Earle and Akie Reynolds Archive
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Peace in Vietnam! Beheiren: Transnational Activism and Gi Movement in Postwar Japan 1965-1974
PEACE IN VIETNAM! BEHEIREN: TRANSNATIONAL ACTIVISM AND GI MOVEMENT IN POSTWAR JAPAN 1965-1974 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I AT MĀNOA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENT FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN POLITICAL SCIENCE AUGUST 2018 By Noriko Shiratori Dissertation Committee: Ehito Kimura, Chairperson James Dator Manfred Steger Maya Soetoro-Ng Patricia Steinhoff Keywords: Beheiren, transnational activism, anti-Vietnam War movement, deserter, GI movement, postwar Japan DEDICATION To my late father, Yasuo Shiratori Born and raised in Nihonbashi, the heart of Tokyo, I have unforgettable scenes that are deeply branded in my heart. In every alley of Ueno station, one of the main train stations in Tokyo, there were always groups of former war prisoners held in Siberia, still wearing their tattered uniforms and playing accordion, chanting, and panhandling. Many of them had lost their limbs and eyes and made a horrifying, yet curious, spectacle. As a little child, I could not help but ask my father “Who are they?” That was the beginning of a long dialogue about war between the two of us. That image has remained deep in my heart up to this day with the sorrowful sound of accordions. My father had just started work at an electrical laboratory at the University of Tokyo when he found he had been drafted into the imperial military and would be sent to China to work on electrical communications. He was 21 years old. His most trusted professor held a secret meeting in the basement of the university with the newest crop of drafted young men and told them, “Japan is engaging in an impossible war that we will never win. -
Paradigms of Collective Decision Making – Counsel, Majority and Consensus
For Manchester Social Movements Conference, 21-23 March 2016 by Andy Blunden The Origins of Collective Decision Making (Synopsis) Abstract: A synopsis is provided of the origin and history of the three main paradigms of collective decision making – Counsel, Majority and Consensus. From a reflection on the conditions under which each arose and the historical evolution of each tradition, the ethical foundations of each mode is brought into relief and an appropriate attitude to collective decision making is suggested which would foster creative collaboration on the Left. The question Ever since participating in the S11 protests against the World Economic Forum in Melbourne in 2000, I have been intrigued by processes of collective decision making and in particular by the antagonism between the two main paradigms used on the Left, viz., Majority and Consensus. Reading the literature arising from the Occupy Wall Street events I became alarmed at the depth of this antagonism and in particular the way the problem was being aggravated by ‘histories’ of Consensus decision making based on hearsay and ill-informed speculation, and the apparent belief that Majority decision making does not have a history at all. Everyone on the Left has some measure of familiarity with both paradigms but the overwhelming majority of activists are firmly committed to one or the other and this problem is emerging as a significant barrier to collaboration on the Left and the success of our shared project. Further, because people – not only young people, but even experienced hands – have no idea of the historical origins of these two paradigms, but simply compare and contrast them pragmatically and on the basis of personal experience, the reasons underlying this antagonism remain shrouded in mystery. -
2011 Issue Number 144
2011 Issue Number 144 Yu - Ai Friendship The Newsletter of NPO World Friendship Center 8-10 Higashi Kan-on Machi, Nishi-ku, Hiroshima 733-0032, Japan Phone: (082) 503-3191 Fax: (082) 503-3179 E-mail:[email protected] Website: http://www.wfchiroshima.net/ Chairman: Hiromu Morishita Directors: Larry&JoAnn Sims Barbara Reynolds Monument Unveiled At Hiroshima Peace Park This newsletter shares several articles and pictures about the unveiling ceremony and the celebration luncheon on June 12, 2011. Leis of paper cranes and beautiful fresh flowers were presented to Jerry Renshaw, Jessica Reynolds Renshaw (Barbara Reynolds’ daughter), and Tony Reynolds (Barbara Reynolds’ grandson.) 1 Jessica Reynolds Renshaw’s Remarks Dear Members of the Monument Committee, hibakusha, friends, and family, We are happy to meet with you today. My husband Jerry and I have come from California and my nephew Tony, one of Barbara's grandsons, has come from Texas. We also represent my brothers, Barbara's sons Tim and Ted Reynolds, and her other 8 grandchildren who would have come if possible. We are here at the invitation of the Dedication Committee to unveil a monument to my mother, who would have been 96 years old today. To me, it is amazing that the hibakusha of the nuclear bomb dropped by Americans would erect a monument to an American woman at their Ground Zero. I am so humbled by your forgiveness and desire to do this. Many people whose lives have been touched by my mother's life call her a saint, even a "national treasure." But my mother would have been the first to say she was just an imperfect human being. -
