http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A61647-2002Dec1.html

Antiwar Effort Gains Momentum 
Growing Peace Movement's Ranks Include Some Unlikely Allies 

By Evelyn Nieves
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, December 2, 2002; Page A01 

AMHERST, Mass.-- The idea was hatched on a bright day in August, when Daphne
Reed was celebrating her daughter's and granddaughter's birthdays, and the talk
around the living room sofa turned to war.Reed began worrying that her
25-year-old grandson, who spent four years in the Coast Guard, might be called
to serve if the United States were to invade Iraq. Her family also wondered why
the United States was threatening to invade Iraq even before United Nations
weapons inspections began. And Reed fretted over the particular suffering that
would befall Iraqi women; their sons and husbands would be killed, she said,
and the women would be left in the rubble to fend off contaminated water and
starvation. 

"I said that all mothers should automatically be against war," Reed said. "It
was against their nature to be violent instead of nurturing." Maybe, she said,
it was time to start a movement -- Mothers Against War. 

Reed's response is just a tiny part of a growing peace movement that has been
gaining momentum and raises the possibility that there could be much more
dissent if U.S. bombs begin falling on Baghdad. 

The retired Hampshire College drama teacher e-mailed about 15 parents in her
address book. Reed reached people such as Elaine Kenseth, whose five children
include a son she adopted from the killing fields of Cambodia. Aileen
O'Donnell, a veteran of the women's movement. Joanne and Roger Lind, whose son
was a Vietnam War conscientious objector. And Elizabeth Verrill, who had never
been involved in political causes. Before long, Mothers Against War had 50 core
members, and thousands of supporters around the country and the world. 

Most members of Mothers Against War are grandmothers in their seventies whose
lives are already full. Yet they spend hours a day on the Internet, reading and
spreading information on Iraq and the United States and planning for marches,
e-mail campaigns and teach-ins. Having lived through the Vietnam antiwar
movement, which took years to build, the Mothers Against War are buoyed to find
themselves part of a fast-growing movement of people from every walk of life,
from every political stripe. 

The extraordinary array of groups questioning the Bush administration's
rationale for an invasion of Iraq includes longtime radical groups such as the
Workers World Party, but also groups not known for taking stands against the
government. There is a labor movement against war, led by organizers of the
largest unions in the country; a religious movement against the war, which
includes leaders of virtually every mainstream denomination; a veterans
movement against the war, led by those who fought Iraq in the Persian Gulf a
decade ago; business leaders against the war, led by corporate leaders; an
antiwar movement led by relatives of victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks;
and immigrant groups against the war. 

There are also black and Latino organizations, hundreds of campus antiwar
groups and scores of groups of ordinary citizens meeting in community centers
and church basements from Baltimore to Seattle. 

It has reached a point where United for Peace, a Web site started by the San
Francisco-based human rights organization Global Exchange for groups to list
events commemorating the Sept. 11 anniversary, has morphed into a national
network coordinating events for more than 70 peace groups nationwide. 

"We're taking the . . . Web site and rebuilding it as a one-stop shopping for
the antiwar movement," said Andrea Buffa, who co-chairs the new network. "It's
a campaign of all different kinds of groups, from the National Council of
Churches to the International Socialists organization; I just got a call from
the Raging Grannies of Palo Alto, who want to join. We're bringing groups
together to develop a consensus statement and a calendar of coordinated antiwar
events." 

Next Test: Dec. 10 Rallies After large rallies in Washington and San Francisco
on Oct. 26, the next big day to test the antiwar movement's might is Dec. 10,
International Human Rights Day. Hundreds of groups plan events, rallies and
civil disobedience to capture the nation's attention, including demonstrations
in Lafayette Park across from the White House and at a military recruitment
center in downtown Washington. 

Otherwise, antiwar groups, which tend to rely on the Internet to receive and
spread information, operate largely without the attention of the media or
Capitol Hill. Yet many of those speaking out against an attack on Iraq
represent large numbers of Americans, including John J. Sweeney, president of
the AFL-CIO (with 13 million members); the National Council of Churches (which
represents 36 Protestant and Orthodox denominations, with 50 million members);
and the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (the leadership arm of 65
million Roman Catholics). 

Among themselves, the groups are quietly organizing their ranks. A letter
Sweeney sent to Congress in early October expressing deep reservations about
the justifications for an invasion has begun to resonate among the rank and
file, said Bob Muehlenkamp, a labor consultant and former organizing director
for the Teamsters union. Several hundred thousand union members, he said, have
signed up against the war, with more joining every week. He expects the numbers
to balloon when leaders hold an organizational breakfast meeting for all unions
in New York on Dec. 18. 

"Union people are the most patriotic of Americans," Muehlenkamp said, "yet you
can't find all-out aggressive support for a Bush war." Union members have the
same concerns as others opposed to the proposed war, including a belief that
the Bush administration has not weighed the economic consequences or made the
case for an unprecedented attack, he said. But they have their own concerns as
well. "For unions," he said, "it's their kids that are going to be doing the
fighting. It's our sons and daughters who could die." 

