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History and Supporters
Founding of the Fellowship
In 1914, an ecumenical conference was held in Switzerland
by Christians seeking to prevent the outbreak of war in Europe.
Before the conference ended, however, World War I had started
and those present had to return to their respective countries.
At a railroad station in Germany, two of the participants,
Henry Hodgkin, an English Quaker, and Friedrich Sigmund-Schultze,
a German Lutheran, pledged to find a way of working for peace
even though their countries were at war. Out of this pledge
Christians gathered in Cambridge, England in December 1914
to found the Fellowship of Reconciliation. The US FOR was
founded one year later, in 1915.
The FOR has since become an interfaith and international movement
with branches and groups in over 40 countries and on every
continent. Today the membership of FOR includes Jews, Christians,
Buddhists, Muslims, and people of other faith traditions,
as well as those with no formal religious affiliation.
FOR's History - Some Highlights
1916-1917: Helps organize the National Civil Liberties Bureau,
now the ACLU. Supports World War I conscientious objectors
and contributes to legal recognition of CO rights.
1920s: Helps organize the National Conference of Christians
and Jews. Sends a peace delegation to meet Sandino in Nicaragua.
1930s: Works to strengthen the labor movement in it's drive
to secure better working conditions. Sponsors Ambassadors
of Reconciliation to visit world leaders.
1940s: Encourages nonviolent resistance to World War II.
Leads the struggle against internment of Japanese Americans.
European FOR members rescue Jews and other political refugees
fleeing Nazism. Sponsors an interracial team on the first
"freedom ride" to test court decision outlawing
discrimination in interstate travel. Organizes extensive campaign
to prevent the Pentagon from extending wartime conscription
into universal military training.
1950s: Helps organize the American Committee on Africa to
support the movements for African independence. Conducts six-year
Food for China program in response to Chinese famines. FOR
staff work with Martin Luther King Jr. during the Montgomery
bus boycott, and hold workshops in nonviolence throughout
the South. Produces a full-color comic book, Martin Luther
King and the Montgomery Story, that sells over 250,000 copies.
1960s: Launches Shelters for the Shelterless, building real
shelters for homeless people, in response to increasing public
demand for fallout shelters. Makes contact with Vietnamese
Buddhist pacifist movement and sponsors world tour by Buddhist
monk, Thich Nhat Hanh. Forms International Committee of Conscience
on Vietnam with 10,000 clergy in 40 countries. Raises money
for medical aid for both sides in Vietnam.
1970s: Founds Dai Dong, a transnational project linking war,
environmental problems, poverty and other social issues, involving
thousands of scientists around the world. Seeks to reverse
the Cold War and the arms race with campaigns, marches, educational
projects and civil disobedience. Opposes death penalty in
concerted campaign with ACLU.
1980s: Takes the lead in initiating the Nuclear Freeze Campaign
in cooperation with other groups. Initiates US-USSR reconciliation
program, including people-to-people exchanges, artistic and
educational resources, teach-ins and conferences. Leads nonviolence
training seminars in the Philippines prior to the nonviolent
overthrow of the Marcos dictatorship.
1990s: Sends delegations of religious leaders and peace activists
to Iraq to try to prevent war and later, to see the massive
devastation caused by the economic sanctions imposed upon
Iraq. Starts the Campaign to Save a Generation, an ongoing
project centered on saving Iraqi children from the horrors
of the sanctions, and American children from the poverty rampant
in the US. Launches "Stop the Killing, Start the Healing"
campaign in response to escalating levels of gun violence
in the United States.Initiates Bosnian Student Project, bringing
students from the former Yugoslavia out of war zones and into
US homes and schools, and later starts the International Reconciliation
Work Camp Project. Works to bring an end to the suffering
of the Serbs and Kosovars during and after the war in former
Yugoslavia. Works to ensure the US military's withdrawal from
Panama.
FOR Supporters
"Your goal is, in my opinion, the only reasonable one
and to make it prevail is of vital importance."
--Albert Einstein, in a letter to the FOR
"The Southern Christian Leadership Conference values
its long partnership with FOR and recognizes FOR's outstanding
work in the anti-war movement and continued commitment to
peace and nonviolence."
--The Rev. Joseph Lowery, SCLC president
"Reconciliation required connection, not separation.
I want to be connected with those who have the courage to
care, the muscle to be compassionate. That is why I belong
to the FOR."
--Rabbi Leo Beerman, Leo Baeck Temple, Los Angeles
"The FOR has been in the forefront of the nonviolent
struggle for peace with justice. What is important about the
FOR is what it stands for. And that is a courageous dedication
to the liberation of humanity from the triple evils of poverty,
racism and violence."
--Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent
Social Change
"I joined FOR because of the people who represented
the Fellowship. They were really for nonviolent action and
were penetrated deeply with the sense of humanism with which
Buddhists are familiar. What makes the FOR meaningful to me
is the presence of open-minded, deeply humanistic and creative
people."
--Thich Nhat Hanh, Vietnamese Buddhist monk, author, poet
Click here to read Richard
Deats' article "The Rebel Passion: 85 Years of the Fellowship
of Reconciliation."
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