Kai Frithjof Brand-Jacobsen – Romania & Canada & Norway

Linked with Transcent, with The Power of Non-Violence, with Johan Galtung – Norway, with Violence, War, and Their Impact, with The Transnational Foundation, and with TRANSCEND’s Advanced International Training Program.

Kai Brand-Jacobsen is Director of the Peace Action, Training and Research Institute of Romania (PATRIR) and is Co-Director of Transcend, a development organization dedicated to resolving conflict by peaceful means. He is also a global consultant and expert advisor and practitioner on peacebuilding, conflict transformation, war-to-peace transitions, and post-war reconciliation and healing. He is promoting local development, community empowerment, and peacebuilding. He talks about how violence is built in to the fabric of our present social, economic and political systems. He talks about three levels of violence that pervade society – direct violence, structural violence and cultural violence. He explains how structural and cultural violence manifest themselves in numerous subtle ways and gives examples of both cases. He goes on to suggest how together they often lead to acts of direct violence such as war and terrorism. (Listen to the five videos of around 5 minutes, recorded all in November 2004 with Big-Picture).

He says: « Cultural Violence are the ideas, values and belief systems, world-views and cosmologies which make violence seem normal, acceptable, correct, or the best/only option, the good, the ‘chosen’/‘sacred’ path. Examples of cultural violence include those elements of cultures and values which legitimize ‘untouchability’, patriarchy, the exploitation of women, workers and the young, unequal development, concentration of power and wealth in the hands of certain castes/classes/families/nations, etc., beliefs in the superiority of one group, gender, caste, nationality, over another. Belief systems and values which make the structures of violence seem legitimate or seek to enforce them as ‘good’ or the only option/the way things are, the need to ‘crush’ the other side, to ‘eliminate’ them; discrimination against people because of their language, religion, gender, culture, nationality or group. Also: values which legitimize violence as good when used in a ‘noble/just’ cause, or when used against the evil ‘other’, ie. violence is acceptable/legitimate because we are fighting against an unacceptable system/structure or against bad/evil actors. Cultural violence is also the belief that ‘I/we can’t do anything’, that violence is normal, that only those ‘with power’ (politicians, combatants, soldiers, generals/presidents/kings/god/, foreign organisations) can do anything to overcome/solve it or change things, ie. that ‘we’, as people, are powerless. Or that ‘power comes from the barrel of a gun’: therefore, for us to have power, we must pick up the gun. Forms of cultural violence are impressed and internalized in all of us, through our upbringing, exposure to culture and the media, myths, national anthems, monuments, folk tales, songs, jokes, education, street signs. Often, even movements working to overcome violence and exploitation, including nonviolent movements and struggles, can be affected by a war culture approach to conflicts and social change ». (On Transcent.org).

Find the links to his articles on this page of Transcent.

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Kai Frithof Brand-Jacobsen – Romania & Canada & Norway

Read: BEYOND SECURITY; NEW APPROACHES, NEW PERSPECTIVES, NEW ACTORS.

Kai has worked in Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Nepal, Russia, Moldova, South Eastern Europe, Colombia, Cambodia, southern Thailand, Burma, Somalia, Aceh, North America, and the Middle East at the invitation of governments, inter-governmental organisations, UN agencies, local organizations and communities promoting local development, community empowerment, and peacebuilding.

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José Ramos Horta – East Timor

On July 10 2006, he was officially sworn in as the second Prime Minister of East Timor. He is also the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize recipient.

Normally I do not put persons on this website being part of the so called High Elite: Governments, persons in high ranking jobs in the Economy and Society. José Ramos Horta is there an exception. So, José Ramos Horta, Prime Ministre of East Timor, shall be presented on this sites, because of his Christmas message to Osama Bin Laden:

He said: « On this occasion, when we are celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ, my words, words of peace, are sent to my brother somewhere in the mountains, in the caves of Afghanistan and Pakistan, Osama bin Laden. Yes, there are some differences between yourself, my brother Osama bin Laden, and myself. The differences are that while you seem to have a profound resentment towards those who had done centuries of harm to Muslims, and today to Palestinians — I do understand these grievances — and yet I fail to understand why you carry this resentment, this anger onto attacking innocent civilians — and that includes also Arabs and Muslims who do not share your vision of Islam. I come from a small country, East Timor, that was invaded by the largest Muslim country in the world (Indonesia). I lost brothers and sisters, yet I do not hate one single Muslim, I do not hate one single Indonesian. I beg you to re-think and extend your love, your solidarity, your friendship, the same ones you feel about Palestinians, extend to the rest of the world, extend to Europeans, to Christians. You will then win them over that way, more than through hatred and violence ».

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José Ramos Horta – East Timor

He says also: « One thing I am proud of is that in 24 years of our struggle not one single Indonesian civilian was targeted by the resistance, » he has said. « No Indonesian civilians, no Indonesian settlers were killed in this country in 24 years. No terrorist tactics were ever used against Indonesians in this country, and there was no hatred towards Indonesians. » (Read more on more or less).

