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                <text>Madison Area Peace Coalition E-mails</text>
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                <text>The Madison Area Peace Coalition (MAPC) formed fourteen days after the September 11 attacks to oppose (among other goals) the use of U.S. military, economic, or political force – whether direct or proxy, overt or covert -- "that violates the sovereignty or human rights of any nation or people." The Archive has assembled here e-mails exchanges from MAPC dating from the group's founding until late November 2001.</text>
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I have mixed feelings about this approach.  What do you think?

&gt;  Only Poetry Can Address Grief:
&gt;  Moving Forward after 911
&gt;  By X
&gt;
&gt;
&gt;  In the middle of the Anti-Capitalist Convergence march in
&gt;Washington DC last month, I found myself nose to nose with a line of
&gt;police attempting to push the crowd back.  I was facing an angry but
&gt;very short policewoman so in my case it was actually nightstick to
&gt;bosom. "Get back, get back!" she was shouting, but our line was not
&gt;giving ground.  I explained to her, calmly and I thought, quite
&gt;reasonably, that we were not going to get back, because there was
&gt;nowhere for us to go. I think of that moment now as a metaphor for
&gt;where what I like to call the Global Justice movement is today.  We
&gt;are facing an array of forces telling us to get back, to disperse,
&gt;to leave the scene.  The forces of the state, the media, all the
&gt;powers that support global corporate capitalism would like to see us
&gt;go away.
&gt;
&gt;  But we have nowhere to go.
&gt;
&gt;  We have nowhere to go because the conditions we have been fighting
&gt;have not gone away.  The disparity between rich and poor has not
&gt;grown less, the attempts of the corporate powers to consolidate
&gt;their hegemony have not ceased, the environment has not miraculously
&gt;repaired itself, and our economic and social systems have not
&gt;suddenly become sustainable.   We're on the Titanic; our efforts to
&gt;turn the course of the ship have just been hijacked, and we're
&gt;churning full steam ahead into the iceberg.
&gt;
&gt;  We don't have the luxury of defraying action to a more favorable
&gt;moment.  We need the movement to keep moving forward. How do we do
&gt;that in the face of increased repression and much potential public
&gt;opposition?
&gt;
&gt;  I.  Stand our ground:
&gt;
&gt;  First, we don't panic, and we stand our ground.  Fear is running
&gt;rampant at the moment, and every effort is being made by the
&gt;authorities to increase and play upon that fear.  While the general
&gt;public may fear more terrorist attacks, we in the movement are
&gt;equally or more afraid of what our governments may do in restricting
&gt;civil liberties and targeting dissent.  But either way, fear is the
&gt;authorities' greatest weapon of social control.  When we are in a
&gt;state of fear, we're not taking in information, we're unable to
&gt;clearly see or assess a situation, and we make bad decisions.  We're
&gt;more easily controlled.
&gt;
&gt;  We can learn to recognize fear, in our own bodies, in our meetings,
&gt;in our interactions.  When fear is present, just stop for a moment,
&gt;take a deep breath, and consciously set it aside.  Then ask, 'What
&gt;would we do in this situation if we weren't afraid?'  From that
&gt;perspective, we can make choices based on reasonable caution but
&gt;also on vision.
&gt;
&gt;  II.  Acknowledge the grief:
&gt;
&gt;  911 threw us as collectively into a deep well of grief.  We have
&gt;had to face the awful power of death to intrude on our lives, to
&gt;sear us with pain and loss, to reorder all our priorities and
&gt;disrupt all our plans, to remind us that we walk the world in
&gt;vulnerable, mortal flesh.
&gt;
&gt;  The political task that faces us is to speak to the depth of that
&gt;grief, not to gloss it over or trivialize it or use it to further
&gt;stale agendas.  If we simply shout at people over bullhorns,
&gt;recycling the politics, the slogans, the language of the sixties, we
&gt;will fail.  The movement we need to build now, the potential for
&gt;transformation that might arise out of this tragedy, must speak to
&gt;the heart of the pain we share across political lines.
&gt;
&gt;  A great hole torn has been torn out of the heart of the world.
