|

Training for the Long Haul
by Janet Chisholm
Printable Version
"We cant do
much anymore. You know, once you get past seventy
." Thats
the refrain of some older FOR members. They lament that so many
are graying, so many are dying, and that FOR membership rolls will
surely dwindle. "Who will carry on the campaigns at the grassroots,"
they ask. "Who will provide the financial resources? We need
to attract more members, more young adults, more allies."
In contrast to this view of the future are the
protests in the US and around the globesurely to be followed
by many morefueled by students and other young activists committed
to justice and nonviolence. But their protests often are disrupted
by a minority who are violent out of frustration or out of a different
conviction about winning tactics or out of collaboration with the
opposition. And the response by police is violent and repressive.
There is torture, injury, and death. It is the violence systems
script once again: social change can occur only through war, not
through transformation. Can there be a creative connection between
these two visions of our future?
"The global struggle brings us to
a turning point for the life of our world and its inhabitantsand
a turning point for those committed to creative nonviolence,"
says Ken Butigan of Pace e Bene. "It is a time of maximum opportunity
to fashion a movement that dispenses with the perception that social
change is a war; it is the time to really experiment with Gandhis
notion of nonviolence: the desire for, and action on behalf of,
the well-being of all. There is increasing momentum worldwide for
democracy, freedom and economic sufficiency." As justice-seekers,
wed like a quick fix, an assured victory. But that is not
the history of nonviolence. The violence of protests has poured
gasoline on the fire. The watching public has not seen an impressive
and stark contrast between violent repression and a nonviolent protest
where individuals willingly accept suffering rather than submit.
The script has been that of the violence system. The power of nonviolence
has been absent.
Bill Moyer, with forty years of experience in
the analysis of social movements, emphasizes that what makes social
change happen is people power, which is mobilized and maintained
through creative nonviolence.
"Successful nonviolent campaigns can
take years," says Jim Lawson, nonviolence trainer and human
rights activist. "We should speak of protracted movements and
the long haul, of the preparation and persistence and discipline
practiced by Gandhi, King, the Philippine Peoples Movement,
the people of Central America, and others. Action begins locallythen
spreads to other issues or regions. The action must engage the publicget
the business community, politicians and others to see the wisdom
of dialogue and cooperation. We can prepare ourselves best by studying
successful, protracted nonviolent campaigns."
Veteran activists understand the need for a formation
process that helps us loosen old skins, learn new scripts, and create
new selves deeply grounded in the philosophy and vision of nonviolence.
And they are committed to nonviolence as a spiritual practice. Moyer,
Gandhi, Day, Lester, King, and Chavez all help us see a possibility
beyond passivity or the war model. We will understand only by learning
from one another and by mutual deepening and training and by experimenting
and working in community.
Activist elders in FOR speak of prison time,
a peace walk across the entire US, police brutality, creative tactics,
celebrations, and periods of despair, inspiration, and spiritual
strength. "I am convinced that you are the planters of the
seeds of nonviolence," I tell them. "You may not see the
seeds take root; teachers and parents and child caregivers know
this reality. Nevertheless, it is you who can teach the next generationsthe
rest of us stand on your shoulders in defiance of oppression and
injustice, violence and war. Tell us of your experience though lessons
learned and experiments with nonviolence; share your perspective.
Tell us how you persisted and how you sustained yourselves. Share
your wisdom."
"Shes my oldest, living friend."
Thats the way Sally introduces me to others at her party,
with a combination of both reverence and good humor. The same may
be said of our elders in FOR. They are our oldest, living friends,
our greatest resource as we struggle to navigate and participate
in the turbulent worldwide drive for justice. And how shall FOR
contribute to the nonviolence formation process that is required
to prepare activists? How shall we best utilize the wisdom of our
elders? We propose developing a team of trainers and a training
module to offer to groups in local areas across the countrygroups
that would sustain themselves for the long haul through continued
nonviolence training and communitybuilding and intergenerational
learning, groups that would commit to ongoing action at the local
level and in concert with FOR national campaigns. What are your
ideas?
(This column was originally prepared for the
Sept/Oct Fellowship on the Wisdom of the Elders.)
©2002 Fellowship of Reconciliation
|