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“Campaign Nonviolence” Symposium at ASCC tomorrow

September 21 —27 has been designated as the kick off week for the national movement of "Campaign Nonviolence.” Initiated by the California-based Pace e Bene Nonviolence Service, Campaign Nonviolence is described as a long-term movement to bring the concept of nonviolence into the national mainstream and to build a culture of peace free from war, poverty, and the climate crisis.

 

Backed by 150 national and local justice, peace, environmental and religious organizations, Campaign Nonviolence invites people everywhere to take a public stand against all violence and to take action for a culture of peace and nonviolence.

 

The American Samoa Community College will host a Campaign Nonviolence Symposium on Tuesday, September 23, from 12:30 to 2:00 in the Lecture Hall to inform students, teachers and all those interested in "Methods of Nonviolence," and to give examples of worldwide movements that face the challenges of poverty, climate crisis and violence/oppression of all types.

 

The symposium, presented in conjunction with the Children’s Healthy Living Project currently underway at the College’s Community & Natural Resources (CNR) division, intends to explore the connection between economic hardship and the effects of global warming as factors linked to violence and oppression.

 

“To study the circumstances that foster violence, we consider our environment as a whole,” said CNR Intervention Specialist Agnes Vargo, one of the symposium organizers. “Poverty has long been recognized as a factor in violence, and as the global warming crisis only escalates over time, we believe that both the fear and the indifference that result are also factors that can lead people to behave in unhealthy ways they normally would not.”

 

“Indifference and apathy, even if they don’t lead directly to violence, foster an environment where people think it’s useless to try and do something about it, which coincidentally is also how many people feel about climate change. We need to remind people that there is in fact very much that can easily be done.”

 

The symposium will be introduced with video clips of Martin Luther King, Ghandi, Mother Teresa and other noted peacemakers. Speakers from ASCC, the Alliance Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, the religious sector, Department of Public Safety and others will elaborate on issues such as wellness, peer pressure, and environmental activism.

 

Resources from the community will be identified for students and others who are interested.  To continue the momentum, the symposium organizers hope to form action groups among the College’s students and teachers, who will utilize the challenge or theme of "La'a Loa," which translates as “stepping forward.”

 

“We envision a world with the tools to challenge the spiral of war, poverty and environmental devastation,” said Pace e Bene Director Ken Butigan, “and a world where we apply these tools to our own lives as well as our larger society. Our mission is to foster a just and peaceful world through nonviolence education, community-building, and action.”

 

 

 

Founded in 1989 by the Franciscan Friars of California, Pace e Bene Nonviolence Service is now an independent, nondenominational 501(c)3 organization. Pace e Bene’s name derives from St. Francis and St. Clare of Assisi, who used this phrase in their own time as a form of greeting, which translated from Italian means “Peace and all good!”

 

Pace e Bene has offices and associates in Los Angeles, Oakland, Chicago, New Mexico, New England, Montreal, Australia and a growing number of partners and trainers in the US and around the world.

 

In the same week as the symposium at ASCC, Campaign Nonviolence will launch its multi-year effort with 110 – and counting - local nonviolent marches and rallies in cities and towns across the United States. Following the People’s Climate March in New York, planned for Sunday, September 21 on the eve of the UN Summit on Climate Change, the Campaign Nonviolence Week of Action across the U.S. will reinforce the march’s call for rapid global action to reverse the climate crisis and also underscore the connections between climate destruction, war and poverty.

 

For more information on the symposium or Campaign Nonviolence, contact Agnes Vargo of CNR at 699-1575, or Mrs. Mona Uli at 256-1459.