Map of Portland State University Almost Everyone Will Be Staying In
Map of Portland State University Almost everyone will be staying in the Broadway Dorms, located at 625 SW Jackson Street, Portland. Workshops will take place at the Smith Memorial Student Union (SU) & Lincoln Hall (LH), and the Ondine (ON). Check In is at the Lincoln Hall (top left of map) Don’t forget, this is also the We would like to thank our friends at Veterans For Peace for allowing us to tag along. The local VFP chapter began planning this convention in June 2010, and IVAW did not officially begin planning until February 2011. Thank you to all of the folks who put up with our delays, uncertainties, and every headache that came along. In particular, we’d like to thank: The VFP National Office Becky Luening, Marion Ward, Grant Remington, Bob Goss, Dan Shea, Rico Vicino, Mike Hastie, Malcolm Chaddock & the other members of the local chapter. Getting from the Airport to the Hotel via MAX Train The trip from the Portland International Airport (PDX) to downtown Portland takes about 38 minutes and requires an "All-Zone" fare ($2.35 Adult, $1 Honored Citizen or $1.50 Youth/Student). The MAX station and ticket machines are located near baggage claim on the lower level. You can easily roll your luggage on board. Board MAX Red Line to City Center and Beaverton TC. Get off at Gateway/NE 99th Ave TC MAX Station. Board MAX Green Line to City Center/PSU. Get off at PSU/SW 5th & Mill St MAX Station. Walk .3 mile south to the hotel. Getting from Union Station Amtrak Depot to the Hotel via MAX Train This trip is within Trimet's Free Rail Zone, so no fare is required. -
2014-2015 Report
2014-2015 REPORT THE PROGRAM FOR HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT FOR PEACEBUILDING Joint Programme of the United Nations Volunteers (UNV) programme and the Hiroshima Peacebuilders Center, funded by the Government of Japan ABOUT THE PROGRAMME Peacebuilding is a complex process that aims to resolve violent conflict and establish lasting peace. The foundations of peacebuilding are the restoration of justice, healing of trauma, reconciliation, development action and effective leadership. With violent conflict never far from headlines around the globe, one of the central parts of the Government of Japan’s strategy to help foster lasting peace worldwide is the Program for Human Resource Development for Peacebuilding. Funded by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, this program demonstrates the power of volunteerism in peacebuilding and peacekeeping activities through the fielding of skilled, trained and committed citizens from Japan and other Asian countries to countries experiencing conflict or post-conflict situations. United Nations Volunteers deployed under the program bring new skills and qualities that expand the reach of peacebuilding efforts. Working alongside national counterparts, UNV’s Human Resource Development for Peacebuilding volunteers (UNV HRD Volunteers) contribute their skills, experience and enthusiasm to projects that range from humanitarian coordination within emergencies and protracted displacement situations to crisis prevention and post-conflict recovery efforts. A number of assignments also support and strengthen the delivery of basic services so that local governance and civil society can be stabilized and strengthened for the long haul. Social inclusion plays a vital role in all aspects of the volunteer assignments, with youth, women and marginalized groups proactively included in peace and development initiatives in communities. -
JFY2020 Report of Program Activities.Pdf
Commissioned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan The Program for Global Human Resource Development for Peacebuilding and Development Global Peacebuilders Program Report of Program Activities in Japanese Fiscal Year 2020 2020 The HPC logo symbolizes a Phoenix of Hiroshima, which underwent a miraculous post-war reconstruction after WWII. This presents the spirit of HPC to train professional peacebuilders to assist war-torn societies in the world today. Hiroshima Peacebuilders Center (HPC) <Hiroshima Office> 〒730-0053 Knowledge Square 1F, Higashisendamachi 1-1-61, Naka-ku, Hiroshima-shi, Hiroshima-ken <Tokyo Office> 〒102-0083 2F, 1-4-4 Kojimachi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 082-909-2631 082-553-0910 https://eng.peacebuilderscenter.jp Copyright (C) The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan HPC Design and Edit Hiroshima Peacebuilders Center (HPC) Publication Date March, 2021 Hiroshima Peacebuilders Center Establishment of the Program We Aim to Develop Experts of Peacebuilding and Development In 2002, the Advisory Group on International Cooperation for Peace (AGICP), chaired by the former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr. Yasushi AKASHI, produced a report to examine and strengthen Japan’s support for consolidation of peace and state-building efforts About the Global Peacebuilders Program in conflict-affected countries as to make it a pillar of Japan’s international cooperation. Implementation System Subsequently, the establishment of the “Pilot Program for Human Resource Development in Asia for Peacebuilding” was announced The Program for Global Human Resource Development for Peacebuilding and Development at a seminar event entitled “People Building Peace: Human Resource Development in Asia for Peacebuilding,” which took place at United (Global Peacebuilders Program) is commissioned by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan Nations University in August 2006. -
