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The
Rebel Passion:
Eighty-five Years of the Fellowship of Reconciliation
by Richard Deats
In his introduction to Euripedes' The Trojan Women,
Gilbert Murray writes of pity as the "rebel passion. Its hand is
against the strong, against the organized force of society, against
conventional sanctions and accepted Gods. It is the Kingdom of Heaven
within us fighting against the brute powers of the world." From
this idea, Vera Brittain took the title for her history of the FOR
at the time of its fiftieth anniversary:The Rebel Passion.
It was such a passion that brought the Fellowship
of Reconciliation into being in 1914. Convinced that war was near,
some 150 Christians came together at an international conference
in Germany, seeking desperately to find a way to head off the outbreak
of hostilities. The conference ended in failure; indeed, the war
broke out while the meeting was being held. The participants hurried
to catch trains back to their respective homelands. At the Cologne
rail station, two of the participants-Henry Hodgkin, British Quaker,
and Friedrich Siegmund-Schultze, pacifist chaplain to the German
Kaiser-believing that the bonds of Christian love transcended all
national boundaries, vowed that they would refuse to sanction war
or violence and that they would sow the seeds of peace and love
no matter what the future might bring. As they shook hands in farewell,
they agreed that they were "one in Christ and can never be at war."
Out of this vow the Fellowship of Reconciliation
was born. The formal beginning came four months later at Trinity
College, Cambridge, where 128 English members elected Hodgkin as
their first chairperson. The founding of the German branch, Versuhnungsbund,
came later. Schultze was arrested twenty-seven times during World
War I and was forced to live in exile during the Nazi period.
In 1915, Hodgkin came to the United States to
meet with sixty-eight men and women at Garden City, New York where
the American FOR was founded on November 11, with Gilbert A. Beaver
as its first chairperson. Leaders during those early years included
Edward Evans, Norman Thomas, Bishop Paul Jones (who had been removed
from the Episcopal Diocese of Utah because of his pacifism), and
Grace Hutchins. John Haynes Holmes, Unitarian minister and one of
the early FOR members pointed out that most people believe war is
wrong in general, but nonetheless go on to justify each particular
war. Placing the claims of the nation state below that of religious
faith, Holmes wrote: "No one is wise enough, no nation is important
enough, no human interest is precious enough, to justify the wholesale
destruction and murder which constitute the science of war."
Members of the Fellowship bore gallant witness
to the insanity of war and the belief that truth is stronger than
falsehood, that love overcomes hate, and that nonviolence is more
enduring than violence. For them, religious faith broke down the
barriers of nation and race, class and tradition. Spreading this
vision, even in wartime, has remained the central witness of the
Fellowship.
A major focus has been working for the rights
of conscientious objectors, who were treated harshly during the
first World War. Except for those from the historic peace churches(who
usually were granted CO status), many were imprisoned, left without
clothes in cold cells, firehosed and manacled in their cells.
Prison sentences ranged from twenty-five years
to life !
John Nevin Sayre, American churchman and early
chair of the FOR, went directly to President Wilson to protest the
inhumane treatment and the torture was ended. After extensive lobbying
by FOR and others, concessions were made that led finally to legal
recognition of conscientious objection during World War II. In that
war, more than 16,000 men performed "work of national importance"
in public service camps. Some, however, still went to prison when
their beliefs clashed with Selective Service rules. These included
five FOR staff members: Roger Axford, Caleb Foote, Alfred Hassler,
Bayard Rustin and Glenn Smiley.
While war has been the central social evil the
FOR has sought to eradicate, an expanding social vision has moved
the Fellowship into other critical areas needing the work of reconciliation
and the establishment of justice. In 1918, it helped found Brookwood
Labor College. In 1919, A.J.Muste, who was then head of the Boston
FOR, rose to prominence during the textile strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts,
where the power of nonviolent action was effectively demonstrated.
Another area of enduring FOR concern has been
to eradicate the evil of racism and to build what Martin Luther
King, Jr. called "the Beloved Community." Years before there was
a civil rights movement, the FOR was active in this effort. With
the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), FOR sponsored the first
interracial sit-in, in 1943. As a consequence of its interracial
Journey of Reconciliation through the South in 1947, FOR race relations
secretaries received the Jefferson Award of the Council Against
Intolerance. FOR was instrumental in ending segregation in public
facilities in such cities as Denver and Washington, D.C. and in
1957, staff member Glenn Smiley worked beside Martin Luther King,
Jr. in the decisive Montgomery bus boycott. Staff member James Lawson,
based in Nashville led nonviolence trainings throughout the South
that were of seminal importance to the civil rights movement. The
FOR provided speakers in churches, synagogues and schools, held
workshops, raised money for bombed churches and produced films and
literature (including the film "Walk to Freedom" and the Martin
Luther King Jr. comic book in English and Spanish) that were widely
distributed across the country.
