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Waging Peace
With Our Lives Sunday, March 15, 2009
”An injustice anywhere
is a threat to justice everywhere” MLK
“Our lives begin
to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” MLK
I want to thank those of you
who asked me to speak today; it is an honor to stand up here in front of all of you. Today, I want to talk about speaking
truth to power and taking risks for standing up for what is right. I want to tell you my experiences of non-violent activism
and how I have dedicated my life to waging Peace. I will try to be brief, although my story is long and I could really
talk for hours. I also want to talk a little about the sixth anniversary of the War in Iraq, which is this coming week,
March 19th.
When I was in the 7th grade,
my teacher, Ms Wanlan went to march with Dr King in Selma Alabama and came back and told her story. She told us all
about the civil rights movement and the power of non-violence. I was on fire with a passion for justice that stayed with me
my whole life.
In 1968, I was expelled from
Marlborough, an all girls’ Episcopal prep school in Los Angeles, for organizing a Viet Nam moratorium at school and
other acts of resistance to authority. I was sent to boarding school at Marymount High School in West Los Angeles –
Out of the frying pan and into the fire! There was such change in the air – the nuns opposed the Vietnam war and were
marching for peace and to bring the troops home, I felt so validated for my convictions and marched with them at UCLA across
the street.
In 1972 I married Richard…a
Chicano activist who also opposed the war in Vietnam. My parents “disowned” me for marrying someone that was not
“white”. He burned his draft card and the FBI hassled his parents. When we realized that they were
looking for him, we left the country and became expatriates in Mexico. There I met my first midwife, learned of the struggles
of the indigenous people in Chiapas and Guerrero and learned to speak Spanish. My son Gabriel was conceived there, and
I returned to the US and had him at home in New Mexico.
I returned back to the US
and had my son at home and co-founded an intentional community in New Mexico. A few years later, I returned to California
and took a break from the peace movement, concentrating on my own spiritual quest and the practice of midwifery. That’s
another long story about how I was called to the women’s movement in 70s and became a part of the home birth and midwifery
movement in California.
In 1986 I saw a film about
refugees from El Salvador escaping to Nicaragua and Honduras fleeing persecution and the dire situation there. I learned
about the atrocities of the US backed Contras in Nicaragua, and was re-awakened to the call to activism. My heart broke
to realize the suffering caused by US intervention in the region. I immediately signed up and booked trip to Managua
with CHRICA (Committee for Health Rights in Central America) to help with the health brigades and cooperatives that the women
had formed during those revolutionary years.
I had heard about the Veterans
Fast For Life in Sept 1986- four US veterans had fasted for 40 days on the steps of the capitol in protest of arms shipments
to Central America and the US support for the Contras. The sanctuary movement and awareness of US intervention in Central
America was growing and I just had to be a part of it.
My life changed when I went
to Nicaragua. The land mines, were a frightening threat on all the roads, and civilians were being ambushed, targeted and
killed with US made weapons. I connected there with midwives, doctors and health workers…and then I met some Vietnam
Veterans from the US there - including the vets from Veterans Fast for Life.
I met Brian Willson, one of
the four fasters when I was at a health conference in Managua and immediately teamed up with him (ended up being married a
year later by a UU Minister) and other vets, with a vision of forming a peace force- a team of veterans to visibly walk and
accompany civilians along the mined roads in the mountains of Nicaragua. When we returned to the US we co-founded
the Veterans Peace Action Teams and in February of 1987 I accompanied the team on a Peace walk from Matagalpa to Wiwili on
the Honduran Boarder. We walked (8 vets, two Vietnamese Buddhist Monks and 1 woman) in protest of the US backed Contras
and the US made land mines that were planted along all the roads. I gave everyone on the team training on how to give
first aid to someone who has lost a leg as that was the biggest risk and the majority of casualties from the war on the Nicaraguan
people, folks movement fighting to protect their land and families. HOW IRONIC!
