April 27, 2010     Alert #253     Images/links not showing up? View online.

Dear Peace Activists,

On April 30 - May 2 in New York City, come join PANYS and thousands of activists from around the world as we take a stand against nuclear weapons with a groundbreaking conference on disarmament and a mass demonstration of global importance — the culmination of a global petition campaign involving over 4 million people.

We call on you to stand with the Hibakusha, the survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Yoko Ono, LUSH Cosmetics, President Obama, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and peace and disarmament activists from countries around the globe to take action for a world free of nuclear weapons.

This week, international artist Yoko Ono urged participation in the three days of action on her website.

LUSH, the international organic cosmetics company, is calling for the support of Peace Action and our work on the petition campaign asking President Obama to engage in “multilateral negotiations on an international agreement to abolish nuclear weapons, within our lifetimes.”

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon confirmed his participation in the International Conference for Nuclear-Free, Peaceful, Just and Sustainable World. Last fall, he said, “nuclear disarmament is the only sane path to a safer world.”

Last year, President Obama reminded the world that taking steps towards a world without nuclear weapons is a moral responsibility. Without action, organizing and protests, that moral responsibility will never be realized.

There is still time to help change history.

1) BE IN TIMES SQUARE at 1:30 PM on Sunday, May 2!

Rally in Times Square (South of 41st Street on 7th Avenue) to call for No Nukes, No Wars, Fund Human Needs, Protect the Planet!

Join Peace Action & PANYS's contingent on 7th Avenue at the Southeast corner of 41st Street! Bring your banners!

March to Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza at the UN with Hibakusha, people from the U.S. who have been harmed by uranium mining and nuclear weapons testing, as well as peace activists and nuclear abolitionists from across the U.S. and countries around the world.. Close the afternoon by participating in a dynamic International Peace & Music Festival from 4:00 - 6:00 PM.

Join Peace Action & PANYS for an after march informal gathering at Connolly’s on 14 East 47th Street between Madison and 5th Avenue. Only a few blocks from Dag Hammarskjöld Plaza (food and drinks for purchase).

2) WATCH LIVE WEB STREAMING of the International Conference for Nuclear-Free,
Peaceful, Just and Sustainable World, April 30 - May 1.
On the eve of the UN Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will join over 800 participants at historic Riverside Church in Manhattan to discuss the urgency of nuclear abolition and the new opportunities for disarmament.

The abolition of nuclear weapons and shifting the world’s resources from war planning to feeding, healing and housing the peoples of the world is what is needed in the 21st century. We must make it happen, in our lifetime.

Live Web Streaming

The conference is now at full capacity. We are working on the logistics for live web streaming of Ban Ki-moon’s address, and all the plenary speakers on Friday night and Saturday. Check www.peaceandjusticenow.org on Friday, April 30th for details.

Organize viewing parties in your area! Timing and list of plenary speakers are up on the peaceandjusticenow.org website. Take note that our own Kevin Martin, Peace Action's Executive Director will be speaking on Saturday afternoon and PANY's Judith Le Blanc will be chairing sessions as well.

Peace,

Judith LeBlanc
NPT Coordinator,
Peace Action of New York State
judith@panys.org

Featured Event
Sunday, May 2, 2:00 - 5:30 p.m.
NEW YORK CITY.
Times Square area to Dag Hammarskjold Plaza
(47th St. between First and Second Aves.)

INTERNATIONAL DAY OF ACTION:
RALLY - MARCH - PEACE FESTIVAL

Join people from around the world for an afternoon of action!
SCHEDULE:
  1:30 p.m. - Assembly - Seventh Avenue south of 41st St.
  2:00 - 3:30 p.m. - Rally in Times Square
  3:30 p.m. - March across 42nd St. to the U.N.
  4:00 - 5:30 p.m. - International Peace & Music Festival
in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza.

More information: Rally and March •  Peace and Music Festival

In the coming week, we will be confirming a line-up of rally speakers and performers to both inform and inspire us in addition to greetings from delegations from our international partners who are helping to organize this International Day of Action. At the Peace Festival, there will be tents and tables that will provide information and organizing resources so that we can continue our work for a safe, nuclear-free, peaceful and just world for all! There will be a tent with the Japanese delegation including Hibakusha (survivors of the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki) as well as many other issue-based tents and tables.

