Peace
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More Minutes relating to our Peace testimony
- July 2006: The Atlanta Friends Meeting supports Lt. Ehren Watada in his decision not to deploy to Iraq because of his strong conviction that this war is both illegal and immoral.
As Quakers we oppose war in any form. It is our firm belief that war is not the answer to conflict. We support hose who use non-violent means to challenge unjust laws and policies.
Lt. Watada's act of conscience is a courageous act of refusing to participate in a war that he believes to be contrary to God's will. We support his refusal completely. - June 2005: Atlanta Friends Meeting endorses the Friends Committee on National Legislation's (FCNL's) Sensible Transition to an Enduring Peace resolution and calls upon the United States Congress to adopt a sense of the Congress resolution declaring: "It is the policy of the United States to withdraw all U.S. military troops and bases from Iraq." Atlanta Friends Meeting also calls upon the government to affirm that it will continue to advocate for the protection of human rights within Iraq, including the rights of Iraqi women and girls, without militarily occupying Iraq. The Meeting asks the Clerk of the Meeting to communicate this message to our congressional representatives and the local media.
- September 2004: Atlanta Friends Meeting approves becoming a member of the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.
- January 2003: The committee recommended that meeting for business support the Urgent Call for nuclear disarmament. We move together with the other nuclear powers, step by carefully inspected and verified step, to the abolition of weapons. As steps toward this goal, we call on the United States to:
- A. Renounce the first use of nuclear weapons.
B. Permanently end the development, testing, and production of nuclear warheads.
C. Seek agreement with Russia on the mutual and verified destruction of nuclear weapons withdrawn under treaties, and increase the resources available here and in the former Soviet Union to secure nuclear warheads and material and implement destruction.
D. Strengthen nonproliferation efforts by ratifying the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, finalizing a missile ban in North Korea, supporting UN inspections in Iraq, locating and reducing fissile material worldwide and negotiating a ban on its production.
E. Take nuclear weapons off hair-trigger alert in concert with the other nuclear powers--the UK, France, Russia, China, India, Pakistan and Israel„in order to reduce the risk of accidental or unauthorized use.
F. Initiate talks on further nuclear cuts, beginning with U.S. and Russian reductions to 1,000 warheads each. - October 1998: The AFM declared itself a Sanctuary for refugees from Central America in 1985. Since then we have heard the first hand testimony of many friends from El Salvador and Guatemala as to their personal experience of torture, disappearances, assassinations and targeting of civilian populations by the military or military related groups in these countries. Over the last few years we have become aware that a significant number of the high military officers in the armies of El Salvador and Guatemala received training at the U.S. Army School of the Americas in Fort Benning, Georgia. We are aware that of those officers implicated in official human rights commission reports as responsible for gross human rights violations most received training at the School and that the School acknowledges use of manuals which included sections on torture, execution, and paying bounties for the assassination of community leaders. We understand that top military officials involved in the current counterinsurgency wars in Chiapas, Mexico and in Columbia are also graduates of the School.
The ongoing history of and rationale for the School of the Americas run counter to the peace testimony of Quakers. Friends affirm that the best way to relate to people is to appeal to that of God within them. Trusting in the leading of the Spirit and respecting the Inward Light in all others can avert violent conflict. We see the School as an egregious example of a false belief that Latin and Central American militaries have or will serve as agents to reduce or avert violent conflict. We, therefore, call upon the United States Congress and the Executive branch to eliminate funding for the School of the Americas, to rescind the recent approval of the sale of weapons to Latin America, and to review thoroughly all other bilateral military training. - April 1998: We wish to express our pleasure at the peace agreement signed among parties in Northern Ireland at Stormont on April 10th. We understand the long history of suspicion and anger that has caused these troubles for so long and wish that GodÍs love and understanding can work through all of this for a peaceful and prosperous land. Our hopes, prayers, and love are with our friends in Ireland.
- October 1997: The Atlanta Monthly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) urges President Clinton to sign and the Senate to ratify the global Treaty to Ban Landmines. God calls us to live in ways that take away the occasion for war. We hope this treaty can be one small step towards a world where differences between nations are settled without injuries, death and destruction. The United StatesÍ joining the nations that are party to this treaty would make that more likely.
- September 1990: The Atlanta Friends Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) affirms that the principle of speaking to that of God in all persons will allow them--and us--to find nonviolent solutions to the present situation and to ongoing problems in the Middle East.
We are concerned for the safety and well-being of all people in the Middle East„individuals of many faiths and nationalities, civilian and military, children and adults. We are especially concerned about the well-being of the people residing in Iraq and Kuwait, if they are prevented from receiving food and medical supplies, and we urge that these materials be made freely available.
We are opposed to the armed aggression by Iraq against Kuwait, a peaceful neighbor, and we are encouraged by the breadth of the international response to this aggression. We encourage Friends to support the continuation of these efforts.
The escalation of belligerence and aggression on the part of the leaders of the United States and Iraq does not lead to an understanding of the truth. The rapid and massive build-up of U.S. military forces is a destabilizing factor rather than an agent of peaceful resolution.
We support a negotiated settlement and the nonmilitary peace-keeping activities sponsored by the United Nations as the proper response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. We believe that the nations of the Middle East must settle their differences in a peaceful manner, and that the United Nations should support the Middle Eastern nations in this effort.
We acknowledge our complicity in a national lifestyle built on greed and the over-consumption of finite resources such as oil. We are mindful that John Woolman cautioned us, long ago, to "Look upon our treasures...and try whether the seeds of war have nourishment in these our possessions." - September 1987: The Atlanta Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) through its experience with refugees and through members visiting and living in Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica is deeply aware of the destruction of human life and the social fabric and the suffering of the people of these nations which result from the reliance on a military solution to the social and economic problems of the Central American countries.
The Meeting supports the initiative of the Central American Presidents in their agreement to the peace plan signed in Guatemala to collectively seek an end to the military conflicts of the region. We are fully aware that the plan involves trust, risk, and compromises by each of the parties involved in the region but see the plan as the most concrete hope for a movement toward peace that the region has experienced in the last decade.
We call upon the President and Congress of the united States to listen to, value, and respect the independent leadership shown by the Central American Presidents. We ask that the United States fully support implementation and conditions of the plan by ending military and financial aid to the contras in Nicaragua, by refraining from economic and other pressures on governments of the region, and by supporting economic recovery of all the nations in the region. The human suffering we have seen and heard calls out for no less a response than this.
In our Meetings for Worship with Attention to Business, we often make public statements, called Minutes. Because we do all business by consensus, these Minutes represent the unanimous will of our entire community.
