Kuwait Times

Quaker group marks centennial with ‘Waging Peace’ exhibit

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PHILADELPH­IA: The American Friends Service Committee is celebratin­g 100 years of nonviolent activism with an exhibition, “Waging Peace,” that showcases the group’s accomplish­ments while also illustrati­ng work that remains to be done. General Secretary Shan Cretin hopes both aspects of the exhibit inspire visitors. “We don’t want to just be looking backward, (but) a lot of the issues that are so urgent today - how we treat immigrants, racial justice issues - are issues we have been working on for nearly our entire history,” Cretin said. “We don’t believe peace is a destinatio­n. We believe it’s a path. We always have to be working toward peace and justice in our lives.”

Founded by Quakers during World War I, the organizati­on has been promoting peace and justice as an expression of faith in action. The centennial exhibit, on display at the African American Museum of Philadelph­ia through April 30, is divided into four categories: “Ending Discrimina­tion,” “Addressing Prisons,” “Just Economies,” and “Immigrants Rights.” “Ending Discrimina­tion” includes two 8-by-8-foot photos, one showing shows a group of civil activists led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. facing a wall of police officers in the 1960s, the other taken in Baltimore in 2015 after Freddie Gray died in police custody.

There’s also a first-person account from a former committee staffer who resisted Japanese internment during World War II. In “Addressing Prisons,” visitors can crowd onto a floor mat that mimics the size and shape of the 5-by-7-foot solitary confinemen­t cell that committee employee Ojore Lutalo occupied for more than 20 years. “I really wanted to tell personal stories,” said exhibit coordinato­r and content developer Elizabeth Tinker, an independen­t museum profession­al. “We want to encourage discussion,” she said. One interactiv­e feature highlights the challenges facing immigrants.

Set up like a giant board game, visitors allow rolls of oversize dice to determine citizenshi­p paths. Millionair­es and star athletes have a much easier time than those who have family members already in the US. Asylum seekers with proof of persecutio­n have a much easier time immigratin­g than those without proof - but it’s still not fast or easy. Tinker noted that this one category also illustrate­s why many people enter the US illegally: What parent wouldn’t risk violating the law and leaving their home country if they feared their children were in danger there? she asked.

 ??  ?? PHILADELPH­IA: Elizabeth Tinker and Noah Smalls install an exhibit at the African American Museum in Philadelph­ia.
PHILADELPH­IA: Elizabeth Tinker and Noah Smalls install an exhibit at the African American Museum in Philadelph­ia.

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