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Every day - Catholic Worker Vigil
Sunday Nov 2 - ICUJP Meeting

Sunday Nov 4 - Interfaith Service
Wednesday Nov 7 - Occidental College 56 Hour Fast For Peace
Friday Nov 9 - Star Wars 17 Benefit
Saturday Nov 10 - Office Of The Americas Benefit - Special Guest Rep Barbara Lee
Sat. and Sun. Nov 10-11 - West Coast Student Peace Conference, Berkeley
Sunday Nov 18 - Interfaith Event - Faith in Action
Friday Nov 30 - Arab Women Poets

email: Coalition For World Peace, Los Angeles California, USA
Meetings Every Tuesday Evening @ 7:00 pm at
The Peace Center, 8124 W. 3rd Street. LA (near Crescent Heights)

The terror of September 11 has raised many questions and created new fears. Many groups support de-escalation of the violence which is leading us into an unimaginable catastrophe. War has proven itself a failure in the provision of security for the people of the United States and the world.
The root causes of terrorism are injustice and poverty.

From within many diverse communities, expressions are being organized to carry the message that no one is safe in a world of violence, and that Americans can and must break this cycle.

This web site provides announcements and information that has been discussed by Coalition For World Peace member representatives. We do not necessarily endorse the meetings herein announced.

For a current list of the Coalition For World Peace endorsing organizations, see the home page


Catholic Worker
Peace Vigil

Every day at 8:00 to 9:00 am
in front of the Downtown Federal Building

300 Los Angeles Street, LA


Call-In

Join the nation's largest peace and justice organizations
in demanding...
Peace Through Justice


White House Comment Line:
(202) 456-1111

Secretary of State Comment Line:
(202) 647-5291

Congressional Switchboard:
(202) 224-3121

Because the U.S. has chosen to bomb Afghanistan, one of the most tragic and war ravaged countries in the world, the Washington Peace Center and the National Coalition for Peace and Justice (a coalition of the nation's largest peace and justice organizations) urge you to join the growing international movement demanding the there be "No More Victims."

We urge you to unite with thousands of concerned citizens from across the country and call President George W. Bush, Secretary of State Colin Powell and your senators and representatives and ask them to:

(1) Exercise the Rule of Law, not the Rule of Force, in bringing those responsible for the September 11th attacks to justice. War is not the answer.

(2) End the U.S. bombing of Afghanistan to allow aid workers to return and restore the delivery and distribution of essential aid to Afghan civilians. Food drops and bombs are not the answer.

(3) Strongly support the United Nations‚ special representative, Frances Vendrell, and the UN-led peace process in Afghanistan.

(4) Defend civil liberties
and condemn attacks on American Arabs, Muslims, Sikhs and all.

The National Call-In Day has been endorsed by

the National Coalition for Peace & Justice, which includes:

Peace Action

War Resisters League

Fellowship of Reconciliation

Education for Peace in Iraq Center

Women’s Association
for Nuclear Disarmament

Pax Christi

American Friends Service Committee


and other national organizations.

Washington Peace Center
1801 Columbia Road NW, Suite 104
(202) 234-2000
fax (202) 234-7064
wpc@igc.org

Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 90083
Gainesville, FL 32607
(352) 337-9274

globalnet@mindspring.com


National Coalition for
Peace & Justice
TALKING POINTS



Since the U.S. bombing of Afghanistan began, U.S. air strikes have killed 4 UN workers and destroyed a Red Cross depot of desperately needed relief supplies.

Over one million civilians have fled their homes in terror and hundreds of civilians are reported dead. Already dealing with a humanitarian crisis, aid workers are now expecting a disaster. In Iraq, the longest sustained air campaign since the Vietnam War continues.

Eleven years of "routine" U.S.-led air strikes and comprehensive international sanctions have killed over one million civilians.

The National Coalition for Peace and Justice (NCPJ), a coalition of the nation's largest peace and justice organizations, urges you to unite with thousands of other concerned citizens from across the country.

Call President Bush, Secretary Powell and your elected Members of Congress on October 24th, along with as many like-minded family and friends as you can mobilize!