Alongside such efforts of the FOR in the United
States, the work of the Fellowship was growing worldwide. The International
FOR was established in 1919 to coordinate the new national chapters
that were being formed. Its first secretary was Pierre Ceresole,
the Swiss pacifist who was jailed time and again for his peace witness,
and from whose vision and labors came the modern work camp movement.
It first brought together volunteers from former enemy nations to
undertake reconstruction projects in war-ravaged Europe. Relief
for the victims of war was carried out, and international conferences
and meetings spread the work of peace to many other parts of the
globe. In 1932, the IFOR led a Youth Crusade across Europe in support
of the Geneva World Disarmament Conference. Protestants and Catholics
from all over converged on Geneva by various routes, reaching over
50,000 people and presenting to the Conference a petition calling
for total disarmament among the nations. As the clouds of war gathered
across Europe later in that decade, the IFOR established Embassies
of Reconciliation that initiated peace efforts not only in Europe
but in Japan and China as well.
"Ambassadors of Reconciliation," such as George
Lansbury, Muriel Lester and Anne Seesholtz, visited many world leaders,
including Hitler, Mussolini, Leon Blum and Roosevelt. Muriel Lester,
English social worker, served as IFOR traveling secretary throughout
the world, helping to establish its work in many countries. A stirring
speaker and writer, she was a practical mystic who was equally at
home holding a School of Prayer in Uruguay, working with Gandhi
for India's independence, or fighting the drug trade in China. When
World War II erupted, many European members of the FOR were in the
front ranks of nonviolent resistance to totalitarianism and to all
the dehumanizing aspects of the war. Many were imprisoned and scores
were executed. Heroic efforts were undertaken to aid the victims
of war.
Thousands of Jews and other refugees were successfully
hidden and smuggled to safety, as in the south of France, where
Andre and Magda Trocme led the villagers of Le Chambon to establish
a haven in the midst of Nazi and Vichy terror. Even in Germany itself,
members of the Versohnungsbund, like Heinz Kloppenburg, Irmgard
Schuchardt and Martin Nieomuller were active in the nonviolent resistance
to fascism.
In the United States, FOR took action when the
US government ordered Japanese-Americans into internment camps in
1942. FOR held public protests of the action and extended concrete
help to the victims (such as caring for the property of those forcibly
evacuated). An FOR member, Gordon Hirabayashi, was the only Nisei
to refuse to register for evacuation; his case went to the Supreme
Court. FOR provided for visits to the camps and set up a travel
loan fund to help resettle people after they were released from
the relocation centers. The national office added a young Japanese-American
to its staff to interpret to schools, churches and FOR groups what
was happening to people of Japanese ancestry.
In 1944, the FOR published Vera Brittain's "Massacre
by Bombing," a carefully documented study of the saturation bombing
of Germany by the Allies. Signed by twenty-eight prominent American
church leaders, the publication aroused international concern over
the effects of obliteration bombing and heightened public awareness
of the savagery of modern warfare. Bringing such information to
the public has been one of FOR's main functions. Its first magazine,
The World Tomorrow, was begun in 1918. By 1934, its circulation
had risen to 40,000. Editors over the years included Norman Thomas,
Devere Allen, Kirby Page and Reinhold Niebuhr. The World Tomorrow
was succeeded in 1935 by Fellowship, edited by Harold Fey; later
editors included John Nevin Sayre, Alfred Hassler, William Miller,
James Forest, and Virginia Baron.
After World War II, there was a major effort to
establish a year of permanent military training for all young men
in the US, to be followed by seven years of reserve service. Under
the leadership of John Swomley, FOR worked with a large coalition
to form the National Council Against Conscription, which waged a
successful campaign to defeat the proposal for Universal Military
Training.
The end of World War II brought in its wake a
new and unprecedented moral issue: nuclear weapons. From the dropping
of the first atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the FOR condemned
nuclear weapons. In the 1950s, the FOR opposed atomic testing and
sent a public statement to Japan expressing sorrow over the tragedy
of fishermen who were radioactively burned by the Pacific bomb tests.
It also spoke out against the civil defense program that conditioned
people to be ready for still another war.
Members such as Dorothy Day and A.J. Muste refused
to take shelter in New York City during air raid drills. Their repeated
arrests for civil disobedience helped to build public awareness
that there is no shelter from nuclear war. In 1995 FOR executive
secretary Jo Becker led a delegation to Japan with a message of
repentance for the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that
helped challenge anew the official US view of the necessity of those
bombings.
