Friday Evening Potluck March 29th at 6:00 pm

Potluck and Discussion at the Peace Center Office

Room 203, stairs at the west end, beside Fuji Steakhouse

This month we’ll just have a potluck with no formal presentation or set agenda. It will be an opportunity for folks with an interest in peace, justice, and sustainability to relax, socialize, and talk about things that are going on in the world and in our community. There is a lot to be concerned about: Ukraine, Gaza, expanding nuclear weapons systems, and much more. There has also been a lot going on in our community, and the larger Alaskan community, working toward ameliorating these problems or at least speaking out about them.

We seem to get few opportunities to meet in person in a relaxed setting these days. If this happens to be an inconvenient evening to bring food, please come anyway. I’m sure there will be plenty.

Friday Evening Presentation and Discussion

February 23 at 7:00 pm via Zoom

Video: Sailing for a Nuclear-Weapons-Free World

The Golden Rule ship, which was used to stop nuclear weapons tests in 1958, has just completed an 11,000 mile voyage around the eastern U.S. Learn about the voyage, the United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons, and measures you can take to stop the possibility of nuclear war. Helen Jaccard is the Project Manager, public speaker and a crew member of VFP’s Golden Rule historic anti-nuclear peace boat. She represents the Veterans For Peace Golden Rule Project to Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom and many anti-nuclear organizations. Helen writes about the environmental costs of war and militarism, specifically Sardegna, Italy and Vieques Island, Puerto Rico. As editor of Golden Rule News, she researches and writes about current nuclear issues.

The video is about an hour long. We will have a discussion afterward.

Learn more about the Golden Rule at: https://vfpgoldenruleproject.org/

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89515216442?pwd=Qdu5xN5LyRvK1MbtroEXGtIYhsgXBT.1

Meeting ID: 895 1521 6442
Passcode: 023930

The Golden Rule sails in protest of Bath Iron Works, makers of nuclear-capable war ships

Save the date Feb. 16-17, 2024; Register now!

Friday evening February 16 and Saturday, February 17, 2024: ALASKA IN THE CROSSHAIRS: Climate, Arctic Environment, & the Resurgence of Nuclear Weaponssymposium .

A State-Wide In-Person And On-Line Discussion of

The future of the Arctic amidst dramatic changes from global warming, nuclear weapons, indigenous rights in a world of growing competition favoring armed, rather than diplomatic resolutions.

Sponsored by Juneau’s Veterans for Peace and World Affairs Council, Point Hope Congress, and Alaska Peace Center. The Pt. Hope Project is an ongoing effort of nuclear Disarmament honoring the courage and wisdom of Pt. Hope Elders to stop the total destruction of the Arctic in “Operation Chariot”, the 1960s plan to use nuclear weapons to prove their value for “peaceful purposes”.

See the poster and sign-up links at https://www.akhopecongress.org/symposium

Friday Evening Presentation via Zoom, January 26, 2024, 7 pm

Are you curious about the roots of the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis in Palestine? How did these two groups of people come to occupy the same landscape? Join us via Zoom on Friday evening for a showing of the documentary “1948: Creation and Catastrophe”, filmed by Andy Trimlett and Dr. Ahlam Muhtaseb. The film is an hour and 25 minutes long. We will have a discussion afterward.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89515216442?pwd=Qdu5xN5LyRvK1MbtroEXGtIYhsgXBT.1

Meeting ID: 895 1521 6442
Passcode: 023930

Through riveting and moving personal recollections of both Palestinians and Israelis, 1948: Creation & Catastrophe reveals the shocking events of the most pivotal year in the most controversial conflict in the world. It tells the story of the establishment of Israel as seen through the eyes of the people who lived it. But rather than being a history lesson, this documentary is a primer for the present. It is simply not possible to make sense of what is happening today without an understanding of 1948. This documentary was the last chance for many of its Israeli and Palestinian characters to narrate their first-hand accounts of the creation of a state and the expulsion of a nation. Hear stories from the Israelis and Palestinians who personally lived through events in Haifa, Jaffa, Dayr Yasin, Acre, Jerusalem, Ramla, Lydda and more. These shocking and dramatic events reveal the core of what drives the conflict today.

Reviews containing much background information can be found here, here, and here.

Tues Jan.9, 2024, Anch Assembly re Calling for Lasting Ceasefire between Netanyahu and Hamas

Dear Friends of Peace,

I have sent this reply to Santa Claus of North Pole AK, and others on the local Call for Ceasefire email list, for his recent testimony submitted to the Anchorage Assembly, appended below.

