VFP friends --
please have the peace and peace-loving people and organizations you know sign on
to this letter, below... sign-on responses go to peace@agapecommunity.org
A time-sensitive message from the Agape Community:
A time-sensitive message from the Agape Community:
Would you like
to join the growing list of signees in support of Veterans For Peace still
disallowed from marching in the St. Patrick’s Day parade.
Here is the
final statement (BELOW).
Can you send
your names to Suzanne Shanley by tomorrow (Sunday, March
9) so that we can send to media outlets as we attempt to express our
concerns as peacemakers in MA and beyond.
Many thanks.
Please also support Veterans for Peace by attending the alternative Peace
Parade, described in the flier and statement below. Please forward to
peacemakers you know and ask them to contact media to express their alarm and
this ongoing treatment of veterans as well as to mention this document. People
may simply send their names and how they want to be listed to peace@agapecommunity.org.
Peace and
gratitude.
Suzanne Belote
Shanley for Agape
Massachusetts Peace Communities
Statement of Support
for Veterans for Peace
inclusion in St. Patrick’s Day Parade
We the
undersigned represent a number of peace organizations across the religious
spectrum, interfaith and ecumenical, who wish to express our deep concern about
the grave injustice, disrespect and clear discrimination against veterans who
are voices of peace, through their exclusion from Veterans for Peace from
Boston’s Annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade.
It is our
conviction that the history of such exclusion in Boston is
based on secular and political maneuvering. Such posturing prevents our
veterans from expressing the ravages and trauma of war and their collective
statement about their experiences and wounds, both physical and mental, in
a public forum such as the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, meant, ironically, to honor
veterans. Visible reminders of the scourge of war such as members
of Veterans for Peace bring to the public forum are consistent with our
work as peacemakers in our war-addicted society.
We are aware
that The Saint Patrick’s Peace Parade is currently mired in a debate about the
exclusion of LGBT sisters and brothers from the main St. Patrick’s Day Parade.
As communities
of peace, we wish to make a clear and consistent statement of support of our
veterans, across the gender spectrum, as peacemakers whose civil rights are
violated, and who by turning from war, characterize a conversion from killing,
to peacemaking, honored by all faith traditions.
We note that St.
Patrick, the Irish Catholic saint, after whom this parade is named, renounced
war emphatically when he said in his writings: “Killing Cannot Be of
Christ.”
The Boston
Chapter of Veterans for Peace, known as the Smedley D. Butler Brigade, is part
of a national veterans’ organization of the same name with 140 chapters around
the country, members from WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War, Iraq and Afghanistan.
For the past ten
years, members of Veterans for Peace have attempted to walk in the St.
Partrick’s Day Parade, and in 2011, they were denied participation by the parade
organizers, one of whom stated: “We do not want to have the word peace
associated with the word veteran.”
We echo and
support the words of Veteran for Peace, Tony Flaherty, LT, USN, Ret. of WWII, a
member of the Boston Chapter, and one of its most eloquent spokespersons as an
Irish Catholic who has renounced war, spent his entire life in South Boston, and
who recently penned the following words to Mayor Walsh of Boston:
“Vets for
Peace has been banned, simply for advocating peace and a dedication to offering
our children a message that war is not the answer at spectacles glorifying
militarism since 2003 (invasion of Iraq) and since initiating the Peace Parade
in 2011, have been subjected to insult and calculated obstruction in which City
Hall has been complicit. …”
Peace Parade key
organizer, Pat Scanlon, a decorated Vietnam Veteran, comments that veterans
experience this obstruction as an insult, especially, “to those of us who have
experienced the horrors of war and know the real cost of war.”
Veterans, some
in their eighties, have waited for hours in
the blazing sun, to march after street cleaners and other public employees
finish their post-parade obfuscating and deliberate degradation of
impact—under the guise of cleanup. They are greeted,
sometimes with applause, often with jeers and sullen stares, by the handful of
dwindling numbers of parade participants. A court order has altered these
delay tactics, but the exclusion remains.
Veterans for
Peace have clearly stated their desire: “One parade, welcoming and inclusive of
any group.”
We representatives of Peacemaking
Communities in Massachusetts want to make clear our support of the Veterans for
Peace and our desire:
The make visible
the flags for peace carried by VFP, the nobility of the tradition of rejection
of war by warriors through the centuries, and the consistent message that we
have learned as a nation from our great peacemakers, Lucretia Mott, George Fox,
John Woolman, Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day, Daniel and Philip Berrigan,
Sr. Megan Rice, Howard Zinn and the countless numbers of the great cloud of
witnesses who live on nationally and internationally and across the faith
spectrum.
We the
undersigned peace communities carry with us the voices of hundreds, if
not thousands of our peacemaking constituents who are appalled at the blatant
disregard for the movement of conscience, courage and nonviolence embodied in
the lives of our brothers and sisters, Veterans for Peace in
Massachusetts.
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