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At 11:52pm on June 19, 2009, Holly Dawn Delano said…
Thank You David!
At 7:50pm on May 12, 2009, Wende Bartley said…
Thanks David for attending to the spammer. Also, and more importantly, for all the great work you are doing. looking forward to seeing what emerges with Wise CLimate and possible involvement in some way.
At 5:20pm on May 12, 2009, John Davis said…
Hi David,
We got a porn spammer!Abbe Rodriguez is spamming for cam whores.
At 11:37am on April 26, 2009, Dr. Rosie & Curtis Campbell said…
Hi David,
Thank you for having this site for the enhancing of the connections we share. Love and Light from Jamaica and the Caribbean.
At 4:29pm on March 28, 2009, jnana said…
Hello, I'm no longer interested in having a page on this site. Can you tell me how to delete my photo, email address, ect?
Thx, j
At 3:54pm on March 16, 2009, Rozalina Gutman said…
Your idea has a beautiful and inspiring sound to it. I look forward to explorations and collaborations. It will be lovely to have live presenters for our group "Intentional Creators", meeting in Berkeley, CA and in other various locations of SF Bay Area.
At 7:49pm on October 20, 2008, Shoshana said…
Thanks for all you're doing David- I used to attend Unity but don't anymore. Will probably watch online!
Namaste'
Shoshana
At 11:21am on October 20, 2008, Anna Romano said…
Thank you so much David! I appreciate you and look forward to supporting the effort. Timing is everything and at this very moment I am putting the final touches on our November issue. If you would, please send me your summary of the Nov 2 event and I would be so happy to include it in my Letter along with the link to the website...I have found this especially timely in communicating the positives of today!
thank you again!
Anna
At 9:09pm on October 7, 2008, Inspired Activism- Tanya Ferencak said…
Hi David,

Thanks so much for your kinds words and support. I am thrilled to see all of the great work you are doing and am inspired by your vision for a network of subtle activists. I am happy to participate in this growing network. At this point I am not sure if I have any feedback on the blog or website, other than ...it so rocks!!.... Other than that I am just excited to know that there is a growing network of subtle activists out there, and that you are at the helm.

Sincerely,

Tanya
At 9:51am on October 4, 2008, Rene Wadlow said…
I thought that you might be interested in this article on peace teams. With best wishes, Rene Wadlow

Non-Violent Peace Brigades: How Fast Can We Move?
Written by René Wadlow
Tuesday, 30 September 2008


I envision an international ideal of service awakening in an emerging class of people who are best called evolutionaries. I see them as soldiers, as youth, and as those who have soldier spirit within them. I see them come together in the name of people and planet to create a new environment of support for the positive growth of humankind and the living earth mother. Their mission is to protect the possible and to nurture the potential. They are the evolutionary guardians who focus their loving protection and affirm their allegiance to people and planet for their own good and for the good of those they serve. They are pioneers, not palace guards. - Jim Channon, First Earth Battalion

The United Nations General Assembly has designated October 2 as the International Day of Nonviolence. October 2 is the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. For Gandhi, non-violence was at the center of his philosophy and actions. Thus it is appropriate to mark the day with an analysis of one aspect of non-violent action: the role of peace teams as observers in conflict situations.

The armed conflict between Georgia and Russia over South Ossetia and Abkhazia starting on August 8 as most people were watching the start of the Olympic games is a test case in real time of how fast governments can negotiate a ceasefire, a freeze on military activity and the deployment of external observers on the frontiers of Georgia, South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The full team of European Union (EU) observers, some 300 persons, is to be in place by October 1. As France has the presidency of the EU until the end of 2008, the French government had its team of 30 observers on the ground by 25 September, waiting for the full contingent of EU observers. The observers, while unarmed, are from military and internal security units.

During the first weeks of the conflict, there were only Russian peacekeepers. The Russian peacekeepers have been there since 1994 when an agreement was signed in Geneva among Georgia, Abkhazia, Russia, and the UN. The UN was to mediate in the Georgia-Abkhazia conflict and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) the Georgia-South Ossetia conflict. The Commonwealth of Independent States was to provide peacekeepers – basically observers. The CIS states were quickly reduced to only Russia. There are no reports that the Russian peacekeepers tried to prevent the fighting between Georgian and Russian troops or between the Georgian and South Ossetia militias. The degree of government control over these militias cannot be known.

