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WNPJ member group in Eagle River sponsors a series on nonviolence
Submitted by staff on Tue, 01/17/2012 - 12:32pm
Studying Nonviolence:
The Occupy Movements, the Wisconsin Uprising, Arab Spring and more
Mondays from 7pm to 9pm, January 23rd to March 5th, Many Ways of Peace, 217 S. Main St., Eagle River
The inspiration for the series comes from the rise in nonviolent movements the past year, in Wisconsin and the United States, as well as around the world. Learning about nonviolent theory and its practitioners provides us with greater insight into current movements and a deeper understanding of the skills nonviolent action requires.
The series is based on the book, Peace is the Way: Writings on Nonviolence from the Fellowship of Reconciliation.
The program will utilize the talking circle format to give each participant the opportunity to speak without interruption.
For more information, see www.manywaysofpeace.org or call 715.480.4697. Copies of the essays that will be used are available upon registering for the series.
If the future is going to be different from the past,
if we’re going to leave a peaceful and healthy earth for our children,
it will be the ordinary people like us who will to do it…
not by becoming extraordinary,
but by discovering our greatest strength lies not in how much we differ from each other…
but how much, how very much, we are the same. Eknath Easwaran
Madison Isthmus: Occupy the Courts rallies on Citizens United anniversary
Submitted by admin on Sat, 01/21/2012 - 10:35am
In a protest organized by WNPJ member group South-Central Wisconsin Move to Amend, more than 60 people braved subzero temperatures and heavy snow to rally outside Madison's Federal courthouse on the second anniversary of the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision, which gave corporations the right to engage in unlimited spending on political campaigns. Participants included Madison's Raging Grannies (above) and state representatives Mark Pocan and Kelda Helen Roys. "I'm here because when corporations are granted human rights, the rights of human beings are diminished," said SCWMTA member Mindy Preston. Read and comment here...
Portland, Oregon city council says "Bring Our War $$ Home!"
Submitted by admin on Sat, 01/21/2012 - 11:12am
On January 12th, the Portland City Council voted unanimously to adopt a "Bring Our War Dollars Home" resolution that "praises United States troops and their families, applauds the end of the Iraq War and supports the further drawdown of troops in Afghanistan with funds being redirected to domestic priorities." Before the vote, the Council heard from members of the community who pointed to urgent unmet needs in the city of Portland. Chani Geigle-Teller from Sisters Of The Road spoke about cuts to funding for housing causing the loss of hundreds of thousands of affordable housing units, while Toby Green of the Laborers 483 Public Employee Union spoke about one-half billion dollars in deferred maintenance that needs to be done in Portland alone.
Sing-Along in the snow
Submitted by admin on Sun, 01/22/2012 - 10:14am
WNPJ member group Solidarity Sing-Along continues its daily protest of mass singing at the Capitol, every weekday at noon. The group will soon celebrate its 300th performance, and its songbook has grown to 28 songs, many with Wisconsin-themed lyrics. When other events are scheduled for the Capitol rotunda at noon, the Sing-Along moves outside, to the Capitol's State Street corner. Above, Sing-Along participants huddle around a songbook on Friday, January 20th, when the temperature was in the teens and Madison received more than six inches of snow.
Schedule this week #
Cassandra Dixon travels to Hebron with CPT
Submitted by staff on Wed, 01/25/2012 - 12:38pm
Cassandra Dixon, WNPJ member and contact for Mary House of Wisconsin Dells, is returning to the West Bank to volunteer again with Christian Peacemaker Teams, this time for two months in the city of AlKhalil, also known as Hebron. In past years Cassandra has been in Tuwani, one of the villages south of AlKhalil, where Palestinians face violence, and the threat of violence, from both Israeli settlers and from the military as they seek to remain on their land. The situation for Palestinians living in AlKhalil in the old city area and surrounding rural neighborhoods is much the same. CPT’s work in AlKhalil began in 1995 in response to harassment suffered by Palestinian schoolchildren as they walk near Israeli settlements on their way to school in the old city neighborhood. CPT’s hope is that the presence of internationals and the documentation of harassment, violence, and human rights abuses will accomplish a lessening of violence. WNPJ will post updates of her work in Hebron. This photo (above) is of homes demolished 1/25 by Israeli bulldozers near Hebron. Read more below.....with links on how to contact Cassandra directly.
