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Saratoga Library displays award-winning books

Paula Rochelle, Saratoga resident and WILPF member, arranged with librarian Peggy Baker for the Saratoga Library to feature the six 2008 winners of WILPF's Jane Addams Children's Book Award.

The Escape of Oney Judge: Martha Washington's Slave Finds Freedom, the winner in the Books for Younger Children Category, is written and illustrated by Emily Arnold McCully and published by Farrar Strauss Giroux. Mrs. Washington declares that young Oney is just like one of the Washington's own children, but Oney is not fooled. On the night Mrs. Washington tells Oney she will not grant her freedom upon her death, Oney thinks quickly, acts courageously and flees. Expressive watercolors within this well-researched biography portray the bravery of Ona Maria Judge, an African-American woman who claimed, and fought for, the right to have "no mistress but herself."

We Are One: The Story of Bayard Rustin by Larry Dane Brimner, published by Calkins Creek, an imprint of Boyds Mills Press, Inc., is the winner in the Books for Older Children Category.
Working behind the scenes because of his sexual orientation and unpopular political stands, African-American pacifist and civil rights activist Bayard Rustin, a trusted adviser to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., organized the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Succinct prose, powerful quotations and fresh historical photographs place the story of Rustin's life alongside the story of the March, revealing the breadth and depth of Rustin's decades of commitment to confronting racism and promoting peace in the United States and in countries around the world.

One book has won honors in the Books for Younger Children Category.
One Thousand Tracings: Healing the Wounds of World War II, written and illustrated by Lita Judge is published by Hyperion Books for Children. After discovering one thousand yellowed foot tracings in her grandmother's attic, Lita Judge wrote this tribute to her grandmother who had used these newspaper tracings to find appropriately-sized shoes to send to needy German families in the aftermath of World War II. A combination of paintings, collages of original photographs and reproductions of foot tracings underscore the message of compassion at the heart of this family story.

Three books have won honors in the Books for Older Children category.
Rickshaw Girl by Mitali Perkins, with illustrations by Jamie Hogan and published by Charlesbridge, is a contemporary novel set in Bangladesh. In clear prose and detailed black-and-white drawings, ten-year-old Naimi excels at painting alpanas, traditional designs created by Bangladeshi women and girls. Her talent, though valued by her family, cannot buy rice or pay back the loan on her father's rickshaw as a son's contribution would do. Determined to help financially, Naimi disguises herself as a boy and sparks surprising events that reveal an expanding world for herself and women in her community.


Tessie Parker and daughter, Laney, 1, get a look at A Place Where Sunflowers Grow, on display in the Children’s Department of the Saratoga Library. Tessie Parker and daughter, Laney, 1, get a look at A Place Where Sunflowers Grow, on display in the Children’s Department of the Saratoga Library. Paula Rochelle, left, and Joan Goddard, background, arranged for the display of the books.


Joan Goddard, a Campbell resident and national board member of the Jane Addams Peace Association, displays books with librarian Peggy Baker. (Joan Bazar photos)

Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis, published by Scholastic Press, an imprint of Scholastic, Inc., is a sensitively-written historical novel infused with the spirit of youth. Eleven-year-old Elijah bursts with pride at being the first child born free in Buxton, Canada, a settlement of runaway slaves just across the border from Detroit. When a scoundrel steals money saved to buy an enslaved family's freedom, Elijah impulsively pursues the thief into Michigan. The journey brings him face-to-face with the terrors of slavery, pushing him to act courageously and compassionately in the name of freedom.

Birmingham, 1963 by Carole Boston Weatherford is published by Wordsong, an imprint of Boyds Mills Press, Inc. Deftly-written free verse and expertly-chosen archival photographs lay open the horror of the 1963 Birmingham church bombing by telling the story in the voice of an imagined girl in the "year I turned ten." Four memorial poems, each a tribute to one of the four girls murdered in the bombing, conclude this slim, powerful volume and carry its emphatic message: No More Birminghams!
Since 1953, the Jane Addams Children's Book Award annually acknowledges books published in the U.S. during the previous year. Books commended by the Award address themes or topics that engage children in thinking about peace, justice, world community, and/or equality of the sexes and all races. The books also must meet conventional standards of literary and artistic excellence.