&gt;What we need now is not to close over the wound, but to dare to
&gt;stare more deeply into it.
&gt;
&gt;  To comprehend that grief, we must look at the possibility that it
&gt;was present within us before the 11th, that the violence and death
&gt;of that day released a flood tide of latent mourning.  On one level,
&gt;yes, we mourned for the victims and their families, for the
&gt;destruction of familiar places and the disruption of the patterns of
&gt;our lives.  But on a deeper level, perhaps many of us were already
&gt;mourning, consciously or not, the lack of connection and community
&gt;in the society that built those towers, the separation from nature
&gt;that they embodied, the diminishment of the wild, the closing off of
&gt;possibilities and the narrowing of our life spaces.  This frozen
&gt;grief, transmuted into rage, has fueled our movements, but we are
&gt;not the only ones to feel it.
&gt;
&gt;  With the grief also comes a fear more profound than even the terror
&gt;caused by the attack itself.  For those towers represented human
&gt;triumph over nature.  Larger than life, built to be unburnable, they
&gt;were the Titanic of our day.  For them to burn and fall so quickly
&gt;means that the whole superstructure we depend upon to mitigate
&gt;nature and assure our comfort and safety could fall.  And without it
&gt;most of us do not know how to survive.
&gt;
&gt;  We know, in our bones, that our technologies and economies are
&gt;unsustainable, that nature is stronger than we are, that we cannot
&gt;tamper with the very life systems of the earth without costs, and
&gt;that we are creating such despair in the world that it must
&gt;inevitably crack open, weep and rage.  The towers falling were an
&gt;icon of an upcoming reckoning we dread but secretly anticipate.
&gt;
&gt;  The movement we need to build now must speak to the full weight of
&gt;the loss, of the fear, and yet hold out hope.  We must admit the
&gt;existence of great forces of chaos and uncertainty, and yet maintain
&gt;that out of chaos can come destruction, but also creativity.
&gt;
&gt;  III.  Develop a new political language:
&gt;
&gt;  Faced with the profundity of loss, with the stark reality of death,
&gt;we find words inadequate.  "What do I say to someone who just lost
&gt;his brother in the towers?" a hard core New York activist asks me.
&gt;"How do I talk to him?"
&gt;
&gt;  The language of abstraction doesn't work.  Ideology doesn't work.
&gt;Judgment and hectoring and shaming and blaming cannot truly touch
&gt;the depth of that loss. Only poetry can address grief. Only words
&gt;that convey what we can see and smell and taste and touch of life,
&gt;can move us.
&gt;
&gt;  To do that we need to forge a new language of both the word and the
&gt;deed.  We on the Left can be as devoted to certain words and
&gt;political forms as any Catholic was ever attached to the Latin Mass.
&gt;We incant "imperialism" or "anti-capitalist" or "non-violence" or
&gt;even "peace" with an almost religious fervor, as if the words alone
&gt;could strike blows in the struggle.
&gt;
&gt;    Those words are useful, and meaningful.  But they're like the
&gt;cliché that the bad poet turns to.  They are the easy first answer
&gt;that relieves us of the work of real expression.
&gt;
&gt;  Lately I'm hearing some of my most political friends say, "I can't
&gt;go to another rally.  I can't stand hearing one more person tell me
&gt;in angry tones what the answers are."
&gt;
&gt;  What if we stopped in the middle of our rallies and said, "But you
&gt;know, these issues are complex, and many of us have mixed feelings,
&gt;and let's take some time for all the people here to talk to each
&gt;other instead of listening to more speeches."
&gt;
&gt;  If we could admit to some of our own ambiguities, we might also
&gt;find that we are closer than we think to that supposed overwhelming
&gt;majority of war supporters, who in reality may have deeply mixed
&gt;feelings of their own.
&gt;
&gt;  IV.  Propose our own alternative to Bush's war:
&gt;
&gt;  Defining the September attacks as an act of war rather than a
&gt;criminal act has only dignified the perpetrators.  Going to war has
&gt;turned us into Bin Laden's recruiting agency, rapidly alienating the
&gt;entire Muslim world.  Bombing Afghanistan has made us look like
&gt;thugs to the Muslim world, (and to everyone else with a heart and
&gt;sense) and bred thousands of new potential ready-to-die enemies.