Israeli settlers have taken over buildings and land, and created settlements within this Palestinian city. What was once a neighborhood walk to a neighborhood school is now a trip through checkpoints and metal detectors, past armed settlers and soldiers, for both schoolchildren and their teachers. Schools which were established so as to be centrally located to the Palestinians whose children attended them are now isolated from the neighborhoods they serve. At times children face long waits at Israeli military checkpoints, where they must pass through metal detectors and gates in order to reach school. Often they are confronted by angry adult settlers on their way to and from school.
Businesses, families and agricultural work are also continually impacted by the presence of both Israeli soldiers and settlers in Palestinian neighborhoods. In the market area of the Old City merchants have stretched netting above the streets to catch the stones and garbage thrown down by settlers from windows of settlement building overlooking the streets. Soldiers frequently move through the neighborhood, entering homes and schools, leaving children interrupted and afraid.
Since 2009 CPT has also provided accompaniment to AlBowereh, a rural neighborhood of about 340 Palestinians in northeastern AlKhalil. AlBowereh lies directly opposite the Israeli settlement of Kiryat Arba and the Israeli outpost “Hilltop 26”, which was constructed on Palestinian farmland. Settlers have erected seven buildings in the outpost, and regularly attack Palestinians, including the neighborhoods 174 children as they walk to school. Settler harassment of AlBowereh has included physical assault, the uprooting of grape vines and destruction of other crops, vandalism, and intimidation. In addition, due to the proximity of Road 60 and the settlement, the Israeli military has placed demolition orders on almost all the remaining homes in AlBowereh.
Seven-year-old AlBowereh resident Amar Zatari was attacked by two settlers from the Givat H Harsina
settlement as he walked home from school with two relatives. The two young men threw stones at the
three boys and, along with a dog, chased them. In his panic to get away Amar tripped and fell on his face.
His twelve-year-old brother ran back, scooped him up and raced to the safety of the closest house. When
Amar’s father attempted to file a complaint the next day the police insisted on interviewing the young
boy and when the seven-year-old Amar did not have a picture of his attackers they dropped the case.
CPT maintains a presence in AlBowereh while children are walking past the settlement on their
way to and from school, and responds to calls from residents when their homes or fields are
threatened by settlers. Through providing international accompaniment, CPT hopes to support residents
in their efforts to remain on their land, in their homes, and in their schools without responding with violence to the
threats they face.
Sometimes accompaniment provides the documentation villagers need to press the legal system of the
occupying power for justice. Sometimes it results in international pressure for justice, and sometimes it
just means that if these children are afraid on their way to school, at least they know that someone is
watching and will know if they don’t arrive safely today. Accompaniment can help to mitigate the
terrible imbalance of power faced by Palestinians who live and work daily in the shadow of Israeli
settlements and outposts, and open up a space for the work of nonviolent change.
In the face of all the violence and injustice our earth and her people are experiencing this work seems
small. But as I look for ways we can address injustice – particularly injustice that is accomplished with
the help of financial aid from our own country – I find that the work CPT is attempting to do in Palestine
still seems crucial to me. If we don’t create non-militaristic ways of addressing injustice, we will forever
resort to military responses.
So I’m traveling again, and am asking for your help. I’m grateful to all of you for your
encouragement, kind thoughts, and financial help in the years I’ve volunteered with CPT, and as always I
find it hard and embarrassing to ask for money. But the truth is that without your help I probably would
not earn enough in a year to take several months off and also meet CPT’s travel costs. The cost of
volunteering with CPT is $3000, which covers airline tickets and the cost of maintaining teams in the
field, including rent, in-country transportation, translators, phone and food.
I’m very grateful to you for helping me to volunteer with CPT for the past six years, and it’s not easy to
ask again. I know that for most of these are some challenging years, and that all of us are stretched
more thinly than ever. CPT’s work for alternatives to violence feels so important to me now, though, that
I am indeed asking. As our tax dollars continue to pour into the pursuit of war in Afghanistan and our
production of newer and more complex weaponry continues unchecked, I am hoping that you’ll help me
to keep volunteering with this experiment in nonviolence. You can make checks out to me, or if you would
like your donations to be tax-deductible, you can make checks out to Mary House, or to Christian Peacemaker
Teams, and write my name in the memo line.