Help us spread the word! Sign up to volunteer. To find housing in Manhattan,
go to Reaching Critical Will's website for a list of low cost hotels and hostels.
More info at www.peaceandjusticenow.org.


 
Tuesday, April 27, 11:00 a.m.
STATEN ISLAND. Spiro Hall 2, Wagner College, Howard Avenue & Campus Road.

THE DAY THE SUN FELL: A TALK WITH HIBAKUSHA
Mr. Takashi Morita (85) and Mrs. Junko Wanatabe (67), are two of the rapidly aging and disappearing Hibakusha - survivors of the American bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Both are also officers of the Brazilian Hibkusha organization that successfully sued the Japanese government for cutting of health support for A-bomb survivors. They will speak of their experiences of the bombing and their lives since. For more information contact Sally Jones, 917-362-0897 or sjones1@si.rr.com.

Tuesday, April 27, Overnight.
STATEN ISLAND.

NPT PEACE WALK ARRIVES IN STATEN ISLAND.
The NPT Peace Walk, which originated in Philadelphia on Earth Day, will arrive in Staten Island on Tuesday, April 27. Overnight stays for about ten marchers being sought. The next morning marches will take the Ferry into the city to join the weekend NPT events. If you can provide a place to sleep, contact Ethan Genauer at nptwalk2010@gmail.com or 856-535-8547. Sponsored by DC => NYC Walk for Nuclear Disarmament and Abolition and supported by Peace Action of Staten Island.

Wednesday, April 28, 8:45 a.m.
CITY HALL AREA.
Metropolitan Correctional Center, 150 Park Row at Pearl Street
VIGILS FOR START OF FAHAD HASHMI TERRORISM TRIAL
Fahad Hashmi, a 30 year old Muslim American citizen and Brooklyn College alumnus, has been held in solitary confinement since May 2007 at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan. He is charged with two counts of providing material support and two counts of making a contribution of goods or services to Al Qaeda. His case raises concerns about the conditions of his detention and his ability to receive a fair trial. He is subject to a regime of severe deprivation, including 24-hour electronic monitoring, 23-hour lockdown, no access to fresh air, and one hour of daily recreation (when it is given) inside a cage. Physical and mental consequences of prolonged solitary confinement may impair his mental state and ability to testify on his own behalf. Also of concern are threats to First Amendment rights. Learn more about the case from Educators for Civil Liberties For info, and to confirm trial dates, contact Muslim Justice Initiative. Vigils at selected times will be ongoing outside Metropolitan Correctional Center, Lower Manhattan. Weekly presentation with special guests from Broadway and Off-Broadway. For information and dates, contact Theaters Against War.

Thursday, April 29, 3:00 p.m.
EAST VILLAGE.
Village East Cinemas, Second Ave. and 13th Street
SCREENING OF PRO-PEACE FILM "THE WESTERN FRONT"
Directed by Marine Officer and Iraq Vet Zachary Iscol. The only public screening at the Tribeca Film Festival

Thursday, April 29, 7:00 p.m.
BROOKLYN.
The Commons, 388 Atlantic Avenue (between Bond and Hoyt)
BROOKLYN FOR PEACE PRESENTS: WHY BOYCOTT AND DIVESTMENT?
Reflections on resisting US militarism and Israel's Occupation of Palestine. An open conversation with Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb , cofounder of Shomer Shalom Network for Jewish Nonviolence and a proponent of human rights, international law and open dialogue. Light refreshments will be available. For info: brooklynpeace.org or 718-624-5921.

Thursday, April 29, 7:30 p.m.
BAY RIDGE.
The Soul Café, Good Shepherd Lutheran Church,
7420 4th (74th St. / 77th St. stop on R)
RICK STEVES' IRAN: YESTERDAY AND TODAY
Rick Steves' travels have taught him the power of people-to-people diplomacy. Now as tensions rise between the United States and Iran, he has taken action. "Rick Steves' Iran: Yesterday and Today" is a one-hour documentary on Iran's people and culture. Presented by Peace Action Bay Ridge (646) 824-5506 or bklynpeaceaction@yahoo.com and Interfaith Peace Coalition (718) 680-2981 or infaithpeace@yahoo.com.

