Citizen George presents the life and work of 86-year-old Quaker activist…
The Third Harmony
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
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Drawing on interviews with veteran activists like civil rights leader Bernard Lafayette, scientists like behaviorist Frans de Waal and neuroscientist Marco Iacoboni, Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, political scientist Erica Chenoweth, futurist Elisabet Sahtouris and others, THE THIRD HARMONY will help students and the public to better grasp just what nonviolence is and how it works.
By revealing the convergence of modern science and the world's great wisdom traditions, the film also explores the important role that nonviolence plays in the wider struggle to develop a 'new story' of human nature, that, contrary to the 'old story', scarcity, competition and violence are not inevitable. Rather the universe is conscious and purposeful; we are spiritual beings, and cooperation and collaboration are our natural way of interacting.
Finally, the film points out what each of us can do to facilitate the fulfillment of Mahatma Gandhi's promise that nonviolence could 'oversweep the world' and allow us each to find personal fulfillment in the process.
'Hats off to the Metta Center for this intellectually challenging but completely accessible film that seamlessly addresses both theoretical and practical aspects of nonviolence. Viewers will go away not only appreciating the film's main theoretical point - that nonviolence is an essential human characteristic - but they will also find themselves face-to-face with the film's very practical challenge to take up the work of nonviolence in their own lives.' Charles R. DiSalvo, Professor of Law, West Virginia University, Author, M.K. Gandhi, Attorney at Law: The Man Before the Mahatma
'The Third Harmony weaves together a brilliant tapestry of voices and experiences on the transformative power of nonviolence to grow love, repair harm, and build a more sustainable and just world. Through a conversation that is at once interdisciplinary and keenly focused on practice, students will gain an understanding of the long history and diverse approaches of peacemaking and peaceful conflict resolution. This film should be assigned in every history and civics course as an introduction to the vast potential young people can harness in the face of the world's challenges. The insights it offers are vital to building a better world!' Selina Gallo-Cruz, Associate Professor of Sociology and Peace and Conflict Studies, College of the Holy Cross
'The Third Harmony gathers some of the most important practical and academic voices of today, calling us to the profound change necessary for our survival. Showing recent examples of how nonviolence is the natural, default response of humanity, it is both inspirational and instructional. Used as a discussion starter it will kick off 1000 different discussions. I highly recommend this to any course on social engagement/change, political science, sociology, religion, and psychology.' Jonathan Rudy, Improving Practices Core Group Member, Global Partnership for the Prevention of Armed Conflict
'Utilizing leading figures in the field of non-violence, both activist and academic, this film provides insight and a road map into the power and efficiency of 'speaking truth to power.' This film bears witness to the power of non-violence and how as humans we can move forward together to solve the legacies of violence and build a brighter future for all. The Third Harmony is a wonderful addition to classroom studies that seek to move beyond the historical sketch of Non-Violence and situates the field as a positive and proactive force.' Dr. Greg Carroll, Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies, Salem State University
'This inspiring video introduces nonviolent theory, strategy, and practice through diverse voices, examples, and geographies connecting a compelling history through an urgent present to a hopeful future. From India to Occupy, Palestine to Standing Rock, and Black Lives Matter to Climate Activism The Third Harmony identifies convincing arguments for the power of nonviolent resistance and potential for creative and proactive nonviolent action toward justice and peace...I recommend this film for educators and activists who seek to inspire and educate agents of nonviolent social change.' Mike Klein, Associate Professor and Program Director, Justice and Peace Studies, University of St. Thomas
'Listening to some of today's leading thinkers, activists, and educators, viewers will not only understand the essence of nonviolence, but will feel the powerful pulse of humanity's true heartbeat of love longing for peace with the natural world, with each other, and within themselves. The Third Harmony mixes real examples of nonviolence transformation together with supporting scientific evidence to shine a bright light on the way forward through the darkness of conflict, hate and violence currently threatening our global community. A must have for any nonviolence training curriculum or peace studies program.' Paul Bueno de Mesquita, Professor and Director, Center for Nonviolence and Peace Studies, University of Rhode Island
'Instructive, visually evocative, pragmatic and inspiring...The Third Harmony will serve well in classes, workshops, and study groups to introduce people to nonviolence. It is broad in scope, revealing nonviolence as an activity at local, national, international, and personal levels. It is comprehensive in presenting a variety of students and practitioners of nonviolence in Asia, Africa, the Americas, Europe and the Middle East. And it reveals the many dimensions of nonviolence, from political activity to a personal practice.' Barry L. Gan, Professor of Philosophy, Co-Director of the Center for Nonviolence, St. Bonaventure University
'The Third Harmony reveals the power and promise of nonviolent struggle fused with the pursuit of cooperative relations, and calls us to the important work of cultivating selves, societies, and ecosystems that can alleviate suffering.' Lee Smithey, Professor, Peace and Conflict Studies, Sociology, Swarthmore College
Citation
Main credits
								Nagler, Michael N. (film producer)
Nagler, Michael N. (film director)
Nagler, Michael N. (screenwriter)
Van Hook, Stephanie N. (narrator)
							
