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Every Teacher a Peace Teacher

In middle school, high school, and college classrooms, I teach that nonviolence, peace, and justice are not utopian dreams but real and practical ways in which humans can affect the world around them.

Banksy/Peace doctor, photo by Eva Blue

Photo by Eva Blue.

Earlier this year, I walked into the university classroom where I teach a course in Peace Studies. Seated in a circle around the room were seniors just shy of graduating. They would soon become doctors, social workers, teachers, community organizers, executives, and leaders.

To open our semester together, I wrote a simple, three-word question on the board.

What is peace?

Silence. Stumped by this tiny question, no one spoke. They did not have an answer, and I would later discover why: It was the first time in their life a teacher had asked them to define peace. 

Each year in the United States, millions of students graduate from high school and college, their diplomas certifying years spent studying the principles of science, mathematics, literature, and writing. These are the subjects we value as a society, and therefore we insist that our young people develop knowledge in these areas. Imagine if we graduated seniors who couldn’t read, or do simple math, or write basic paragraphs. Outrageous, right?

Yet these very same students will graduate without ever once studying conflict resolution. During their entire academic career, they will never be required to take a course on making peace, building community, or forgiving an enemy. The principles of violence and nonviolence will not be analyzed, the philosophy of Dr. King will not be discussed, and satyagraha—the practice of nonviolent resistance, which Gandhi called the most powerful force in the universe—will remain ignored.

Peace and justice are not utopian dreams but real and practical ways in which humans can live and affect the world around them.

We are neglecting to teach our students the most fundamental and urgent lesson: how to make peace in the world around them. And by forgetting to do so, we are promoting violence. As my friend and fellow peace educator Colman McCarthy once said, “If we don’t teach our children peace, someone else will teach them violence.’’

So each day, in the classrooms where I teach middle school, high school, and college students, I work to counter the violence, spark the conscience, and liberate the thinking mind. I teach peace.

Dismantling the Violence

At the most basic level, to teach peace is to teach that violence does not have to happen.

For too long in the West, we have acted as if violence is inevitable, a natural part of the human condition that sticks to us like the skin on our back. Nonviolence is written off as an afterthought—viewed, at best, as do-nothing-passivity and, at worst, as a long-haired fantasy of Woodstock. Responding to violence with violence is seen as the only practical solution, and the result is greater violence.

But this is changing.

Hundreds of colleges and universities across the globe now offer degrees in Peace Studies, with some universities reporting enrollment size doubling in the past few years. At the heart of each program is the declaration that nonviolence, peace, and justice are not utopian dreams but real and practical ways in which humans can live and affect the world around them. Violence and its dynamics are examined alongside the history, philosophy, and principles of nonviolence. The treasure chest of stories is opened, and like some reverse-Pandora’s Box, the ideals of peace-making are unleashed onto classrooms as students study the examples of Cesar Chavez and Vandana Shiva, Dorothy Day and Daniel Berrigan, Gandhi and Gene Sharp.

From a broader perspective, this academic trend towards peace-making is part of the widespread awakening—what David Korten calls “The Great Turning”—happening in response to the problems of our time.

Those problems are many.

The United States leads the First World in the following categories: prison population, drug use, child hunger, poverty, illiteracy, teen pregnancies, firearms death, obesity, diabetes, recorded rapes, use of antidepressants, income disparity, military spending, production of hazardous waste, and the poor quality of its schools (Paul Hawken, who published this list in Blessed Unrest, also points out that the U.S. is the only country in the world besides Iraq with metal detectors in its schools).

For the peace educator, this list is no surprise. Violence spreads like a virus. Contagious by nature, it follows a spiritual law that says that violence plus violence only equals more violence. Violence can never lead to peace, and the more we respond with violence, the more violence we create.

So teaching peace means dismantling this list. One great crowbar comes simply through asking questions.