CALL PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH via the White House comment line at

202/456-1111


CALL SEC. OF STATE COLIN POWELL tel. (202) 647-5291
fax (202) 261-8577


Urge SECRETARY OF STATE and the PRESIDENT to:

(1) Immediately stop the U.S. bombing of Afghanistan before its too late! Millions of Afghan civilians will die if aid workers are not able to deliver the emergency aid and set up distribution networks before Winter hits on Nov. 15th. And despite some reports, bombs and food drops are not compatible. Doctors without Borders have condemned the effort as "military propaganda."

(2) Ensure adequate U.S. funding for the reconstruction of Afghanistan, a nation that has been destroyed by international policies and neglect, and strongly support the UN special representative, Francesc Vendrell, and the UN-led peace process in Afghanistan.

(3) Lift the economic sanctions against Iraq, which targets Iraqi civil society and have claimed the lives of at least half a million children since the 1991 Gulf War.

(4) Defend civil liberties and condemn attacks on American Arabs, Muslims, and other U.S. citizens and residents.

CALL your MEMBERS OF CONGRESS via

Capitol Switchboard
tel. (202) 225-3121
or (202) 224-3121

Urge your U.S. Representative and Senators to:

(1) Show the same courage as Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) who broke ranks and criticized the war on Afghanistan, questioning whether the President had "thought this action out completely or fully examined America's cause." Ask them to support efforts to bring the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks to justice under law, not through war.

(2) Allocate the billions of dollars needed to rebuild Afghanistan and encourage the administration to strongly support the UN-led peace process in Afghanistan.

(3) Support measures that will stop damage to the Iraqi economy and further injury of innocent civilians. This means ending the 11-year-long economic siege on Iraq, while maintaining an international ban on all arms sales to Iraq until the Iraqi government respects human rights and the rule of law.

(4) Defend civil liberties and condemn attacks on American Arabs, Muslims, and other U.S. citizens and residents.
Note: When calling Members of Congress, ask to speak with the staffer that handles foreign policy or national security. Be prepared to leave a brief voice message and your phone number if necessary.


TALKING POINTS on AFGHANISTAN


* Although the humanitarian 'food drops' might play favorably at home, they are mostly symbolic and are a disaster for humanitarian workers in the region who are at risk if they are not seen to be impartial. On Monday (USA Today, 10/08/01), Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the Nobel Prize-winning relief group, condemned the food drop on Monday as ''military propaganda'' designed to justify the air strikes. According to Dr. Jean-Herve Bradol of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), airdrops of food and medical aid are of 'little real value to the Afghan people', are 'potentially dangerous', and will likely 'cause real problems for truly independent non-governmental aid organizations who are less likely to be perceived as impartial actors in the future.'

* Before the air strikes, UN agencies and independent relief organizations were still able to get some food convoys into Afghanistan. Now, all convoys have stopped, and the delivery of aid has become nearly impossible.

* Although it has gone largely unreported, Afghanistan is in the grip of a three-year drought-the worst in decades-affecting over 50% of the population. Even before the war, much of Afghanistan was on the verge of starvation. The displacement of people increases this risk.

* United Nations humanitarian aid agencies predict as many as 1.5 million Afghans will seek refuge in Pakistan and other neighboring countries, but many are more likely to move within the country's borders (USA Today, 10/10/01).

* Although U.S. Defense officials have said the mission only targets military assets, civilians are being killed. In Kabul on the night on Oct. 8, a U.S. guided missile destroyed the office of the Afghan Technical Consultants (ATC), the oldest and largest anti-mine organization funded by the UN in Afghanistan. Four UN mine disposal workers were killed. Following the attack, the UN Coordinator for Afghanistan, Mike Sackett, appealed to the international community to meet its obligation to protect innocent civilians while military strikes were going on. More recently in Kabul, U.S. missiles destroyed a Red Cross depot.

* What happened on September 11th was a crime against humanity, and when there is a crime, those who are responsible must be held accountable and brought to justice, but without harming great numbers of innocent people.


TALKING POINTS on IRAQ

* Over 300 civilians have been killed by "routine" U.S. bombings over the last two years. The UN does not recognize the "no-fly-zones", which are enforced by the U.S. and UK and cover 65% of Iraq's territory. Under international law, these self-declared zones are illegal.