A national committee chooses winners and honor books for older and younger children. Members of the 2007 Jane Addams Children's Book Awards Committee are Susan C. Griffith, Chair (Mt. Pleasant, Michigan), Barbara Bair (Washington, D. C.), Ann Bower (Harwich, Massachusetts), Sonja Cherry-Paul (Yonkers, New York), Eliza T. Dresang (Tallahassee, Florida), Oralia Garza de Cortes (Pasadena, California), MJ Grande (Juneau, Alaska), Daisy Gutierrez (Houston, Texas), Margaret Jensen (Madison, Wisconsin), Jo Montie (Minneapolis, Minnesota), Sarah Park (Long Beach, California), Pat Wiser (Sewanee,Tennessee) and Junko Yokota (Skokie, Illinois). Regional reading and discussion groups participated with many of the committee members throughout the jury's evaluation and selection process.

Contact JAPA Executive Director Linda B. Belle, 777 United Nations Plaza, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10017-3521; by phone 212-682-8830; and by e-mail japa@igc.org.
For additional information about the Jane Addams Children's Book Awards and a complete list of books honored since 1953, see www.janeaddamspeace.org.


WILPF Statement on the 63rd anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

6 and 9 August mark the anniversaries of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States. Two nuclear weapons, dropped deliberately by the world's military superpower on these cities in Japan, killed 200,000 civilians by the end of 1945 and many more through cancer, mutations, and birth defects in the years that followed; sparked an arms race of insane proportions; and helped shape the hyper-militaristic world order with which we are now collectively plagued.

On 6 and 9 August, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) remembers with horror the destruction and devastation wrought upon Hiroshima and Nagasaki. And every day of the year, WILPF works to prevent nuclear weapons from ever being used again through our project Reaching Critical Will, which helps increase the preparation and participation of non-governmental organizations in disarmament diplomacy by providing information, analysis, and primary documents. Every day, WILPF works at international, national, and local levels to foster the conditions, values, and momentum necessary to eliminate nuclear weapons from our planet.

The development and maintenance of nuclear weapons have an ongoing legacy of destruction, the burden of which has primarily been borne by marginalized people around the world, especially indigenous peoples. For example, from 1966-1996, the French carried out 41 atmospheric and 142 underground nuclear tests on Mururoa. US nuclear weapon tests conducted in the Pacific between 1946-1958 unleashed the destructive power equivalent to 1.5 Hiroshima sized bombs per day during that 12 year period, leaving behind radioactive contamination and the infrastructure for military colonization. In 2008, US military realignment in the Asia-Pacific region seeks to base 60 percent of its Pacific Fleet in and around Guam, in what activists from that "unincorporated US territory" describe as a "storm of US militarization so enormous in scope, so volatile in nature, so irreversible in consequence," that it endangers the fundamental and inalienable human right to self-determination of the indigenous Chamoru people.

Along with military bases around the globe, the expansion of the military-industrial complex inhibits long-term, sustainable success in nuclear disarmament. Trillions of dollars are invested every year on militaries, equipment, advanced technologies, wars; much of this money is embedded into the military and corporate structures that support the maintenance and renewal of nuclear weapons. War profiteers-particularly Bechtel, British Nuclear Fuels Limited, Lockheed Martin, Mitsubishi, Raytheon, and the University of California-benefit from the ongoing development and maintenance of nuclear weapons and their delivery systems.

Today, approximately 27,000 nuclear warheads exist, most of them in the arsenals of the permanent five members of the Security Council-China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States-the countries supposedly in charge of maintaining international peace and security. The governments of most of these states have plans to modernize their nuclear weapons or delivery systems, in continuing violation of Article VI of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which says, "Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament." Three states outside of the NPT-India, Israel, and Pakistan-also possess nuclear weapons, and five non-nuclear weapon states-Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkey-host approximately 240 US nuclear weapons on their soil under the North American Treaty Organization Strategic Concept, also in violation of the NPT.

