Artists' International For Peace &

Cultural Exchange

 We are .......... 

 Yahoo Ref:#1,2

Artists' International For Peace &

Cultural Exchange



2004-2006
Peace Is Their Business
One afternoon, 27 protesters zipped themselves up in white vinyl body bags on the sidewalk outside what they said was the lobbying office for "Exxon Mobil" on Pennsylvania Avenue NW. They looked like abandoned luggage. Someone dressed as the Grim Reaper walked among the prone shapes, cackling and holding a gasoline nozzle instead of a scythe.

Then the protesters popped out of their bags, chanted "No blood for oil" and marched to a nearby gas station, where they posed for pictures next to the pumps.

Ah, the anti-corporate-globalization raiders, with their theater and whimsy.

But what do they have to do with the peace movement?

They are nothing if not opportunistic. But they also are adding a planetary perspective that seems new. You didn't hear this stuff so much in 1965.

"Some of the opposition to the war now comes from a clearer vision of what's happening in the international world than we had when we started trying to figure out where Vietnam was," says John Judge, 55, a coordinator of the Washington Peace Center. He was a college student in 1965 who flunked the physical for the draft and counseled students and GIs on their options, and he's been doing peace work ever since.

At the gas station, the Grim Reaper, who was labeled "ExxonMobil," exulted for the television cameras: "We're looking forward to the war. The price of oil is going to go up and we're going to make billions of dollars!"

The alleged war-oil connection is not new, but this species of dove is opposing the war more broadly as an instrument of global capitalism, not just oil companies. The demonstrators say this war is best understood simply as a scheme to make another patch of the world safe for Western investors.

Several miles north in bourgeois Bethesda, a different analysis is spreading softly in the night.

Jane Meleney Coe, the Quaker, has about 40 senior citizens from various Protestant denominations arranged in a circle in the basement music room of a private school while she writes their ideas with a squeaky marker pen on a large pad.

They are trying to come up with slogans. They chuckle at "Drop Bush Not Bombs" but decide it's not nice.

They admire "There Is That Which Is of God in Every Person," the old Quaker precept.

But is it too much for a sign?

This is new territory. Will Metro allow them to board trains with wooden sticks for signs?

"I can use it as a cane with my new knee," says Lee Warren Shipman, 78, an architectural planner. Later she says: "I just don't believe in war. I think al Qaeda is more of a threat than Iraq."

Odom Fanning, 82, a World War II Marine vet and retired writer, says, "I can see hundreds of thousands of our troops and allied troops being involved in a bloody and almost never-ending conflict, and I don't think history will look kindly on the United States for starting that kind of war."

It was Coe who thought the sight of 65- and 75-year-olds marching downtown would be powerful. Now it's mushroomed into the centerpiece of today's activities, the rally at Farragut Square.

The other peace tribes promise to fall in behind the church ladies, all for one, one for all.

Peace is Our Business

A Patriotic Promotional Campaign -The perfect choice!

PEACE WATCH

Imagine A World 

Where governments respect the rights of all their citizens and settle disputes by the rule of law for the common good.

Where all people have food, shelter and access to medical care, and children are born into and raised by healthy families and communities.

Where literacy and education for all are accomplished facts.

Where economic practices create well-being for all stakeholders, including communities and the environment.

Where beauty, the arts, and media inspire the best in people.

Where the benefits of science and technology enhance all circles of life.

Where tolerance and appreciation of diverse religious beliefs is the rule, spiritual practice is encouraged, and reverence for life fostered.

Where the earth in all her natural beauty is treasured and its resources utilized sustainably, for this and future generations.

This is a world at PEACE.

May Peace Prevail On Earth 


The Battles to Come
Later will come the schisms, betrayals and burnouts.

Are sanctions effective? Is capitalism a problem? Is war sometimes the answer? 

The doves disagree among themselves on all of these questions. The doves are eternally cursed to disagree, sooner or later. Oh, to be born a simple hound.

They know this. And yet they keep organizing, marching, chanting, singing, praying, drumming, going to jail, zipping into body bags -- so that one day they might get it together, and the dogs will be forever leashed.

Every Day Counts 
for A Better World..... 
One Heart, One Day 
at a time! 

A Tribute to our Beloved...

HARMONY EVERYWHERE

We stand for Peace,  Progress & Prosperity


   -Supported by mediagroup-

           

Assess Yourself Daily Homework

Take Action!

 

 

EARTH DAY NETWORK   

2004 Campaigns

Reduce Cholesterol

Ask Your Doctor

2003 Breast Cancer Campaign

Food Safety

 

Blood Donation 

 

Buckle Up

 Keep Your City Clean

Global Campaign

UAE Campaigns

Rating-#3

Oxfam

Report

AIPCE - PEACE FRONTIERES.ARTISTS' INTL'  FOR PEACE & CULTURAL  EXCHANGE


Back to Top

World Wide Publishers: CARE & SHARE PUBLICATIONS - AIPCE(Europe): publisher@aipcefrontieres.org

New Office opening in S.India (October 2004)-Registered Office for Middle East & Asia:

AIPCE (Middle East & Asia) - aipce@aipcefrontieres.org

Copyright © 2000 - 2005 AIPCE - All rights reserved.