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IPRA: INTERNATIONAL PEACE RESEARCH ASSOCIATION
PAVE PEACE THROUGH CULTURE AND LITERATURE

ELECTRONIC MAGAZINE

Number 4, March 1999

 

"WOMEN, CHILDREN AND PEACE"

 

Founder and Editor:
Dr. Ada Aharoni, Pres. PAVE PEACE
IPRA Peace Through Culture and Communications Commission,
57 Horev Street, Haifa, Israel 34343
Tel: 972-4-8243230
Fax: 972-4-8261288

Email: ada33@bezeqint.net
Website:
http://tx.technion.ac.il/~ada/home.html

Technical Editing: Deborah Gelbard
Graphic Design by:
Webhaven

 

HORIZON is a cultural, literary and educational magazine providing information on paving a culture of peace and creating bridges of understanding among people and nations.

 

 

EDITORIAL by ADA AHARONI

CONTENTS

 

 

 

GREETING :

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY

SECTION 1 :

WOMEN PAVING PEACE

SECTION 2 :

BANNING VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

SECTION 3 :

CHILDREN AND PEACE

SECTION 4 :

ME AND HUMANITY

SECTION 5 :

INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS

 


 

 

EDITORIAL

 

WOMEN AND CHILDREN ARE THE BEST
ALLIES FOR ABOLISHING WAR

 

 

Women and Children are indeed the best allies of peace. HORIZON 4 depicts several moving and authentic aspects and creations concerning this truth. There is no greater challenge in the world today than that of living in harmony, tolerance and respect with one's neighbors, and women and children seem to instinctively share this basic grassroot knowledge. At a time when the entire world is caught up in the process of globalization, it is imperative for humanity
"to listen to women and children for a change."

There are more women and children killed in wars than soldiers. We get continuous reports concerning this tragic fact from various parts of the world, where more than fifty senseless wars are being waged. In 1999, at the end of our "mushroom" century, we seem not to have learnt anything from the past, and more and more rivers of innocent blood are helplessly and continuously being poured everyday, in Kosovo, Ruwanda, Nigeria, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Guatemala, El Salvador, the Basque country, Ireland, and so on, and endlessly so on.... The thwarted, shortsighted satanic belief that wars can solve conflicts, has to be rapidly thrown into the anachronistic dustbin of history where it belongs, before the new millenium.

The BAN-WAR campaign and petition appearing in Section 4, built on the model of the UN "Declaration of the Right of Peoples to Peace" (Resolution 39/11), gives us the opportunity to express our democratic global vote and will, to abolish the very concept and practice of war, and to banish it forever from our lives and from our world.

The global village to which we all belong is one of great multiplicity, which is the basis for the necessity of cultural bridges and exchange of humanistic values. Literature and Poetry are some of the best vehicles for expressing our innermost thoughts and feelings, and several moving pieces and poems appearing in the pages below, bring this truth home. For example, in the poem: "Eve's Defence" , in her monologue, Eve satirically touches on one of the basic aspects of the discrimination of women, the myth that she was responsible for offering the forbidden apple to Adam. Eve exclaims that first, he did not have to eat it, and secondly, she reminds him, that although she was created from a much finer substance than he was (his own human rib-bone, instead of mere earth), men and women are in truth equal.

Women and children are great communicators and consumers of culture, they are open to new ideas and creations, new methods of organizing, and new ways of living. They are, therefore, a special source of renovation, vitality, strength and hope. They are certainly not in society's "museum anymore". Women are organizing through NGO's, such as the "BEIJING NGO", "THE BRIDGE", and numerous organizations and associations all around the world, to safeguard their lives and that of their children and families against violence. Women's demands for abolishing violence against them, for equal rights, and the basic human right to live in peace, are at the foundations of a truly democratic society.

However, the media, worldwide, does not as yet give women the backing, coverage, and credit they deserve. The corrrespondence between Ursula Oswald Spring (from Mexico), the President of IPRA, and the editor of Horizon, concerning the 20 Years to The Bridge Symposium, clearly shows that.