Maia Genaux

currently on the traditional homelands of the Nez Perce people, the Nimiipuu                                  Practice seeing and creating our best possible future

Begin forwarded message:

From: Maia Genaux <mg88morgan@gmail.com>
Date: January 5, 2024 at 11:08:03 PST
To: Santa Claus <SantaClaus@usa.net>
Subject:Re: Request for Public Testimony Received (GAZA CEASEFIRE – ANCHORAGE ASSEMBLY)

Dear Santa,

Thank you for sharing your testimony with us. 

I really appreciate your naming Netanyahu and Hamas as the actors. 

I am practicing seeing Zionists and Hamas as the actors … still testing that. 

It certainly is not Israel or Israelis vs Palestine or Palestinians.

Many Israelis and Palestinians have worked together for decades, building relationships and trying to build a loving, healthy environment for all people. And for the Land and all creation. 

Also, thank you for naming love and fear. Both are so important and both need tending … via friendships, connections, advocacy, negotiations and other nonviolent attentions and actions. 

It is tragically pathological, that the US economy has become centrally, and somewhat invisibly, dependent on the war machine, which is constantly and eagerly exporting militarism and weapons.

It is past time to stop the obscene usage of petroleum for the intentional harm to people, infrastructure and land. Beyond those explicit intentions, there is damage to our very planet, the air, water, living creatures and all of creation, caused by both preparation for and conduct of armed conflicts, whether named War or not. 

Let us breathe and appreciate one another, in our work for Peace. This work is not easy. Breathe. Love one another. So we may work. And build peace. 

Thank you, Santa, for using your voice coming from love,
Maia.  (with the Alaska Peace Center)                                                                                                currently on the traditional homelands of the Nez Perce people, the Nimiipuu                                  Practice seeing and creating our best possible future

On Jan 4, 2024, at 19:49, Santa Claus <SantaClaus@usa.net> wrote:

TO: All of us who are keeping track of Alaska-centric efforts to urge legislators to call for a ceasefire in Gaza.

PLEASE NOTE: In addition to my testimony for the Anchorage Assembly (below), my similar testimony at our rally at Murkowski’s Fairbanks office last year has garnered some traction on Twitter (TheRadicalSanta & SantaClausforAK) and Bluesky (SantaClausAlaska) and YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3T4jqPd0SY Hoping it all helps!

HAPPY NEW YEAR :-)}

—— Original Message ——
Received: 04:52 PM AKST, 01/04/2024
From: “wwmas@muni.org” <noreply+3f53a2bdd8c6be37@formstack.com>
To: SANTACLAUS@USA.NET. Subject: Request for Public Testimony Received Submission ID: 1180594114, Received: Jan 4, 2024 4:52 PM

Details:

  • Name: SANTA CLAUS
  • Contact Info: ; SANTACLAUS@USA.NET
  • Testimony Type: Written
  • Agenda Item: THE ANCHORAGEASSEMBLY ‘PALESTINE/GAZA CEASEFIRE’ RESOLUTION
  • Date of Meeting: January 9, 2024
  • Written Comments (if applicable): I’ve been an advocate for vulnerable children for decades. My name, Santa Claus, is derived from the Dutch expression for Saint Nicholas: Sinterklaas.

    He would be appalled, as I am, by Hamas’ slaughter of women and children and Netanyahu’s escalating genocide, especially the murders of thousands of women and children.

    The International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, recognized annually by the United Nations, serves as a reminder of the ongoing struggle for justice, freedom, and the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

    I join millions of others, in calling for a lasting ceasefire by Netanyahu and Hamas, release of all hostages, the shut down of military operations in Gaza, ensuring the protection of vulnerable Palestinians and Israelis, especially women, children, the elderly, and the sick and wounded, safe access to Palestine for humanitarian organizations and their aid supplies, and restoration of the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people.

    It’s the leaders, not the Israeli or Palestinian people, who are to blame for the current atrocity. I fail to understand why the United States has been funding, and proposes to continue to fund, the Israeli military that has conducted operations that have been directed, for decades, at expansion, rather than for their security and defense.

    I demand our federal legislators stop using millions of Alaskans’ tax dollars to fund Israel’s genocide.