There are photos and more information on CPT’s website, cpt.org, or you can write to them at PO Box
6508, Chicago, Il 60680. If you would like to hear from me while I am in Palestine, please send me your
email address and I will do my best to keep in touch whenever possible. You can email me at
chrepairs@yahoo.com. I will be back at the end of March, as would be happy to come and talk about
CPT’s work in Palestine – please feel free to call or email me.
And to those of you who have been so kind as to hire me to repair your homes in the past I would be
grateful for your letting your friends know that I will be looking for work when I return and I would be
grateful for their calls. For my friends in the Madison area I’ve enclosed a business card, and hope you
will pass it on if you know someone who needs home repairs in the coming months.
Thanks so much for taking the time to read this, for all of your own efforts for peace and justice, and for
your support.
Gratefully & Sincerely,
Cassandra Dixon, 608-445-0357, chrepairs@yahoo.com, 3579 County Road G, Wisconsin Dells WI 53965
(Mary House is a member gorup of WNPJ - and Cassandra the contact) Jan. 2012
G8/NATO in Chicago: At a global crossroads, turn away from war
Submitted by staff on Sun, 01/29/2012 - 8:34am
The host committee for the G8/NATO summit in Chicago in May has unveiled a new slogan for the event, “The Global Crossroads.” The mood of the organizers is upbeat and positive.
Chicago in May is also a crossroads in that it is a critical place and time for us all to take stock of where we have been and where we are going. We are at a crossroads- do we continue on the road of war and economic exploitation of the planet that NATO and the G8 are committed to, or do we abandon that road
and turn a corner toward economic justice and a world at peace. We are at a crossroads and our choices are stark: global domination and the economic and ecological devastation that it makes inevitable or global community.
With this in mind, Voices for Creative Nonviolence (VCNV) decided to call our efforts leading up to the NATO and G8 summit, “At A Global Crossroads: Turn Against War.” We are starting the ground work for a walk starting on May 1 from Madison, Wisconsin, to arrive in Chicago in time for the summit on May 19.
Brian Terrell of VCNV has more on WNPJ weblog.
Fox News: Red Cliff tribe member arrested, "Are we going to eat polluted fish?"
Submitted by staff on Mon, 01/30/2012 - 9:42am|
Fox News 21, a Fox affiliate in northern Wisconsin, features an interview with Lincoln “Sam” Morris of the Red Cliff Band, who was arrested last week for drumming on a sacred drum during a protest against a proposed mine in the Penokee hills. |
"Are we going to eat a polluted fish? Are our deer going to be polluted? Our trees are going to be cut down. All these other animals, all the ones down under mother earth,” Morris said. Attorney Glenn Stoddard, who represents the tribe, says, "The proposed mine in the Penokee Hills is at the head of the watershed. It would essentially send all the pollutants downstream right into the reservation.” Read more...
WNPJ Action Alerts: Week of February 6th
Submitted by staff on Fri, 02/03/2012 - 7:43amAction Alert 1: Feb 4th: No War on Iran actions in Wisconsin
Action Alert 2: Lobby day to stop mining bill in Senate
Action Alert 3: Urge DNR to register stream as mine-damaged
Action Alert 4 - Madison: Wisconsin uprising alive and well after one year
Action Alert 5: Help provide clean water to children in Gaza
Action Alert 1: Feb 4th: "No War on Iran!" actions in Wisconsin
Background: Saturday, February 4th is a national day of action against a war with Iran, with events scheduled in more than 40 U.S. cities, including Madison, Milwaukee and Racine. The protests come as the U.S. is escalating its program of threats and pressure on Iran, with two U.S. aircraft carrier battle groups now in the seas off the Iranian coast. News reports indicate a new Special Operations commando team has been sent to countries neighboring Iran, prompting writer Tom Englehardt to ask, "How would we react to news that a new elite Iranian commando team was operating in the U.S.-Mexican border region?" Even though Defense Secretary Leon Panetta admitted as recently as January 8th that Iran is not developing a nuclear weapon, President Obama said in his State of the Union address that "No option is off the table" with regard to Iran, a phrase widely understood to be a threat of military attack.
