The first annual Poets for Peace showcase, hosted by PWKC in collaboration with Poetic Underground in May of 2023, was a vibrant spotlight on the poetry community’s call for peace and a highlight of our forthcoming annual Memorial Day protest of nuclear weapon production in KCMO.
Every spring we will feature organizations/leaders we align with, in addition to small businesses and artists to support.
We are grateful to Poetic Underground KC and Blip Coffee for collaborating with us.
This year, on Nov. 11, while preparing to set up for the Armistice Day Remembrance at the World War I Memorial and Museum in Kansas City, Mo., I was reminded of why the monument was built.
World War I ended on Nov. 11, 1918. The groundbreaking for the monument occurred on Nov. 1, 1921, three years after the war ended. The finished monument was dedicated on Nov. 11, 1926, by President Calvin Coolidge, in the presence of Queen Marie of Romania.
Coolidge announced that the memorial “…has not been raised to commemorate war and victory, but rather the results of war and victory which are embodied in peace and liberty … .” World War I was originally called the “War to End All Wars.” The world was actively unified in seeking peace. So much so that in 1928, The US Secretary of State, Frank Kellogg, was a co-author of “The Kellogg–Briand Pact or Pact of Paris” – officially the “General Treaty for Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy.” It was an international agreement on peace in which signatory states promised not to use war to resolve “disputes or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever origin they may be, which may arise among them.” The first signers of the document were the United States, France, and Germany.
Needless to say, the treaty has not been kept. However, as I spoke this Armistice Day (the day’s name was unfortunately changed to Veterans’ Day), I wanted to make the point that there was a time when the United States actively sought peace in the world. When I rang the bell eleven times like was done at the end of World War I, signifying the end of fighting, my prayer was that we would remember what seeking peace was like and that we would one day return to that endeavor.
May Peace prevail on Earth.
—Theodore John is president of Chapter 97, the Kansas City area chapter of Veterans for Peace. The photos below, by Jim Hannah, include a Vets for Peace sign as well as signs or memorabilia others brought, in tribute to soldiers and the war mission.
Kimmy Igla and Rylan Scott pleaded guilty for crossing the property line at the KC nuclear weapons plant, and Ann Suellentrop pleaded not guilty and comes to trial Oct. 25.
“The more we educate ourselves and each other, the stronger the anti-nuclear movement grows!” says Kimmy Igla, reflecting on our high-energy Memorial Day gathering.
PeaceWorks KC held its 13th annual Memorial Day event this year at the KC National Security Campus. Some 63 of us gathered to march, mourn, and rally to object to the nuclear weapons production work at NSC.
On the tenth anniversary of PeaceWorks-KC's annual Memorial Day peace witness, five members of the PeaceWorks-KC family “crossed the line” and were arrested for trespass at the National Security Campus, where more than 80 percent of the parts for the U.S. nuclear arsenal are made or procured. The resisters’ action helped the 70 or so in attendance re-frame what the weapons plant truly is: a Global Insecurity Factory.