FOR responded creatively to the fad for fallout
shelters with its Shelters for the Shelterless campaign that built
dwellings for homeless people in India. It also made the first proposal
that American surplus food be sent to communist China. In 1954,
the FOR launched a six-year Food for China Program in response to
Chinese famine. Tens of thousands of miniature bags of grain were
sent to President Eisenhower with the inscription, "If thine enemy
hunger, feed him."
During this period, the witch hunts of Senator
Joseph McCarthy intimidated many leaders. Communists and blacklisted
persons were denied access to speaking platforms. FOR sponsored
a public forum in which A.J.Muste and Norman Thomas debated two
Communist leaders in a forceful and daring affirmation of free speech
at Carnegie Hall in New York. In the 1960s the FOR formed the International
Committee of Conscience on Vietnam, with 10,000 clergy in forty
countries. Contact with the Vietnamese Buddhist pacifist movement
was established, spearheaded by the untiring efforts of the US executive
secretary, Alfred Hassler. In 1968, at the height of the suffering
in Vietnam, FOR sponsored a world tour by Buddhist monk Thich Nhat
Hanh, whose poetry and other writings, as well as his speeches and
presence, made a profound impact wherever he went. FOR's "Meals
of Reconciliation" raised money for medical aid for all areas of
Vietnam. In 1969, the FOR Study Team on Religious and Political
Freedom documented Saigon's reliance on torture and initiated a
prodigious effort to gain the release of Vietnamese political prisoners,
some of whom had been crippled for life. These various missions
to Vietnam continued a tradition of FOR since its inception, in
which missions of reconciliation and friendship have been sent to
such places as the Philippines (1925), Haiti (1926), Central America
(in the 1920s,1980s and 1990s), the USSR throughout the 1980s, Libya
in 1989, Iraq and Israel/Palestine in the 1990s. After the Vietnamese
war ended, a campaign for amnesty for US war resisters was launched,
as well as a program to help support Vietnamese orphans. In 1970,
Dai Dong was founded as a groundbreaking transnational project linking
war, environmental problems, poverty and other social issues. Thousands
of scientists around the world were reached through this program,
as evidenced by the Menton Statement, signed by 2,200 biologists
(including four Nobel Prize Laureates). The full statement, "A Message
to our 3 1/2 Billion Neighbors on Planet Earth," was published in
the UNESCO Courier and received worldwide attention. In 1972, in
an effort to move public opinion beyond the constraints of national
self-interest, Dai Dong sponsored an alternative environmental conference
in Stockholm at the time of the UN Environmental Conference.
With the end of the Vietnam War, FOR placed major
emphasis on ending the Cold War, reversing the arms race, meeting
human needs and building global solidarity. FOR was part of a growing
number of groups-peace, environmental, minority rights, women, anti-intervention-that
worked for a more compassionate domestic and foreign policy. It
joined in campaigns, marches, educational projects, and civil disobedience.
At sessions of the World Council of Churches and the UN, FOR sponsored
Plowshares Coffee Houses to provide an alternative forum for critical
issues facing the world community.
In the 1980s, as the Cold War deepened, FOR launched
a major emphasis on US-USSR Reconciliation to undergird its disarmament
efforts and to root out the enemy image that had so poisoned East-West
relations. Through people-to-people projects and exchanges, FOR
made a significant contribution to the dramatic turnaround in US-Soviet
relations that occurred in the late 1980s. FOR also pioneered in
bringing nonviolence education and training to Russia and Lithuania
as the Soviet Union broke up.
Recent years have seen the growth of IFOR branches
and affiliates in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
The seeds planted earlier by traveling secretaries like Muriel Lester
and John Nevin Sayre bore fruit, along with the decades of seminars
in active nonviolence carried out by Jean and Hildegard Goss-Mayr
of Paris and Vienna, three times nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
From such labors arose Servicio Paz y Justicia (SERPAJ) throughout
Latin America. SERPAJ's Adolfo Perez Esquivel of Argentina was awarded
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1980. IFOR training in active nonviolence
contributed significantly to the people power overthrow of the Marcos
dictatorship in the Philippines in 1986, as well as the growth of
nonviolent movements in Asia and Africa. The Goss-Mayrs, IFOR Honorary
Presidents, were central to the global spread of active nonviolence.
