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PEACE AND CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION
Records of a membership organization (administered as an independent branch of the
Social Action Department of the National Catholic Welfare Conference) concerned with
"educating all Catholics as to their obligations of justice and charity in the cause
of international peace." Included are correspondence, minutes, publications, reports,
speeches, and other records documenting the annual conferences and other activities of the
Association's committees, subcommittees, officers, and secretariat. Notable
correspondents
include Patrick H. Callahan, John Tracy Ellis, Charles Fahy, Anna Dill Gamble, Carlton
J.H. Hayes, John
LaFarge, Elizabeth M. Lynskey, Raymond A. McGowan, Francis E. McMahon,
Parker T. Moon, and Elizabeth M. Sweeney.
[Connect to Inventory] Papers of a religious educator who co-founded Milwaukee's Casa Maria Catholic Worker
House of Hospitality (1966) and destroyed draft records in the "Milwaukee
Fourteen" anti-war action in 1968, for which he served 9 months in federal prison
before being deported to Ireland. (He was readmitted to the United States in 1991.)
Included are correspondence, manuscripts, photographs, press clippings, publications, and
audiotape recordings, largely relating to Cullen's social ministry, anti-war activism, and
imprisonment. Correspondents include Daniel and Philip Berrigan, Dorothy Day, James
Groppi, and Albion Ross. Records of a faith-based, grassroots movement for peace and social justice through nonviolent direct action, founded by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin in New York City in 1933 and represented today by more than one hundred loosely affiliated "houses of hospitality" (including several in Australia, Canada, Europe, and Mexico) in which the poor and homeless are welcomed as guests. The records document the efforts of Catholic Worker volunteers to "live out" the Gospel message, interpreted as pacifist, personalist, and profoundly radical. The collection includes the personal papers of Day, Maurin, and others involved in the movement; records of the New York City and other Catholic Worker communities; photographs; audio and video tapes of interviews, talks, television programs, and peace demonstrations; and a wide variety of publications. [Connect to Inventory]
Records of an advocacy and research organization, founded by the Capuchin Franciscan Friars in 1971 and later supported by nine religious communities, including general administrative records, minutes of staff and board meetings, newsletters and other publications, scrapbooks, and the subject files of individual staff members (which focus on specific issues or programs such as desegregation, hunger, legislative action, and welfare). The center closed in 1982.
Records of a peace organization (originally part of a national network) formed in opposition to the United States government's support of the "Contras" in Nicaragua. Included are correspondence, minutes, publications, reports, press releases and other records documenting the group's nonviolent resistance to US military intervention in Latin America, the Middle East, and elsewhere. James M. Barrett, formerly professor of Biology at Marquette University, served for many years as coordinator and editor of its newsletter. [Connect to Inventory] PEACE VIDEOS COLLECTION, ca. 2000-present, 0.2 feet. Documentaries on faith-based peace activism, selected to complement
holdings in the Dorothy Day-Catholic Worker Collection Published information by and about spiritually-motivated organizations
and individuals active in peace and social justice VOICES IN THE WILDERNESS RECORDS AND KATHY KELLY PAPERS (unprocessed). Voices in the Wilderness (VITW, 1996-2005) utilized the means of nonviolent direct action, including civil disobedience and fasting, to oppose economic sanctions and war against Iraq. From its base in Chicago, the group organized over seventy delegations to Iraq which brought donations of medicine and toys to children in hospitals in open violation of the U.N. sanctions and U.S. law. The Treasury Department responded by imposing a $20,000 fine. Refusing to pay the penalty as a matter of principle, VITW closed its doors in the summer of 2005, reorganizing under the name Voices for Creative Nonviolence. Included in the records are correspondence, subject files, photographs, and video recordings. Closely related are the papers of Kathy Kelly, a co-founder of VITW/VCN
who has anchored its leadership team from the beginning. Her
peacemaking efforts in Bosnia, Haiti, Israel/Palestine, and Lebanon, as well
as Iraq, led to
her
nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize on three occasions. Papers of a conscientious objector during World War II, concerning his
experiences in a Civilian Public Service camp in New Hampshire, including
correspondence, diary entries, and his subsequent thesis. Ask an Archivist about records in this section
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