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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2002

'Mirror of Truth' tour

Memphis, Tenn.--The Mirror of Truth bus tour began Sept. 12 in New York City and concluded in Columbus, Georgia, at the School of the Americas protest on Nov. 17. The tour was a project of Voices in the Wilderness (VIW), a Chicago-based group of nonviolent war resisters dedicated to ending the economic sanctions and continuing war against the people of Iraq.

The Mirror of Truth Tour visited schools, universities, churches, and peace groups to speak out against a new war against Iraq. Members of the tour came from all across the country.

The tour also challenged Americans to acknowledge the weapons of mass destruction that are here in the U.S. If our government is going to attack Iraq preemptively because of weapons of mass destruction, we as Americans should "look in the mirror" and question why we have so many of these destructive weapons.

The tour visited sites where the U.S. produces, stores, and researches weapons of mass destruction, and participated in vigils and protests with the communities of people who are resisting these weapons that are in their backyards. About 50 people participated in a protest at Picatinny Arsenal in Morristown, N.J. Picatinny Arsenal developed depleted uranium for use on the battlefield in the first Gulf War.

In Memphis 40 people protested the former Defense Depot, where chemical weapons were stored for decades. The former Depot remains a superfund site, and an activity center is going to be built for children here. Local groups (Youth Terminating Pollution, Defense Depot Memphis Tennessee-Concerned Citizens Committee, News and Letters Committees and Peace Action) organized the event, which drew an enthusiastic crowd of young and old, Black and white.

We in the tour met hundreds of people involved in working against the war while building safe and healthy communities at home. In Carlisle, Pa. (home of the Army War College) 30 people signed the Iraq Pledge of Resistance--to engage in civil disobedience should the U.S. begin an invasion of Iraq--on the steps of the court house and explained their convictions to people on the street.

A presentation at Messiah College in Grantham, Pa., drew over 200 students. Over 100 New York University students attended the presentation and split into small groups to talk about what forms of action to take. Two weeks later, a group of NYU students took over a live broadcast at MTV, speaking truth about why the war is a bad idea, and wearing shirts that said "No war against Iraq."

Plans are in the making for continuing the tour by taking it southwest, and continuing up the west coast. For more information, check the Voices in the Wilderness website www.vitw.org.

--Young woman peace activist

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