Warm thanks to all our contributors, who have helped us in making the creation of HORIZON a labor of love. We call on the citizens of our global village to join us in the creation of "TIKKUN OLAM" - the active "Repairing of our World", through cultural bridges built on harmonious ethical and human values, toward our new millenium. May it be a millenium beyond war!

Ada Aharoni
Editor

 


GREETING FOR

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY

 

 

Dear Women, Peace Researchers and Men in solidarity with gender issues,

I would like to send you all an extra special greeting today, 8 March, International Women's Day 1999. It is important for us to reflect on this day not only on the problems which women face living in a male-dominated, patriarchal world, but the hope we all carry within us to improve the unjust conditions in which more than half of the human race are forced to live, and the possibilities we have to create a future society based on gender equality, justice, non-violent conflict resolution and peace.

I believe that women have a special role to play in peace processes. A new analysis is needed of gender roles and the part they play in the male violence which is causing so much misery in the world today and has done for centuries. It is easy to give up hope, and put it down to human nature, that violence and agression are intrinsic parts of masculinity, and therefore cannot be changed. Any historical study would seem to back up this genetic argument that men are naturally violent. However, I believe that the participation of many men in peace proceses, and the emergence of the so-called "new masculinity" offers us a counter argument, and therefore the basis to work towards a new approach to gender relations, where men can be freed from the straightjacket of machismo, which includes as an integral part not only the rejection of anything considered feminine, but an exaggeration of "masculinity", shown in violent attitudes towards other men and women. We need a complete reworking of these gender roles which limit our growth as human beings and as men and women, and cause so much frustration and violence in our lives.

How can we do this? We need to start with our own attitudes, our own behaviour, challenge our own thoughts and actions. We need to look towards creating a different world order for our children, which means fighting now against corruption, violence, war, inequality and environmental degradation to be able to offer future generations a world based on non-violence, equity, justice, sustainability and peace. This means thinking twice before buying a toy gun for our little son or as men, trying to resolve conflicts verbally instead of physically. As women, we must fight against current discrimination and prejudice which limit our development as human beings, as professionals, as women. Although many men are now changing their attitudes and supporting women and our rights, it is true that only we, ourselves, have the capacity and the will to gain our own liberty and equality; nobody will do it for us.

Today we must reflect on the importance of bringing a gender perspective into our work as peace researchers; it is no coincidence that 99% of all violent acts in the world are committed by men. Women and children suffer from particular forms of violence whether in war or peace time. Many women are frightened to leave their houses, due to increasing violence on the streets; every case of rape or sexual assault results in warnings for women to stay at home, but we mustn't forget that the vast majority of rapes, of physical violence and of murder of women occur in the home, and by someone known to the victim. Domestic violence is a huge problem which only recently has been brought into the open and talked about rather than suffered in silence and shame. It is not only our streets which are dangerous for women, but our families, and the values of our societies which tolerate men's abuse of women as a natural right. It is time that we let our voices be heard, that we denounce all the crimes committed against women, the rape, the physical violence, including torture, the enforced prostitution which are common occurrences in peacetime and which increase during armed conflicts. The terrible situation which our sisters in Afghanistan are now living could happen to any of us; all our rights taken away from us in a matter of a short time. We must also let our voices be heard in protest at this complete abuse of human rights, reinforcing the idea that women's rights are human rights too.

We still have so much work to do, but today is not only a time to reflect on all that we still suffer from as women, but a day to celebrate our womanhood, a day to feel proud to be women, to be strong, to know that together we can change the patriarchal order which oppresses both women and men. We must believe in ourselves, and act together to show that sisters really are doing it for themselves.

Once again, I wish you all a very happy 8 March, and hope that you all have a marvellous time in whichever part of the world you are in. Today is our day so let's make the most of it!

I send you all an affectionate hug, a wish for peace in all parts of the world, and some of my Mexican sunshine with the scent of flowers outside my window and the beautiful summer breeze to those of you in cold parts of the world.

Ursula Oswald (President of IPRA)

 

 


 

We also invite you to view and sign our Guestbook
dedicated to the PAVE PEACE Project.

PAVE PEACE LOGO by Anika Movchine-Kanter

 

 

We also invite you to view and sign our Guestbook dedicated to the PAVE PEACE Project.

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