WILPF works to expose the threat that the hypocritical policies of these states pose to the world and to generate commitment to an alternative future, a world without nuclear weapons. The only means to this end is the full implementation of the first UN General Assembly resolution, adopted in 1946-the total and universal disarmament of all nuclear weapons. The world needs verifiable, irreversible reductions of nuclear arsenals and the negotiation of a nuclear weapons convention. WILPF urges all governments and citizens to unconditionally reject all arguments put forward for the continued existence of nuclear weapons and encourages everyone to work for the elimination of all nuclear arsenals and for the redirection of nuclear weapon expenditures to meet environmental, social, cultural, health, and educational needs.

WILPF calls on all NPT nuclear weapon states to fully implement their Treaty obligations and to cease modernizing their arsenals as a step toward the good faith pursuit of nuclear disarmament and the ultimate goal of a nuclear weapon free world. We also call on nuclear weapon states that are not party to the NPT-India, Israel, and Pakistan-to verifiably disarm their nuclear weapons and join the NPT as non-nuclear weapon states. We call on these states to support in word and action the ratification and negotiation of relevant treaties, including the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, a fissile materials treaty, and a nuclear weapons convention.

WILPF welcomes the recent withdrawal of US nuclear weapons from the United Kingdom, which had been stationed there since 1954. We call on all non-nuclear weapon states who currently host nuclear weapons on their territories to demand their immediate removal and to prevent the stationing of these weapons on any foreign soil. WILPF also calls on all states under the US "nuclear umbrella" to reject the "security" offered to them under such bilateral agreements with the United States in favor of fully supporting the movement for nuclear abolition. WILPF calls on the Japanese government in particular to renounce the US nuclear umbrella and to respect Article 9 of the Japanese constitution, which renounces war and the use or threat of force as a means of settling international disputes. At the same time, WILPF welcomes the announcement that former Environment Minister and Foreign Minister Ms. Yoriko Kawaguchi of Japan will co-chair of the International Commission on Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Disarmament. WILPF also welcomes the establishment of this Commission by Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, who announced its formation after he visited Hiroshima-the first Western leader to do so.

In her philosophical text On Violence, Hannah Arendt says, "The means used to achieve political goals are more often than not of greater relevance to the future world than the intended goals." No number of nuclear weapons in the hands of any number or type of government or people can protect against their use; the use of nuclear weapons cannot occur again without catastrophic consequences for the entire human race. The promise offered by nuclear weapons is not one of security but destruction, militarism, fear, insecurity, and extinction. The only acceptable number is zero.

For more information about WILPF's work on nuclear disarmament, please go to www.reachingcriticalwill.org.


The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) is the oldest women's peace organization in the world, established in 1915 to oppose the war raging in Europe. It has been working ever since to study, make known, and abolish the causes of war, and to support human rights and general and complete disarmament.

HOLIDAY PEACE FAIR 2008

This year's fair will take place Dec. 6 at Campbell United Methodist Church. We feature non-violent toys, books and games, international handcrafts, Fair Trade coffee and cocoa, and political T-shirts and buttons. Vendors are South Bay peace and justice groups. Watch for news on this year's vendors and entertainers.


The U.S. Department of Defense

  • spends at least $16,000 in promotional costs alone for each single soldier signed up -- one-and-a-half times the amount the Chicago Public School Systems spent in 2002 to educate a child.
  • has a database of 30 million 16- to 25-year olds, combining names with birth dates, addresses, Social Security numbers, e-mail addresses, phone numbers, field of academic study, grade-point averages, height and weight.
American Friends Service Committee

Counter-recruitment project under way

Members of WILPF and other peace and justice groups are working with parents and students to counteract the military presence in South Bay and Peninsula schools. To join us, send a message to

SJ WILPF
SJ WILPF

“World domination does not fit our
career goals.”      
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