Take Action: Madison: Meet at the State Street corner of the Capitol for a rally from 3pm-5pm. Milwaukee: Join Peace Action at 11 am for a press conference at their offices, 1001 E. Keefe, followed by an 11:30 am march to the bridge over the Milwaukee River on Capitol Drive for the weekly Stand for Peace. Racine: Vigil from 10:00 am to 11:00 am at Highways 311 & 20 (northwest corner)
Contact for more info: Madison: Barbara Smith, Barb at barbara@merr.com Milwaukee: Peace Action, 414-964-5158, dan@peaceactionwi.org Racine: Dick Kinch, 262-764-9968, racinepeace@yahoo.com
Action Alert 2: Lobby day to stop mining bill in Senate
Background: Last week, the state assembly voted to pass a mining bill that would fast-track a mining project in northern Wisconsin by limiting public input and environmental oversight. The mining bill would eliminate contested case hearings on proposed mining permits, reduce the number of public hearings during the process from six to two, make it easier for mining companies to fill wetlands and divert navigable waters, chop the amount of revenue received by local community impact funds by 50%, cap the reimbursement paid by an applicant to the DNR at far less than the true cost to the state of a permit, limit the time for permit review to 360 days, establish presumptive approval of permits, and put the state at odds with federal regulators over flood plain ordinances and archaeological sites.
Take Action: Opponents of the legislation see some hope that the bill can be stopped in the Senate. Wisconsin League of Conservation Voters is organizing a special lobby day for Thursday, February 16th, from 12-5:00pm, meeting at the Madison Concourse Hotel and in the State Capitol Building. Click here to RSVP.
Contact for more info: Wisconsin League of Conservation Voters, 608-661-0845, info@conservationvoters.org
Action Alert 3: By Feb. 20th: Urge DNR to register stream as mine-damaged
Background: As legislators debate a mining bill that would gut environmental regulation of mines (see above) people near Ladysmith, WI are dealing with the toxic aftermath of the Flambeau mine, which was shut down in 1997. Streams in the area of the mine have been polluted by mine runoff, including a small tributary of the Flambeau river labeled by the Department of Natural Resouces as "Stream C", which flows over the southeast corner of the Flambeau Mine site. Stream C has consistently had levels of copper (and sometimes zinc) over the concentrations established by the DNR as representing “acute toxicity" causing the DNR to include Stream C in its proposed 2012 list of “impaired waters."
Take Action: Flambeau Mining Company will be actively lobbying the DNR to take this stream off the impaired waters list, in part because the designation could impact a lawsuit filed under the Federal Clean Water Act against the mining company for its toxic discharges of metals. Please send an email by Feb. 20th to either dnrimpairedwaters@wisconsin.gov or AaronM.Larson@wisconsin.gov by Feb. 20th to urge the DNR to accurately record Stream C as impaired for copper and zinc and to ask that the DNR require Flambeau Mining Company to clean up the toxic mess it has left behind. After the 20th, the public comment period for this issue will close.
Contact for more info: Wisconsin Resources Protection Council, online contact form here...
Action Alert 4 - Madison: Wisconsin uprising alive and well after one year
Background: Beginning on Saturday, February 11th people from across Wisconsin will converge in Madison for a Week of Action to commemorate the one-year anniversary of last year’s Wisconsin Uprising and the sustained occupation of the Capitol building. The Week of Action will include two rallies, a march from UW-Madison to the capitol building, and a Documentation Station inside the Capitol to help preserve the collective memory of those historic events, with audio recorders, cameras, and artistic materials available for people to share their stories of the past year. Documentation Station organizers ask anyone who participated in the protests to bring signs, posters, photographs (digital files or printed), pins, and other memorable items to contribute to the project, which will be located in room 415 NW on Tuesday, February 14th,10am - 6pm and room 300 NE on Wednesday, February 15th, also10am - 6pm.