FOR, under the work of executive secretary
Doug Hostetter, made valiant efforts to stop the Gulf War through
repeated delegations to Iraq that sought to keep open possibilities
of a peaceful resolution of the crisis brought on by Iraq's invasion
of Kuwait. After the war one million dollars in medical supplies
were taken to victims of the war. Efforts to build peace with Iraq
and to stop the sanctions that killed so many innocent Iraqis have
continued through the 1990s.
In response to ethnic cleansing in the former
Yugoslavia, FOR initiated the Bosnian Student Project to bring Bosnian
students to the US for study due to the disruption of their lives
by the war. This effort was matched by work camps for reconstruction
and reconciliation in Bosnia.
Despite the end of the Cold War, the US military
budget remained obscenely high, leading FOR to issue an Interfaith
Call to Restore Sanity and Compassion to the National Agenda. FOR
has also joined with other religious peace groups to foster a New
Abolitionist Covenant to get rid of all nuclear weapons. FOR has
placed special emphasis on youth through its Peacemaker Training
Institute and its peace internships.
Also in this period FOR worked for racial
and economic justice, especially for women of color in the workplace
who so often work under dangerous and degrading conditions. There
has also been a healing emphasis on racial dialogue and reconciliation
in the U.S.
FOR's vigorous work in Latin America has been
highlighted by its national leadership to ensure that the US fulfill
its historic promise to decolonize and demilitarize the US presence
in Panama and to faithfully comply with the Panama Canal Treaties.
FOR joined with other groups to organize SIPAZ(International Service
for Peace) to support a just and lasting peace in Chiapas.
With the assistance of FOR and its members, over
the years a wide variety of parallel groups have come into existence:
the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Conference of Christians
and Jews, the Congress of Racial Equality, the Workers Defense League,
the Committee for Social Responsibility in Science, the Committee
on Militarism in Education, and the American Committee on Africa.
Such organizations have taken up tasks in such specific fields as
civil liberties or the support of African independence movements.
The FOR has sought to remain on the cutting edge of nonviolent witness
in each generation.
While the Fellowship has been religious in inspiration
and outlook since its inception, the nature and dimensions of this
commitment have broadened over the years. Founded by Christians,
the Fellowship was at first centered in the ethic of love that Jesus
taught, and this remains the faith of many FOR members. At the same
time, the remarkable growth of nonviolent thought and life in the
twentieth century has had a profound impact on the Fellowship. It
was deeply affected by Gandhi and the freedom struggle in India,
with its roots in the ancient teachings of Hinduism. Jews have brought
to the FOR a commitment to nonviolence that grows out of Judaism's
allegiance to universalism, justice and love. The powerful pacifist
movement in Vietnam brought to the world's attention the great tradition
of nonviolence that derives from Buddhism. One of IFOR's new Asian
branches, in Bangladesh, includes many Muslims, as well as Hindus
and Christians. Out of FOR's work against the Gulf War and the continuing
sanctions in Iraq, FOR has joined increasingly with Muslims in peacemaking.
The Muslim Peace Fellowship has become one of FOR's vital affiliates.
The FOR has seen these and other expressions of
nonviolence as indications of an unfolding understanding of the
meaning of truth and the way of love.
As a result, the FOR has become interfaith, and
as such is a religious pioneer, pushing beyond contemporary ecumenism.
It encourages people to live out the full dimensions of their beliefs,
even as they are enriched and strengthened by traditions other than
their own.
The FOR has fostered and encouraged peace fellowships
within the various religious traditions and with these fellowships
has often led the way in challenging (and assisting) established
religious bodies to take up the peacemaking task, from combating
homophobia and anti-Muslim prejudice to witnessing against handgun
violence at home and support of dictatorial and exploitative regimes
abroad.
As we enter the twenty-first century, the challenge
to peacemakers continues, not only to rid the world of nuclear weapons
and all weapons of mass destruction, but to remove the occasion
for war, oppression and hostility between and within nations, and
to build a just peace and to save the earth. Under the vigorous
leadership of executive secretary John Dear (the first priest in
that position) and its national chairperson, James Lawson, FOR called
for a forty day People's Campaign for peace and justice in the summer
of 2000 in Washington, DC
Throughout the world, people are showing their
determination to be free and to be treated justly; they are learning
the great power of nonviolent struggle, compassion and reconciliation,
even in the face of seemingly overwhelming odds. The UN declaration
of the first decade of the new millennium as a decade for a culture
of peace and nonviolence is evidence of this hope.
The Fellowship of Reconciliation, with its message
of peace and active nonviolence, grounded in faith and tested over
many years, is uniquely equipped to speak to the present age and
the universal longing for peace and justice.
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©2001 Fellowship of Reconciliation
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