Paths to Peace




Friday, May 28, 2010

Details about Monday's Memorial Day Service




"Interfaith Paths to Peace in cooperation with a number of local groups will host a unique interfaith Memorial Day Service at 11 am on Monday May 31 at Christ Church Cathedral at 421 South Second Street in Louisville. What makes this Service unique is that it honors not only military dead but also civilian dead in all US wars."

This is the 26th annual Memorial Day Service and will include a special emphasis on youthful presenters (see list below).

This event is free and open to the public and will be followed by a reception at which those attending can meet and converse with the presenters.

Here are the program details:



Memorial Day Service



Reception Immediately Following in Bishops Hall



Prelude................................................................................... Micah and Nancy Harris

"American Trilogy"



Welcome and Opening Prayer.......................................... Elizabeth, Hannah and Sarah Bourlakas



Introduction......................................................................... Fiona Grant



Musical Reflection.............................................................. Desmond Anderson and Emanuel Potts

"Lift Every Voice and Sing"



Reading from the Baha'i Faith.......................................... Evan Mortazie



Prayers from Hinduism and Islam................................... Sepideh & Sharzaud Karimi and

Priya Matadar



Interpretive Dance.............................................................. Burmese, Caran and Thai Dancers



Reflection on International Peacemaking.................... Lyla Wasz-Piper



Litany of Battles................................................................. Mitzi Friedlander

Music by Nancy & Sam Harris



The Importance of Remembering the Holocaust......... Alyssa Fromeyer



Musical Reflection.............................................................. Andrea Davidson

"Natchez Trace"



The Importance of Non-violence Education................. Nathan Hagan



Candle Lighting for the Fallen........................................ Aaron Payne

Lighting of First Candle by Lee Thomas

"How Great Thou Art" performed by Anderson & Potts



Closing Remarks and Invitation...................................... Terry Taylor



Postlude................................................................................ The St. Clair String Quartet

Beethoven's Harp Quartet in E flat major



Please join us for a Reception in Bishops Hall

with music by Brendan Grant






Sponsors for the event includ:

Sponsors include:



The Kentucky Council of Churches



Baha'is of Louisville



Kentuckiana American Indian Advocates



Fellowship of Reconciliation, Louisville Chapter



Drepung Gomang Institute (Tibetan Buddhists)



U.S. Department of Peace Campaign



Christ Church Episcopal Cathedral

Friends Meeting (Quakers) of Louisville

Hindu Temple of Kentucky

Independent Muslims of Louisville

The Islamic Cultural Center of Louisville

St. William Catholic Church

St. Agnes Catholic Church

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Speaker tomorrow at 11:30 am on resistance to war


Bill Galvin, Counseling Coordinator at the Center on Conscience & War in Washington, DC, will be the featured speaker at the Third Thursday Lunch at 11:30 am on May 20, 2010 at the Rudyard Kipling.

Through his work over many years beginning with the Vietnam War, Bill has counseled many soldiers and draft resisters. He travels widely, holds workshops and supports conscientious objectors (COs) who are speaking out and standing up in the ongoing effort to move this country to the day when conscience is respected and wars end. He worked directly with most of the COs interviewed for the new award-winning documentary

Soldiers of Conscience which is to be shown in Louisville on May 29 at St. Matthews Episcopal Church, 330 N. Hubbards Lane, 6:00 pm.

Everyone is invited to the buffet lunch ($6) beginning at 11:30 am at the Rudyard Kipling Restaurant, 422 West Oak Street. For reservations, call Jean Edwards, 458-8056.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Sad milestone: 1,000 US dead in Afghanistan


I just saw an article in the NY Times that says we have now reached 1,000 dead among US service men and women serving in the war in Afghanistan. I have yet to hear anyone explain how we would know if we have won (or lost) this war. How many more Americans and Afghanis will die before we take a deep breath and make the tough decision to end the war...not next year or the year after, but now.

Here's a link to the NY Times Story:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/19/us/19dead.html?hp

Here's a link to images of the US service men and women who have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Sadly, we have no images of the hundreds of thousands of of Afghanis and Iraqis who have died.

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/us/faces-of-the-dead.html?ref=us#/rivers_thomas_e_jr

Monday, May 17, 2010

Dalai Lama, Rabbis, Klezmer, an Islamic Reformation and more



It was quite a busy weekend for the executive director of Interfaith Paths to Peace.

I'm not often this busy, but the following items illustrate what a rich variety of interfaith opportunities there are in Louisville (or within a short drive).