Take Action: Please join in one or more of the following events: 1) Thursday, February 9th; 7-9pm, The Wisconsin Uprising One Year On: What Happened and What Next?, 2) Saturday, February 11th; 11am-1pm Wisconsin Day! Rally to Kick-off a Week of Action, 3) Tuesday, February 14th; 12:15pm, I Still ♥ UW March and Rally, 4) Thursday, February 16th; 7-9pm One Year Later - Lessons from the Wisconsin Uprising, 5) Sunday, February 19th; 2-5pm WisConvocation Public Planning Session.
Contact for more info: Adam Porton, Wisconsin Wave, porton68@gmail.com, online contact form here...
Action Alert 5: Help provide clean water to children in Gaza
Background: WNPJ member group Madison-Rafah Sister City Project has joined with Middle East Childrens Alliance to provide water filter/desalination systems for schools in Rafah. They have already provided money for a system at the Tuyar Al-Jena (Birds of Paradise) kindergarten and the Rafah' Girls' Preparatory School A, and are now working to provide clean water to a third school, Al-Shuka Prepatory Girl's School. Large parts of Gaza's water and sewer systems were destroyed by Israel during Operation Cast Lead in 2008, and the continuing Israeli blockade has made repairs nearly impossible. A 2009 examination by the UN Environment Program found that well water in Gaza had a concentration of nitrates six times higher than the level recommended by the World Health Organization, a level that can lead to anemia among children and methemoglobinemia (“blue infants” syndrome) among infants.
Take Action: Madison-Rafah Sister City Project has already raised over $4000 of the $11,500 needed to pay for a water filtration system at Al-Shuka Prepatory Girl's School. Please make a donation to help complete the project, either by mail at: MRSCP, PO BOX 55371 Madison, WI 53705 (make checks payable to MRSCP and please write "WATER" on the memo line) or click here to pay online.
Contact for more info: Barb Olson, Madison-Rafah Sister City Project, 608-238-1227, rafahsistercity@yahoo.com
WNPJ is forwarding these weekly alerts from member organizations, individual members and national affiliates. If you are a WNPJ member and have an alert you would like posted , please send it to Steve Burns at: outreach@wnpj.org
Feb. 4th: "No War on Iran" rallies in Madison, Milwaukee and Racine
Submitted by staff on Thu, 02/02/2012 - 9:52am

Saturday, February 4th was a national day of action against a war with Iran, with events in more than 40 U.S. cities, including three in Wisconsin: Madison, Milwaukee and Racine. (photo by Elaine Kinch) ) ....and Voices for Creative Nonviolence is part of the rally in Chicago. Click here for photos of the Milwaukee protest by Sue Ruggles.
Organizers recall the campaign of government-sanctioned lies that led up to the war on Iraq, and see parallels in the escalating rhetoric being used to build support for a military strike on Iran. Even though Defense Secretary Leon Panetta admitted as recently as January 8th that Iran is not developing a nuclear weapon, the U.S. is escalating economic sanctions and military threats. In his State of the Union address, President Obama said that "No option is off the table" with regard to Iran, a phrase widely understood to be a threat of military attack. On January 12th, an Iranian nuclear scientist was killed in a car bomb attack, the fifth such attack in the past two years. Photos from Sue Ruggles of Milwaukee event here "No war on Iran -- we demand diplomacy, not another war..."
sruggles@local212.org
Mining bill threatens flood coverage
Submitted by admin on Sun, 02/05/2012 - 7:00pmA new mining bill passed by the state Assembly that weakens environmental regulations and limits public input also threatens Federal flood insurance for thousands of Wisconsin property owners, according to the chief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Floodplain Management Branch. Writing in the Capital Times, Madison representative Brett Hulsey says he has been told by FEMA that the mining bill, which would exempt strip mines from state floodplain rules, would put Wisconsin out of compliance with federal law. Hulsey writes, "These rules are in place to protect our flood-vulnerable homes and businesses, and if Wisconsin doesn’t meet them, the federal government can’t provide any flood insurance and can give only limited flood disaster relief to anyone in our state." 18,000 federal flood insurance properties representing more than $3 billion in property (see map at left) could be placed at risk by the mining bill. Opponents of the bill hope to stop it in the Senate.


608-250-9240, Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice, 122 State Street, Suite 405A, Madison, WI 53703, Send an email to the office info@wnpj.org.