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GLOBAL MOVEMENT FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE

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Books Triumph over Bombs
un article par Joe Yannielli

At noon on March 5th, 2003, nearly 200 students at Wesleyan University stood in a sea of mud and under a blanket of freezing rain to make one message clear: Students reject the culture of war. We were cold and wet, but our spirits were high.

Although we didn't realize it at the time, we stood in solidarity with over 400 high school and college campuses worldwide. Our rally was part of an International Student Strike against war with Iraq, dubbed "Books Not Bombs" by its organizers, The National Youth and Student Peace Coalition. The March 5th actions united an estimated 50,000 students for education and against military spending.

The path to the student strike was a difficult one. At Wesleyan, our president published an article in a local newspaper after hearing of the action, begging students not to "Politicize the Academy." Students and professors refused to accept an academic strike as an effective way to promote education. Many cited the strikes of the Vietnam War era, saying that times were different then and that a student strike now would be out of place.

Nevertheless, through dialogue and a massive publicity campaign, we convinced many that the already underfunded school system would suffer a near-fatal blow if the U.S. decided to bungle headfirst into a second Iraq war. Why should educational programs be cut and tuition in public schools raised as much as 60% so that our government has an easier time killing thousands of women, children, and fellow studentsin Iraq? Why should we continue as if nothing was wrong while our government teeters on the edge of this insanity?

The response was overwhelming. At Wesleyan, groups advocating women's rights, the environment, black and latino awareness, ethnic studies, and peaceful resolutions rallied as a united bloc. A large group of students from nearby Middletown High School joined in, under risk of suspension. Afterwards, professors opened their classes up and brought war with Iraq into the classroom dialogue. Hundreds of other high schools and colleges across the country held similar actions and teach-ins. At the University of Michigan, 2,000 students boycotted their classes. Los Angeles area schools had a strike rate of almost 20%. And 30,000 students in Australia alone brought the strike to the international community's attention.

Surely, this level of militancy and awareness among students has helped postpone war thus far. And, as long as the momentum remains, we have hope for a peaceful and democratic resolution. For more information and ways you can help build the movement: www.nyspc.net.

DISCUSSION

Question(s) liée(s) à cet article:


Can such student strikes be effective?, What else can students do to promote peace?

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Commentaire le plus récent:

NATIONAL YOUTH AND STUDENT PEACE COALITION
PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Wednesday, March 3, 2004

CONTACT:
National Youth and Student Peace Coalition national spokespeople:
Jason Fults, (215) 222-4711,
seac@seac.org
Jessie Marshall, (646) 643-7702,
Jessica.M.Marshall.01
@Alum.Dartmouth.org

Grassroots spokespeople:
(Austin, TX) Brent Perdue, (512) 736-6852,

brent@notwithourmoney.org
(Chicago, IL) Dan Lichtenstein-Boris, (773) 505-2579,
dwlb@uchicago.edu
(Des Moines, IA) Jay Kozel, (515) 255-6876,
desvalido@aol.com


********************

COMMUNITIES WITH PLANNED MARCH 4 BOOKS NOT BOMBS DAY OF ACTION EVENTS

Below are communities where the National Youth and Student Peace Coalition knows youth and students are organizing events to challenge Bush to focus on
the needs of students and youth.  For specific details on local actions, please contact Jason Fults at (215) 222-4711 or

State  Location
AZ  Tucson High
CA  San Francisco, CA
CA  Arcata, CA
CA  California State Polytechnic University-Pomona
CA  Chabot College; Hayward, CA
CA  San Diego
CA  UC Berkeley
CT  Yale University
CT  Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT
DC  Washington, DC
FL  University of FL
IA  Des Moines, IA
ID  Boise State University -Idaho
IL  Chicago, IL
IN  Notre Dame
KS  Shawnee-Mission South HS - suburb of KC
LA  Louisiana State University -Baton Rouge
MA  Harvard University
MA  Boston College
MI  University of Michigan
MI  Grand Valley State University; Allendale
MN/WI  Northland, Minnesota and Wisconsin
MO  St. Louis, MO
MO  University of Missouri -- Kansas City
NC  North Carolina State University
NC  Duke University
NJ  New Brunswick, NJ
NM  University of New Mexico
NY  Syracuse, NY
NY  NY, NY
NY  Fordham University
NY  Cobleskill-Richmondville High School, NY
NY  Buffalo St./Students for Peace
NY  NYU
NY  SUNY-Orange, Middletown
OH  Wright State University; Dayton, OH
PA  Philadelphia, PA
PA  Westminster College, Wilmington, PA
PA  Cedar Crest College; Allentown
PA  Orwigsburg, PA
TX  University of TX-Austin
TX  University of St. Thomas; Houston, TX
TX  University of Texas - Arlington
TX  O'Connor; San Antonio
VA  James Madison University, Harrisonburg Virginia
VT  AFSC-VT
WI  Un. of Wisconsin-Madison
WI  Un. of Wisconsin-Osh Kosh
WI  Un. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee




Cet article a été mis en ligne le March 17, 2003.