For Immediate Release
Celebrating thirty-five years of nonviolent resistance to the
Trident nuclear weapons system, Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action will
honor two of its co-founders, Jim and Shelley Douglass, who will speak at its annual August
event at the Ground Zero Center in Kitsap
County, Washington.
By the 1980s the Douglasses and a community of activists were
organizing people across the county to protest the “White Trains” that carried
nuclear weapons to Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor.
In subsequent years the community that became Ground Zero
Center for Nonviolent
Action has continued the spirit of resistance to the Trident nuclear weapons system with regularly
scheduled vigils and nonviolent direct actions at the Bangor Trident submarine base.
The theme for the August 4th – 6th
event, “NUCLEAR WEAPONS: The Most Inconvenient Truth”, will focus participants
on the history, current status, cost, and future plans for more nuclear new
subs and missiles.
Cindy Sheehan and Dorli Rainey will also speak about their
experience with this “Most Inconvenient Truth.”
Sheehan’s son Casey was killed in action during the Iraq War. Her makeshift camp outside President George
W. Bush’s Texas Ranch in 2005 launched her career as a dedicated peace activist.
She continues to be a vocal critic of U.S. foreign policy under President
Obama.
Rainey, at 84, pepper sprayed in the face at Seattle Occupy,
became a “poster child” for the Occupy movement through national media
attention to her picture and story. Rainey
has been a peace activist for five decades, and has a strong commitment to
nonviolence in foreign affairs.
In
addition to speakers, on Saturday, August 4, participants in
the Interfaith Peace Walk for a Nuclear Free Future will arrive at
Ground Zero Center, ending their 13-day walk that will begin on
July 23rd in Portland, Oregon. The Nipponzan Myohoji Buddhist order conducts
annual peace walks as a reminder of the very real dangers presented by all uses
of nuclear materials.
The weekend includes education about nuclear weapons and the
Trident base, nonviolence training, music, movies, and a vigil at the Kitsap
Mall. There will also be special
sessions on the Navy’s plans for a Second
Explosives Handling
Wharf at Bangor and its plans for a new generation of
ballistic missile submarines.
Participants at the weekend event will walk down to the Bangor entrance gate early
Monday morning for a traditional vigil and nonviolent direct action. Monday, August 6th, marks the
anniversary of the atomic Bombing of Hiroshima.
According to one estimate, the Bangor base, just 20 miles from
downtown Seattle, has the largest concentration of operational nuclear weapons. As Rear Adm. Joseph Tofalo, Commander, Submarine Group 10,
said on April 18: “A single Trident Submarine is the sixth largest nuclear nation in the world all by itself.”
In related action the Peace Fleet will arrive in Seattle’s Elliott
Bay on Wednesday, August 1st. The Peace Fleet is a water-based nonviolent
protest against the glorification of weapons of war at the Seattle Seafair
festival. Peace activists will
simultaneously demonstrate near Pier 66.
All or any part of the weekend gathering at Ground Zero
Center for Nonviolent Action, at 16159 Clear Creek Road NW, Poulsbo, WA is open
to anyone interested in the nature and practices of nonviolent
action and working toward a nuclear weapons-free world. More information and schedule at
http://psnukefree.blogspot. com/p/events.html.
Direct questions to info@gzcenter.org or 360-930-8697.
###
Contact: Leonard
Eiger, Media & Outreach
Ground Zero
Center for Nonviolent
Action
(425)
445-2190
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