This Week in History is a collection designed to help us appreciate the fact that we are part of a rich history advocating peace and social justice. While the entries often focus on large and dramatic events there are so many smaller things done everyday to promote peace and justice.

To the real peace advocates - YOU!

Publisher, Carl Bunin • Editor, Al Frank
from detroit, michigan
view in web browser
 
This week at a glance.

Monday

Nov 30
•Pope orders Jews to wear badge
•Anti-war senator runs for president
•Thousands v. WTO in Seattle

Tuesday
Dec 1

•International Peace Bureau
•Costa Rica disbands its army
•Rosa Parks won’t stand for it
•African American activist supports Native American rights
•Draft Lottery in U.S.

Wednesday

Dec 2
•Lone voice for peace in German parliament
•Free speech brings arrests
•Steve Biko’s murderers exonerated
•Salvadoran military kills American church women

Thursday

Dec 3
•First college for all
•Civil rights worker’s murderers convicted
•Draft files destroyed
•U.N. support for the disabled

Friday

Dec 4
•American Anti-Slavery Society
•Pres. Wilson confronted on suffrage
•Politicians investigate generation gap
•Black Panther leaders assassinated

Saturday
Dec 5
Bus Boycott begins
•AFL joins with CIO
•Fair Housing in NYC
•More resistance to the draft
•University and radio for peace

Sunday
Dec 6
•Slave escapes her chains
•Slavery becomes unconstitutional
•Spain chooses constitutional government

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November 30, 1215

Pope Innocent II, in a papal bull (or major sacred pronouncement of canon law), ordered that Jews, "whether men or women, must in all Christian countries distinguish themselves from the rest of the population in public places by a special kind of clothing." The rule was interpreted as requiring a badge on clothing as determined by each country. In England, for example, the tablets with the 10 commandments were used.
read more

November 30, 1967


Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minnesota) announced that he would run on an anti-Vietnam war platform against Pres. Lyndon Johnson for the nomination of the Democratic Party. McCarthy, though a contender to be Johnson's running mate in 1964, had since become increasingly disenchanted with U.S. policy toward Vietnam, and opposed the war in his campaign.
McCarthy on the campaign trail “I am not for peace at any price, but for an honorable, rational and political solution to this war; a solution which I believe will enhance our world position, encourage the respect of our Allies and our potential adversaries, which will permit us to get the necessary attention to other commitments . . . and leave us with resources and moral energy to deal effectively with [the] pressing domestic problems of the United States itself.”
read more, see photos

November 30, 1999


Tens of thousands of activists, students, union members and environmentalists demonstrating for global justice shut down the World Trade Organization (WTO) summit in Seattle, Washington.

International media coverage ignored both the blockade and the police riot (and an enormous labor-sponsored rally and march), focusing instead on minor property damage committed by a few dozen self-described anarchists.


photo Elaine Brière

What is the World trade Organization?

What the protests were about

December 1, 1891 


The International Peace Bureau was launched in Rome, Italy, “. . . to coordinate the activities of the various peace societies and promote the concept of peaceful settlement of international disputes.” The organization won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1910 for its work, and is headquartered in Bern, Switzerland.


December 1, 1948 

Following a brief but bloody civil war in 1948, Costa Rican President Jose Figueres helped draft a constitution that abolished the military and guaranteed free election with universal suffrage (all adult citizens can vote).

Money not spent on a military allowed the country to adequately fund health care and education, yielding one of the highest literacy rates on the continent, ninety-six percent. This is judged to be a factor in the nation’s never having fallen prey to corruption, dictatorships, or the bloodshed that has marred the history of much of the region.

read about Costa Rica’s values and attitudes

December 1, 1955 

Rosa Parks, a black seamstress active in the local NAACP, was arrested by police in Montgomery, Alabama, after refusing to give up her seat on the bus to a white man. Mrs. Parks faced a fine for breaking the segregation laws which said blacks had to vacate their seats if there were white passengers left standing. The same bus driver had thrown her off his bus twelve years prior for refusing to enter through the rear door.  
Rosa Parks
 

Mrs. Parks had not been the first to defy the Jim Crow (the system of legalized or de jure segregation) law but her arrest sparked the year-long Montgomery Bus Boycott, organized by a young Baptist minister named Martin Luther King, Jr. The Montgomery bus company couldn’t survive without the revenue from its black passengers who, for the next year, created car pools and other means to avoid using the city busses. The boycott was successful and Mrs. Parks became known as the "mother of the civil rights movement."