When we returned from Nicaragua
to report back the horrors we saw, we began to work to awaken more folks to the situation in Central America. We worked with
a wonderful man, Dave Hartsough of the American Friends Service Committee, who helped us with training in nonviolent communication
and the creation of ongoing peacekeeping teams in Central America. We also planned a visible and dramatic direct action
here in the US to stop the flow of arms shipments, (White phosphorous rockets and mines) to Central America. We founded Nuremberg
Actions, and created a vigil and blockade at the Concord Navel Weapons Station at Port Chicago in Northern California.
(I mention David’s name
because just a few weeks ago, over 20 years later, I found out, that the Non-violent Peaceforce that we first envisioned back
in those days, has now become a real tangible force with over 100 trained peacekeepers in Sri Lanka and the Philippines.
Erika Shatz, their spokeswomen, just was here last week to tell some of us about it, and I will be inviting her back for a
Wholly Wednesday or Sunday Service to tell you about this awesome and brave undertaking and how we can support it. There
are fliers available in the Narthex)
Some of you know what happened
next. We planned another 40 day fast, this time on the train tracks where arms shipments were being sent from the Concord
naval Weapons Station to Port Charlotte, in Contra Costa, CA. The weapons were being loaded onto ships and sent to Central
America. We prepared for this action for months, expecting arrests to be made removing the blockading protestors from
the tracks. That did not happen. Brian was run over by that train, when it sped up over 3 times the speed limit and
ran him over severing both of his legs. 40 of us, including my son, clergy and the media watched this in horror-and
then over and over again on television for many months afterwards.
We found out that there was
a conspiracy that the drivers were given an order to run the weapons train through the group of protesters on the tracks.
We sued the navy and they ended up settling with us after 3 years of litigation. I won’t try to answer for Brian
any more about why sat on the tracks that day. It’s an emotional issue for me - so I printed up his own words
about what happened there and you can get a copy on our “Peace Table” in the Narthex and find out yourselves.
Brian is walking on what he calls his” third world legs” and living a quiet life on the west coast writing and
speaking his truth.
After the train incident we
received tens of thousands of letters, mostly fan mail and invitations to visit countries where there were struggles for justice
and democracy. We traveled to N Korea, Northern Ireland, Cuba, Canada and all over the US speaking and participating
in events concerning peace and justice seeking. The peace movement was galvanized and the protests against US intervention
in Central America stepped up until Congress finally had to stop funding the Contras and the US backed armies in El Salvador.
We also got death threats
and hate mail; we found out that we were under CIA surveillance and that we had been put on a “Domestic Terrorist”
list created by Oliver North and his cronies.
I have participated in many
acts of civil disobedience since then, including being arrested for defending women's-rights to choose and also for demonstrating
at Livermore Laboratories and against nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site and for protesting against arms shipments to
Central America at the Concord Navel Weapons Station.
I have been a part of the
Pagan Cluster, co-founded by activist and Reclaiming Community founder, Starhawk in many actions around the country.
The Cluster is part of the anti-globalization movement bringing songs, dances, theatre and magical presence to street actions.
They have been non-violently standing up for fair trade, peace and earth justice in the US and around the globe for the last
decade.
I am presently the local coordinator
of CODEPINK - Women for Peace and also on the board of directors of the Environmental and Peace Education Center and have
been actively involved in actions, online campaigns and speaking gigs opposing the war in Iraq since I moved here to Ft Myers
over 6 years ago.
In 2003 I decided to join
in the anti Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) 3 day protest in Miami. (The FTAA is the expansion of NFTA) and attended
a non-violent training with my friend and mentor, Starhawk, in preparation for the big action in Miami.