To Teach Peace is to Teach Gandhi

“Could nonviolence have stopped Hitler and the Nazis?” I ask middle school students in my U.S. history course. Having already examined the philosophy of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., the students create imaginary European nations whose mission is to develop nonviolent strategies to stop invading Nazis. After they present their plans, I tell them about the citizens of Denmark—so many of them teenagers barely older than my students—who monkeywrenched the entire Nazi plan through nonviolent noncooperation.

Mahatma Gandhi on the Salt MarchVandana Shiva on Gandhi
for Today's World

Some say terrorism makes Gandhi irrelevant. Vandana Shiva says we need him more than ever.

During our year together, these 12-year olds have surveyed the landscape of U.S. history. But where most history courses ignore the deep tradition of American nonviolence, my curriculum examines Jeremiah Evarts as well as Andrew Jackson, AJ Muste as well as Harry Truman, Henry David Thoreau as well as Teddy Roosevelt. My course features nonviolence alongside every story of violence. Students develop a long exposure to the people in our history who have resisted violence by following their conscience.

“Which is stronger: love or hate?” I ask high school students in my Democracy Studies course. We’ve already finished the biography of Gandhi, discussing at length the ideas behind satyagraha. Gandhi is the Thomas Edison of nonviolence—he switched on our understanding of this universal force more than anyone prior, and to study and teach peace is to study and teach Gandhi.

Gandhi was skilled at civil disobedience, but he was even better at promoting practical solutions. Gandhi resisted injustice by creating alternatives, what he called “constructive programmes.” His favorite was the spinning wheel, which allowed Indians to forgo British cloth while actively spinning their own.

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Cook, D. J. (2010, June 24). Every Teacher a Peace Teacher. Retrieved February 09, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/peace-justice/every-teacher-a-peace-teacher. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

Distance learning peace studies program

Posted by Tan at Jul 01, 2010 01:08 PM
I think readers of Yes! might be interested in learning about Global Village School, which is focused on peace and diversity studies: www.globalvillageschool.org


Anyone interested in this article...

Posted by Daniel Geery at Jul 03, 2010 09:19 AM
may be interested in one I wrote a few years back, as I taught in a school with over twenty natives languages and kids from all over the world--and can state with a fair amount of confidence that peace and non-violence can not only be taught, but that violence is not inherent in our species:
http://www.opednews.com/art[…]16_alternatives_to_exti.htm

Democratization of religion agrees

Posted by d.m. at Jul 13, 2010 09:22 PM
Democratization of religion based on Thomas Paine's Rights of Man for Christianity,Islam, and Judaism as possibility backs up your ideas.
Public libraries have books which appear go in the wrong direction though since the authors use titles like Knowing Your Enemy Jihadist Ideology and The War on Terror. My view is books like these should be recycled after someone speaks with the librarians to explain that they have guidelines prohibiting racism in their libraries.

The book knowing your enemy seeks democratization of religion but does not make the point clear and spends over 100 pages on the idea.

I think also that Peace Marches should start with checking the public libraries for understanding of human rights and peace.

In addition libraries which have a policy of saying they will not accept every book people suggest be more careful in their selection.
eople say saving paper is important so I do not understand why they have such books. There is a Raise A Reader Campaign in town but communication is te problem and while I could talk to the librarians I feel so betrayed by their not notcing I do not wish to speak to them.
I am not even sure they would understand.

Importance of critiquing Reuters and Media

Posted by d.m. at Jul 13, 2010 09:50 PM
I note that different versions of Reuters and the BBC have been published than the ones I have. The ones I have feature articles on a Suicide Bombing in Pakistan but no mention of Democratization of Islam and other religion as an option. Other versions found elsewhere feature Global Warming as front page news not The Suicide Bombing.
The most recent version of Reiters had another suicide bombing again no mention of any other Ideas like Green Peace or Marxist-Green parties or the U.N. Charter international vote for enon religious types extending voting pace. Or the Canadian film which when says 1776 suppplied true Human Rights and later U.N. that people got the point they have not yet because international elections have not happened yet but are a human right.

