Commemorating International Conscientious Objectors’ Day

Commemorating International Conscientious Objectors’ Day

“To commemorate men & women
conscientious objectors to military service
all over the world & in every age

To all those who have established and are maintaining the right to refuse to kill

Their foresight and courage give us hope

This stone was dedicated on 15 May 1994
International Conscientious Objectors’ Day”

Witnessing for Peace in WWII

Witnessing for Peace in WWII

“At that time we didn’t know hardly anything at all about what was happening in the concentration camps. Had we known, would it have been different? But after knowing all the horrors of Nazism, one can understand people taking arms to get rid of Nazism for the world. But even then, side by side with that, it was so very important that there was a very, very small separate section of us who would give a peace witness. I never questioned that.”

Ukrainian Quakers React to the War

Ukrainian Quakers React to the War

“Though our faith community of Ukrainian Quakers, being advocates of nonviolent action, finds regrettable that nonviolent resistance to Russian aggression, marked by such impressive and heroic deeds as unarmed repulsion of Russian tanks by a crowd of civilian protesters in Koriukivka17, remains a matter of spontaneity and limited efforts of enthusiasts [….] The Government of Ukraine does not see nonviolent action among priorities in any short-term or long-term planning, does not provide any significant support to it, and attempts to subordinate it to the army, which undermines the ethical integrity and safety of nonviolent resistance.”

The System is Designed to Deter Conscientious Objectors

The System is Designed to Deter Conscientious Objectors

“Virtually every male living in the United States, even illegal immigrants, need to register for selective service 30 days before or after their 18th birthday. That process has become pretty much seamless and hidden in that, in about 45 states across the country, it’s now automatic when people sign up for a driver’s license. So young people, young men really aren’t even aware that they are signing up for selective service.”

Bayard Rustin’s letter to the Draft Board

Bayard Rustin’s letter to the Draft Board

“Gentlemen,

For eight years I have believed war to be impractical and a denial of our Hebrew-Christian tradition. The social teachings of Jesus are: (1) Respect for personality; (2) Service the ‘summum bonum’ [Latin: ‘the highest good’] (3) Overcoming evil with good; and (4) The brotherhood of man. These principles as I see it are violated by participation in war.”

A Quaker’s Refusal to Pay War Taxes

A Quaker’s Refusal to Pay War Taxes

“Joshua Evans, an associate of John Woolman’s, came to his decision to refuse paying war taxes in 1756. Some told him that Christ said to pay Caesar his due, ‘but I saw through their groundless arguments, for there was nothing in the text about War.’ Moreover, Joshua Evans had always paid taxes to maintain government, ‘though not to pay for killing men, women, and children.’ 

He was sure his path was rightly led, because ‘when my goods have been taken it has seemed as though I had never possessed them and could in my heart love my Opposers and magnify God.’ Joshua Evans and his wife found the way of war tax resistance to be costly in the loss of possessions. Nonetheless, he cheerfully remarks: ‘I saw those who would be the followers of humble Jesus must be willing to suffer.'”

Beware Lest by Our Example We Lead Others Wrong

Beware Lest by Our Example We Lead Others Wrong

“To conform a little to a wrong way strengthens the hands of such who carry wrong customs to their utmost extent; and the more a person appears to be virtuous and heavenly-minded, the more powerfully does his conformity operate in favour of evil doers… what expressions are equal to the subject, or what language is sufficient to set forth the strength of those obligations we are under to beware lest by our example we lead others wrong.”

To Puritans, Quakers Were “Ravening Wolves”

To Puritans, Quakers Were “Ravening Wolves”

“Again and again in history we see that violent persons do not regard their opponents as fully human. The Greeks, it seems, waged war only against ‘the barbarians.’ For the Massachusetts Puritans, the early Quakers were ‘ravening wolves.’ African slaves were thought to be animals. Himmler repeated again and again that Jews were vermin, and vermin must be exterminated. The Nazis, in turn, were ‘mad dogs.’ […]

It is easy to be violent against those who are seen as either inhuman or non-human. The task of nonviolent campaigners, then, is to get the opponent to see them as human beings.”

We Cannot Retire from Political Activity

We Cannot Retire from Political Activity

“In time of conscription and war, we cannot retire for practical purposes from political activity, from attempting to influence the nation’s course, especially when there are still certain democratic channels available for doing so. The movement as a whole should not, it seems to me, become quietist and non-political. That might be merely an expression of an isolationist or escapist attitude, neither of which expresses the true spirit of community with our fellows.”

The Ultimate Justification for Peacemaking

The Ultimate Justification for Peacemaking

“It should be the goal of understanding to pierce first through the thin layer of superficial familiarity and then through the hard rock of differing customs, habits and beliefs to discover the real humanity that lies beneath. National, racial and religious differences have not destroyed our common humanity, but they have given it different faces which may tempt us to forget that all the things that really matter, life and death, birth and love, joy and sorrow, poetry and prayer, are common to us all.”

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