The National Council of Churches, which includes Lutherans, Episcopalians and
President Bush's denomination, Methodists, is facilitating antiwar events for
traditionally liberal institutions and conservative churches, said the Rev.
Robert Edgar, its general secretary. 

"Average, ordinary people," Edgar said, "who come from evangelical Christian
conservative roots are organizing against the war." Edgar, who served in
Congress as a Democrat from suburban Philadelphia from 1975 to 1987, recalled
that he was a freshman Democrat during the last days of the Vietnam War. Even
then, he said, he and other lawmakers had to fight to end U.S. involvement. He
also remembered that it took the church -- meaning most mainstream religious
institutions -- 12 years to start opposing that war. "Whereas, the threat of
war now has even middle churches, not just liberal churches, involved in
antiwar activities," he said. 

During its annual meeting last month, the National Council of Churches issued a
statement praising the National Conference of Catholic Bishops for reiterating
its position against a U.S. invasion. "We thought it was important to
acknowledge their important work," Edgar said. 

Now, he said, the National Council of Churches -- fresh from its "What Would
Jesus Drive?" television ad campaign to promote fuel efficiency -- is launching
a "Seasons of Peacemaking" campaign, "moving beyond statements to actions. On
December 8 through 15, there will be a series of actions across the country."
The biggest day, he said, is Dec. 10, which is significant not only because it
is Human Rights Day but also because it is the day that former president Jimmy
Carter is to receive his Nobel Peace Prize. "Carter, as an evangelical
Christian, represents a great number of people in the antiwar effort," Edgar
said. 

Indeed, on that day, religious groups across the country plan to stage mass
acts of civil disobedience. Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry's ice cream, founder of
Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities, plans to join church groups in New
York and get arrested, he said, for the first time. 

"I've never engaged in civil disobedience before," he said. "But if some
country was going to do this to us -- have a little preemptive war with the
U.S., bomb our people, kill or maim people because they thought that at some
time we might bomb them, we'd say that's a war crime. I feel that getting
arrested is the biggest statement that I could make to say that what the Bush
administration is doing is wrong." 

That day, as well as the weekend of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, Jan.
18-19, is important for the smaller groups across the country as well. Damu
Smith, founder of the Washington-based Black Voices for Peace, said his group
plans to begin a poor people's peace movement similar to the one King was
organizing before his murder in 1968. Black Voices is planning its own rallies
and forums in Washington, as well as participating in planning national events
as a member of the steering committee for United for Peace, he said. 

"Before Doctor King died," Smith said, "he was speaking out forcefully against
the United States involvement in Vietnam. He made the point that the money
being spent on bombs was money that could never be spent on addressing poverty.
We are taking up Doctor King's legacy." 

While African Americans and other minorities have been underrepresented in some
national campaigns, such as the environmental movement, Smith, executive
director of the National Black Environmental Justice Network, said that he has
had no trouble recruiting against the proposed war. The group, which he began a
few weeks after Sept. 11, 2001, in response to a lack of African American
voices in the policy debates and newscasts surrounding the attacks, has more
than 3,000 members, he said. 

Not all are African American. "We get calls from people who say, 'I'm white,
but I want to join your group,' just as in the civil rights movement. It's such
a shame that the media has not focused on what is happening because there are
so many voices working together." 

Remembering Another War Those who still remember the horrors of the Vietnam
War, like the members of Mothers Against War, find themselves connected to this
new antiwar movement on a personal as well as ideological level. The other day,
as half a dozen core members sat in Daphne Reed's living room, they remembered
friends who had fled to Canada to shield their sons from the military draft,
friends who died in the war, and lives forever changed by the war. 

Joanne and Roger Lind, 77 and 78, respectively, are retired professors of
sociology and social work, whose son received his draft card as soon as he
turned 18 in 1965. As Quakers, the Linds were actively working toward peaceful
solutions to the crisis, including organizing teach-ins. Their son became a
conscientious objector, and did community work, known then as alternative
service. "But sons of our friends were not so lucky," Joanne Lind said. "They
served two years in prison." 
Elaine Kenseth, at 59 the youngest of the group, remembered that her friends
started getting married in 1964 before finishing school so that their men could
be exempt from the draft. "Others left for Canada. They lived there until
President Carter created the amnesty for them." 

She became active in helping refugees of the war resettle in Western
Massachusetts, and adopted her Cambodian son, when he was 16. "When we say
we're mothers against war," she said, "we're also saying we're mothers seeking
peace. We are activists for spreading peace in the world." 

Reed, recalling the four wars she has seen this country involved in during her
lifetime, said she is often motivated by a single memory decades old. She was
visiting the nation's capital, she said, when she saw a man without a face. 

"Yes," she said, "without a face. He had nothing but a plastic mask with two
holes for eyes and one for mouth. It still swims before my inner vision,
provoking an agony of grief that no one had been able to stop the war that took
away that man's face."

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