A continuing series by guest author Jean Gerard
Moving to California, I married and began raising three boys. It was the time of World War II, with its nuclear atrocities that wiped out vast portions of my beloved Japan. All too soon again came the Korean “engagement.”
Finally worried and angry enough, I joined Quakers. With the strength of their comradeship and guidance, I committed to non-violent protesting of further nuclear testing and missile development.
I was a paid office manager for the Sane Nuclear Policy Committee, then later for Women’s Strike for Peace and the Nuclear Weapons Freeze movement, and finally for the American Friends (Quaker) Service Committee. My main interest has long been in world peace:
- To what extent could it be taught?
- What are the essential ingredients of intercultural understanding and acceptance?
- What does empathy have to do with understanding differences?
It is no surprise that I have fallen in with Occupiers. I find them particularly engaging because they are trying to do what I failed to do – discover and employ the most important fundamental of peace-making – creative alternatives to violence.
I have read some, listened a lot, and thought a great deal about the works of Gene Sharp, Richard Gregg and others, and the practices of Gandhi, Mandela, Schweitzer, Havel and Walesa, the Berrigan brothers, and Catholic Worker activists.
When the recent uprisings began in the Middle East, I started reading Al Jazeera and several foreign English language sources. I recognized at last some hope for stopping the destruction of this failing world and for rehabilitating our decadent American democracy.
I see the free Internet as an aid to improving international understanding, and nonviolent revolution as a means toward a human future.