    I want to make it very clear that the dynamic is love versus fear and hatred. We see it manifest in our own streets. Show children here and abroad that we love them; give them hope for a better future. Love is the greatest gift.

Thank you for signing up to provide testimony to the Anchorage Assembly during an upcoming meeting.

To watch the Assembly Meeting live, go towww.muni.org/watchnow.

If you signed up for phone testimony before the 5 p.m. deadline the day before the meeting, then you are on our call list. When the Assembly reaches your agenda item, staff will phone you at the number you have provided. You will have 3 minutes to provide testimony on the item you wish to speak.

If you signed up to speak under Audience Participation, there are time constraints that may not allow us to call you to speak. If time constraints prevent the Assembly from addressing a Public Hearing item you want to speak on, that item may be postponed to another meeting so you will not receive a call.

To make your telephonic testimony most effective, please consider following the tips found here under the section titled, “If you wish to provide testimony on the phone.”

If you signed up for written testimony, then your testimony has been received by all members and will be incorporated into the record through formal action.

As always, general comments and feedback can be emailed to the full Assembly at wwmas@muni.org.

Nov. 11 Ring In Armistice Day 11 a.m.

Dear Friends of Peace, 

The Alaska Peace Center invites you to a celebration of Armistice Day (DRESS WARMLY!)

Saturday, Nov 11, gathering at 10:45am  at Veterans Memorial Park, 8th and Cushman St, Fairbanks   

Bring a bell if you have one. Extra bells will be available if you don’t have one to bring. 

In 1918 World War I, “the war to end all wars”, ended with the ringing of bells, celebrating Peace!   

🕊🕊🕊

Peace is needed always. And it is needed now. 

Armed conflict only creates more problems. 

Veterans for Peace and the Alaska Peace Center are calling for Global Ceasefire

The United Nations and the Pope have been calling for Global Ceasefire since at least 2020.

          🌎🕊🌍

Bring your prayers for Peace, bring your vision of Peace and well-being for all. Let us step up in Peace, to peaceably communicate our hopes and fears. And Ring and Sing for Peace!

Peace is the Way


KWRK is sponsoring a presence for protection of Palestinian people at Golden Heart Plaza on Saturday, November 11, at noon, after the 11am Armistice celebration at Veterans Memorial Park.

Everyone is welcome!

Call for Ceasefire today, Friday, 11/3/23

Friday Evening Potluck and Presentation, 27 Oct 2023 at 7:15 pm

APC Office, Room 203 College Mall Building

We have a special, timely opportunity to witness and learn how we can engage in impossible conversations. This month’s Alaska Peace Center Potluck and Presentation will feature a documentary by Braver Angels

This Friday, October 27, 7:15pm, we will meet in person at our office (Room 203 of the College Mall Building at 3535 College Road, upstairs above the Fuji Japanese Steakhouse).

and via Zoom: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89515216442?pwd=Qdu5xN5LyRvK1MbtroEXGtIYhsgXBT.1

Meeting ID: 895 1521 6442
Passcode: 023930

After viewing and discussing this documentary, we will consider whether we want to develop a specific workshop/conversation event.  Alas! There are too many hot topics, impossible and perilous conversations to choose from today! But having some tools and guidance could let all of us breathe and think a bit more clearly. 

Sharon Baring is a local Quaker who has trained as a Braver Angels moderator/facilitator and would like to create such a workshop event locally. 

We hope to see you!

Alaska Peace Center Statement on Violence in Israel/Palestine.

The Alaska Peace Center is dismayed by the recent escalated armed violence in the Middle East.  We call for an Immediate Ceasefire. 

We support the recent Veterans for Peace statement, part of which says:

Well-being anywhere depends on well-being everywhere. 

Peace is the way.  

Ceasefire Now. 

The Alaska Peace Center Board

Friday Evening Potluck and Presentation, Sep 29 at 7:15 pm

APC Office, Room 203 College Mall Building

Now that fall is here, the Alaska Peace Center will resume sponsoring in-person “potluck and presentation” nights on the last Friday of each month. The first one is coming up this Friday, August 29, at 7:15 pm in our office in Room 203, College Mall Building. Radio Station KWRK (90.9 FM) is broadcasting a local show (Electric Avenue, with DJ Kelly Green) from 6:00 to 7:00 in the same office complex, so we will not be able to enter the office until after 7:00. We will have to wait quietly in the hall if we get there early. The office is in room 203 in the College Mall building, 3535 College Road, upstairs above the Fuji Steakhouse. Use Fuji’s external door, then turn right to go up the stairs.

