Nonviolent
Advocacy
Nonviolent
networking for peace with justice ...
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· Nonviolence is a way of life for courageous people. It is active nonviolent resistance to evil... · Nonviolence seeks to win friendship and understanding. The end result of nonviolence is redemption and reconciliation... · Nonviolence seeks to defeat injustice, not people. Nonviolence recognizes that evil doers are also victims. · Nonviolence holds that suffering can educate and transform. Nonviolence willingly accepts the consequences of its acts... · Nonviolence chooses love instead of hate. Nonviolence resists violence of the spirit as well as the body. Nonviolent love is active, not passive. Nonviolent love does not sink to the level of the hater. Love restores community and resists injustice. Nonviolence recognizes the fact that all life is interrelated. · Nonviolence believes that the universe is on the side of justice. The nonviolent resister has deep faith that justice will eventually win. Six
Steps for Nonviolent Social Change · Information Gathering: In order to understand and articulate the issue, problem or injustice facing the community, you much first research, investigate and gather all vital information that will increase your understanding of the problem. Know all sides of the issue, including the other party's position. · Education: It is essential to inform others about your issue. This minimizes misunderstandings, and gains you support and sympathy. · Personal Commitment: Eliminate hidden motives and prepare yourself to accept suffering, if necessary, in your work for justice. · Negotiation: Using grace, humor and intelligence, confront the other party with a list of injustices and a plan for addressing and resolving these injustices. Nonviolent communication does not seek to humiliate, but to call forth the good in an opponent. · Direct Action: Used to morally force the opponent to work with you in resolving the injustices, direct action imposes a "creative tension" into the conflict. · Reconciliation: Nonviolence does not seek to defeat the opponent, but to seek his/her friendship and understanding. It is directed against evil systems, forces, policies and acts not against persons. Four Nonviolent Intervention Techniques
The Four
Spiritual Laws of Peace 1. All people are made in the
image of God and therefore born with dignity and value, worthy of
respect. Whereas it is true that humanity by nature is capable of
malice, it is also true that humanity by nature is capable of
compassion. 2. Dehumanization of the Other
is a form of violence and always precedes acts of violence. It is
rooted in ignorance and one or more of the following: fear, overconsumption, and the
psychological projection of our own inadequacies onto the Other. 3. The antidotes to ignorance,
fear, overconsumption,
and projection are truth, love, humility, selflessness, and service. 4. Nonviolent reconciliation
is rooted in the common humanity shared by conflicting parties. A
peacemaker must therefore assume that there is at least a shred of
humanity (the image of God) in the Other. Compiled by Mark M. Mattison Nonviolent
Response to Personal Violence Nonviolence focuses on communication: 1.
Your objectives must be reasonable.
You must believe you are fair and you must be able to communicate this
to your opponent. 2.
Maintain as much eye contact as
possible. 3.
Make no abrupt gestures. Move slowly.
When practical, tell your opponent what you are going to do before you
do it. Don't say anything threatening, critical, or hostile. 4.
Don't be afraid of stating the
obvious; say simply, "You're shouting at me," or "You're hurting my
arm." 5.
Someone in the process of committing
an act of violence has strong expectations as to how his/ her victim
will behave. If you manage to behave differently-in a nonthreatening manner you can
interrupt the flow of events that would have culminated in an act of
violence. You must create a scenario new to your opponent. 6.
Seek to befriend your opponent's
better nature; even the most brutal and brutalized among us have some
spark of decency which the nonviolent defender can reach. 7.
Don't shut down in response to
physical violence; you have to play it by ear. The best rule is to
resist as firmly as you can without escalating the anger or the
violence. Try varying approaches and keep trying to alter your
opponent's picture of the situation. 8.
Get your opponent talking and listen
to what s/he says. Encourage him/her to talk about what s/he believes,
wishes, fears. Don't
argue but at the same time don't give the impression you agree with
assertions that are cruel or immoral. The listening is more important
than what you say- keep the talk going and keep it calm. Guidelines for a
Peaceful Rally
Adapted
from Michigan Peace Team’s adaptation of an article by
Markley Morris of War Resister’s League Nonviolent Strategy ·
Nonviolent protest and persuasion - identifying,
naming and pointing to what we think is wrong; helping others
understand. Tactics include petitioning, picketing, demonstrating,
lobbying. ·
Nonviolent noncooperation
- refusing to participate in the identified wrong. Tactics include
boycotts, strikes, tax resistance. ·
Nonviolent intervention - Facing the identified
wrong and stepping in the way, interfering. Tactics include physical
obstruction, blockades, civil disobedience, sit-ins. Convergence of nonviolence and
liberation theology |
©2004
Nonviolent Ways Project®