Friday, April 30, 2:30 p.m.
LINCOLN CENTER.
Bruno Walter Auditorium
SCREENING: "THE MOST DANGEROUS MAN IN AMERICA: DANIEL ELLSBERG AND THE PENTAGON PAPERS"
Oscar-nominated documentary film by Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith, partially funded by The Yip Harburg Foundation. Robert Ellsberg, son of Daniel Ellsberg and a key figure in Pentagon Papers affair, will appear at the event for a talk-back and questions.

Tuesday, May 4
CITY HALL AREA.
Pace University's Schimmel Theater, 3 Spruce Street.
THE WISDOM OF THE SURVIVOR
A day-long conference of testimony and conversation centering on the unprecedented interaction between the Hibakusha and the 9/11 community, and the unique political, psychological, and spiritual contributions that survivors of atrocity and their families can make towards a peaceful future. With Robert Jay Lifton, author of the ground-breaking study Death In Life: Survivors of Hiroshima, and more than 25 other influential books exploring the “survivor experience,” and Jonathan Schell, author of the passionate antinuclear books The Fate of the Earth and The Gift of Time: The Case for Abolishing Nuclear Weapons Now. Hiroshima Mayor Tadatoshi Akiba, the co-chair of Mayors for Peace and has also been invited to play a prominent role. The conference will also feature a panel of writers who have addressed nuclear weapons-related and 9/11 issues in their work including Ian Baruma, Edward Hirsch, and Mohsin Hamid, as well as scholars Charles B. Strozier, author of the forthcoming Until the Fires Stopped Burning: New York City and the World Trade Center Disaster; Peter Kuznick, director of American University's Nuclear Studies Institute; and Michael Flynn, professor of psychology at York College. Others include Boston Globe columnist James Carroll, Pulitzer-Prize winner Martin Sherwin, and Yuki Tanaka, Research Professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute. The conference is expected to be shown on C-SPAN and to have wide coverage in New York City and the nation. It will be video-streaming and clips will be posted YouTube after its completion. Free and Open to the Public. Co-sponsored by Peaceful Tomorrows . RSVP is requested but not required. For more details, please visit http://johnjay.jjay.cuny.edu/wisdomconf/. RSVP to wisdomofthesurvivor@jjay.cuny.edu.

Saturday, May 8, 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
GREENWICH VILLAGE.
Assembly Hall, Judson Memorial Church, 239 Thompson Street (ring bell at door)
ANNUAL MEETING, ABOLITION 2000
Abolition 2000 will hold its Annual General Meeting in New York City in historic Greenwich Village, during the Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference. A continental breakfast will be served.

Wednesday May 12, 7:30 - 9:00 p.m.
GREENWICH VILLAGE.
Brecht Forum, 451 West Street (between Bank & Bethune Streets)
NORTH KOREA'S BOMB AND THE ROAD TO PEACE
Why did North Korea walk away from the Non-Proliferation Treaty? What has been the history of U.S. policies towards North Korea and what led up to the current impasse in U.S.-North Korea relations? Is there a path towards full denuclearization and peace on the Korean peninsula? A panel discussion with Joseph Gerson, American Friends Service Committee, author of Empire and the Bomb: How the United Sates Uses Nuclear Weapons to Dominate the World; Ko Young-dae, Solidarity for Peace and Reunification in Korea (SPARK), a national organization in South Korea that works towards peace, disarmament, and reunification of the Korean peninsula; Representative from the National Campaign to End the Korean War, a national coalition of scholars, veterans, and grassroots organizations that have come together to call on the U.S. government to sign a Peace Treaty and establish diplomatic relations with North Korea. For directions, see http://brechtforum.org/directions. For more info, go to www.nodutdol.org/, email nodutdol@nodutdol.org, or call 718-335-0419.