The bus restored in Henry Ford Museum
The story of the bus
Access to sites about Rosa Parks
Arrest record of Rosa Parks

December 1, 1966 

Comedian Dick Gregory was convicted in Olympia, Washington for his participation in a Nisqually Native American fishing rights protest.

 

Interview with Dick Gregory


December 1, 1969 

A lottery was held to determine which young men would be drafted into the armed services for the ongoing Vietnam War. A large glass container held 366 blue plastic balls each marked with a birth date. The drawing determined the order of induction for draft-eligible men between 18 and 26 years old, and was broadcast live nationally. The first draft lottery was held in 1942.

Rep. Alexander Pirnie, R-NY, draws the first capsule in the
draft lottery held on Dec. 1, 1969.
The capsule contained the date, Sept. 14.
 

December 2, 1914 

Karl Liebknecht was the only member of German Parliament to vote against war with France and Britain. He was arrested shortly thereafter and conscripted into the German Army. Refusing to fight, Liebknecht served on the Eastern Front burying the dead.

read more

Karl Liebnecht


December 2, 1964

Thousands who were part of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement gathered on the steps of Sproul Hall, the administration building at that University of California campus, to protest four students being disciplined for distributing political literature; Joan Baez performed in support. The next day, police arrested 773 who began a sit-in at Sproul Hall. 10,000 more students then went on strike and shut down the school.

The Free Speech Movement had begun in October, when three thousand students surrounded a police car for 36 hours. Inside the car was a civil rights worker, Jack Weinberg, who had been arrested for distributing political literature on the UC-Berkeley campus. 

What was the Free Speech Movement?

 

Jack Weinberg

in police car.


December 2, 1977

A demonstration erupted outside a South African court after a magistrate ruled that security police were to be exonerated in the death of black consciousness leader Steve Biko, who died while in their custody.

Biko's funeral

The demonstrators chanted, "They have killed Steve Biko. What have we done? Our sin is that we are black?"
His funeral had been attended by more than 15,000 mourners, not including the thousands who were turned away by the police. He had been arrested for writing inflammatory pamphlets and "inciting unrest" among the black community.

Steve Biko

The news story

Review of a Biko biography
Learn more about Steve Biko:

December 2, 1980

Maryknoll Sisters Ita Ford and Maura Clarke, Ursuline Sr. Dorothy Kazel, and lay missionary Jean Marie Donovan were raped, murdered, buried outside San Salvador, and unearthed shortly thereafter. U.S.-trained and -supported Salvadoran national guardsmen, widely known to act as death squads, were suspected.


American Nuns Maura Clarke, Ita Ford, Dorothy Kazel and Jean Marie Donovan- killed in El Salvador in 1980.

The Reagan administration, taking office seven weeks later, and relying in part on the Salvadoran military to rid Central America of communism, denied the National Guard’s involvement. General Alexander Haig, the president’s secretary of state, explained the churchwomen's deaths to Congress as an accident caused by nervous soldiers who "misread the mere traveling down the road (of the nuns' van) as an effort to run a roadblock." The FBI and CIA later reported this as a total fabrication, and five national guardsmen were later convicted of murder.
Still no justice after twenty years

December 3, 1883

Oberlin College was founded in Ohio. It as the first college to enroll men and women on equal terms, and to accept African-American men and women on equal terms with white students.

December 3, 1965

An all-white jury in Alabama convicted three Ku Klux Klansmen for the murder of white civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo.

 

Viola Liuzzo

The mother of five from Detroit was shot and killed while driving a young black activist, Leroy Moton, back to the town of Selma following a protest march to the state capital in Montgomery. It was later learned that another Klansmen in the car, Gary Thomas Rowe, was an FBI informant.

 

Klansmen Collie Wilkins, Eugene Thomas and William Eaton at their trial

read more
A serious blogger considers a book about the FBI’s involvement

December 3, 1969

Files were destroyed at eight New York City draft boards in protest
of the Vietnam War.

December 3, since 1992

The International Day of Disabled Persons was declared by the United Nations. “The annual observance of the International Day of Disabled Persons ... aims to promote an understanding of disability issues and mobilize support for the dignity, rights and well-being of persons with disabilities . . . .”

2009 Theme:
"“Making the MDGs Inclusive:
Empowerment of persons with disabilities
and their communities around the world”

December 4, 1833

The American Anti-Slavery Society was formed by Arthur Tappan in Philadelphia. He and his brother Lewis had been active abolitionists throughout their lives, including providing legal defense for the Africans who mutinied on the slave ship Amistad.

