Washington Peace Center
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Founded | 1963 |
---|---|
Founder | Larry Scott |
Focus | Social Justice, Activism, Community Building |
Location |
|
Website | WashingtonPeaceCenter.org |
The Washington Peace Center is a justice-oriented grassroots organization founded and currently located in Washington, D.C. The organization provides education, support, and resources to activist groups. The Peace Center aims to strategically link organizations to establish "structures and relationships that are nonviolent, non-hierarchical, humane and just."[1]
History
The Washington Peace Center grew from The Vigil to Stop Biological Weapons at Fort Detrick, which was maintained in Frederick, Maryland from 1959 through 1961. In 1961 vigil coordinator Larry Scott and other vigilers moved to the nation's capital to start the Washington Peace Action Center. Activists from the Peace Action Center vigiled at the White House calling for a ban on all testing of nuclear weapons, a major Cold War issue at that time. The PAC also contributed to local mobilizing for the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Justice.
The ratification of the Partial Test Ban Treaty between the US, USSR and Great Britain led to the dissolution of The Peace Action Center in 1963. Left in its place was the Washington Peace Center, a non-profit organization housed (until 1997) in the Friends Meeting of Washington and initially directed by Gelston MacNeil, a Quaker pacifist and activist. The Center sought to educate the public on peace issues through film screenings, discussions, and the publication of a local newsletter.
The Peace Center quickly became a hub for organizing against the Vietnam War and helped to coordinate draft counseling in the Washington area. During the 1970s the Center continued its work by supporting the movements against nuclear power and for nuclear disarmament. In the 1980s the Peace Center served as the local nexus for national and international opposition to the arms race and played a vital role in organizing resistance to the Reagan administration's interventions in Central America. The 1990s saw the Center contributing to social justice movements in opposition to racism and for justice for gay, lesbian, and transgender people. In the 2000s, the Center was involved with opposing the invasion and occupation of Iraq, countering military recruiters and attempting to institute a peace curriculum in area public schools, as well as working to close the Guantanamo Bay prison camp, ending torture and restoring civil liberties at home. Currently, the Peace Center fiscally sponsors several activist organizations in Washington D.C. including Witness Against Torture, the Fort Reno Summer Concert Series, the Hiroshima-Nagasaki Peace Committee, Positive Force, and the Civilian-Soldier Alliance, allowing these groups to raise funds without 501(c)(3) status.[2] The Center organizes and hosts monthly skillshares as part of the DC Trainers Network in order to strengthen progressive social movements in Washington D.C.[3] As the Center's current website states, the summation of all of these efforts is that, "We envision a world based on respect for people and the planet that is achieved through nonviolence, peace and social justice."[4]
As a local grassroots organization working in the political milieu of Washington, DC, the Peace Center has always faced the unique challenge of balancing the competing impulses of national organizations oriented toward using Washington as a stage for major demonstrations with the concerns of local activists working to confront the symptoms of global injustice in the environs of DC. Now in its fifth decade the Center is a not-for-profit organization with an eleven-member board of directors. The Center works on a variety of peace and social justice issues locally, nationally, and globally. The Center publishes the "Washington Peace Letter" bi-annually.[5] It distributes the free publication to libraries, coffee shops and other public places throughout the District of Columbia and mails the publication to its members throughout the greater Washington metropolitan area.
Currently the Center has three staff members, Sonia Silbert, Darakshan Raja, and Candice Jones.[6] Activists who served on the Center's staff in earlier years include Abe Bloom, David Goodman, Joe Miller, Jane Midgely, Elise Fisher, Til Bartels, Michele Guimarin, David Hostetter, Lisa Fithian, Mark Anderson, Benito Torres, Phillis Engelbert, Christine Rice, Tammi Coles, Vicki Linton, Luci Murphy, Jennifer Carr, John Judge, Maria Ramos, Brian Anders, Paul Magno, Asantewaa Nkrumah-Toure, Mkawasi Mcharo, Pete Perry, Dany Sigwalt, and Jay Marx. Many interns and long-term volunteers have helped make the Peace Center a significant presence in organizing for peace and social justice.
Records
The records of the Vigil at Fort Detrick, the Washington Peace Action Center, and the Washington Peace Center are housed at the Swarthmore Peace Collection at Swarthmore College (http://www.swarthmore.edu/library/peace/).
References
- ^ Washington Peace Center, History
- ^ Sponsored Projects, Washington Peace Center
- ^ DC Trainers Network Washington Peace Center
- ^ About, Washington Peace Center
- ^ Peace Letter Info. Washington Peace Center
- ^ Contact Us, Washington Peace Center
Further reading
- David Hostetter, "Experiment In Persuasion: The Vigil to Stop Biological Weapons at Fort Detrick, 1959-1961, and Antiwar Protest in the 1960s," in Michael A. and Barbara M. Powell,eds., Mid-Maryland History: Conflict, Growth and Change, (Charleston: The History Press, 2008). 143-193.
- The Washington Post, A Hunger for Justice, Darfur Becomes One Man's Cause for Deprivation, by Delphine Schrank, Washington Post, April 14, 2007, C01.
- The People's Voice, Marine Mom Arrested at Speaker Pelosi’s Office, April 2007.
- The Washington Post, Veteran Questions Ethics of War Policies, by Sylvia Moreno, Washington Post, August 29, 2007, B06.