Other credits
Cinematographer, Lou Zweiger; editor, Sarah Gorsline; original score, "Sky" (Jim Schuyler).
Distributor subjects
Activism; Conflict Resolution; History; Humanities; International Studies; Neuroscience; Peace Studies; Philosophy; Political Science; Psychology; Religion; Social Emotional Learning; Social Psychology; Sociology; War and PeaceKeywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:04.600 --> 00:00:15.500
 [Music]
 
 00:00:29.500 --> 00:00:34.200
 The problems of our world
 can’t be solved piecemeal.
 
 00:00:34.200 --> 00:00:38.100
 Only a deep change will make it possible
 to live in harmony
 
 00:00:38.100 --> 00:00:39.400
 with nature
 
 00:00:39.400 --> 00:00:40.900
 with one another
 
 00:00:40.900 --> 00:00:42.600
 and most importantly
 
 00:00:42.600 --> 00:00:48.100
 within ourselves.
 
 00:00:48.100 --> 00:01:04.800
 Fortunately, that change is happening.
 
 00:01:04.800 --> 00:01:12.000
 Nonviolence, to me, is the source of power.
 
 00:01:12.000 --> 00:01:26.800
 And the power is actually in each person.
 
 00:01:26.800 --> 00:01:29.600
 One thing we have in common as individuals
 
 00:01:29.600 --> 00:01:31.900
 as human beings
 
 00:01:31.900 --> 00:01:37.000
 is the power to show love.
 
 00:01:37.000 --> 00:01:40.700
 The basis of nonviolence is love.
 
 00:01:40.700 --> 00:01:45.300
 And first of all, in order to have love
 
 00:01:45.300 --> 00:01:48.400
 you have to have a heart.
 
 00:01:48.400 --> 00:01:52.900
 And each person has a heart.
 
 00:01:52.900 --> 00:02:03.900
 My point is, when you step out of the shower,
 you’re fully armed.
 
 00:02:03.900 --> 00:02:19.900
 [Music]
 
 00:02:19.900 --> 00:02:32.500
 It seems like every one of us has this big library
 of humanity and nonviolence inside.
 
 00:02:32.500 --> 00:02:40.500
 To be able to meet the human being inside you
 and to discuss with him about yourself.
 
 00:02:40.500 --> 00:02:46.000
 Nonviolence is to be an artist of your humanity.
 
 00:02:46.000 --> 00:02:48.200
 To bring the best of you.
 
 00:02:48.200 --> 00:02:58.100
 Not just by solving problems, but also by living,
 by experiencing, by practicing.
 
 00:02:58.100 --> 00:03:02.100
 It’s about your humanity is my weapon.
 
 00:03:02.100 --> 00:03:09.200
 And I have to be able to bring you to that place.
 
 00:03:09.200 --> 00:03:14.200
 To me, one of the core principles of nonviolence
 
 00:03:14.200 --> 00:03:21.500
 this core worldview of nonviolence
 is this unwavering faith in humanity
 
 00:03:21.500 --> 00:03:30.800
 and in the goodness of people.
 
 00:03:30.800 --> 00:03:35.300
 No matter how much harm
 someone may have committed
 
 00:03:35.300 --> 00:03:44.000
 that the possibility of transformation
 and the possibility of resilience is always there.
 
 00:03:44.000 --> 00:03:51.300
 Ali Abu Awwad: My brother was
 very violently murdered by Israeli soldiers.
 