Friday, May 14, 8:00 p.m.
HEWLETT.
Hewlett-Woodmere Public Library, 1125 Broadway
OBAMA'S LATIN AMERICAN POLICY AND THE HONDURAN COUP:
"THAT'S NOT CHANGE, THAT'S MORE OF THE SAME."

Speaker: Dan Beeton, policy analyst and International Communications Coordinator for the Center for Economic and Policy Research. Mr. Beeton has over ten years of experience working on international policy issues with organizations including the Center for Economic Justice, Haiti Reborn, and the U.S. Campaign for Burma. Sponsoree by Five Towns Forum. Contact Rochelle Dorfman, (516) 623-5689

Saturday, May 15, 12:00 - 5:00 p.m.
BROOKLYN.
Brooklyn College, 2900 Bedford Avenue.(Train: 2/5 to Flatbush Ave/Brooklyn College; Q to Ave H; Bus: B6, B103, B44, Q35, B44, B11, BM2)
BROOKLYN PEACE FAIR
Keynote Speaker: Father Roy Bourgeois, Founder of School of the Americas Watch, Nominee for Nobel Peace Prize. Workshops and discussions, information on peace and justice, kids' activities. Performances by Rude Mechanical Orchestra, Spiritchild, Ill-Literacy, Metro Sonics, Stephanie Rooker, and more. Sponsor: Brooklyn For Peace. Co-Sponsors: Brooklyn College Community Partnership & Brooklyn College Student Center. Plan now for your organization to participate! Endorse, register for a table, place an ad in the program. If you would like to present a proposal for a workshop, activity, or performance, e-mail peacefair@brooklynpeace.org.

Now through Sunday, May 2
FROM STEAMBURG NY THROUGH SIX NATIONS TO NYC
PEACE WALK FOR A NUCLEAR-FREE FUTURE
Led by June-San Yasoda, Japanese Buddhist nun and leader of the Grafton Peace Pagoda, the 700-mile, two-month Walk will start in Steamburg on March 6, and progress through New York State's Six Nations Native American territories to arrive in New York City (converging with at least three other feeder marches from Oak Ridge TN, Maine, and DC) on May 2, the eve of the UN’s review of the U.N. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Conference.
For full information, including a schedule, map, and resources on how to join or help out, see the PDF at www.dharmawalk.org or contact Jules Orkin, organizer/walker at julesorkin@yahoo.com.

Wednesday, April 28, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
BINGHAMTON.
LECTURE HALL 9, Binghamton University.
CELEBRATE AFRO-LATIN WEEK WITH GUEST SPEAKER ROSA ALICIA CLEMENTE
Rosa Alicia Clemente: 2008 Green Party Vice-Presidential Candidate; community organizer and activist for over 15 years; featured keynote speaker, panelist, and political commentator all over the United States; founder, Know Thy Self Productions, a speaker's bureau for young people of color; presenter of workshops and lectures at over 400 colleges, town halls, rallies and national and international conferences; academic researcher on national liberation struggles inside the United States, with a specific focus on The Young Lords Party, The Black Panther Party and the Black and Brown Liberation Movement's of the 60's and 70's as well as the effects of COINTELPRO on such movements; extensive author on Afro-Latino identity and politics, Sexism within Hip-Hop Culture and Hip-Hop Activism, Media Justice, and African-American and Latino unity; recipient of numerous awards, grants and fellowships and frequent contributor on On the Real with Chuck D on Air America, Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez, The Bev Smith Show, Hard Knock Radio with Davey D, Make It Plain on SIRRUS and CNN with Roland Martin, and numerous other radio shows. Rosa lives in the South Bronx, where she resides with her husband and daughter. She is currently writing her first book: When a Puerto Rican Woman Ran for Vice-President and Nobody Knew Her Name. Her show Hip Hop State of Mind, a weekly tv and radio show, will debut on Free Speech TV in June 2010. This is definitely a talk that you don't want to miss! Sponsored by the Latin American Student Union & the Black Student Union.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010, 6:30 p.m.
BUFFALO.
Network of Religious Communities, 1272 Delaware Avenue
(parking & entrance in back)