The war was revving up and
the fair trade, environmental, labor unions and peace movements all joined forces and united for a mass rally united against
“Free Trade”. We were addressing the dangers of “Free Trade” including issues of slavery, exploitation,
environmental destruction and peace. I joined up with the Pagan Cluster, as part of a huge contingent called the “Green
Bloc” marching peacefully as a “Living River”. (Photos are posted on my old website, I will add the
link below)
At the end of our march, police
in full riot gear surrounded us, with helicopters buzzing overhead and mounted police all around us armed with tear gas, rubber
bullets and pepper spray. We were not breaking any laws and had permits to be there. But I was shot in the breast
with a lead shot filled beanbag bullet. And now, for the second time, I am engaged in litigation against those who have blatantly
assaulted my first amendment rights. I am now, as once before in the train assault case, a plaintiff in a lawsuit for the
violation of my rights. I am litigating because of the PTSD that I have suffered from the trauma of police brutality
and government violations against non-violent peace activists and me. This lawsuit has dragged on for years now, but
I will get my day in court and hope that you, my beloved community will support me when that day comes.
Before closing, I want to
talk about Iraq for a bit:
Since the U.S. invasion in
March 2003, over 5 million Iraqis have been forced from their homes by violence and insecurity. Roughly half of these are
displaced throughout Iraq. Others have fled across international borders to Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Syria, and other neighboring
countries. Because the vast majorities of these international refugees do not have official refugee status, they could be
deported back to Iraq at any time. There have been between 91,077 – 99,452 documented civilian deaths from violence
directly related to the war, and (at least) 4,865 American troops have died.
Millions of Iraqis are unemployed
and school-aged children are unable to attend classes. Whether in Iraq or in host countries, families face enormous challenges
in finding housing and employment, obtaining food, and accessing health care and education systems. The international community
has yet to implement a comprehensive humanitarian program to assist them.
The Unitarian Universalist
Service Committee supports legislation to assist Iraqi civilians and calls on Congress to increase funding for programs authorized
under the Torture Victims Relief Act. UUSC also advocate assistance for internally displaced Iraqis, Iraqi refugees in the
region, and Iraqi refugees settling in the United States.
The First Amendment to the
Constitution guarantees freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of people to participate in
peaceful demonstrations, and the freedom to petition the government for redress of grievances.
However, since the attacks
on September 11, 2001, the Bush administration aggressively introduced laws and policies that infringe on the First Amendment
rights of Americans and foreign nationals, violating our civil liberties. HOMELAND SECURITY….
What happened to me at the
FTAA is a clear example of the human rights abuses sanctioned and funded by Homeland Security. The tear gassing, herding and
shooting of peaceful protestors, the creation of “free speech zones” and the harassment of many law-abiding Americans
who oppose the Iraq war, the rights to freedom of speech and assembly have been threatened and in many cases, like mine have
been egregiously violated. New U.S. security measures allow secret wiretapping, illegal surveillance of phone calls and e-mails
through spy programs, and the review of financial and other records by the federal government.
So what does it mean for us
as members of the UU? Does it mean we all need to get out in the streets? Block weapons trains? Join a peacekeeping
force and walk on mined roads? I would not begin to tell anyone else how to work for peace, there are so many ways and
each of us must find our own. But if we cannot take direct action ourselves, we can at least support others who do.
For me, waging peace is part
of the goals of Unitarian Universalism. Working for justice and striving for equality and diversity are at the center
of the lives of many Unitarian Universalists. As we seek to live lives that are justice-filled and that affirm the inherent
worth and dignity of each person, we can gain strength from one another, and I gain strength from you, my comrades!
There is such Joy and exhilaration
of marching in a group – a great feeling of solidarity, which is such a gift in itself. I believe in the power
of the people – that when a critical mass is eventually reached we become effective in catalyzing change. Just look
what happened with the election of President Obama, thanks to grass roots organizing, and a change of heart about the war.
But we cannot stop here. Obama needs a mandate for peace and for the change we all want to see. He needs us to keep
the fire under his feet and to be reminded of his promise for peace, not just in Iraq, but in Afghanistan and the entire region.
We can continue this movement each in our OWN ways. Whether it is online activism, marching and vigiling for peace to
raise awareness or taking a more radical step for civil disobedience, let us ask the question of ourselves. What is
one extra step I can take to be an agent for change- How Can we wage peace with our lives?