The violence has led to a refugee flow from South Ossetia and Abkhazia, mostly of ethnic Georgians. The current refugees join some 200,000 Georgian refugees, mostly from Abkhazia, due to the 18 months of fighting during 1992-1994. Most of the ethnic Georgian refugees have not been permanently resettled in Georgia and continue to live in unstable conditions. It is unlikely that, after the current flair up of violence, there will be any massive return of refugees.

The EU observers are from the military. I do not have access to the resumes of the observers to know how many have served in other countries, in UN missions or received special training in unarmed observation. As we mark the International Day of Nonviolence, it is appropriate to ask could non-violent peace teams have reached the Georgia-Abkhazia and Georgia – South Ossetia frontiers faster had they been called upon by the EU or the UN to do so? We can also try to look at why governments still turn to their armed forces to provide observers in conflict areas.

There have been a good number of efforts to create non-violent teams which could work internationally somewhat on the model that Mahatma Gandhi and his followers developed in India, the Shanti Sena, to work primarily in local communal tensions.(1) One of the first and most ambitious was the proposed "Peace Army" to be a ‘living wall’ between the advancing Japanese Army and the Chinese defenders of Shanghai in 1932. The effort, based in the UK, was offered to the League of Nations, but since the League was not planning to get involved, nothing came of the effort. Japan continued its conquest.

A second opportunity to show the effectiveness of non-violent inter-positioning came in August 1981 with the newly created US-Canada-based Peace Brigades International (PBI). In August 1981, there was a fear that US troop maneuvers in Honduras on the frontier with Nicaragua would be a prelude for a US or a US-aided attack on the Sandinista government of Nicaragua. PBI was able to draw upon an already existing team of people in southern California, some of whom were trained in radio transmission. The team had already trained together and built up a ‘team spirit’. The team was able top move out quickly. Negotiations with diplomats from Nicaragua and Honduras were carried out at the UN in New York as part of the PBI secretariat was in Philadelphia, in easy reach of New York. After the US-Hondourous maneuvers finished, the fear of a real invasion ended, and the PBI team was withdrawn. (2)

One never knows if there were serious US plans for an attack or if support for the Contras was all that was envisaged. This experience showed the need for having an existing trained team and for good contacts with ambassadors at the UN. Given the crucial importance of close contacts with the UN, I was asked to represent PBI at the UN in Geneva, which I did from 1982 until about 1996 when there were changes in the functioning of the PBI secretariat. For reasons I do not know, after the one experience on the Nicaragua-Honduras frontier, there was no further use made of the team from southern California. PBI recruitment was done on an individual basis. Teams were constituted when individuals arrived in the country of action. The PBI activity became centered on individual protective accompaniment of local human rights activists living under threat of abduction or assassination in Guatemala. (3)

During the 1980s, the Ambassador of Nicaragua to the UN in Geneva was one of my former students who kept me well informed about Central American politics. We had discussions on the possibility of non-violent defense against the Contras. While there was interest on the part of the Nicaraguan government, nothing was really put into place.

There were two situations with which I was deeply involved in discussions with UN officials: the large-scale refugee flow of Muslim Burmese to Bangladesh with the danger of a Burmese Army attack on the refugees, and the transport of relief supplies during the wars in ex-Yugoslavia. In both cases, several hundred people would have been necessary with only two weeks notice. PBI was not equipped to raise that number of people in that length of time.

Since the 1981 creation of PBI, a number of other organizations have joined the ranks of non-violent peace teams, some with hopes of building a large reserve of well-trained team members able to go into conflict areas as peacemakers and actively use and share their conflict resolution and peacemaking skills. There has also been a growth in mediation and conflict resolution efforts, both in academic programs and in non-governmental organizations (NGOs). However, as we see in the Georgia conflict, ‘when the chips are down’, governments turn to other governments, not to NGOs.

The confidence of governments only in other governments should come as no surprise. The world is still organized around the role of states, and both the diplomatic services and the military are trained to be state-centric. There is no non-governmental peacemaking organization that springs to the mind of a government official in a crisis situation, with the possible exception of the International Committee of the Red Cross which is bound to governments by treaties which set out its rights and responsibilities.