&gt;The bombing, by preventing relief trucks from delivering serious
&gt;food supplies before winter, now threatens to impose starvation on
&gt;up to seven million Afghanis.
&gt;
&gt;  In spite of what the polls and the media tell us, I don't
&gt;necessarily believe that the bulk of the U.S. population is frothing
&gt;at the mouth with eagerness for Afghani blood. The phrase I keep
&gt;hearing is a plaintive "We need to do something."   Bush's program
&gt;is the only one laid out for us.  The attacks are real, and
&gt;devastating; simply calling for 'peace' and singing "Where Have All
&gt;the Flowers Gone?" does not address their seriousness.  If we oppose
&gt;Bush's war, we need a clear alternative.
&gt;
&gt;  Diplomacy does not mean weakness.  It means being smarter than the
&gt;opposition, not just better armed.  Diplomacy also does not mean
&gt;simply issuing ultimatums backed by bombs.  It means actually
&gt;understanding something of the culture of the people you're
&gt;negotiating with.  It means actually negotiating, offering a carrot
&gt;as well as a stick, being willing to let the other side come out
&gt;with something less than total humiliation.  If the goal of the war
&gt;is truly to get Bin Laden, well, the Taliban just offered to deliver
&gt;him to a third country.
&gt;
&gt;  This could be a moment to switch our policy, to negotiate, to work
&gt;with and strengthen international institutions and the U.N., to
&gt;begin to deliver massive and meaningful humanitarian aid to the
&gt;region.  Any or all of those acts would increase our long term
&gt;security far more than our present course.
&gt;
&gt;  V.  Expose the real aims of the war:
&gt;
&gt;  We have about as much chance of doing any of the above as I have of
&gt;being offered a post in the current Administration.  All the
&gt;indications are that Bush wants a war, to establish U.S. hegemony in
&gt;Central Asia and the East, to forestall an Asian alliance that might
&gt;oppose our vested interests with interests of their own, to take
&gt;control of rich oil resources of Central Asia and provide a safe
&gt;passage for an oil pipeline across Afghanistan, to deflect from the
&gt;illegitimacy of his own presidency, to implement the entire right
&gt;wing agenda.  We need to continue educating the public about those
&gt;aims and about the real consequences of the war.  To do that, we
&gt;need to talk to people-not just at rallies and teach-ins, but in our
&gt;neighborhoods, our workplaces, our schools, on the bus, in the
&gt;street, on talk shows, with our families.  It can be easier to march
&gt;into a line of riot cops than to voice an unpopular opinion where we
&gt;live, but we've got to do it and to learn to do it calmly and
&gt;effectively.
&gt;
&gt;  And while we're talking about the war, we need to make the
&gt;connections to the broader issues we were working on before the
&gt;eleventh of September.  The war can be an opening to challenge
&gt;racism, and to spotlight the U.S.'s historic role of training,
&gt;arming, and supporting terrorists-including Bin Laden and the
&gt;Taliban in previous years. In an age of terrorism, does an economy
&gt;entirely dependent on oil-based long distance transport really make
&gt;sense? (Especially as it didn't make sense before, but never mind
&gt;that.) The Anthrax scares are a perfect opportunity to push for true
&gt;domestic security in the form of a well-funded, functioning public
&gt;health system, availability of hospital beds and medical care,
&gt;support for local food producers, development of alternative energy
&gt;resources, etc.  The right wing has used the attacks and the war to
&gt;justify their agenda, but with a little political jujitsu we can
&gt;redraw their picture of reality.
&gt;
&gt;  VI.  Develop our vision:
&gt;
&gt;  Despair breeds fundamentalism, fanaticism, and terrorism.
&gt;
&gt;  A world of truly shared abundance would be a safer world.
&gt;
&gt;  The policies of global corporate capitalism have not brought us
&gt;that world.  They've been tried-and found wanting.  We need to
&gt;replace them with our own vision.
