to my jmdl peace advocate activists,
i am finding great reward in doing things within my power to make my voice
heard as a patriot for peace...this idea was sent to me by a friend & am
doing it! thought i'd share with others who might also find it worth
doing...kate (ps pass it on!)


There is a grassroots campaign underway to protest war in Iraq in a simple,
but potentially powerful way.

 Place 1/2 cup uncooked rice in a small plastic bag (a snack-size bag or
sandwich bag work fine).
Squeeze out excess air and seal the bag.
Wrap it in a piece of paper on which you have written,
"If your enemies are hungry, feed them.  Romans 12:20.
Please send this rice to the people of Iraq; do not attack them."

 Place the paper and bag of rice in an envelope (either a letter-sized or
padded mailing envelope--both are the same cost to mail) and address them
to:
President George Bush
White House,
100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20500

Attach $1.06 in postage.  (Three 37-cent stamps equal $1.11.)

Drop this in the mail TODAY.  It is important to act NOW so that President
Bush gets the letters ASAP,   preferably before the report from the
inspectors comes out on the 27th.

In order for this protest to be effective, there must be hundreds of
thousands of such rice deliveries to the White House.
We can do this if you each forward this message to
your friends and family.

 There is a positive history of this protest!
"In the mid-1950s, the pacifist Fellowship of Reconciliation,
learning of famine in the Chinese mainland, launched a
'Feed Thine Enemy' campaign.  Members and friends
mailed thousands of little bags of rice to the White House
with a tag quoting the Bible, "If thine enemy hunger, feed him."
As far as anyone knew for more than ten years, the campaign was an abject
failure.  The President did not acknowledge receipt of the bags publicly;
certainly, no rice was ever sent to China.

 "What nonviolent activists only learned a decade later was that the
campaign played a significant, perhaps even determining
role   in preventing nuclear war.  Twice while the campaign was on,
President Eisenhower met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff to
consider U.S. options in the conflict with China over two
islands, Quemoy and Matsu.  The generals twice recommended
the use of nuclear weapons.  President Eisenhower each time
turned to his aide and asked how many little bags of rice had come in.
When told they numbered in the tens of thousands,
Eisenhower told the generals that as long as so many Americans
were expressing active interest in having the U.S. feed the Chinese, he
certainly wasn't going to consider using nuclear weapons against them."

 From:  People Power:
Applying Nonviolence Theory
by David H. Albert,
p.43, New Society, 19.

Thank you for being people of hope, people of faith.

Pastor Susan,
Mennonite Church,
Boulder CO

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