COUNTER-RECRUITMENT PLANNING MEETING

Thursday, April 29, 6:00 p.m.
WHITE PLAINS.
Location TBA.
WESPAC’S ANNUAL AWARDS DINNER
Keynote Speaker: Honorable Cynthia McKinney speaking on
"Reflections on How We Move Forward"
This year WESPAC is recognizing:
* Ted DeSoyza, lifelong work advocating for children, people with disabilities and a more peaceful world
* Felice Gelman, for the WESPAC Middle East Committee and her Palestine Solidarity work
* Mirene Ghossein, for tirelessly bringing people together through culture
* Jackie Mann, The Elias Foundation, and their funding of local, progressive community organizing
* Mary Williams, one of the founders of WestCOP, lifelong anti-poverty work
WESPAC will be saying farewell to Rev. Joe Agne at the awards dinner. Piano selections offered by Margot Dilmaghani http://celebration1.org. $100 per person. Purchase your ticket through PAYPAL today at www.wespac.org.

Thursday, April 29, 7:15 p.m.
PURCHASE.
Pius X Theatre, Music Bldg., Connie Hogarth Center for Social Action, Manhattanville College.
ANNUAL PEACE CONCERT
Performing will be: Dan Einbender and David Bernz • Great Folk Musicians and Songwriters • Manhattanville’s Percussion Ensemble • Rreadings of PEACE POETRY!
More information at http://conniehogarth.org or call the Center at 914-323-7156.

Saturday, May 1, 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
ALBANY.
West Capital Park.
TWELFTH ANNUAL MAY DAY CELEBRATION.
Presented by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace. There will be music, poetry, food and tables for literature. Speakers will focus on more jobs, less war, better healthcare and fairer trade. More Information: call (518) 273-2759 or see the Hudson-Mohawk May Day website, www.jflan.net/mayday/m2010/mayday2010.html.

Saturday, May 1, 2:00 p.m.
BUFFALO.
Gather at Main and Goodell. March to Martin Luther King Park.
MAY DAY: WORKER AND IMMIGRANT RIGHTS NOW!
Join the March & Community Social! Come Celebrate the Efforts of All to Defend Rights! Speakers, Performers, Food at MLK Park, Help Mobilize or Donate Food. For more information, contact: Buffalo Forum: buffaloforum@usmlo.org, Tel: 716.602.8077. Co-sponsored by Western New York Peace Center.

Sunday, May 2, 9:00 a.m.
ALBANY.
East Garage, Eagle &Madison.
BUS TO NYC RALLY
There are still a few seats left! The bus will return in the evening. You can park free at the garage. Seats are $35 each. Mail checks to: Upper Hudson Peace Action, 33 Central Ave., Albany NY 12210. Scholarships available. To reserve your seat call 518-595-9324 or e-mail getonthebus@peaceact.net. Click here for monre information.

Monday, May 3, 7:30 p.m.
OSSINING.
Asia Room, Maryknoll Society Center Building, Maryknoll Fathers & Brothers, 55 Ryder Rd/
CONVERSATION WITH HIBAKUSHA.
Hibakusha, Survivors of the US Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan at the end of World War II. A delegation of Hibakusha will present a short video, describe their experiences, and engage in a discussion with us.

Tuesday, May 11, 7:00 p.m.
BINGHAMTON.
UU Congregation of Binghamton, 183 Riverside Dr.
BROOME COUNTY PEACE ACTION ANNUAL MEETING
After a brief business meeting to elect officers and board members, we will welcome our special guest speaker – Matt Ryan, mayor of Binghamton, who will talk on the very timely topic of The Cost of War. Ample time will be reserved for questions and comments from the audience. Light refreshments will be served. The event is free and open to the public. Please come and enjoy an evening of fellowship and discourse.


