispatches called the "Sevastopol Sketches" for a monthly literary journal back in St. Petersburg. "They were a sensation," says Professor Donna Orwin, a Tolstoy specialist at the University of Toronto. "Everyone was desperate for news from the front and here comes this great writer out of the blue."

As the world's first embedded journalist, he could accurately describe an officer's simultaneous vanity and dread of death: "At the instant the shell or mortar reaches you, you invariably think it will kill you," he wrote. "But pride keeps you up, and no one notices the dagger that is digging into your heart."

These experiences formed the raw material for the famous battle scenes of War and Peace - an old novel that's come back to life with two new translations into English this past fall and a third in 2005. Though the novel describes Napoleon's invasion of Russia, its portrayals of the bewildering fog of battle are based on Tolstoy's memories of fighting in the Caucasus and at Sevastopol.

How could men commit the most horrific atrocities in the most gorgeous places on Earth? Tolstoy asked. His characters always notice the absurdity one moment too late. Here's a veteran of many battles as a live artillery shell lands at his feet: "'Can this be death?' Prince Andrey wondered, with an utterly new, wistful feeling, looking at the grass, at the wormwood and at the thread of smoke coiling from the rotating top. 'I can't die, I don't want to die, I love life, I love this grass and earth and air.'"

So is War and Peace a pacifist noel? Orwin does not think so. "The paradox is that these situations, terrible as they are, do create heroic moments," she says. "Tolstoy learned that war tests people in a way that nothing else does. Those tests can be character building, but they can also be character destroying."

Tolstoy struggled with this tension his whole life.

In 1877, after completing his other great novel, Anna Karenina, he began a profound conversion that would transform him into an outspoken vegetarian, pacifist and Christian anarchist.

When he discovered the persecution of the Doukhobors, a group of peasants with a similar take on Christianity, he used the proceeds of his novel, Resurrection to help pay for their relocation to the Canadian prairies. (Since then, most have moved to British Columbia.)

After his conversion, Tolstoy mainly wrote about war in pamphlets advocating non-violence. The exception was a novella set in the Caucasus called Hadji Murat, the story of a Muslim, Chechen freedom fighter torn between Russia's corrupt imperialism and a loathsome local imam.

Though the costs of violence are rendered clearly, so is the glory of the hero's bloody resistance. "Why am I writing this?" Tolstoy asked in his diary.

Outside literature, he came to see clearly that you cannot achieve positive change through violence. "Think of his pacifism as a strategy," Orwin says.

"His argument was that if you do things the old way, by fighting, you're going to turn into what you hate."

In South Africa, Tolstoy's writings landed on the desk of a young Indian dissident, Mahatma Gandhi. He was overwhelmed, declaring that after reading Tolstoy his "lack of faith in non-violence vanished."

He hung a picture of Tolstoy on his office wall and named the camp where he trained activists in peaceful resistance Tolstoy Farm.

Gandhi wrote five letters to Leo Tolstoy and received four in return, all glowing with praise and intellectual exchange. In his last letter, writing in September 1910 only weeks before his death, Tolstoy told Gandhi that his activity was "the most central and important of all the work now being done in the world."

Years later, Gandhi repaid the compliment, writing that he knew of no one "in India or anywhere else who has had as profound an understanding of nonviolence as Tolstoy had." Tolstoy had inspired Gandhi's legendary instruction to "be the change you want to see in the world."

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Non-Violent Leadership of the Dalai Lama

From the Friday, October 19, 2007, Comment, Editorials section of the Toronto Star, page AA6, is an article about the non-violent leadership of the Dalai Lama and how it should act as a model for other world leaders:

WORTH REPEATING
Leader a model of non-violence

It is a given that whenever the Dalai Lama is honoured, China's Communist leaders lash out. It happened when the Tibetan spiritual leader, and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, was received by German Chancellor Angela Merkel last month, and it happened again Wednesday when the Dalai Lama met with President George Bush and was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in Washington.

The Dalai Lama said Wednesday that he felt "regret" over the tensions. It is our hope that leaders will continue to ignore China's protests and threats, and that by continuing to honour the Dalai Lama they will finally persuade Beijing to open serious talks about granting autonomy to Tibet.

The Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet in 1959 after the Chinese army crushed an uprising there, is a powerful symbol of Tibet's resistance to China's suppression of its religious culture. In Beijing-speak, the Dalai Lama is a "splittist," someone out to split off a chunk of China. Zhang Qingli, the Chinese party boss in Tibet, denounced the Dalai Lama as "a person who basely splits his motherland and doesn't even love his motherland."

The fact is that the Dalai Lama does love his motherland - Tibet - and is not trying to split it away from China. He said Wednesday that he is not seeking independence from China. What he wants, he says, is "meaning autonomy for Tibet."

We would like to think that the spiritual leader's lifelong dedication to non-violence and tolerance might also rub off on some of the people he meets in Washington. "Through violence, you may solve one problem, but you sow the seeds for another," is one of his statements that politicians everywhere might mediate upon. Or this: "The world has become so small that no nation can solve its problems alone, in isolation from others."

This is an edited version of an editorial in The New York Times yesterday.