* Over 500,000 children have died in Iraq as a result of over ten years of crippling UN sanctions. Under-five child mortality in Iraq from 1984-1989 was 56 per 1000; from 1994-1999 it was 131 per 1000 - a 160% increase. No disease on earth has had as devastating an effect on children in as short a time as sanctions. [UNICEF, 2001]

* An August 1999 UNICEF nutritional survey showed that 21 percent of Iraqi children under five years of age were malnourished - a level on par with the neediest countries in the world.

*In 2000, there were more than 127,700 refugees and about 700,000 internally displaced persons in Iraq. [U.S. Committee for Refugees] Iraq has also seen mass emigration. Since 1990, over 20% of the population (4-5 million people) have left the country. This includes doctors, teachers, and other professionals essential to Iraqi civil society.

* Similar to the U.S. food air drops in Afghanistan, the Bush administration's "smart sanctions" proposal is widely viewed as being more symbolic than doing any good. And according to former UN Humanitarian Coordinator to Iraq Denis Halliday, it may even do harm. According to him, Iraq's fundamental problem is a lack of access to its own oil revenues. "Smart" sanctions are designed to further diminish what little revenue Iraq receives through trade outside of the UN Oil-for-Food program. (Note: Iraq does not receive any money from the Oil-for-Food program. Instead, the UN decides which commodities the funds can purchase and sends them to Iraq.)

* "Smart" sanctions make no provision for paying the salaries of civil servants in Iraq. Therefore regardless of how much medicine, chalk and chlorine arrive in Iraq, doctors, nurses, teachers, and water and sanitation engineers will remain underpaid and desperate to find the income to support their families.

 


Friday
November 2, 2001
Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace (ICUJP)


Weekly Meeting

7:00 a.m.-9:00 a.m.


First Baptist Church
760 South Westmoreland
Los Angeles, California


The ICUJP is organizing a large Interfaith event for World Peace on November 18th. Location and time TBA

WHO ARE WE? 80+ religious leaders from the Buddhist. Christian, Hindi, Islamic, Jewish, Unitarian and other spiritual friends.

WE SAY: Yes to life and No to terrorist and military killing;

YES to International tribunal for the guilty

NO to fear and funding of weapons of mass destruction,

YES to food for any in need and resecting our diversity.

TOGETHER HUMANITY IS THE SUPERPOWER.


Sunday November 4, 2001
4 pm


Interfaith Communities
United for Justice and Peace

Interfaith Service


Temple Kol Tikvah
20400 Ventura Blvd.
Woodland Hills


For more information
Regas Institute 626 683 9400
regas@pacbell.net
or
Pax Christi 323 223 9047

cponnet.stcamillus@usa.net


http://www.californiapeaceaction.org
http://www.waginpeace.org
http://www.paxchristiusa.org
http://www.psr.org


Wednesday
November 7, 2001
9:00 am

Beginning of 56 hour fast to protest America's "war on terrorism"

12 noon ceremony
Main Quad
Occidental College
Eagle Rock

This 56 hour fast will be the first of many similar fasts in the coming months as we continue to actively protest America's "war on terrorism" and its general reluctance to acknowledge the United State's role in the oppression of peoples throughout the world.

The fast will begin on November 7th at 9:00am and end at 5pm on Friday the 9th.

Contact:
andrew
arizerocs@hotmail.com
spencer
jacksons@oxy.edu


Wednesday November 7, 2001
National Coalition for Peace and
Justice

The National Coalition for Peace and Justice, representing the nation's largest peace organizations, asks its member groups and networks to organize two national days of action for peace on November 7 and December 7in local communities across the country. The days follos the lead of people in New York City who have been working since the tragic events of September 11 to plan anti-war activities.

American Friends Service Committee
A National Day of Peace Response


November 7 will follow the U.S. elections and emphasize Defense of Civil Liberties.

December 7 will memorialize Pearl Harbor Day by highlighting and redefining the Meaning of Security.