Read about ASEAN, Cebu, Philippines:
Highly successful Cebu summits end as PGMA thanks Asia Pacific leaders for attendance, today Jan. 15, 2007.
Timor Leste Thanks ASEAN, Jan 13, 2007.

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Sonia Pierre – Dominican Republic

Linked with International Women’s Rights Action Watch irwaw, with The Dominican Republic Country Report, and with the Movement for Dominican Women of Haitian Decent MUDHA.

She says: « This award strengthens our work at MUDHA, our institution, and our communities,? said Sonia upon receiving the award. ?As a human rights activist, who has been fighting for the recognition of the human rights of Haitian immigrants and their descendents, since an early age, I owe this award to the communities MUDHA supports, to my colleagues and to all who believed in our work ».

Under Sonia’s leadership, MUDHA has risen to protect the rights of the Dominican Republic?s Haitian immigrants and their descendants and to empower women and children in the face of deep rooted discrimination and intolerance. Despite threats against her life, Sonia has been a driving force for change and a leader in the movement to end human rights violations against Haitians in the Dominican Republic. (Read all on caribeannetnews.com).

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Sonia Pierre – Dominican Republic

She works for the Movement for Dominican Women of Haitian Decent MUDHA.

Like thousands of ethnic Haitians born in the Dominican Republic, Sonia Pierre’s family had previously crossed the border in search of greater work opportunities than were available to them in Haiti. While the sugar-cane fields of the Dominican Republic provided jobs to migrant workers who sought to eke out a subsistence living, such workers were viewed as both a valuable source of cheap labor to the Dominican economy and as dark-skinned undesirables who belonged to the margins of Dominican society.
A Question of Identity: The anti-Haitian sentiment which, in the eyes of the young Sonia, characterized the treatment of ethnic Haitians throughout mainstream Dominican society has continued to this day unabated, according to Ms. Pierre, notwithstanding mounting pressure from international organizations and human rights groups. « In my country, Dominican children of Haitian descent suffer discrimination from the moment they are born, » Ms. Pierre said in Spanish, her voice choked with emotion upon accepting the award. « The Dominican Constitution established that all who are born in the Dominican Republic are Dominicans. However, the authorities refuse to issue birth certificates to the children of Haitian immigrants born in the country. »

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Elzita Santa Cruz Oliveira – Brazil

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « ?I raised my children to be decent and brave persons, to defend whatever they think is right? »

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Elzita Santa Cruz Oliveira – Brazil

?Where is my son?? The question that Elzita Santa Cruz Oliveira (born 1913) asked was never answered. During the 1970s, when Brazil was frightened and terrified, Elzita, a housewife, faced the military forces in the search for the fifth of her ten children. She has written hundreds of letters to politicians, to national and international organizations for human rights. Elzita has gathered mothers who shared her pain. She symbolizes all Brazilian mothers whose children were victims of the military regime’s oppression.?

?Old Zita! Old Zita!? When Elzita Santa Cruz Oliveira gathers her family, she still feels like she can hear her son Fernando, who disappeared in 1974. ?He used to call me ?Old Zita?. Fernando Augusto de Santa Cruz Oliveira, a student and militant of the Popular Action ? a revolutionary organization of the left-wing catholic movement-, left home in an afternoon during the celebration of carnival in Rio, to meet a friend. He never came back. It makes Elzita, 92 years old, sad to remember the past. She goes back to the beginning of the 70?s. That is when the daughter of a sugar plantation owner, a rich girl raised to marry, had her peaceful life as a housewife in Olinda, Pernambuco, shook up by the dictatorship?s cruelty.

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Wai King Wong – Hong Kong SAR

Linked with .

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « To preserve culture, the human being is the prime factor. If people in a community do not see the importance of safeguarding it, development is an empty word ».

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Wai King Wong – Hong Kong SAR

She works as founding member for the Tai O Cultural Workshop.

A Hong Kong native, Wong Wai King is a housewife living in Tai O, a small fishing village on western Lantau Island, the largest outlying island of Hong Kong. She began her community services for the elderly and people with different abilities in her home village in the early 1980s. From 1990 onward, she has actively engaged in safeguarding the ecological environment of Tai O, challenging government- corporation collusion and patriarchal ideologies.

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Jason Rezaian – Iran & USA

Linked with A World Between, and with The Iran Media Service.

He makes frequent trips to Iran, and has made a variety of reports for the San Francisco Chronicle across different media, blending articles, blogs, video reports and podcasts to offer a rounder picture of news from Iran. He also serves as a guide to other Western journalists, most recently for Christopher Hitchens of Vanity Fair. His blog « Inside Iran » is currently featured on the San Francisco Chronicle’s website.

He says: ”I’ve also written many articles on Iran and produced and appear in a feature length documentary about Iran, and I am available to publications and television networks unable to send journalists to Iran … I am one of a very few United States citizens who is able to freely travel to and from Iran, and work there as well ».

