Author Archives: Lee Smithey

Cadbury scholar Mary Lord on peace work, hope, and 21st century Quaker witness

Mary LordMary Lord, who is the Cadbury Scholar this year at Pendle Hill (on the other side of Crum woods) was recently interviewed in the center’s electronic newsletter.  She addresses Quaker witness, nonviolent resistance, and the elements of a peaceful culture.

“Mary Lord worked professionally in the field of peace and security for thirty years, including as Assistant General Secretary for Peace and Conflict Resolution for the American Friends Service Committee and with the program on peaceful prevention of armed conflict for the Friends Committee on National Legislation.  She is the Henry J. Cadbury scholar at Pendle Hill for 2009-2010. A member of Adelphi Friends Meeting in Baltimore Yearly Meeting, she serves on the General Board and Executive Committee of Friends United Meeting.”

Read the interview in its entirety.

7th District Congressional Candidate Debate Sunday Feb 28th, 4pm

from http://www.democracyunplugged.net/

DEMOCRACY UNPLUGGED

WWW.DEMOCRACYUNPLUGGED.NET

610 543 8427

NOW ON FACEBOOK

Democracy Unplugged presents

7th District Congressional Candidate Debate Sunday Feb 28th, 4pm Peace Center of Delaware County, 1001 Old Sproul Rd. Springfield.

The first of a series, this event will focus on foreign policy. Afghanistan? Iran? Terrorism? Â Find out where your next congressional representative stands on the issues as they answer questions from a panel and from the public. Your opportunity to participate in democracy. Moderated by Roger Balson, co-sponsored by Delaware County Wage Peace & Justice and Delco for Liberty, invited candidates include Independent Jim Schneller, Republican Patrick Meehan and Democrats Gail Conner, E.Teresa Touey and Bryan Lentz. Â Free to the public with refreshments served. For more info or directions please call 610 543 8427 or www.democracyunplugged.net.

Directions to the event:

http://www.delcopeacecenter.org/directions.html

Artists in Wartime: Bearing Witness / Shaping a Response Symposium

Daniel_Heymen

LIST GALLERY EVENT:

March 4 – April 9, 2010

Bearing Witness, Recent Works by Daniel Heyman

Artist Lecture: Thurs., March 4, 4:30pm

Gallery reception to follow: 5:30-7:00pm

For the past four years, Daniel Heyman, has traveled to Jordan and Turkey to meet with former Iraqi detainees, paint their portraits, and record their testimony. His exhibition will feature a selection of his portraits of survivors of torture at Abu Grahib prison as well as portraits of African American men from the Philadelphia area who have endured extreme poverty and repeated incarceration. Heyman’s moving portraits neither sensationalize the horrific stories told by their subjects nor emphasize his own emotional reaction. Instead, as Swarthmore Professor of Sociology Robin Wagner-Pacifici points out in her forthcoming exhibition catalog essay, Heyman’s portraits, with their selective inclusion of excerpts of sworn testimony, emphasize the subjects’ professional and familial roles—fundamental aspects of our social and personal identity. In doing so, the portraits restore dignity and individuality to those who have been deprived of their most basic human rights.

Heyman graduated from Dartmouth College with a degree in Visual Studies and received an M.F.A in painting from the University of Pennsylvania. Numerous institutions have acquired portfolios of his work including the Library of Congress, New York Public Library, Yale University Art Gallery, Baltimore Museum of Art, and Princeton University Art Museum. Heyman is a 2009 Pew Fellowship recipient. In addition, he has received many fellowships including awards from the MacDowell colony, the AMJ foundation, the Philadelphia Print Collaborative, and the Independence Foundation. A distinguished visiting artist and critic at noted institutions, including Cranbrook Academy and the University of Iowa, Heyman teaches printmaking regularly at Swarthmore College and Rhode Island School of Design.

For more information

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Artists in Wartime: Bearing Witness / Shaping a Response Symposium

March 20, 2010

begins 9:30 a.m.

This symposium will explore the role of contemporary artists who focus on a seemingly endless era of global warfare, related health issues, and other crises of politics.

It will take place while Bearing Witness, Recent Works by Daniel Heyman and Printmakers Go to War Exhibit are on display on the Swarthmore campus.

The discussion will be moderated by Janine Mileaf, participants will include Daniel Heyman, visiting artist; Damian Cote, artist; Eric Avery, artist; Laurel Reuter, director, North Dakota Museum of Art; and Juan Manuel Echavarria, artist.

Cooper Series events are free and open to the public; there is no reserved seating. Event details may be subject to change without notice.