&gt;
&gt;  The global justice movement has often been accused of not knowing
&gt;what it wants.  In reality, we know clearly the broad outlines of
&gt;what we want even though we have a multiplicity of ideas of how to
&gt;get there.  I can lay it out for you in five short paragraphs:
&gt;
&gt;  We want enterprises to be rooted in communities and responsible to
&gt;communities and to future generations.  We want producers to be
&gt;accountable for the true social and ecological costs of what they
&gt;produce.
&gt;
&gt;  We say there is a commons that needs to be protected, that there
&gt;are resources that are too vital to life, too precious or sacred to
&gt;be exploited for the profit of the few, including those things that
&gt;sustain life:  water, traditional lands and productive farmland, the
&gt;collective heritage of ecological and genetic diversity, the earth's
&gt;climate, the habitats of rare species and of endangered human
&gt;cultures, sacred places, and our collective cultural and
&gt;intellectual knowledge.
&gt;
&gt;  We say that those who labor are entitled, as a bare minimum, to
&gt;safety, to just compensation that allows for life, hope and dignity,
&gt;and to have the power to determine the conditions of their work.
&gt;
&gt;  We say that as humans we have a collective responsibility for the
&gt;well being of others, that life is fraught with uncertainty, bad
&gt;luck, injury, disease, and loss, and that we need to help each other
&gt;bear those losses, provide generously and graciously the means for
&gt;all to have food, clothing, shelter, health care, education, and the
&gt;possibility to realize their dreams and aspirations.  Only then will
&gt;we have true security.
&gt;
&gt;  We say that democracy means people having a voice in the decisions
&gt;that affect them, including economic decisions.
&gt;
&gt;  VII.  Develop our strategy:
&gt;
&gt;  We might begin by acknowledging that we have had a highly
&gt;successful strategy for the past two years.  Since Seattle, what
&gt;we've done is to oppose every summit, as a means of focusing
&gt;attention on the institutions of globalization that were functioning
&gt;essentially in secret, and delegitimizing them.  Systems fall when
&gt;they hit a crisis of legitimacy, when they can no longer inspire
&gt;faith and command compliance.  Our strategy should continue to work
&gt;toward creating that crisis for the institutions of global corporate
&gt;capitalism.  In the meantime, in spite of all appearances the
&gt;government may already be creating that crisis for itself.  For
&gt;ultimately, nothing delegitimizes a government faster than not being
&gt;able to provide for the physical or economic security of its people.
&gt;
&gt;  Now our strategy needs to broaden and become more complex.
&gt;
&gt;  Contest the summits when and where we can, but perhaps with some
&gt;new tactics that clearly embody the alternatives we represent.
&gt;
&gt;  Turn more of our attention to local organizing, bringing the global
&gt;issues home and making organizing and activism an ongoing, sustained
&gt;process.  And find ways to make that process as juicy and exciting
&gt;as some of the big, global actions.
&gt;
&gt;  Find ways to link local issues and actions regionally and globally.
&gt;
&gt;  Start to build the alternatives:  alternative economic enterprises
&gt;on new models, directly democratic systems of governance such as
&gt;neighborhood or watershed councils or town meetings, everything from
&gt;alternative energy co-operatives to community gardens to local
&gt;currencies.  Look for ways to let those alternatives delegitimize
&gt;the status quo.
&gt;
&gt;  VIII.  Organize openly:
&gt;
&gt;  In times of increasing repression, the strongest way to resist is
&gt;not to hide, but to become even more open in our organizing and our
&gt;communications.  The more out there we are, the harder we'll be to
&gt;brand as terrorists.  The more faces they photograph at rallies and
&gt;marches, the less meaningful any single face will be.  The more
&gt;information they collect, the less they'll be able to collate,
&gt;analyze and make sense of it all.  And if they read my email-they're
&gt;welcome to read my email.  Somebody ought to, and I don't have time
&gt;to read it all myself.  Maybe I could pay one of them a small extra
&gt;fee to sort it for me and send me a summary of the high points.