As Brian Urquhart, for many years the chief political officer in the United Nations, has written "Peacekeeping depends on the non-use of force and on political symbolism". The Red Cross is one of the most universally recognized political symbols. Even those who do not respect the Geneva Conventions know they are not supposed to shoot people with a Red Cross flag. Only the UN flag has such wide recognition as a non-state symbol.

The second weakness of non-governmental peacekeeping is the lack of availability of people on short notice. While there are an increasing number of people who have studied in conflict resolution courses or have participated in efforts in the field, most have jobs, families etc. and cannot drop everything to live on the Georgia-South Ossetia frontier for three months. The military are sitting around waiting for something to do. The only civilian equivalents are monks. I had once thought that it might be possible to re-create the ‘fighting monks’ of Japanese history. I saw teams of Christian, Buddhist, and Hindu monks all trained and ready to be deployed. For a while in the 1980s when there were a good number of communes, I thought about ‘New Age monks’ that could play the same role. But I must not have been convincing enough.

The third weakness is related to the other two. The people on the ground who are to be protected or at leased ‘observed’ know what the military are. They may not like soldiers, but they have seen them before. Non-violent peacekeepers without a recognizable symbol or uniform are unknowns and there is little time to explain.

Non-violence is still more potential than reality. On the International Day of Nonviolence, we have to consider the road not yet travelled.

***



Rene Wadlow, Representative to the United Nations, Geneva, Association of World Citizens and editor of the on-line journal of world politics and culture: www.transnational-perspectives.org

Notes:

1. Thomas Weber.Gandhi's Peace Army: The Shanti Sena and Unarmed Peacekeeping, (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1996, 293pp.)

2. For an account see: Daniel Clark Transnational Action for Peace Transnational Perspectives Vol 9, N°4, 1983

3. For a full analysis see: Liam Mahony and Luis Enrique Eguren Unarmed Bodyguards: International Accompaniment for the Protection of Human Right, (West Hartford, CT: Kumarian Press, 1997, 288pp.)
At 1:20am on October 4, 2008, Rene Wadlow said…
The Healing Light

Dear Friend,

There are many efforts at healing individuals through the use of subtle energies, including efforts to heal from a distance. It may also be possible to heal a large number of people — a whole country — from a distance with the use of creative visualization and psychic energy.

Ethnic and racial tensions, hate, violence — all create a dark, negative energy field which continues to manifest itself in additional divisions and violence. Thus, there is a need for a Healing Light which will help scars to heal and divisions to be overcome through a knowledge of the unity of all life. Such Healing Light will give new energy to peacemakers who exist in all societies to build bridges and work for reconciliation.

There is a need for those of us who work with subtle energies to be active in projecting Healing Light to the many parts of our planet where tensions are strong and violence ever present. Your efforts are most welcome. Rene Wadlow
At 4:46pm on October 2, 2008, Gary Green said…
All is energy in the eternal NOW!
At 4:07am on September 2, 2008, Cor said…
Hi David,
I wonder if this website will ever awaken and become a lively forum of exchange and common focus. Or am I too pessimistic? Cor.
At 2:34pm on August 14, 2008, Cor said…
Thank you David for the welcome. Cor.
At 5:21pm on August 4, 2008, Janine Fafard said…
URGENT...Please do something...I have been receiving like 50 Thank you email for joining Gaiafield...it keeps on coming every 5 minutes!
PLEEEEEASE
At 10:10am on July 8, 2008, Sperry said…
Thanks for all your great work here David. May I ask if you know of the work of CSETI.org and Dr. Steven Greer ? I've just returned from one of his seven-day E.T. Contactee Trainings, and it was life changing. Honest, evidence erases the purposeful-disinformation that some E.T.s are male-intentioned. All direct experience points to the conclusion that their societies live in Unity Consciousness - as a conflict-free state. Have You read Steve's most excellent recent book, "Hidden Truth Forbidden Knowledge", if not, I would highly recommend it as 'essential reading'.
With Lots of Love,
Sperry

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The Gaiafield Project is a collaborative action research program of the Gaiafield Center for Subtle Activism at CIIS.



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