March 19th is the sixth anniversary
of the war in Iraq, There will be a vigil called ‘Eyes Wide Open” and a memorial service in Centennial Park this
Thursday starting at noon with a candle light vigil at 6:30 PM. Please join me and EPEC and other activists and families
this coming Thursday in Centennial Park in this vigil for peace and remembrance of all the civilians and combatants that have
suffered and died in the six years of this tragic war in Iraq. Please stop by the “Peace Table” in the Narthex
for information about “Eyes Wide Open” and the Non-violent Peace-force.
Thank you again for having
me speak today. I look forward to joining with you on the path to peace making and justice seeking as we wage peace
with our lives in all the little and big ways that we can find.
Peace, Salaam, Shalom
And Blessed Be!
FTAA Protest Photos
Nov 17, 2008
Greetings friends and family. What a tremendous time of change,
hope and danger.... and oppertunity. Let us come together as never before and re-dedicate ourselves to working for peace and
sustainability. I will write more soon. It's great to be up and blogging again.
Holley

May 22, 2008
Miracle in the Santa Cruz Mountains
Many thanks
to all all who called and emailed me and held my sister and our Sacred Land, Windtree in the light and protection of the Goddess.
Julian, my nephew, my sister Elena's
son called late last night with good news. Our good friend Janet Planet had been with my sister all day on the mountain
called and left a message: Elena, Janet and a fire fighter went back up to the property and were calling him from the
Council Lodge. Critter, (two story two bedroom cabin), Windows, a smaller one full of stored building materials
and glass, the big dance deck , outhouses by the Sacred Medicine Wheel and a large trailer did burn down but
skipped the rest. Of all the structures on the property those four were the ones less used and not full of all of my
mom's paintings, our library, our newly built handicapped bathroom and healing room, and family heirlooms were all spared.
The other four cabins and the counsel lodge were miraculously spared. My sisters and I held the thought
and vision of the fires skipping over our Retreat Center. We thought all was lost from earlier reports, but kept our
prayers going. More land was cleared where we are building our labyrinth. I do not know if our ten foot redwood Peace
Pole survived or not.
We feel so grateful to the Goddess and
know that this is a major cleansing of the land, ourselves,(and the whole area.) It is amazing that the Counsel Lodge
and the Medicine Wheel area were spared. Native Americans built them and the other buildings there in the early
eighties and much much ritual and magic has happened there. Ancestors have been invoked over and over and
sacred rituals have been performed there over the last two decades. Thank You Gaia, Spirits and Angels of the Elements.
All our relations.
Holley
This website is a draft of Windtree website
that has not yet been published. To see the different pages use the links at the top of the page.
Dear family, friends, and friends of friends,
I am writing
this letter to you on behalf of my sister, Elena Rauen. Please take a few minutes to read her story.
Several years
ago, Elena purchased “WindTree” along the summit of the Santa Cruz Mountains overlooking Monterey Bay in Northern
California. WindTree is a private retreat center where Elena began manifesting her dream to create a secluded, natural space
for community gatherings, workshops, retreats and events. For the last several years, Elena has tirelessly worked on the land,
restoring the guest cabins, clearing brush, maintaining walking paths, gardens and sacred healing spaces in order to provide
a unique and nurturing sanctuary for people committed to world peace, ecology and sustainability, health and well being, and
personal growth.
As many of you may or may not be aware, the wild fires that broke out in the Santa Cruz mountains
at the beginning of summer destroyed her beautiful WindTree property. Although fire crews managed to save Elena’s main
residence along with several other cabins, seven structures were lost, in addition to leaving 95% of her 64 acres of land
severely burned. What was once a breathtaking setting comprised of meandering paths amongst Madrone, Pine, Oak and Manzanita
with sweeping views of Monterey Bay, is now a charred and devastated wasteland.