Location Information:

*Swarthmore College – Lang Performing Arts Center

Room: LPAC Cinema

Contact Information:

Phone: 610-328-8200

For more information

Event Sponsors:

Swarthmore College and William J Cooper Foundation

Dorothy Marder: An exhibit of photographs and memorabilia

THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED TO APRIL 4, 2010.

Marder_event

Dorothy Marder was a peace activist, feminist, and gay rights advocate. Her freelance photography offers a glimpse into activism during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.

At the Kitao Gallery

February 26-28, 2010

Opening & Reception: Friday 5 to 7 pm

Saturday and Sunday 4 to 6 pm

The Kitao Gallery is a student gallery located on the Swarthmore College campus between Sharples dining hall and Olde Club.

(see campus map) (pdf map) (Google map) (directions)

Hosted by Swarthmore College Peace Collection, Peace and Conflict Studies, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Kitao Gallery

contact: Elizabeth Matlock

Swarthmore College 500 College Avenue Swarthmore, PA 19081

February 8: Israeli-Palestinian Conflict as Reflected in Propaganda Images

The long, drawn-out Ethnopolitical conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians has long been waged through a war of words and images. In an illustrated lecture, Professor Angus Kress Gillespie of Rutgers University reviews how the battle of propaganda has been played out. Both sides have tried to implant the most beneficial images into western media in order to win over western minds.

This lecture is part of the Asch series on Conflict and Visual Culture.

4:15-5:30pm, February 8, 2010
Carpenter Library, Room 21
Bryn Mawr College

Poster

Directions

Taller de Paz aids displaced Colombian children

“In response to the current drug war in his home country, Colombia, Deivid Rojas ’11 decided to begin a program, Taller de Paz — meaning “workshop for peace” in Spanish — that would provide internally displaced youth with a safe space to use art as a means of expression and empowerment.

A team of four Swarthmore students, Rojas, Alex Frye ’11, Camila Leiva ’09 and Andres Freire ’10, along with the organization Conciencia Social — Spanish for “social conscience” — launched Taller de Paz in Bogotá, Colombia last summer.

The project has three specific goals: Give refugees access to safe spaces and educational tools, teach them specific skill sets in the areas of technology and teamwork, and guide them through the development of a final project that uses all the skills they’ve learned.” … Read the full story by MENGHAN JIN at the Phoenix Published January 28, 2010

Inspired Pasta & Peace Talks

Inspired Pasta & Peace Talks

a series of monthly talks at Providence Friends Meeting,

FREE and open to the public

Jan 24, Feb 28, March 21, April 18, and May 23, 2010

Guns, Bombs, and Global Warming . . . is violence catching up with us?

Join us on January 24, 2010 at Providence Meeting for the first in the series
1:00 INSPIRED PASTA lunch by Francesco Bellini
1:30 TALK by Sam Caldwell

Bad Karma: Why the human race is running out of time and what you can do about it

“Is this ‘bad karma’ catching up with us? Why haven’t we solved the problem of evil in the world? What was Jesus saying about how to solve it? Is there anything I can do?”

Come join us as SAM CALDWELL shares some provocative reflections about faith, inspiration, and practice in these challenging times.

A Quaker business owner and grandfather of five, Sam spent a year protesting gun violence with others in front of Colosimo’s gun shop in Philadelphia. Colosimo’s, as a result of the protests and subsequent investigations, closed its doors and is out of business. He will speak about his inspiration for this action, one victory against violence, and his vision for a new world order.

“Conscience is the root of all true courage;

if a person would be brave, let her obey her conscience.”

PROVIDENCE FRIENDS MEETING

105 North Providence Road

Media, PA 19063

Coming next

Feb 28: Why Go Inside Prison?

Mar 21: Can We Stop Paying for War?

Apr 18: Free Trade or Fair Trade?

May 23: Why Did They Refuse to Fight?

Sponsored by the Peace and Social Action Committee of Providence Meeting.

War Discourse, Peace Discourse: More of the Same?

Dov Shinar

Ben Gurion University

“War Discourse, Peace Discourse: More of the Same?”

Analysis of media coverage of war leads to some conclusions and open questions on the role of the media in peace-building. Suggestions are offered for development of peace journalism and “common ground discourse.”

Monday, 25 January, 2010

4:15-5:30 pm

Benham Gateway Conference Room (Admissions Building)

Bryn Mawr College

Free and open to the public.  Refreshments will be served.

Directions: http://www.brynmawr.edu/campus/visiting.shtml

For more information, visit  www.aschcenter.org.