Read: Holocaust Conference, Iran’s Holocaust cartoon exhibition, by:Jason Rezaian, December 13 2006.

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Jason Rezaian – Iran & USA

He is the Founder and Director of The Iran Media Service, founded in 2000.

Read: Tourists in a divided kingdom, Mosques, Starbucks found in Saudi Arabia, by Jason Rezaian, December 10, 2006.

He is a documentary filmmaker based in Marin, CA who runs a blog on sfgate.com called Inside Iran. (See SFgate).

He is also an Iranian-American freelance journalist whose work on Iran has been featured in Vanity Fair and the San Francisco Chronicle.

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María del Carmen Sarthes – Argentina

Linked with Catholics for the Right to Decide.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: “In order to be able to help raped and maltreated women, they first have to recognize themselves as victims of violence”.

She tells: « The priest said: be patient, your husband may have had a bad day. Wait on him with joy and make him some good food. That was in opposition to what the Gospel states which is that violence is violence and that it cannot be justified ».

She maintains: « It was verified the fact that women have to bear the responsibility over sexuality ».

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María del Carmen Sarthes – Argentina

She works for the Católicas pelo Direito de Decidir / Catholics for the Right to Decide.

She has been weaving for 23 years. Her name is María del Carmen Sarthes. She comes from Argentina. With this traditionally female activity, she weaves hope, fighting for the rights of women, children and adolescents. She supports raped and maltreated women, gives workshops and seminars about sexual and reproductive health and against violence. She marches, teaches, accompanies and continues weaving. She has a husband, four sons and female companions.

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Rahela Khatun – Bangladesh

Linked with The Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association BELA.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « Earlier all I did was sit at home, cook and obey my husband’s orders. I never felt that I was of any worth! After joining this landless people’s group, I came out of the house, got to know other people and learnt the language of public speaking. Now, I do not think only about my own family, but also about the development of my country. Now, I am a person who can speak against injustice, mobilize people to join our struggle against corrupt machineries, and fight for poor peoples’ rights to life and livelihood ».

She also publicly raise questions: « Why should we not come out? We are not doing anything against the religion? » (The moulavi, head priest of the local mosque, warned Rahela’s husband, telling him that she was doing un-Islamic things, such as attending meetings with unknown men and going out on her own – bepurdah (without a veil). None of this served to stop Rahela.

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Rahela Khatun – Bangladesh (even in the original size of this photo you could not see her face – too dark / hidden).

She works for the Noai Landless Women Organization, and for the Deluti Landless Union Committee.

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Drucilla K. Barker – USA

Linked with Microcredit and Women’s Poverty, and with Good Governance and Participatory Development.

She is Professor of Economics and Director of Women’s Studies, Hollins University, Roanoke, VA 245020.

She says: ” … I don’t like to say what feminist economics is in that sense. I much prefer to think about what are some approaches that characterize feminist economics and define it by those approaches. Gender analysis is central to all these approaches. In other words, a recognition of the social construction of gender, and its intersections with ethnicity, class, nationality, sexual identity and so forth. So feminist approaches examine the ways in which the organization of the economy, especially the gender division of labor, reflects, reproduces and transforms these social hierarchies. Feminist approaches do not privilege the market, but rather examine other ways that societies provide for their material well-being. Thus they recognize that economies are not populated by disembodied actors, but rather by historically situated subjects ». (Interview on Wellesley College).

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Drucilla K. Barker – USA

The value of the 1997 increase in the federal minimum wage has been fully eroded. The real value of today’s federal minimum wage is less than it has been since 1951. Moreover, the ratio of the minimum wage to the average hourly wage of non-supervisory workers is 31%, its lowest level since World War II. This decline is causing hardship for low-wage workers and their families. We believe that a modest increase in the minimum wage would improve the well-being of low-wage workers and would not have the adverse effects that critics have claimed.

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Rina Amiri – Afghanistan & USA

Linked with Women Likely to Suffer Most in Central Asia’s Turmoil, with Muslim Women As Symbols and Pawns, with the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan RAWA, and with The Women Waging Peace Network.

She says: « I felt destroyed within seeing that, my adopted country (USA) and my homeland (Afghanistan) were at war. »

Read: The Fear Beneath the Burka, by Rina Amiri, The New York Times – March 20, 2002.

She says also: “As a child in this climate of fear, I was confused and felt anger. From a secure, warm and loving family life, I suddenly learned that the world could lack any element of control ».

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Rina Amiri – Afghanistan & USA

She works for The Women Waging Peace Network.

Listen to her audio/ watch her video on OnlineNewsHour.

Read: Afghanis in the Driver’s Seat, Rina Amiri addresses Afghanistan’s current status.

Rina Amiri has been preparing since she was a child for her present dynamic role as a peace builder and reconstruction strategist in her devastated homeland, Afghanistan. It is a role she has longed for, and to which she has been passionately committed for as long as she can remember. Yet before the events of September 2001, it seemed inconceivable that she could return to her country, devastated by decades of invasion, clan warfare, drought, and famine.

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