FEBRUARY 2003
WAR IS NOT THE ANSWER!
REMEMBER 9/11/2001


Large version of the same image (190kb)


 
 
"Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction....The chain reaction of evil--hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars--must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation." 
Martin Luther King, Jr., Strength To Love, 1963

Just War — or a Just War?
March 9, 2003

By Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States, is chairman of the Carter Center in Atlanta and winner of the 2002 Nobel Peace Prize.



Presidential Address by
His Royal Highness Prince El Hassan bin Talal 
of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
as President of the Club of Rome
To The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology 
A New World Order without Ideologies


Horrible deaths for young Americans 
Sunday, February 16, 2003

By Andrew Greeley
 




SEPTEMBER 11, 2001
ATTACK ON HUMANITY: CONFRONTING TERROR WITH DIALOGUE

This is a dark day not merely for the United States but for the global community. Let us give thanks to the countless men and women who at great risk to themselves are trying to cope with this emergency.  Let us weep with the victims and their families. Let us do our best to ensure that this act of terrorism is not allowed to precipitate a chain reaction of escalating retaliatory violence.  Let us do our best to keep from rashly placing blame and lashing out at members of suspect groups.  Let us do our best to channel our sorrow, our anger, our frustration, and our revulsion at this heinous act into unceasing efforts to promote dialogue among ideologically, politically, and religiously diverse groups.  Let us do our best to keep the flame of hope alive. We must, in the words of the poet, love one another or die . . .
Ingrid Shafer
11 September 2001
I wrote the preceding paragraph the day of the attack and sent it off to several of my online communities. Since then, I have been deeply touched by the almost universal outrage at this heinous act and the resulting opportunities for building bridges across cultures as together we start out on our common human journey to overcome murderous fanaticism. As a child of the Second World War, I find myself close to tears at images of forner bitter enemies -- men, women, and children from countries, such as Albania, Bangladesh, China, England, France, Germany, India, Israel, Kenya, Palestine, Peru, Russia -- identifying with the United States as they are lighting candles and bringing flowers to mourn the dead. Nothing could more strongly attest to the ultimate absurdity of war. This outpouring of global solidarity also gives meaning to the sacrifice of thousands of unwitting martyrs, men and women from many religious and national groups who happened to be in the twin towers when death struck from the skies. Their dying turned what could have been an act of cosmic vandalism with one tenth of the loss of life if the towers had been struck at 3:00 am some Sunday morning, into mass murder so heinous that it had the power to galvanize not only this nation but much of the civilized world. 

And so,  as my contribution to the cause of peace, the cause of humanity,  I created a collage of a few of those images in the hope that one of my personal saints, Pierre Teilhard de Chardin will have been right when he predicted the spiritual unification of the world in an through the cosmic power of love.

21 September 2001
Inspired by President Clinton's speech at Georgetown University, I am starting a new section dealing with ways of building a global future in which all the people on earth, in their diversities and commonalities, will be able to lead fulfilling lives.
21 September 2001

 
Collage of parts of images on the Web of the terrorist attack and the loving responses throughout the world.
Large version of the same image (202kb)

 

Building a future for all the people on earth

Philip Hefner's Reflections on the Okahoma City Memorial and 11 September
President Clinton's Speech at Georgetown University (7 November 2001)
Expressions of solidarity and hope:
Statement by HRH Prince Hassan of Jordan (12 September 2001)

Statement by HRH Prince Hassan of Jordan (19 September 2001)

Pope John Paul II prays that the spiral of hatred and violence will not prevail

The Dalai Lama calls for restraint

The homily at the 10:30 mass at Our Lady of the Assumption Church, Osterville, Massachusetts, September 16, 2001
By Reverend Joseph T. Nolan

Beyond the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" -- A letter to my pastor
By Ingrid Shafer

The Unintended Gift of Timothy McVeigh
By Catherine Butler

Professor Leonard Swidler calls for the eradication of terrorism through education

Deny Them Their Victory: A Religious Response to Terrorism

Women Religious Leaders respond with words of peace and reconciliation

Tragedies change our lives. Need they change us, the people we truly are?
By Diana Robinson
 
 

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Webpage Editor: Ingrid H. Shafer, Ph.D.
e-mail address: ihs@ionet.net
Posted 14 September 2001
Last revised 9 March 2003