&gt;
&gt;  Security culture either has to be so good you can outspook the CIA,
&gt;or it simply makes you look like you have something to hide and
&gt;attracts the attention of the authorities.  And it makes it
&gt;extremely difficult to mobilize, educate and inspire people.  Yes,
&gt;there are actions that depend on surprise, but with a little
&gt;cleverness we can figure out how to do that in a basically open
&gt;setting.  "And tonight, each affinity group spoke receives a sealed
&gt;envelope-open it at five A.M. tomorrow and it will give you two
&gt;alternative beginning points for your march.  Flip a coin to decide
&gt;which one to go to"
&gt;
&gt;  IX.  Make our actions count:
&gt;
&gt;  Political action may well become more costly in the next months and
&gt;years.  That simply means we need to be more clear and thoughtful in
&gt;planning and carrying out our actions.  Most of us are willing to
&gt;take risks in this work and to make sacrifices if necessary, but no
&gt;one wants to sacrifice for something meaningless or stupid.  We can
&gt;no longer afford vaguely planned, ill considered actions that don't
&gt;accomplish anything-and believe me, I've done more than my fair
&gt;share of them.
&gt;
&gt;  We should never carry out an action that involves significant
&gt;risks, unless the following five points are addressed:
&gt;
&gt;  1.  We know what our intention is-are we trying to raise public
&gt;awareness, delegitimize an institution, influence an individual, end
&gt;an immediate wrong?
&gt;
&gt;  2.  We have a clear objective and know what it is--are we trying to
&gt;close down a meeting, deliver a petition, pressure an official to
&gt;meet with us, provide a service?  What are we trying to communicate,
&gt;to whom, and how?  What would victory look like?
&gt;
&gt;  3.  We make sure the acts we take, the symbols we use, the focus we
&gt;choose and the tactics we use reflect our intentions and objectives.
&gt;We resist the temptation to do extraneous things that might detract
&gt;from our focus.
&gt;
&gt;  4.  We have an exit strategy.  How are we going to end the action?
&gt;How are we going to get out once we get in?
&gt;
&gt;  5.  We have ongoing support lined up for afterwards-legal, medical,
&gt;political support, people willing to offer solidarity if needed.
&gt;
&gt;  X.  Use tactics that fit the new strategy and situation:
&gt;
&gt;  All of us are rethinking our tactics in the light of the current
&gt;situation.  We often argue tactics on the grounds of morality-is it
&gt;right or wrong, violent or nonviolent, to throw a tear gas canister
&gt;back into a line of police?  To break a window?  We might do better
&gt;to ask, "Do these particular tactics support our goals and
&gt;objectives," and "Are they actually working?"
&gt;
&gt;  Those who advocate highly confrontational tactics, such as property
&gt;damage and fighting the cops, are generally trying to strike blows
&gt;against the system.  But at the moment, the system has been struck
&gt;harder than we could have imagined, and is reeling toward fascism,
&gt;not liberation.  In the present climate, such tactics are most
&gt;likely to backfire and confirm the system's legitimacy.
&gt;
&gt;  Many classic nonviolent tactics are designed to heighten the
&gt;contrast between us and them, to claim the high moral ground and
&gt;point out the violence of the system.  But many of those tactics no
&gt;longer function in the same way. Static, passive tactics become
&gt;boring and disempowering.  Symbolic, cross-the-line arrests don't
&gt;seem to impress the public with our nobility and dedication any
&gt;more, even when they are noticed at all.  Mass arrests may be used
&gt;to justify police violence, even when the arrestees were completely
&gt;peaceful.  When the police cooperate in making the arrest easy and
&gt;low risk, the process confirms rather than challenges the power of
&gt;the state.  When they don't, even symbolic actions are costing
&gt;heavily in jail time or probation.  The price may well be worth it,
&gt;but there's only so many times in a lifetime we can pay it, so our
&gt;choices need to be thoughtful and strategic.