Your article on our blog

Posted by Judith Turnipseed at Jul 15, 2010 06:13 AM
I saw this article on someone's blog and was so impressed that I am putting it on ours, unless you object. It is the first time I have posted someone else's. So far it has been only our own posts and I am not sure of the protocol.

We just started our own called Two Seeds on a blog (note our name) Tom's posts are mostly about peace, politics and social justice. Mine are mostly random. Our's is at http://tomandjudyonablog.blogspot.com/

Reposting

Posted by Brooke Jarvis at Jul 16, 2010 01:00 PM
Hi Judith,
Glad to hear you liked David Cook's article! YES! Magazine encourages you to share our articles and spread their impact. All we ask is that you follow these easy steps: www.yesmagazine.org/reprints


Song About Love, Peace and Freedonm

Posted by Ken Swiatek at Jul 19, 2010 04:48 PM
Here are the lyrics to a song I have written:

The Freedom Waltz

You can’t be free without love.
Love for every one.
You can’t be free without love.
You need love to be free.

There is no freedom without peace
Peace makes freedom for you & me.
Darkness doesn’t make light.
Hate will not make us free.

War does not make freedom.
It takes peace to be free.
Torture is hate, does not set us free.
War has not made us free.

Hate does not love justice.
Justice does not seek hate.
Justice does not seek war.
Justice and Love seek Peace.

Haters do not seek Peace.
They know no love, peace or freedom
Freedom does not hate.
Freedom is love and peace.

You can’t be free without love.
Love for every one.
You can’t be free without love.
Freedom is love and peace
Freedom is peace and love.

Your Song

Posted by Holly at Jul 29, 2010 10:29 PM
Beautiful lyrics. Have you written a melody? I'll bet other Code Pink members would love to sing this song.

The Freedom Waltz

Posted by Ken Swiatek at Jul 30, 2010 04:28 AM
Holly:

I'd be happy to email an MP3 of the song if you can provide an email address to send it to. Include a name to whose attention it should be directed. Thanks!

The Freedom Waltz

Posted by Holly at Jul 30, 2010 01:52 PM
hollyharps[at]yahoo.com

Teaching youth about peace

Posted by David J. Smith at Sep 07, 2010 05:24 AM
Yes! readers might be interested in the work we are doing at the U.S. Institute of Peace with youth. One of our primary programs is our National Peace Essay Contest which every year focuses on a global question of peace and conflict. The contest is designed for high school level students. It can be found at www.usip.org/npec. Also, USIP is moving to the National Mall area in March 2011. In 2011 we will be opening a Global Peacebuilding Center. If you have questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at dsmith@usip.org.

Negative mindset is the root of all evil!

Posted by Oleksiy at Dec 27, 2010 02:29 PM
I believe that the first step in teaching is to change our modes of thinking. I agree with the author that for too long in the west violence is seen as inevitable. The line of thinking that persists to this very day is like this: "All these teachings are good, and noble, but they are just Utopian fantasies which will never come true. Humans are by nature hardwired to be competitive, hateful, greedy, and war-like. Humans are evil." If we want a better world, then I believe we must dismantle such mindset, because if we think like this, then we behave like this for certain. There is too much cynicism and despair, and anyone who tries to make reforms for better society is seen as a naive fool.
   If we want to make a better world, then we must dismantle this mindset. I believe this is the greatest obstacle. The belief that humans are selfish by nature, and violence is somehow hardwired into us. Has anyone seen Stanley Kubrik's "Space Odyssey 2001"? At the opening scenes, it shows dawn of humanity, where a bunch of apes made war on one another. Such mindset says that humans have been inherently evil since the dawn of history, and things will never change. This is how we in the west basically think. Even some of the most progressive intellectuals think like this, and this mindset is What I believe is primarily responsible for all wars and suffering, which we see today. It works like a self fulfilling prophecy! THIS IS WHAT MUST CHANGE: THE WAY THINK!

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