 00:03:51.300 --> 00:03:56.700
 One year after, my mother,
 receiving a phone call
 
 00:03:56.700 --> 00:04:04.900
 from a very religious Jewish Israeli father
 that his son was kidnapped and killed by Hamas
 
 00:04:04.900 --> 00:04:08.500
 telling us that there is a group of parents
 
 00:04:08.500 --> 00:04:13.600
 Israeli parents, who have lost
 some of their family members
 
 00:04:13.600 --> 00:04:19.300
 and are willing to come and pay condolences.
 
 00:04:19.300 --> 00:04:20.800
 I was born in 72.
 
 00:04:20.800 --> 00:04:23.800
 And that meeting happened in 2001.
 
 00:04:23.800 --> 00:04:31.800
 That was the first time in my life
 that I saw an Israeli crying.
 
 00:04:31.800 --> 00:04:40.200
 And then my mother was crying with the same
 color of tears with a Jewish mother in my home.
 
 00:04:40.200 --> 00:04:42.400
 That touched me deep.
 
 00:04:42.400 --> 00:04:49.100
 Because I told myself if these people who paid
 the highest price can stand for my right
 
 00:04:49.100 --> 00:04:53.800
 and can understand what does it mean
 to lose someone
 
 00:04:53.800 --> 00:04:58.100
 so everyone can?
 
 00:04:58.100 --> 00:05:03.500
 I realized that justice is this step
 
 00:05:03.500 --> 00:05:09.600
 when we decide to give up being the victim
 of the victimizers
 
 00:05:09.600 --> 00:05:28.700
 and not to be in this prison
 of hatred and victimhood.
 
 00:05:28.700 --> 00:05:31.600
 The work of forgiveness,
 the work letting go
 
 00:05:31.600 --> 00:05:37.600
 the work of healing through our own traumas,
 I think, is so important in nonviolence.
 
 00:05:37.600 --> 00:05:40.100
 I think oftentimes, even when we think of
 nonviolent movements
 
 00:05:40.100 --> 00:05:44.600
 we think of how do we fix those people out there?
 
 00:05:44.600 --> 00:05:46.900
 And there’s a time and a place for that,
 absolutely.
 
 00:05:46.900 --> 00:05:50.500
 There’s a lot of things out there
 that do need to be changed.
 
 00:05:50.500 --> 00:05:53.100
 And at the same time,
 I think a lot of the work of nonviolence
 
 00:05:53.100 --> 00:05:56.900
 is about owning the ways
 in which we contribute to harm
 
 00:05:56.900 --> 00:05:59.800
 and the ways in which we contribute
 to systems of violence.
 
 00:05:59.800 --> 00:06:17.400
 [Music]
 
 00:06:17.400 --> 00:06:19.500
 We didn’t respect you.
 
 00:06:19.500 --> 00:06:21.600
 We polluted your earth.
 
 00:06:21.600 --> 00:06:25.100
 We’ve hurt you in so many ways.
 
 00:06:25.100 --> 00:06:28.200
 We\'ve come to say that we are sorry.
 
 00:06:28.200 --> 00:06:34.400
 We are at your service and we beg
 for your forgiveness.
 
 00:06:34.400 --> 00:06:48.900
 [Native American ululation.]
 
 00:06:48.900 --> 00:06:57.200
 [Native American drumming and singing]
 
 00:06:57.200 --> 00:07:02.500
 We lose sight of the fact that we ourselves are beings
 that want to be in good relationships with each other
 
 00:07:02.500 --> 00:07:07.100
 and sometimes it’s easy for us to be hateful
 and to be angry at everyone.
 
 00:07:07.100 --> 00:07:12.900
 But it’s always possible to reach the core
 of who we are.
 
 00:07:12.900 --> 00:07:16.900
 I just recognize that that there’s no one
 that I can’t learn something from.
 
 00:07:16.900 --> 00:07:20.500
 As we try to make a difference,
 it’s important that in our certainty
 
 00:07:20.500 --> 00:07:23.700
 we don’t eliminate those who disagree with us.
 
 00:07:23.700 --> 00:07:29.400
 And I love nonviolence because it is a way
 that you can show up boldly and passionately
 
 00:07:29.400 --> 00:07:34.300
 and try new things.
 
 00:07:34.300 --> 00:07:38.500
 Nonviolence makes me look for a solution
 that is win/win.
 
 00:07:38.500 --> 00:07:40.900
 A solution that’s not zero sum.
 