On Friday, I drove to Indianapolis for a public presentation by the Dalai Lama at Conseco Fieldhouse. As I said to someone after the event, I have heard the Dalai Lama speak a number of times, and I rarely hear anything new, or anything I didn't already know. But I do hear from him reminders of important spiritual matters to which I should be paying attention. Here's a link to the Dalai Lama's official web site so that you can explore his ideas for yourself.

http://www.dalailama.com/

On Saturday, I drove over to Lexington for that city's annual Peace and Global Citizenship Fair, an outdoor exposition of groups and vendors associated with peace or spirituality. I meant many wonderful people, one of whom reminded me of the words of someone who is not often thought of as a spiritual master. A woman approached my table, saw a copy of my book, A Spirituality for Brokenness, and said to me, "We grow stronger at the broken places." I said to her, "You know who is credited with saying that, don't you?" She didn't. "It was Ernest Hemingway. I am the only person I know who uses that quote citing Hemingway as a Spiritual Master."

Later that evening I had the opportunity to lead a book discussion for a local Jewish group that gathers once a month. We discussed a book by a friend of mine, Rabbi Irwin Kula, who is the head of the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership. We explored his book called Yearnings: Exploring the Sacred Messiness of Life. In this powerful work Irwin shares an amazing array of stories, wise words, and interpretations that have really opened the eyes of my heart. In the book the Rabbi says that over the years his vision of the mission of his organization has evolved to the point where he now sees CLAL's major task as sharing Wisdom and Practice across religious lines. In many ways I see that as the mission of my own organization.

Here's a link to learn more about Rabbi Irwin and his book.

http://yearnings.irwinkula.com/index.html

The next morning I spoke to the Adult Sunday School Class at First Unitarian Church in Louisville. My topic was "An Emerging Velvet Reformation in Islam." That religion is beginning to undergo major changes that are reflective of a long hidden (or ignored) concern for values embraced by the mainstream of other world religions. A key figure in this Reformation is a Turkish spiritual leader named Fettulah Gulen who is like the Christian master Thomas Merton in that he embraces a deepening of spirituality, a concern for social justice, and a commitment to genuine interfaith dialogue. Here's a link to information about Gulen.

http://www.fethullahgulen.org/

Sunday afternoon I attended a wonderful "Klezmer Fest", a celebration of a Jewish style of music that has all of the liveliness of Dixieland Jazz. If you would like to hear a little, here's a link to a short performance by The Java Jews, one of the bands that performed on Sunday.


I finished my Sunday by attending a religious service at St. Agnes Catholic Church honoring the Louisville Association of Community Ministries on the occasion of their 40th anniversary. These ministries (that provide a wide array of social services in every area of Louisville) were the first in the nation and established a model that has been duplicated in cities across America.

http://www.louisvilleministries.org/

And then came Monday morning and a meeting with the visiting Abbot of the Drepung Gomang Monastery in India...

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Gray Henry, Muslims and Tibetan Buddhists




Our friend Peter Smith at the Courier Journal is at a program with the Dalai Lama in Bloomington, Indiana. He just blogged about IPP's friend and emerita Board member Gray Henry, her Fons Vitae Press and how the Muslims and the Tibetan Buddhists have leraned to cooperate over the Years...with Gray's help. Here's a link to Peter's story.

http://faith.courier-journal.com/2010/05/long-road-to-common-ground.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+courier-journal%2FDqbI+%28Faith+%26+Works%29&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Muslims DO denounce terrorist acts


We frequently hear in the news media cries from folks who claim that Muslims do not denounce terrorist acts by their coreligionists in the US and other parts of the world. You should know that Muslims publicly and loudly denounce violence undertaken in their religion's name.

I don't know if you saw Peter Smith's article in the Courier Journal this week about a local Pakistani group condemning the May 1 attempted car bombing in New York and that group's efforts to support law enforcement. There is a link to the story below.

Please note that several US Muslim organizations have also condemned the attempt. Links to their statements appear after the link to the CJ article.

Here is a link to the Courier-Journal article about a local Pakistani Muslim group condemning the attempted car bombing in New York on May 1.
http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=20105070365

Here is a pulbic condemnation from the Islamic Society of North America of the attempted New York terrorist attack.
http://www.isna.net/articles/News/ISNA-Commends-Efforts-of-Law-Enforcement-Condemns-Attempted-Bombing-at-Times-Square.aspx

Here is a public condemnation from the Council on American Islamic Relations of the attempted New York attack:
http://www.cair.com/ArticleDetails.aspx?mid1=777&&ArticleID=26384&&name=n&&currPage=1

Monday, May 10, 2010

Praying for an End to Nuclear Weapons



Friends, you can still be part of an interfaith service that was held on May 2 in New York at which those gathered prayed for an end to nuclear weapons.

You can be part of it by using this link to watch a brief video of the Service. Below is some text that explains what the service was about.

