3 Current Non-Violent Direct Action Movements

Guerrilla Gardening: Guerrilla gardening is a form of nonviolent direct action. The gardens are planted on an abandoned piece of land which they do not own to grow crops or plants. Guerrilla gardeners wish to reclaim land from neglect or misuse and assign a new purpose to it.

Links here, here and here.


 

 

 

 

 
The National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance The National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance was founded in September of 2002 as the Iraq Pledge of Resistance. It is a nationwide network of activists and organizations committed to ending the war in Iraq through nonviolent resistance, utilizing the practices and philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.

On March 12, 2008 NCRC members gathered in the gallery of the U.S. Senate wearing "We Will Not Be Silent" T-shirts with gauze over their heads. One by one they stood and said "I am a ghost from the Iraq War.  While I died needlessly, I am here to demand an end to the funding of the war so that others do not have to die." Video of the action can be seen here.
 
 
Mountain Justice Summer is a call to action and a request for help from the people of the Appalachia mountains for help in saving mountains, streams–and forest from mountain top removal mining.
 
The group sponsors Mountain Justice Spring Break in two locations  - one in Virgina, one in Ohio  - in March each year. These pictures are from the 2008 Ohio camp:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Posted: May 15, 2008 Comments (0)

Inspiration

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I’m a week behind. This post should have been written last week. So, two post this week.

I’ve been spending a lot of mental energy thinking about and planning my final project for this class. It’s going to be a fiber project. I’ve know that since the first day of class. I thought I was going to do a small quilt but that idea has changed into something else that I’m not ready to give too many details about yet. There’s a kind of supersition for me about talking too much about a project before I really get into it. I think it’s got something to do with energy…that if I talk too much about it I release the internal energy I need to make it a reality.

 I do have a picture though of one piece of the process:

When my current project idea came to me, I was excited about the challenge of making my idea into reality. But our assigned reading for last week - Chapter 7 - Argentina and Chile: Resisting Repression from  A Force More Powerful provided the extra bit of inspiration I needed to know I’m on the right track. Each movment we have read about so far has touched me, but none has touched me as deeply as the movement of Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo.

My project will be grounded in what I have learned about these very brave women.

         

 

Posted: May 14, 2008 Comments (0)

Like Mother, Like Daughter

This week I focused my search for an important woman of non-violent resistance on the Danish Resistance since this was the topic  of one of the assigned chapters this week. I typed in "important women Danish Resistance" into Google and found a link to "Women in Intelligence" as part of an online bibliography of a Muskingum College project.

Listed under "Other Resistance" is Monica: Heroine of the Danish Resistance by Christine Sutherland, published in 1990. So I surfed the book’s title and then on other pieces of information gleaned from hits about the book.

  Monica was Massy-Beresford de Wichfeld. The majority of the  information I could find about Monica was related to the book. The following is from Biblio.Com which quotes the dust jacket from the book:

An English Beauty of high social standing and incredible courage, Monica Massy-Beresford became the heroine of the Danish Resistance during World War II. Condemned to death by the Nazis, she died in Germany a few months before the war’s end. Her glamorous and fashionable life was an unusual preparation for her heroic wartime role.

Born in London, Monica spent her youth in Ireland. The loss of her favorite brother in 1918 inspired a lifelong hatred of Germans. Having married a Danish aristocrat, Jorgen de Wichfeld, heir to an estate in Lolland, she discovered the family was in financial trouble after their first two children were born. When she turned for help to their neighbor and Jorgen’s friend, Kurt von Reventlow, they became lovers. The Wichfelds moved to Italy to live with Monica’s widowed mother in her Rapallo villa, and Kurt followed.

Monica, now the family bread- winner, started a costume-jewelry and perfume business in Paris. Despite Kurt’s plea, she would not abandon her family, so he left and later married Barbara Hutton. As neutral Danes, the Wichfelds had to return to Lolland at the outbreak of war.

When the Nazi occupation grew harsher, Monica (without her husband’s knowledge) joined the Resistance. She harbored RAF paratroopers and other refugees in their large house and rowed explosives across the lake at dead of night. Her daughter, Inkie, who secretly helped her, later married the Resistance leader. Monica’s effective support of the underground, her impressive deportment at her trial, and her example to fellow prisoners made her a national heroine. When the Nazis transported her to Germany, her end was inevitable.

A slightly different search on Monica’s name produced a TimesOnline article from January 9, 2003 about the death of Monica’s daughter, Varinka Wichfeld-Muus. The article  says that Monica "worked closely with Free Denmark and Britain’s Special Operations Executive (SOE) in sabotage activities before being arrested by the Germans in 1944 and sentenced to death for refusing to leak information about her involvement in the Resistance and her contacts. Monica Wichfeld’s sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, but she died of tuberculosis in prison in Waldheim, Germany, in February 1945, aged only 50."

That article goes on to tell how Varinka "helped her mother with arms pickups, hiding and feeding wanted persons, running errands and becoming a resistance leader in her own right, before joining the legendary Flemming Muus as secretary — and wife after a secret wedding — in Copenhagen in 1944 at the height of the Danish resistance effort against Germany."

"Varinka spent much of her time and energy at the tail end of the war and in the ensuing years defending her husband against allegations of embezzling SOE and other funds entrusted to him in his capacity of Danish resistance leader."

"Varinka’s memoirs Fra Solskin til Tusmoerke (From Sunshine to Twilight) were published in 1994.

Varinka Wichfeld-Muus was born in Saxkøbing, Denmark, on February 9, 1922. She died of cancer in Copenhagen on December 18, 2002, aged 80."

 

Posted: May 3, 2008 Comments (0)