Veterans for Peace 2017 Board Meeting Minutes
Veterans For Peace 2017 Board Meeting Minutes • January (Albuquerque, New Mexico) • February (Conference Call) • March (Conference Call) • April (St. Louis, MO) • June (Conference Call) • July (Conference Call) • August o August 6 (Conference Call) o August 9 (Chicago) o August 12 (Chicago) • September (Conference Call) • October (St. Paul) • November • December (No Meeting) Veterans For Peace 1 Veterans For Peace National Board of Directors Meeting Albuquerque, NM, USA Friday, January 27, 2017 Board members present at the meeting: Barry Ladendorf, President Gerry Condon, Vice President Michael McPhearson, Executive Director Mark Foreman, Treasurer Kourtney Andar, Secretary Brian Trautman Tarak Kauff Patrick McCann Dan Shea Monique Salhab Members and guests present at the meeting: Willard Hunter, VFP Member, Albuquerque Chapter Sally-Alice Thompson, VFP Member, Albuquerque Chapter Motions and votes in bold. ______________________________________________________________________________ Barry chairs the meeting. Barry convenes the meeting at 9:20 AM MST Kourtney records the minutes Executive Director Report – 9:22 AM MST - Michael briefs the meeting on his report as provided in print; Christine Assafe hired as Administrative Assistant in the national office; accountant has to finish up December numbers; in February third week, we will have our reviewer/accountant review our books; the numbers from last year will change based on adjustments to be made; we raised over $850k last year total; further briefing of the report as provided in writing -
Patterns of Membership and Participation Among British Quakers, 1823 – 2012
Patterns of Membership and Participation Among British Quakers, 1823 – 2012 JAMES WILLIAM CROAN CHADKIRK A thesis submitted to The University of Birmingham for the degree of MASTER OF PHILOSOPHY School of Theology, Philosophy and Religion Centre for Postgraduate Quaker Studies The University of Birmingham September 2014 University of Birmingham Research Archive e-theses repository This unpublished thesis/dissertation is copyright of the author and/or third parties. The intellectual property rights of the author or third parties in respect of this work are as defined by The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 or as modified by any successor legislation. Any use made of information contained in this thesis/dissertation must be in accordance with that legislation and must be properly acknowledged. Further distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holder. Abstract During the 1850s there was rising concern in the Society of Friends about declining membership. From the 1840s attempts were made to obtain hard statistics on adherence and in the late 20th century another decline again reduced numbers to the level of the 1850s and 1860s. This thesis reviews and analyses data from the middle of the 19th century to 2012, illuminating variation in both membership and participation in church worship and governance. It presents new data on participation in meeting for worship and provides geographical and socio- metric data on the origins of enquiries about Quakerism, providing both a research tool for further work by bringing large volumes of information together and illuminating the ways in which the size and the social structure of the Society of Friends has varied with time. -
(EAEH 2021) Program
As of 20 August 2021 The Sixth Biennial Conference of East Asian Environmental History (EAEH 2021) Program Dates and time are based on Japan Standard Time. (GMT +09:00 ) Monday, September 6 Pre-event Welcome Online Party Free Discussion Room Sep.6 18:00-20:00 Zoom Test and Instruction Tuesday, September 7 Opening Remark & Keynote Speech Opening Remarks Sep.7 8:45-09:00 Webinar Akihisa Setoguchi (President of AEAEH) Minoru Inaba (Director, Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University) Keynote Speech Sep.7 9:00-10:00 Webinar Speaker Wataru Iijima Aoyama Gakuin University Pandemic and Endemic in East Asian Chair History Akihisa Setoguchi Kyoto University Discussant Manyong Moon Jeonbuk National University Parallel Session 1 Parallel Session 1.1 Sep.7 10:30-12:00 Room 1 The History of Nuclear Energy and Organizer/Chair Radiation Management in Yuka Tsuchiya Kyoto University Environment, Part I: Nuclear Moving on the Surface of the Ocean: Ships in Discussant Environmental History of Nuclear Masato Tainaka Kobe University Title Presenters 14 As of 20 August 2021 Just Another Ship? The Contested Nuclearity of Toshihiro Higuchi Georgetown University U.S. Nuclear Warships in Japan, 1959-1968 US Nuclear Merchant Ship NS Savannah as a Traveling Showcase Changed Motivation behind Shinsuke Tomotsugu Hiroshima University the Voyage and Induced Reaction The Golden Rule and the Phoenix of Hiroshima: Elyssa Faison University of Oklahoma An Ocean History of Anti-nuclear Activism Parallel Session 1.2 Sep.7 10:30-12:00 Room 2 Organizer/Chair Traversing -