The Anti-Slavery Society produced The Slave's Friend, a monthly pamphlet of Christian and abolitionist poems, songs, and stories for children. In its pages, young readers were encouraged to collect money for the anti-slavery cause.
Arthur Tappan

December 4, 1916

Five members of a women's suffrage group unrolled a banner from the visitor's gallery during President Wilson's annual message (state of the union) to Congress, asking, "Mr. President, What will you do for woman suffrage?" There was no mention of the issue in his speech.


Wilson and suffrage

December 4, 1969


Pres. Richard Nixon, Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew and 40 U.S. governors embarked on a fact-finding mission to discover the causes of the generation gap. They viewed films of "simulated acid trips" and listened to hours of "anti-establishment rock music."

         

President Richard Nixon 
 
Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew

December 4, 1969

Black Panther party leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were assassinated by Chicago Police officers with cooperation from the FBI.
Hampton had founded the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party at the age of 20. He led in establishing the Breakfast for Children program and a free health clinic on the west side of the City. A main purpose of the Panthers was to resist police violence.
Fred Hampton
One of Hampton's achievements was to persuade Chicago's most powerful street gangs to agree on a non-aggression pact. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, however, considered the Panthers as "the greatest threat to the internal security of the country." The Panther party headquarters had been raided three times with over 100 members arrested. 
The Senate Intelligence Committee, led by Frank Church (D-Idaho), revealed in 1976 that William O'Neal, Hampton's bodyguard, was an FBI informant who had delivered an apartment floor-plan to the Bureau with an "X" marking the bed where Hampton died. About 100 shots were fired by the police, just one from the building. The survivors, including Deborah Johnson, Hampton's pregnant girlfriend, were arrested and charged with attempting to murder the police.
Chicago police remove the body of Fred Hampton, slain by police on Chicago's west side, Dec 4, 1969
“ You can kill a revolutionary, but you can’t kill a revolution!” –Fred Hampton
Remembrance by someone who worked with Deputy Chairman Fred Hampton

December 5, 1955

Five days after Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man, the African-American community of Montgomery, Alabama, launched a boycott of the city's bus system.
The Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) was formed to coordinate the boycott with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., elected as its president.


Out of Montgomery’s 50,000 black residents, 30,000-40,000 participated. They walked or bicycled or car-pooled, depriving the bus company of a substantial portion of its revenue. The boycott lasted (54 weeks) until it was agreed the buses would be integrated.

What was the Montgomery Bus Boycott?  

December 5, 1955

 

The American Federation of Labor, which had historically focused on organizing craft unions, merged with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, an organization of unions largely representing industrial workers, to form the AFL-CIO with a combined membership of nearly 15 million. George Meany was elected its first president.

read more


December 5, 1957
New York became the first city to legislate against racial or religious discrimination in housing (Fair Housing Practices Law).

December 5, 1967

264 were arrested at a military induction center in New York City during a Stop the Draft Week Committee action. Dr. Benjamin Spock and poet Allen Ginsberg were among those arrested for blocking (though symbolically) the steps at 39 Whitehall Street where the draft board met. 2500 had shown up at 5:00 in the morning to show their opposition to the draft and the Vietnam War.

Dr. Benjamin Spock  
  Allen Ginsberg

December 5, 1980

The United Nations adopted the charter for the University for Peace in Costa Rica. Its purpose would be “promoting among all human beings the spirit of understanding, tolerance and peaceful coexistence, to stimulate cooperation among peoples and to help lessen obstacles and threats to world peace and progress . . . .”

The monument sculpted by Cuban artist Thelvia Marín in 1987, is the world's largest peace monument.

It also established short-wave Radio for Peace International (RFPI)which was shut down by the University in 2004 when RFPI exposed a plan between the University for Peace and the U.S. to hold anti-terrorist combat training on campus. 

Interview with James Latham, CEO of RFPI when it was under siege
RFPI continues on the web

December 6, 1849

Harriet Tubman, a slave in Maryland, escaped her owners.
What Harriet Tubman did with her freedom

December 6, 1865

The state of Georgia provided the final vote needed for the 13th Amendment to become part of the U.S. Constitution, abolishing slavery.

slave auction  


“ Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

 

first vote  
Two days before, Mississippi’s legislature had voted to reject ratification; Mississippi didn’t ratify the anti-slavery amendment until 1995.
Details of ratification

December 6, 1978

The voters of Spain approved a new constitution in a popular referendum by nearly 8-1. It proclaimed Spain to be a parliamentary monarchy and guaranteed its citizens equality before the law and a full range of individual liberties, including religious freedom. While recognizing the autonomy of seventeen regions, it stressed the indivisibility of the Spanish state.


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