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/by-topic/international/praying-for-an-end-to-nuclear-weapons/6263/

As you know from my recent blog, I was part of a conference ten days ago in New York focused on Nuclear Disarmament. The conference concluded with an interfaith service in a chapel across the street from the UN that also marked the begining of a month of nuclear disarmament activities.

Religion & Ethics Newsweekly recently covered the service and has posted a short video from the service on its web site.

Here's the Religion and Ethics Story:

The United Nations opened a month-long conference in New York this week to review ways to contain the spread of nuclear weapons. Prior to the conference, leaders from several religious traditions gathered at an interfaith chapel across from the UN to pray for the abolition of all nuclear weapons. Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and others offered prayers, chants, songs, and special readings. Watch excerpts of the service, where some of the participants included Buddhist peace activists; Roman Catholic Archbishop Joseph Mitsuaki Takami of Nagasaki, Japan, a survivor of the 1945 atomic bombing, who brought a scorched piece of a statue of Mary from the cathedral that was destroyed in the attack; a Shinto chant leader; Rev. Michael Kinnamon, general secretary of the National Council of Churches; a Native American prayer-song leader; Buddhist and Muslim readers; and Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

The US still has over 5,000 nuclear weapons...ready to use




Last weekend I attended a conference in New York at the historic Riverside Church devoted to nuclear disarmament. Almost simultaneously the US for the first time in history announced the number of nuclear weapons it possesses: 5,113 (with thousands more awaiting "decommissioning).

I want to talk about the conference, but first, a word about why we should be concerned that in spite of moves toward disarmament, we still possess over 5,000 nukes. Keep in mind that Russia probably has an equal number, as do as many as 10 other nations...and possibly some terrorist groups.

What would be the result if an atomic bomb the size of the one that was dropped on Hiroshima was exploded in Louisville...on the Clark Memorial Bride, lets say.

The explosion would essentially destroy downtown Louisville and downtown Jeffersonville, taking out businesses, hospitals, government centers and the central police departments in both cities. If the bomb exploded during the week and in business hours, perhaps 25-50,000 people would be killed outright. Thousands more would be sickened and killed downwind by the resulting radioactive fallout.

But what if a one megaton bomb bomb were exploded in the same spot? This is, I believe, an average size for a weapon in the US and Russian arsenals.

The heat and blast effects would completely destroy or badly damage everything in the Metro Louisville area out to the Waterson Expressway. Hundreds of thousands of people would die instantly. The blast would wipe out everything we think of as civilization: nearly all of our schools, hospitals, police and fire stations, government offices, libraries, stores, restaurants. Most of the city would become what I have heard cynically referred to as a highly radioactive "self lighting parking lot" for a century or more. Jeffersonville, New Albany and Clarksville along with all of their citizens, would simply cease to exist.

Now some information about the conference I attended.


The conference was entitled "International Conference for a Nuclear-Free, Peaceful, Just and Sustainable World.'

Over a thousand people attended, and large numbers of attendees came from outside the US: Japan, Australia, Scandinavia and over 200 from France.

The mood was powerful and engaging. There were workshops on a variety of topics that would help participants understand the impact of nuclear weapons, hear about initiatives currently underway to limit and even eliminate all nuclear weapons, and most importantly, discover ways that we as individuals can do something about the nuclear "Sword of Damocles" hanging over our heads.

There were discussions, film presentations, dances and music. The plenary sessions drew hundreds of conference participants and featured noted leaders from the anti-nuclear weapons movement.

The Saturday night plenary featured Ban Ki-Moon, Secretary General of the United Nations, and Tadatoshi Akiba, the Mayor of Hiroshima (who also heads the Mayors for Peace program).

The Secretary General received a standing ovation when he told the audience that the first item on his agenda the day he took office was nuclear disarmament. He went on to invoke the memory of the famous sermon by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at Riverside Church http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/058.html delivered one year (to the day )before he was assassinated. In that speech Dr. King went against the wishes of other leaders in the Civil Rights Movement and announced his fervent opposition to the Viet Nam War.

Mayor Akiba affirmed the efforts of the thousands of Mayors for Peace http://www.mayorsforpeace.org/english/index.html to achieve total nuclear disarmament by the year 2020.

He invoked another sermon delivered by Dr. King.

This second sermon was delivered less than a week before Dr. King died. In that talk http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/index.php/kingpapers/article/remaining_awake_through_a_great_revolution/ Dr. King called for nuclear disarmament and stated unequivocally that the choice facing the world today is not between violence and nonviolence, but rather between nonviolence and nonexistence.

The impact of his words brought into focus for me what had touched me most deeply at the conference: the stories of human suffering related by hibakusha (atomic bomb survivors) from a variety of different parts of the world.