Index to a Friendly Letter
INDEX TO A FRIENDLY LETTER FOR ISSUE #1 (March 1981) through ISSUE #130-131 (March & April 1992) ----------------------------------------- ISSUES #1-#85 Prepared by Sabrina Sigal Falls ISSUES #86-#110 Prepared by Matthew Ripley-Moffitt ISSUES #111--#131 Prepared By Molly A. Fager Copyright (C) 1992 by A Friendly Letter. All Rights Reserved A FRIENDLY LETTER INDEX CODES This index uses a code system to assist readers in finding the location of a topic within a particular issue of A Friendly Letter: L = letter (first page) A = featured article (inside pages) Supp = supplementary article (inside pages) QH = This Month in Quaker History (final page) QC = Quaker Chuckles (final page) Example: conscientious objection, #5QH(8/81); #17A(8/82) Conscientious objection appears in Issue Number 5[#5], in the section "This Month in Quaker History" [QH], dated August 1981 [8/81], Conscientious objection also appears in Issue Number 17 [#17], in the featured article [A], dated August 1982 [8/82]. -A- A Quaker Action Group, #117QH,(1/91) abolition, #38QH(5/84). See also antislavery movement abortion, Friends' attitudes concerning, #2A(4/81); #14A(5/82); #86L(6/89); #92A(12/88); #98A(6/89) "Abortion and Civil War", #86L(6/89); #92A(12/88); #126A(11/91) Abraham, F. Murray, #49L(4/85) Access Exchange International, #130&131A(3&4/92) Ad Hoc Committee on Love, Discernment and Community, #114 & #115A(10-11/90) "Ad Hoc Committee to Respond to the Use of Cherry Street Porch by Jealous and Vincent, Two Homeless Men", #102A(10/89) Adelman, Kenneth, #54L(9/85) Adler, Margot, # 114 & 115A(10-11/90) The Adventures of Obadiah (Brinton Turkle), #126A(11/91) "Advices," #18A(9/82); #21L(12/82) AFSC. -
Let Your Life Speak Profiles in Waging Peace Dear Friend
“Then will your words, lives, and conversations preach and manifest, that ye serve God in the new life.” —george fox, epistle 200 Let Your Life Speak Profiles in waging peace Dear Friend, This year, the American Friends Service Committee celebrates its Centennial. For 100 years, AFSC has been working faithfully for Let your life speak— social change, putting Quaker testimonies into practice around the world. AFSC and Friends need each other in this moment when support AFSC and Quakers witness for peace, equality, and community is all the more essential. Featured here are five stories from AFSC staff, partners and in our shared work supporters who are following the leadings of Spirit into work for justice, peace, and love. We have included only short excerpts of each person’s story. Read more at afsc.org/LetYourLifeSpeak. afsc.org/FriendsDonate Go We encourage you to use these stories and the queries that follow as guides for reflection and sharing in meeting for worship, with your family, or with a committee or other group from your meeting. How is Spirit moving you to respond? If you would like to participate in one of the many ways we support Friends in working for lasting peace with justice, visit the other ways to give Friends Engage webpage, afsc.org/FriendsEngage, for more infor- mation about programs of action and accompaniment. Call our Donor Services team at: Help us begin our next century by contributing to AFSC’s programs around the world, as well as AFSC-supported organizing 1-888-588-2372 efforts among Friends. -
Latitude 38 August 2015
VOLUME 458 August 2015 WE GO WHERE THE WIND BLOWS INSTEAD OF TELLING YOU WHY YOU SHOULD COME TO GRAND MARINA, F Prime deep water double-fingered WE ARE GOING TO DO THE concrete slips from 30’ to 100’. F Great Estuary location in the heart COMPLETE OPPOSITE, of beautiful Alameda Island. we are going to ask you to check out the F Complete bathroom and shower facility, heated and tiled. other marinas and compare if you could, F Free pump-out station open 24/7. their docks to ours, their facilities, and F Full-service Marine Center and haul-out facility. their staff. Also, do they offer a full-service F Free parking. Marine Center? You’ll see why Grand F Free on-site WiFi. And much more... Marina is the only choice. Directory of Grand Marina Tenants Blue Pelican Marine ..................... 133 Boat Yard at Grand Marina, The ...31 Marchal Sailmakers .....................134 MarineLube .................................. 123 New Era Yachts ............................. 136 510.865.1200 Pacific Crest Canvas ....................... 30 Pacific Yacht Imports .....................18 Leasing Office Open Daily Alameda Canvas and Coverings 2099 Grand Street, Alameda, CA 94501 Alameda Marine Metal Fabrication www.grandmarina.com UK-Halsey Sailmakers GRAND MARINA GRAND Simply Fiddling About in Boats PHOTO BY ERIK SIMONSON BY PHOTO Little Fiddle* It took Jim Lilliston 10 years to build his Meadow Bird 16, Little Fiddle. He wanted a small daysailer and chose the plans for the Meadow Bird. He methodically calculated the hull dimensions; he researched the proper materials for the boat and the spars; he even hand-crafted most of the deck hardware.