Many local peace groups hold regular events, vigils, "Honk for Peace" actions, etc. 
See our list: www.panys.org/ongoing.htm


April 22 - 29
PHILADELPHIA - NEW JERSEY - STATEN ISLAND - MANHATTAN

NPT PEACE WALK TO NYC
• Thursday, April 22: Earth Day Rally in Philadephia and Peace Walk to Camden NJ
• Tuesday, April 27: Arrive in Staten Island. Possible event with Hibakusha at Wagner College and St. John's University, possible event at UU Church at night. Overnight stay.
• Wednesday, April 28: Take Staten Island Ferry to NYC.
• Weekend April 30 - May 2 : Join International Conference and Peace Rally.
Sponsored by DC => NYC Walk for Nuclear Disarmament and Abolition

Wednesday, April 28, 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
PRINCETON. NJ.
Garden Theater, 160 Nassau Street,
COUNTDOWN TO ZERO: FILM SCREENING AND DISCUSSION
Countdown to Zero is a full-length documentary movie with experts from Princeton University and elsewhere who present the growing danger of nuclear holocaust and the urgent need and means to prevent that. With discussion following led by Prof. Frank von Hippel (physicist, nuclear weapons expert, Professor of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, former Assistant Director of the White House Science Advisors Office, chairman-elect of the American Physical Society’s Panel on Physics and Public Affairs, and CFPA sponsor) and Dr. Zia Mian, a Pakistani physicist based at the Program on Science and Global Security at Princeton. Free. Seating is limited, and reservations are required. Reservation instructions here .

Sunday, May 2
PHILADELPHIA - TRENTON - PRINCETON - NEW BRUNSWICK - NYC
PEACE TRAIN TO GLOBAL NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT
MARCH AND RALLY IN NEW YORK CITY
Join the Peace Train! Board at Stations throughout the Delaware Valley. Co-Sponsored by Coalition for Peace Action and coordinated through United for Peace and Justice-Delaware Valley Network.
Click here for further information and schedule
.

Saturday, May 8, 12:00 p.m.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Dept. of Labor, 200 Constitution Ave. NW, (between 2nd and 3rd Sts.)
LABOR RALLY.
Seventy-five years ago, Pres. Roosevelt signed the executive order establishing the Works Projects Administration, the biggest public jobs program in U.S. history. Join unemployed people, trade unionists, community and youth activists and organizations from all over the country on Saturday, May 8 in Washington, D.C. to call for a real jobs program for the 30 million unemployed and underemployed people in the U.S. today.

All Summmer
NEW MEXICO and other locations.

THINK OUTSIDE THE BOMB's DISARMAMENT SUMMER.
This year, youth around the world are on the move organizing for a nuclear free future. Think Outside the Bomb, the largest youth-led anti-nuclear network in the US, is organizing a global convergence near Los Alamos, New Mexico where the nuclear industry began. Disarmament Summer is a cross-cultural alliance of youth working together to re-ignite hope from below and build a grassroots consensus-based nonviolent direct action movement. In partnership with the Tribal Environmental Watch Alliance, TEWA Women United, the Multicultural Alliance for a Safe Environment, Products of Atzlan youth group, and the Southwest Indigenous Uranium Forum, we are committed to collective liberation, a sustainable future, and an end to the cycle of nuclear violence. After a 30 year hiatus, the uranium industry has now applied to open or re-open 22 New Mexican mines, many on sacred sites, in direct opposition to a Navajo Ban. There are 30 applications for new nuclear reactors and the Obama Administration wants to underwrite at least three of them with our tax dollars. There are no proposals to dismantle the thousands of existing US nuclear weapons, clean up their deadly legacy, or close the 250 abandoned uranium mines that continue to contaminate the air, soil, and precious water. Nor is there adequate health care or compensation for thousands of workers and their familiars who are sick or dying. For too long, the US government and corporations have sacrificed the environment, health and well-being of indigenous and poor communities to secure access to resources through the threat and use of force. To create a nuclear-free future, we must undo the legacy of racism and violence. www.thinkoutsidethebomb.org (408) 676-TOTB (8682) ForLisa Putkey, lisaputkey@gmail.com; Rebecca Riley, totbchicago@gmail.com.

Going out of state? Check UFPJ's national Events Calendar: http://www.unitedforpeace.org/calendar.php .
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