Those of you who know
Elena are aware that she has dedicated her entire life to helping others, often at consequential sacrifices to herself. And
on the morning of the Summit Fire, watching her land and cabins engulfed in flames, she didn’t run in to gather valuables
or precious photos. True to her nature, she left her property to come to the immediate aid of other fire victims, getting
her neighbor’s child and pets to safety. At first, she was told she had lost everything. Later that evening she was
filled with immense gratitude for the firefighters who risked their lives to save all they could of her property. She is incredibly
blessed and grateful to have a home to go back to, but no longer any means to support her in the coming months, even years,
before WindTree can be a thriving retreat center again. And yet, in the face of her personal loss, Elena continues to outpour
her magnanimous generosity to her community. Since the fire, she has continuously provided shelter, food, water and clothing
to her neighbors on a daily bases. WindTree has become a staging area for family groups, churches and outreach workers who
are coordinating relief efforts along with Elena for the numerous fire victims in the area.
Elena’s passion
and vision for WindTree and her single source of livelihood has come to a virtual halt and she urgently needs our help.
Some
years ago, Elena was severely injured in two separate accidents that resulted in excruciating and chronic neck, back and nerve
damage that at times has been debilitating to the point that she could not even walk and often needed the assistance of a
wheelchair, walker or cane. Recently, she had a long overdue and much needed emergency surgery on her lower back which was
hugely successful but has left her deep in medical debt in the tens of thousands of dollars. As a single mother, struggling
to make ends meet and pay down her exorbitant medical bills while supporting her son, Julian, through college, this recent
turn of events has been crushing.
Consider that Elena is the personification of charity and selflessness, an extraordinary
human being who time after time puts the needs of others before her own. Please join us in giving back to Elena in her extreme
time of hardship.
What you may not know about Elena is that for over 30 years, she has been an active and vital
member of Los Niños in Tijuana, Mexico helping to create opportunities for children and their families to realize their human
potential through participation in the development of their communities. She began her work with Los Niños early in high school
raising money by walking from Santa Barbara to the Mexican boarder for 25 years up until her first accident when she could
no longer walk the distance but continues to participate in other valuable ways. Elena also served for several years as the
Executive Director of Amigos de El Salvador, a non-profit outreach organization for Salvadorian refugees. In addition to the
incredible volunteer work she has done for Los Niños and Amigos de El Salvador, Elena lived and worked on Skid Row in her
late teens in downtown Los Angeles serving the daily needs of the homeless. Throughout her life she has continually given
refuge to friends, family, even strangers, in times of despair and need. She has lovingly cared for the disabled, the elderly,
the sick, the poor and victims of violence and domestic abuse.
Prior to her accidents which ultimately left her unable
to work, Elena was a bilingual kindergarten teacher in Santa Cruz. Her amazing ability to connect with and teach children
is awe inspiring. Children are drawn to Elena for she is a beacon of caring, compassion and gentleness. Although no longer
working in the school system, Elena continues to reach out to children, teaching them about peace and sustainability, recognizing
that they are the future guardians of our precious earth. For many years, Elena has participated in the Jane Addams Peace
Camp, a one-week summer day camp where, through games, crafts, music, and drama, children learn about community building,
peace keeping skills, and care for the environment.
Clearly, Elena is a true humanitarian, an activist for social justice,
human rights and equality, world peace, and the environment. It doesn’t seem fair that someone who does so much for
the good of the human race and the well being of our planet would have to suffer such overwhelming physical pain and disabilities,
severe financial hardship and then lose the one thing that brings her the greatest joy, inspiration and purpose in life.
Your
tax deductible donation to assist Elena in putting the pieces of her life back together, rebuilding WindTree and replanting
her surrounding forest will make a tremendous difference, not only in Elena and Julian’s life, but in the lives of everyone
Elena continues to reach out to. Thank you for taking the time to read this message and for giving back to my dear sister
who has touched the lives and hearts of so many others. We are grateful for any amount you feel inspired to give and your
donation is forever and greatly appreciated.
With hope, love and enormous gratitude,
Tricia Rauen Evenson
Please
make checks out to: The Sanctuary of Gaia Mail
to: Elena Rauen 31440 Loma Prieta Way Los Gatos, CA
95033 Reference on bottom of check: WindTree
Fire Relief Fund
PS. We appreciate you forwarding this letter on to others you may feel can additionally help.
Thank you.
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