Workshop Number 14
Led by Mary Loehr
In this workshop we were simply asked to share the stories - more specifically, the people, literature, maxims, and music - that have shaped our lives. Listed below are the personal responses of participants. The items are not officially endorsed by any agency.
- Vance Reese, reporter
Juanita Nelson
- Persons: mother (and vice versa, She became a war tax resister), Wally Nelson, J. P. Norion (became Gandhian) Karen, Bob Beatty and others in the war tax resistance movement Person/Movement: Pauli Murray and the formation of CORE at Howard University
- George Bernard Shaw: Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism (except at the end where he advocates a woman's inaction)
- Margaret Kennedy's book
- Philip Hallie: Lest Innocent Blood be Shed: The Story of the Village of Le Chambon, and How Goodness Happened There
- Author: Thoreau (thrown out of a Methodist camp for reading this)
Vance Reese
- Biographies of Gandhi, Jesus, Saint Francis,
- John Woolman, George Fox
- Abraham Joshua Heschel: Man is Not Alone
Herb Myers
- The Mennonite Mental Health Story
- If We Can Love
Joffre Stewart
- Hymn: “Down by the Riverside”
- Persons: Sunday school teacher and chaplain who declared themselves atheists;
- Corvy Bishop, William Ogburn and Meyer Nimkoff: Sociology (a textbook which taught that patriotism was something to oppose)
- e. e. cummings:
i will not kiss your fucking flag
- Veblen Thorstein: Theory of the Leisure Class
- Karl Marx: A World Without Jews
- Author: Dwight MacDonald
Alan Gamble
- Persons: parents
- Sojourners (magazine)
- Books: Agenda for a Biblical People
- Jim Wallis: The Call to Conversion
- Martin Luther King: Strength to Love
- Biography: Gandhi
- Leo Tolstoy: The Kingdom of God is Within You
- Jonathan Kozol: The Night is Dark and I am Far from Home (chapters on famous persons, including Helen Keller, Martin Luther King; a good book for educators)
- Maxim by Dorothy Day:
We are not called to be successful; we are called to be faithful.
- Dan Hallock: Hell, Healing and Resistance: Veterans Speak
Mary Loehr
- Author: Gene Sharp
- People: Dorothy Day, Catholic Workers and Ploughshare activists (including Barbara Demme and Jim Douglas for a sense of working together)
- Newspaper: The Catholic Worker
- Walter Wink: The Third Way
- Denise Giardina: Saints and Villains: A Novel (on the life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer)
- Magazine: Unarmed Struggles (published by the Peace Brigades)
- Community: Ithaca, New York
Nancy Rice
- Place: Garrett Evangelical Seminary in the mid-1960s (taking a closer look at scripture, having challenging classmates)
- Person: Max (husband)
- Jean Houston with Margaret Rubin: Manual for the Peacemaker (initially scared to read it)
- C. S. Forester: The Peacemaker
- Daniel Berrigan: Trial of the Catonsville Nine
- Magazine: The Catholic Worker
- Workshop: on anarchy
Robin Harper
- Biographies: Albert Schweitzer, Gandhi
- Kahlil Gibran: The Prophet
- Persons: mother (who promoted non-violent views),
- A. J. Muste, B. Rustand, Larry Scott, George Willoughby
- James Bristol: Primer on Pacifism (pamphlet)
- The Friends' Peace Testimony (1660 submission to King Charles II that say,
We utterly [condemn] war.
)
Dirk Panhuis
- Person: Stern, a Dutch minister, wrote thesis on the power found in service.
- Magazine: Dutch monthly Fellowship of Reconciliation Journal
- People: Gene Sharp, Martin Luther King
- Movement: Divestment movement out of South Africa, and the Friends in the movement
- Jan de Hartog: The Peaceable Kingdom (in 4 volumes)
- Biographies: Nelson Mandela, Gandhi
- Author: Mohandas Gandhi
- Hildegard Goss-Mayer: The Power of the nonviolence. The Christian and the Revolution in Brazil. (Original title: Die Macht der Gewaltlosen) (about Latin America in the late 1960s)
- Kate Penner (editor), Risking for Change. Stories of Ordinary People
William Galvin
- Persons: son (especially in the 1980s draft),
- Martin Luther King, Gandhi, John Howard Yoder, Ricardo Esquivia
- John Howard Yoder: The Politics of Jesus
Jon Harmon
- Person: parents (messages of ‘think for yourself ’and ‘be compassionate and kind’)
- Howard Zinn: A Peoples History of the United States
- edited by Cooney and Michalowski: The Power of the People: Active Nonviolence in the United States
- Biographies: Desmond Tutu, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela
- compiled by Margaret MacDonald: Peace Tales: World Folktales to Talk About
- Saying: “If you think you're small and ineffective, you've never been in a tent with a mosquito.”
- Civil Rights Movement /Vietnam Era
Dee Logan
- Research: a report on Hiroshima done in grade school
- People: grandparents and great aunt (all immigrants)
- Culture: Native American heritage
- Books about Native Americans
- Time/Experience: the experience of being a child and the violence in the US nuclear protests
- Saying: “Once you know something [and act on it], you can never go back.”
- People: Cesar Flores, Fannie Lou Hamer, Noam Chomsky
Karen Brandow
- Persons: Ellen Shapiro (8th grade friend who introduced her to political activism), Wally Nelson (who challenged: How can you be working for peace and paying for war?), Abbie Hoffman (for being fearless), and Randy Kehler.
- Documentaries: The War at Home by Glenn Silber and Barry Alexander Brown (on the Wisconsin Vietnam experience)
- The New Underground Railroad (on the Salvadoran refugees)
- Newspaper: various articles on what ‘our’ taxes are buying
- Place: Living in Guatemala for eight years
- Culture: Judaism, and Jewish history for providing the concepts of mitzvot and tikkun olam (the concepts of [divine] mandates for justice)
Ben Yoder
- Corrie Ten Boom: Peace Be With You (read aloud by his parents)
- Al Rhymer: My Heart is Turned to Mourning (shift from withholding to simple living)
- Daniel Hallock: Hell, Healing, and Resistance: Veterans Speak (especially Steve Weynat's story)
David Zarembka
- Place: teaching in Africa with Randy Kehler in the mid 1960s
- Gladys Kamonya
- Person: father, who served as the primary example of conscientious objection in Tanzania
- Other mentions at the end:
- Author: Noam Chomsky, Ed Maxwell, A. Cameron, Robert J. Lawson, and Brian W Tomlin: To Walk Without Fear: The Global Movement to Ban Landmines, Jacques Lusseyran: And There Was Light.