Misplaced Priorities: What are you doing to protect your children?

A book review of Sandra Steingraber’s Raising Elijah  by Tim Wolcott A great book is sometimes difficult to read.  However, the author often propels you along its enlightened path using earth-shaking examples that strike home.  Such is the case with Raising Elijah, the story of how toxic chemicals are affecting our children. Ms. Steingraber’s empirically-based, maternally-centered thesis […]

Nonviolent Resistance: Twice as Effective as War

Post by Tim Wolcott I financially support and post pieces on independent media, because I believe mainstream media is part of how militarism remains entrenched in our society.  So when I learned from a recent presentation by Kevin Martin, President of Peace Action National, that The Washington Post published January 18, 2016 an article by […]

Eleanor Roosevelt on Peace

Eleanor Roosevelt: A Teach Peace Now Hero    

Inspiration from the Art of JahSun

Inspiration from the Art of JahSun

  Yelling and profanity burst our joyous family union like a needle stabbing a balloon.  What was once a warm, inter-generational breakfast became a cauldron of fury and recrimination.   Months passed until forgiveness and apology began the process of healing.    A careless comment from my spouse hurt, but letting it go became the balm to […]

Teach Peace Now Books for African American History Month: Aunt Harriet’s Underground Railroad in the Sky

Teach Peace Now Books for African American History Month: Aunt Harriet’s Underground Railroad in the Sky

Aunt Harriet’s Underground Railroad in the Sky by Faith Ringgold has been around a long time. It was first published in 1991 and won the Caldecott Award for its illustrations in 1992. Born a slave, Harriet Tubman escaped to freedom in 1847. That would have been heroic enough for anyone. But Harriet Tubman did not […]

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month: The Story of Ruby Bridges

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month: The Story of Ruby Bridges

The Story of Ruby Bridges by Robert Coles Through My Eyes by Ruby Bridges Six-year-old Ruby Bridges was the first black child to integrate an all-white public school in the south. Day after day, escorted by U.S. marshals and her mother, she braved spitting, hissing, cursing crowds of white people throwing things at her in […]

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month

  We March by Shane W. Evans is a book about standing up for justice written for our youngest children and for early readers. The soft pastel illustrations show a family as they wake up early in the morning, prepare for the day, and then join thousands of other people for the August 28th, 1963 […]

Teach Peace Now Recommended Books for African American History Month

Oh, Freedom  by Casey King and Linda Barrett Osborne with a forward by Rosa Parks Rosa Parks says, “To live is to have stories.” This is a book of stories about real people who participated in the Civil Rights Movement. The stories are told through interviews done by children. Each child interviews a person, often […]

Maria Montessori on Peace

A Teach Peace Now Hero Maria Montessori (1870-1952) is most often remembered for her contributions to the education of young children. However, she is also considered by many to be a founder of peace education. She believed that the root of peace lay in the education we give our children. Only when children are intentionally taught […]

Martin Luther King on Injustice

Martin Luther KIng tells us… Injustice is…a threat to justice Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. Injustice is…poverty & homelessness & starvation The rich must not ignore the poor because […]

The Predator: A Play about War and Peace

The two act play The Predator by Jack Gilroy was first presented at Georgetown University in 2011. Since then it has been performed in many venues from New York to Georgia.  The play presents four women each with a different viewpoint on the role of the military, on the military conflicts our country is currently engaged […]

5 Resolutions for a More Peaceful World by Teach Peace Now

5 Resolutions for a More Peaceful World by Teach Peace Now

Over two thousand years ago, Chinese philosopher Lao-Tse showed us the way to peace in the world. Based on his thoughts, here are our Teach Peace Now’s 2016 resolutions for a more peaceful world. May they speak to you as they do to us. One There must be peace in the heart. If there is to […]