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Peace and Witness

Quakers have a well-earned reputation for social justice and Christian witness. Tag: witness

Members: 55
Latest Activity: 11th month 12, 2022

Quaker Peace & Witness

Large Peace Organizations:

The American Friends Service Committee (US) and Quaker Peace and Social Witness (UK) are the most well-known organizations working on Quaker peace issues. In the US, the Friends Committee on National Legislation lobbies government officials on concerns of interest to Friends.

More Grassroots efforts:

Quaker Initiative Against Torture
Quaker House in North Carolina (US) is a long-standing military counseling center near Fort Bragg.
Friends Peace Teams builds long-term relationships with communities in conflict to create programs for peacebuilding, healing and reconciliation. One of their active programs is the African Great Lakes Initiative.

Right Sharing of World Resources makes grants to jump-start micro-enterprise ventures for female entrepreneurs in developing countries and does education on issues of global wealth. They have a QuakerQuaker account.

Discussion Forum

Peace Testimony and the Taliban

Started by Don Shabkie. Last reply by Kenneth Lawrence Schroeder 1st month 19, 2012. 14 Replies

Feedback Please: Changing the World

Started by LC. Last reply by LC 1st month 7, 2012. 4 Replies

Against Being Positive! (Quakernomics)

Started by QuakerQuaker. Last reply by Tim Kelty 2nd month 13, 2010. 0 Replies

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Meetups, Events, and Resources

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Comment by Dave Austin on 1st mo. 19, 2013 at 6:40pm

Rodney : http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Mennonites_in_the_World_War/XI

Also, look for An Oklahoma I Had Never Seen Before: Alternative Views of Oklahoma History on Google Books.

Comment by Rodney Guy Pharris on 1st mo. 31, 2011 at 10:25am
Can anyone help me with this?  In the movie "Matewan", the main character talks about Mennonites during WWI being mistreated at Fort Leavenworth.  Is there a historical reference I can look up for this incident?
Comment by Barbara Quintiliano on 3rd mo. 14, 2010 at 11:09pm
Thanks! I'll be sure to read that.
Comment by T. Vail Palmer, Jr. on 3rd mo. 14, 2010 at 10:52pm
The nation state a possible other God? Yes! really! I figured that out when I was writing my Ph.D. dissertation back in the 1960s -- with some help from a hard-nosed Niebuhrian political scientist, Hans J. Morgenthau. Read Morgenthau's Politics Among Nations, 3rd edition (1960), pp. 255-259. See the conclusions I drew in my "The Spirit of the Nation", Quaker Relgious Thought, Vol. 12, No. 4 (Summer 1971), especially pages 14-17.
Comment by Barbara Quintiliano on 3rd mo. 14, 2010 at 9:09pm
Oh ... and I had to look up the word "henotheistic." It means "worshipping a single god while accepting the existence or possible existence of other deities." So, when Miller talks about the "henotheistic loyalties of nationalism" I take it he means that the nation state serves as a possible other God. (no! really???? :-))
Comment by Barbara Quintiliano on 3rd mo. 14, 2010 at 9:06pm
Just came across this startling (for me, anyway) statement:
"The Church is a countercultural social body which nurtures unique loyalties, universal or transcultural loyalties, which supplant the henotheistic loyalties of nationalism. Relative to secular institutions, the Church is a deviant institution and offers a distinctive cultural ethos."

WOW...the Church as deviant institution! I've always sort of felt that true Christianity, i.e., truly following Jesus could only be a subversive endeavor, one that goes against the grain.

So...the Church is a deviant institution ...but...which
Church are we talking about? The institutional Church or ...some sort of more prophetic Church? Maybe I should have posted this on one of the convergent groups :-) Makes my head spin a bit

Anyway, the quotation is from an interesting article by Richard B. Miller entitled "Christian Pacifism and Just War Tenets: How do they Diverge?" Theological Studies 47 (1986): 448-472.
Comment by QuakerQuaker on 12th mo. 30, 2009 at 5:18pm
Mental ward injustices from 1940s brought to light by Quaker and ot...
In September of 1942, Warren Sawyer, a 23-year-old conscientious objector, reported for his volunteer assignment as an attendant at a state mental hospital. The young Quaker was... assigned to work in... [the] Philadelphia State Hospital, best known as Byberry.... "If we COs do nothing about this place to improve it," Sawyer continued, "our stay here has been to no avail and we have accomplished nothing..." Posted by LizOpp
 

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