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Peace and Justice Center-
Arlington

Our mission is to facilitate
Peace, Love and Justice through education, networking and nonviolent
action.
Please
join us for our monthly meetings:
4th
Sunday of each month at 5:00
pm.
We currently meet at the Arlington Yoga Center,
1011 W. Abram St . (between
Davis and Cooper)
For more
information, email:Peace-Center@TX.RR.COM
Vision: We see the Peace
and Justice Center Arlington as an interconnected, diverse community, positively
and boldly working to bring about understanding and respect through education,
networking, activism and outreach.
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January 30
begins the 11th A Season For Nonviolence
. Click on the ASFN page for the daily practices, and join us
in honoring these values:
Joint (Gandhi-King) Principles of
Nonviolence "At
the center of non-violence is the principle of love". - M. L. KingJr. -
Nonviolence means to honor the inherent worth of every human being. In
nonviolence we naturally seek to understand each other, build friendship and
community. - Nonviolence means believing that our lives are linked together,
that what we do impacts the lives of everyone we encounter. That we are
responsible to and for one another. That we can trust one another and work
toward the common good. - Nonviolence means dedicating ourselves to the
fundamental rights of every human being (justice, equity, equality). -
Nonviolence is courageously choosing to practice compassion with our
adversaries. We oppose injustice, not people. - Nonviolence means recognizing
love as the power of the human spirit to triumph over injustice, inequity,
suffering - a true hero's journey of personal-social change.
Gandhian Principles of Nonviolence
"Truth is my religion and nonviolence (love)
it's only realization". - M. K. Gandhi Respect
I vow to respect others and the
interconnectedness of all life. Understanding
I vow to understand the "whys"
(meaning behind behavior), for myself and others.
Acceptance Out of respect
and understanding, I vow to accept the differences of others.
Appreciating Differences I
seek to move beyond acceptance into appreciation and celebration of
difference. Truth and Truthfulness
I commit to be truthful and
authentic and to confront untruth wherever I find it.
Absorbing Suffering I take on without complaint any suffering that results from my
confrontation with untruth. I also accept that all forms of violence cannot be
totally eliminated. Ahimsa (nonviolence) with my
Adversary I vow to help my
adversary avoid all suffering, especially from our confrontation.
Trusteeship and Constructive
Action
Beyond personal necessities,
I see myself as God's trustee over my possessions and talents. I promise to use
them to empower others and make things fair for all.
Martin Luther King's Principles of
Nonviolence "The aftermath of
violence is tragic bitterness, while the aftermath of nonviolence is the beloved
community." - M.L. KingJr. 1.Nonviolence is a way
of life for courageous people. 2.Nonviolence seeks to win friendship
and understanding. 3.Nonviolence seeks to defeat injustice, not
people. 4.Nonviolence holds that suffering for a cause can educate and transform. 5.Nonviolence chooses
love instead of hate. 6.Nonviolence holds that the universe is on the
side of justice and that right will eventually
prevail.
King's Six Steps to Social Change 1.Information Gathering 2.Education
3.Personal Commitments 4.Negotiation 5.Direct
Action 6.Reconciliation and Healing
Process

We learn to
practice nonviolence one step at a time, one choice at a time, one day at a
time. This is how each of us, in our own way, move the world in the direction of
peace. This is A
Season For Nonviolence .
For additional resources and participating partners:
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