The 6 Points of Unity

1. We mourn the victims and condemn the attacks of
September 11.


2. We stand in defense of civil liberties.


3. We oppose anti-Arab, ant-Muslim, anti-immigrant and all forms of racial, ethnic, and religious violence and bigotry.

4. We oppose military intervention and war.

5. We seek global peace through social and economic justice.

6. Justice not vengeance; bring the perpetrators to justice through established principles of international law.



National Coordination

National Response phone line:
215-241-7003
(as of 1 October)

National Response Web page:
http://www.peaceresponse.org
(as of 1 October)

Endorsing Groups

Fellowship of Reconciliation
War Resisters League
Women's Action for New Directions
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
Peace Action
Pax Christi


Friday November 9, 2001

Support The Star Wars 17
Save Our Right To Protest!


Westchester Sports Grill
5630 W. Manchester Blvd., Westchester

(Near LAX, 1/2 mile west of the 405, exit Manchester )
phone 310-670-2366

Join Greenpeace and other progressive activists for a night of entertainment and information, and help support the Star Wars 17 activists.

Tasty buffet $5
with music and entertainment by:

MoJoi
(World Beat/Reggae)
Billionaires for Military Megabucks
(Musical Satire)
Michael Richard
(Savvy Songwriter),
Deborah Magone
(Bluesy Belter)
and More


Plus, meet some of the Star Wars 17 activists in person

The situation:
Fifteen Greenpeace activists and two journalists face up to 6 years in prison and $250,000 in fines following a peaceful action during a missile test on July 14 at the Vandenburg Air Force Base near Lompoc, California.

Proceeds from the event will help fund The Star Wars 17 legal defense.

Suggested sliding scale donation $7 to $70. No one will be turned away for lack of funds.
For more info visit:
http://www.USA.org/sw
Or call 800-326-0959


Saturday November 10, 2001

Office Of The Americas
18th Anniversary Event

Special Guest:
Congresswoman Barbara Lee

Silent Aution 6:30-7:30 pm
General Program 7:30-9:30 pm

University Synagogue
11960 Sunset Boulevard
Los Angeles
(west of the 405 at Sinclair)


Office Of The Americas is thrilled to announce that Congresswoman Barbara Lee will be participating in our 18th Anniversary event on November 10!

We will be honoring:
Aris Anagnos
Medea Benjamin
and Bishop Samuel Ruiz


Martin Sheen, Antonio Villaraigosa, Angela Sanbrano, and Rabbi Leonard Beerman will also participate in our program.

Please spread the word!

contact:
Lisa Smithline
Office of the Americas
323-852-9808

 


Saturday and Sunday
November 10 - 11, 2001

California Schools Against War

Call For A West Coast
Conference For Campus Activists
Organizing Against
War And Racism
In The Wake Of
September 11

UC Berkeley Campus

Housing available Saturday and Sunday night!
RSVP to:

StopTheWarConference@hotmail.com
with the number of people that need housing.

If you or your campus coalition is interested in attending, please email us immediately, telling us which campus you're from.  We need to know how many people to expect. Also, please help spread the word to different campuses! It is critical to the success of this conference that each campus makes strong efforts to inform nearby campuses of the conference.

Signed,
California Schools Against War
Conference Committee


Sunday November 18, 2001
3 pm


Interfaith Communities United for Justice and Peace

Faith in Action
First AME Church
2270 South Harvard Avenue
Los Angeles


Special guest speakers from the religious and civic community participating

For more information
Regas Institute 626 683 9400
regas@pacbell.net
or
Pax Christi 323 223 9047

cponnet.stcamillus@usa.net


http://www.californiapeaceaction.org
http://www.waginpeace.org
http://www.paxchristiusa.org.
http://www.psr.org


Friday November 30, 2001
8 pm

Arab Women Poets

Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Centre
681 Venice Blvd

$7.00
$5,00 for memebers

More info:
310-822-3006

Join Levantine Center at Beyond Lietrary Arts Center Cosponsered by Al Jadid Magazine of Arab Arts and Cultures come and listen to major contemporary Arab Women poets moderated by Nathalia Handal, editor of the new anthology "The Poetry of Arab Women" (Interlink Books, 2001)

© 2001 design by elbop for the Coaition For World Peace