There were the devastating stories of individuals who had experienced the very real holocaust of flames and radiation that took the lives of nearly a half-million people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 and the years that followed.

I heard the tale of a poor Japanese fisherman who barely survived a black rain of nuclear fallout after a hydrogen bomb test on the Bikini atoll in the Pacific Ocean.

On the closing afternoon of the conference I listened to a woman my own age tell the crushing details of what it was like as a child to grow up in Utah, downwind from a site where the US tested atomic weapons in the atmosphere in the 1940s, 50s and 60s. She told of her own withering round of atomic-related illnesses and the premature deaths of close relatives who had eaten, drunk, and breathed the residue left behind by the atomic tests.

Then I read about our "disarmament." And I thought about what would happen in Louisville if we were the victims of an atomic attack. Here's the story. What do you think?

US says it has 5,113 nuclear warheads
By ANNE GEARAN, AP National Security Writer Anne Gearan, Ap National Security Writer
Tue May 4, 1:08 am ET

WASHINGTON – The United States has 5,113 nuclear warheads in its stockpile and "several thousand" more retired warheads awaiting the junkpile, the Pentagon said Monday in an unprecedented accounting of a secretive arsenal born in the Cold War and now shrinking rapidly.

The Obama administration disclosed the size of its atomic stockpile going back to 1962 as part of a campaign to get other nuclear nations to be more forthcoming, and to improve its bargaining position against the prospect of a nuclear Iran.

"We think it is in our national security interest to be as transparent as we can be about the nuclear program of the United States," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton told reporters at the United Nations, where she addressed a conference on containing the spread of atomic weapons.

The U.S. has previously regarded such details as top secret.

The figure includes both "strategic," or long-range weapons, and those intended for use at shorter range.

The Pentagon said the stockpile of 5,113 as of September 2009 represents a 75 percent reduction since 1989.

A rough count of deployed and reserve warheads has been known for years, so the Pentagon figures do not tell nuclear experts much they don't already know.

Hans Kristensen, director of Nuclear Information Project, Federation of American Scientists in Washington, said his organization had already put the number at around 5,100 by reviewing budget estimates and other documents.

The import of the announcement is the precedent it sets, Kristensen said.

"The important part is that the U.S. is no longer going to keep other countries in the dark," he said.

Clinton said the disclosure of numbers the general public has never seen "builds confidence" that the Obama administration is serious about stopping the spread of atomic weapons and reducing their numbers.

But the administration is not revealing everything.

The Pentagon figure released Monday includes deployed weapons, which are those more or less ready to launch, and reserve weapons. It does not include thousands of warheads that have been disabled or all but dismantled. Those weapons could, in theory, be reconstituted, or their nuclear material repurposed.

Estimates of the total U.S. arsenal range from slightly more than 8,000 to above 9,000, but the Pentagon will not give a precise number.

Whether to reveal the full total, including those thousands of nearly dead warheads, was debated within the Obama administration. Keeping those weapons out of the figure released Monday represented a partial concession to intelligence agency officials and others who argued national security could be harmed by laying the entire nuclear arsenal bare.

A senior defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the overall total is still classified, did not dispute the rough estimates developed by independent analysts.

Exposure of once-classified totals for U.S. deployed and reserve nuclear weapons is intended to nudge nations such as China, which has revealed little about its nuclear stockpile.

"You can't get anywhere toward disarmament unless you're going to be transparent about how many weapons you have," said Sharon Squassoni, a nuclear policy analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Russia and the United States have previously disclosed the size of their stockpiles of deployed strategic weapons, and France and Britain have released similar information. All have signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which is the subject of the U.N. review that began Monday.

The U.S. revelations are calculated to improve Washington's bargaining power with Iran's allies and friends for the drive to head off what the West charges is a covert Iranian program to build a bomb.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahamadinejad spoke ahead of Clinton at the conference, denouncing U.S. efforts to pressure his regime to abandon its nuclear program.

The U.N. conference will try to close loopholes in the internationally recognized rules against the spread of weapons technology.

Independent analysts estimate the total world stockpile of nuclear warheads at more than 22,000.

The Federation of American Scientists estimates that nearly 8,000 of those warheads are operational, with about 2,000 U.S. and Russian warheads ready for use on short notice.

The United States and Russia burnished their credentials for insisting that other countries forgo atomic weapons by agreeing last month to a new strategic arms reduction treaty.

The New START treaty sets a limit of 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads for each side, down from 2,200 under a 2002 deal. The pact re-establishes anti-cheating procedures that provide the most comprehensive and substantial arms control agreement since the original 1991 START treaty.