&gt;
&gt;  We need a new vocabulary of tactics, that can be empowering,
&gt;visionary, confrontational without reading as proto-terrorist, and
&gt;that work toward a crisis of legitimacy for the system.  We also
&gt;need tactics and actions that prefigure the world we want to create,
&gt;but that do so in a way that has some edge and bite to it.
&gt;
&gt;  Here are a few we are already using that could be further developed:
&gt;
&gt;  Mobile, fluid street tactics:  Groups like Art and Revolution,
&gt;Reclaim the Streets, the Pink Blocs of Prague and Genoa and the
&gt;Living River in Quebec have brought art, dance, drums, creativity
&gt;and mobility to street actions, and developed mobile and fluid
&gt;street tactics.  Such actions are focused not on getting arrested
&gt;(although that may be a consequence of the actions) nor on
&gt;confrontations with the cops, but on accomplishing an objective:
&gt;claiming a space and redefining it; disrupting business as usual,
&gt;etc., while embodying the joy of the revolution we are trying to
&gt;make. In Toronto on October 16, snake dancing columns of people
&gt;managed to disrupt the financial district in spite of a very tense
&gt;police presence.  The Pink Bloc has snake danced through police
&gt;lines.  The Pagan Cluster in Quebec City and DC was able to perform
&gt;street rituals in the midst of dangerous situations, in ways that
&gt;allowed participation by people with widely varying needs around
&gt;safety.  The Fogtown Action Avengers in San Francisco combined an
&gt;open, public ritual which distracted the police from a surprise
&gt;disruption of the stock exchange carried out by an affinity group
&gt;dressed as Robin Hood.
&gt;
&gt;  Claiming space:  Reclaim the Streets takes an intersection, moves
&gt;in a sound system and couches, and throws a party.  A Temporary
&gt;Autonomous Zone is a space we take over and then exemplify the world
&gt;we want to live in, with free food, healing, popular education, a
&gt;Truly Free Market where goods are given away or traded, workshops,
&gt;conversations, sports, theater.
&gt;
&gt;  Street services and alternative services:  Groups like Food Not
&gt;Bombs have been directly feeding the homeless for decades.  One of
&gt;the most successful direct actions I've ever been involved with was
&gt;a group called Prevention Point that pioneered street based needle
&gt;exchanges for drug users to prevent the spread of AIDS.  In DC in
&gt;September, during the Anti-Capitalist Convergence's Temporary
&gt;Autonomous Zone and during the Sunday peace march rally, the Pagan
&gt;Cluster set up an Emotional Healing Space that offered informal
&gt;counseling, massage, food, water and hands-on healing.  The
&gt;IndyMedia Centers provide alternative news coverage and a powerful
&gt;challenge to corporate media.  The medical and legal services we
&gt;provide during an action could be expanded.  Guerilla gardeners
&gt;could be mobilized in new ways.  Imagine a convergence that left a
&gt;community transformed by community gardens, with toxic sites
&gt;healing, worm farms thriving, and streets lined with fruit trees.
&gt;
&gt;  Popular education:  One of the values of mass convergences has been
&gt;the education and training we've been able to provide for each
&gt;other, from teach-ins on the global economy to climbing instruction.
&gt;Almost every Summit has had its CounterSummit.  Most of these have
&gt;followed the rough format of an academic conference, with presenters
&gt;talking to an audience or facilitating a discussion.  But many more
&gt;interactive and creative ways of teaching and learning could be
&gt;brought into them: role plays, story-telling circles, councils.  We
&gt;could hold a giant simulation of a meeting, with people role playing
&gt;delegations and grappling with the issues on the table, but from the
&gt;starting point of our own values.
&gt;
&gt;  People are hungry to talk about the war, about their fears and
&gt;beliefs and opinions. The Zapatistas give us the example of the
&gt;Consulta-a process of going out to the people to both listen to
&gt;concerns and mobilize. We might halt the speeches at a rally for ten
&gt;minutes to let people talk to each other.  Or do away with the
&gt;speeches altogether, and instead ask groups to facilitate
&gt;smaller-group discussions on their issues and tactics, run short
&gt;training sessions, offer games or dances or rituals.  And we could
&gt;develop ways to create instant Public Conversations as actions and
&gt;as education.  Caravans can bring discussion and education out of
&gt;the urban centers, and could embody alternative energies and
&gt;possibilities, running their vehicles on vegetable oil, bringing
&gt;solar panels to power sound systems.
