Something can be done, the keynote speaker said.
โThe first thing is not to succumb to hopelessness,โ said David Hartsough, executive director of Peaceworkers. โNo government has any power if the people donโt choose to cooperate. โฆ How are we cooperating with this war regime?โ
Hartsough, a gentle-looking man with a firm handshake and a broad smile, recounted something overheard from observers at an anti-war protest: โLet them demonstrate all they want, as long as they pay their taxes.โ
Tax resistance movements, Hartsough said, are gaining impetus in the United States. (More at War Resisters League, www.warresisters.org.)
Hartsough spoke to 40 or so people gathered for this yearโs Peace Summit, held at the University of Nevada, Reno.
Obviously, direct acts of resistance, like non-payment of taxes, involve risk. Hartsoughโs no stranger to that concept.
As a college student in the 1960s, Hartsough spent weekends with African-American friends holding sit-ins at whites-only lunch spots. During final exams his sophomore year, Hartsough and friends decided to risk arrest getting โsomething to eatโ at a lunch counter in a state that had threatened stiff fines and jail time to protesters.
โWe didnโt relish the idea of a year in jail or a $500 fine,โ Hartsough said. But that didnโt stop them. The group filed into a drug store and sat down at the lunch counter. The owner put up a closed sign.
โI spent the time meditating on loving your enemy,โ said Hartsough, a Quaker. โI sat for two days waiting for something to eat. โฆ. The most difficult two days of my life.โ
The protesters were spit at and kicked. Lit cigarettes were thrown down their shirts. Hartsough was attacked by a man with a knife. The man grabbed Hartsough and gave him an ultimatum: โYou nigger lover, get out or Iโll stab you through the heart.โ
โI had less than two minutes to decide whether I truly believed in non-violence,โ Hartsough said.
Hartsoughโs reply to the man: โFriend, do what you believe is right.โ
The man left.
With 500 people waiting outside โwanting to kill us,โ the protestors appealed to the local religious community.
โThe 12 of us touched their consciences,โ Hartsough said. โWe pressured them to do the right thing.โ
Within a week, the facility was open to everyone.
โWe donโt have to sit on the side-lines,โ Hartsough said. โWe have power to make changes.โ
After more than four decades, Hartsough is still doing non-violent resistance. His group, Peaceworkers, part of Non-violent Peaceforce (www.nvpf.org), trains civilians to go into war-torn areas and do non-violent activism, pursuing a mission of protecting human rights and human life. In some villages and towns, the mere presence of a Westerner is enough to keep violence from breaking out.
โOur world is addicted to using violence to solve problems,โ Hartsough said. โBut there are non-violent movements to overthrow repressive governments.โ
Non-violence is also far less expensive than war.
A Peaceforce pilot program is working in Sri Lanka, where civilians are sick of a war thatโs lasted nearly two decades and led to 65,000 deaths.
It works. And it costs far less than bombs. The annual budget of Peaceforceโs Sri Lanka program equals what the U.S. Defense Department spends in two minutes, Hartsough said.
The people of the world want peace, Hartsough said, and they need to know thereโs an alternative. That runs counter to the mindset of leaders like President Clinton, when he decided to send planes on raids over Yugoslavia.
โFor some, the choice is either to turn our heads and pretend nothing is happeningโor to start bombing,โ Hartsough said. โFor others, both of these were not options.โ