This will be a hybrid event. Everyone is highly encouraged to come in-person to the office at 7:15 and to bring some food to share. There are plenty of plates, cups, and silverware at the office. Although Covid is still a concern, after the isolation of the past few years many of us are looking forward to seeing each other in-person again. There will also be an online option via Zoom, with details below. We will try to open the Zoom link around 7:30.

Here is the Zoom link:
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89515216442?pwd=Qdu5xN5LyRvK1MbtroEXGtIYhsgXBT.1

Meeting ID: 895 1521 6442
Passcode: 023930

We will be viewing “The Strangest Dream,” Eric Bednarski’s compelling 2008 documentary on Joseph Rotblat. Rotblat was a Polish physicist who resigned in protest from the group developing the atomic bomb during World War II after it became clear that Nazi Germany had ended its nuclear weapons research program and after learning that the real purpose of the U.S. atomic bomb project was to intimidate Russia.


We’ve all been hearing about the Oppenheimer film that has been sweeping the country and probably a number of us have watched it. Oppenheimer, of course, was the man in charge of the Manhattan Project that developed the atomic bomb during World War II, and who famously quoted the Bhagavad Gita upon witnessing the first atomic explosion (“Now I have become Death, destroyer of worlds”). The movie presents him as a brilliant physicist, a polymath, a charismatic organizer, and a man eventually tormented as he comes to realize the horror that he has been instrumental in releasing. Whatever one may think of this complicated man, the movie has certainly done a lot to raise awareness that nuclear weapons are still very much with us, and to remind us of their horrifying power. Many of the Manhattan Project scientists had grave misgivings about the eventual result of their work and protested against American policy, but Joseph Rotblat was the only one to resign in protest during the time the bomb was being developed. Here is a summary from Counterpunch:

“Forget going to see Christopher Nolan’s bloated exercise in sanitized nuclear hagiography and instead watch The Strangest Dream, Eric Bednarski’s compelling 2008 documentary on Joseph Rotblat, the Polish physicist, who resigned from the Manhattan Project in protest after it became clear that Nazi Germany had ended its nuclear weapons research program. Rotblat was a driving force behind the 1955 Albert Einstein-Bertrand Russell Manifesto, which called for nuclear disarmament and a negotiated end to the escalating Cold War. Rotblat went on to co-found the anti-nuclear Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs, with whom he shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995 ‘for efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international affairs and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms.’ Rotblat, along with Leo Szilard and Joseph Franck, was a consistent voice of sanity amid a throng of mad scientists. The film can be viewed here online courtesy of the National Film Board of Canada.”

The title of the film references Ed McCurdy‘s iconic song from the 60’s, and we get to hear a lovely rendition of it by Jenn Grant at the end.

Nuclear weapons are still very much with us, and the danger of a nuclear holocaust followed by nuclear winter is greater now than it has been at any time since the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. Nuclear war and climate change are the two existential threats the world is facing today, and militarism exacerbates both. It is encouraging to see the progress made by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), of which the Alaska Peace Center is a partner organization. The UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) has been ratified by 69 of the 193 member states of the United Nations. The ICAN Cities Appeal is a tool by which cities and states can pass resolutions encouraging their national governments to ratify the TPNW. Over seventy U.S. cities (including Anchorage) and five states have passed resolutions in support of the TPNW.

Nuclear Weapons Free Zones are another tool by which large areas of the world have eliminated nuclear weapons from within their boundaries. Canadian Pugwash, co-founded by Rotblat, has been actively working along with others toward development of an Arctic Nuclear-Weapons-Free Zone. Thanks to the work of many Fairbanksans and other Alaskans in the early 1980’s, Alaska already has a nuclear freeze policy enacted by the State Legislature (Alaska Statutes Sec. 44.99.120 and 44.99.125). It states, among other things, that “it is the policy of the State of Alaska to promote a mutual and verifiable freeze followed by reductions in nuclear warheads, missiles, and other delivery systems in order to halt the nuclear arms race and to reduce the risk of nuclear war.” This statute could be a building block toward eliminating nuclear weapons from our part of the Arctic and building momentum for an Arctic NWFZ.

For an in depth review of the “Oppenheimer” movie and much information and commentary on the whole Manhattan project including Rotblat, see the review by Eric Mann in Counterpunch. It’s a long read, but highly recommended.