&gt;
&gt;  These are just a few ideas that can stimulate our thinking and
&gt;awaken our creativity.
&gt;
&gt;  XI.  Renew our spirits:
&gt;
&gt;  These are hard times.  Many of us have been working intensely for a
&gt;long time and are now seeing the possibility of our hard won
&gt;political gains being swept away.  Fear and loss surround us, and
&gt;many forces are at work trying to make us feel isolated,
&gt;marginalized and disempowered.  At best, the work ahead of us seems
&gt;overwhelming.
&gt;
&gt;  If we are going to sustain this work and regain our momentum, we
&gt;need to allow ourselves time to rest, to go to those places we are
&gt;working so hard to save and be open to their beauty, to receive
&gt;support and love from the communities we are working for.  We need
&gt;to nurture our relationships with each other, to offer not just
&gt;political solidarity but personal warmth and caring.  Death and loss
&gt;rearrange our priorities, teach us how much we need each other, and
&gt;make it easier to drop some of the petty things that interfere with
&gt;our true connections.
&gt;
&gt;  Many activists mistrust religion and spirituality, often for good
&gt;reasons.  But each of us is in this work because something is sacred
&gt;to us-sacred in the sense that it means more than our comfort or
&gt;convenience, that it determines all of our other values, that we are
&gt;willing to risk ourselves in its service.  It might not be a God,
&gt;Goddess or deity, but rather a belief in freedom, the feeling we get
&gt;when we stand under a redwood tree or watch a bird winging across
&gt;the sky, a commitment to truth or to a child.  Whatever it is, it
&gt;can feed and nurture us as well.  For activists who have some form
&gt;of identified spiritual practice, now is a good time to seriously
&gt;practice it.  For those who don't, it might still be worth taking
&gt;time to ask yourself, "Why do I do this work?  What is most
&gt;important to me?  What does feed me?"
&gt;
&gt;  The answer might be grand and noble, or it might be small and
&gt;ordinary, hip hop or sidewalk chalk.  Whatever it is, make it a
&gt;priority.  Do it daily, if you can, or at least regularly.  Bring it
&gt;into actions with you.  Let it renew your energy when you're down.
&gt;We need you in this struggle for the long haul, and taking care of
&gt;yourself is a way of preserving one of the movement's precious
&gt;resources.
&gt;
&gt;  The goal of terrorists, whether of the freelance or the state
&gt;variety, is to fill all our mental and emotional space with fear,
&gt;rage, powerlessness and despair, to cut us off from the sources of
&gt;life and hope.  Violence and fear can make us shut down to the
&gt;things and beings that we love.  When we do, we wither and die.
&gt;When we consciously open ourselves to the beauty of the world, when
&gt;we choose to love another tenuous and fragile being, we commit an
&gt;act of liberation as courageous and radical as any foray into the
&gt;tear gas.
&gt;
&gt;  There is nowhere left to go, but forward.  If we hold onto hope and
&gt;vision, if we dare to walk with courage and to act in the service of
&gt;what we love, the barriers holding us back will give way, as the
&gt;police eventually did in our Washington march.  The new road is
&gt;unmarked and unmapped.  It feels unfamiliar, but exhilarating;
&gt;dangerous, but free.  We were born to blaze this trail, and the
&gt;great powers of life and creativity march with us toward a viable
&gt;future.
&gt;
&gt;
&gt;  X
&gt;  (This copyright notice protects me, as this piece will be published
&gt;in Spring '02  in a collection of my writings called Webs of Power:
&gt;Notes from the Global Uprising.   But please feel free to forward
&gt;this, reprint it, translate it, post it or reproduce it for
&gt;nonprofit uses.)

_______________________________________________
discuss@madpeace.org mailing list
http://lists.OpenSoftwareServices.com/mailman/listinfo/madpeace-discuss

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