| Building A Culture Of Peace
& Nonviolence: What You Can Do
Be Creative: Think of ideas that will
awaken the imagination of your community.
AS A STUDENT... Connect with other students
interested in social justice. Research and do a
presentation in your class about a specific case of nonviolence in
history. Start a peace studies program on your campus.
AS A PARENT... Learn constructive ways to
deal with anger and pass this gift on to your kids. Make a family pledge
to express feelings and resolve conflict creatively. Urge your school to
teach nonviolence and conflict resolution at every level.
AS A TEACHER ...Teach nonviolence in your
classes through studying the Nobel Laureates' lives, a book on Gandhi,
King, or Dorothy Day. Have interactive workshops on conflict resolution.
Meet with other teachers who have the same interests and share your
resources.
AS A SCHOOL ... Organize a Month of
Nonviolence to learn about alternatives to violence, to address recent
violent events in the community, to brainstorm nonviolent solutions, and
to celebrate positive efforts that have succeeded. Schedule a series of
videos on social justice issues such as militarism, racism, hate crimes,
economic justice, youth empowerment, women's rights, and indigenous
people's rights.
AS A CONGREGATION... Start a study circle
in your congregation to explore nonviolence, racism, youth empowerment,
the growing economic disparity, or homophobia. Join a Religious Peace
Fellowship. Explore the spiritual dimensions of nonviolence in your
tradition. Sponsor interfaith gatherings so congregations of differing
faiths can learn about each other. Sponsor conflict resolution trainings
for the congregation. Be an active voice against injustices in your
congregation.
AS A LOCAL COMMUNITY MEMBER ... Form a
coalition of local leaders from schools, religious institutions, local
businesses, police departments, and interest groups to learn about
nonviolence through workshops, videos, forums, nonviolence trainings,
speakers. Meet with the town council to organize a town meeting to discuss
problems relating to violence in schools and neighborhoods, and possible
nonviolent solutions. Be sure to include individuals who represent the
diversity of your community in planning, implementing, participating, and
evaluating the event.
AS A PEACEMAKER ... Urge your groups to
endorse the Decade of Nonviolence. Join the Abolition 2000 campaign to
promote total nuclear disarmament. Join the Jubilee 2000 campaign and call
for the cancellation of the Third World debt. Join Moratorium 2000, the
movement to abolish the death penalty. Join efforts to lift economic
sanctions on Iraq and to stop war and genocide in the Balkans.
[ Up ]
|