 00:07:40.900 --> 00:07:46.600
 A solution that recognizes too if we don’t
 figure out how to share this planet
 
 00:07:46.600 --> 00:07:55.300
 with people of different or similar truth claims
 that we can also have a lose/lose.
 
 00:07:55.300 --> 00:08:04.200
 We are continually inviting people to really work
 with the two hands of nonviolence.
 
 00:08:04.200 --> 00:08:08.600
 Barbara Deming, the late feminist writer
 talked about activists.
 
 00:08:08.600 --> 00:08:10.800
 The two hands of nonviolence being
 on the one hand
 
 00:08:10.800 --> 00:08:19.600
 I will not cooperate with your injustice
 
 00:08:19.600 --> 00:08:25.700
 but I’m open to you as a human being.
 
 00:08:25.700 --> 00:08:33.400
 I think this is the job description of the 21st century.
 
 00:08:33.400 --> 00:08:36.600
 Nonviolence has been with us as long as
 we\'ve been human.
 
 00:08:36.600 --> 00:08:38.700
 It’s a legacy we can all claim.
 
 00:08:38.700 --> 00:08:42.100
 And if we do, we can repair and transform
 the world.
 
 00:08:42.100 --> 00:08:45.300
 So, why don’t we hear more about it?
 
 00:08:45.300 --> 00:08:48.700
 There had been no systematic studies
 on the comparative effectiveness
 
 00:08:48.700 --> 00:08:56.300
 of nonviolent and violent struggle.
 
 00:08:56.300 --> 00:09:00.900
 There have been plenty of studies comparing the
 effectiveness of different types of violent struggle
 
 00:09:00.900 --> 00:09:04.800
 but nobody had ever studied
 the empirical comparison
 
 00:09:04.800 --> 00:09:09.900
 between nonviolent and violent methods of
 struggle by civilian actors.
 
 00:09:09.900 --> 00:09:16.000
 Very few people actually look at the full range of
 strategic options including nonviolent ones
 
 00:09:16.000 --> 00:09:17.900
 and compare them against the violent ones.
 
 00:09:17.900 --> 00:09:26.400
 And this is something that my whole life’s work
 now is seeking to remedy.
 
 00:09:26.400 --> 00:09:34.800
 Michael: It all started really with the Tiananmen Square
 episode when those students were massacred.
 
 00:09:34.800 --> 00:09:41.300
 It hurt me very much.
 
 00:09:41.300 --> 00:09:43.400
 My colleagues and I in the nonviolence field
 
 00:09:43.400 --> 00:09:49.000
 we’d noticed that they\'re making certain tactical
 errors that could easily have been adjusted.
 
 00:09:49.000 --> 00:09:51.100
 But in those days, there was no internet.
 
 00:09:51.100 --> 00:09:52.700
 We couldn\'t just ring them up.
 
 00:09:52.700 --> 00:09:56.600
 So, we thought, “Well, you know,
 I hope it’ll work out for the best.”
 
 00:09:56.600 --> 00:10:02.500
 And it worked out for the worst.
 
 00:10:02.500 --> 00:10:08.300
 We\'re trying to help people practice nonviolence
 more safely and more effectively.
 
 00:10:08.300 --> 00:10:14.100
 But behind that, we\'re also trying to build
 a nonviolent culture in which the general public
 
 00:10:14.100 --> 00:10:19.600
 not necessarily activists will understand
 what nonviolence is
 
 00:10:19.600 --> 00:10:25.000
 and know that they have a big array of resources
 embedded in that power
 
 00:10:25.000 --> 00:10:33.200
 which we could deploy to basically
 build a better world.
 
 00:10:33.200 --> 00:10:37.400
 Tiffany: In South Sudan we have teams around
 the country who are working on what are called
 
 00:10:37.400 --> 00:10:40.400
 “Protection of civilian sites.”
 
 00:10:40.400 --> 00:10:44.100
 Two of our colleagues happened to be
 right where this was starting.
 
 00:10:44.100 --> 00:10:46.600
 They had gone in that day to organize.
 
 00:10:46.600 --> 00:10:50.600
 They were going to do some work with a group of
 women when this all started.
 
 00:10:50.600 --> 00:10:53.600
 A large crowd of people banging
 against the perimeter gate.
 
 00:10:53.600 --> 00:10:58.500
 We could hear stones coming over
 after a couple of minutes.
 
 00:10:58.500 --> 00:11:03.000
 And then ultimately, gunshots.
 
 00:11:03.000 --> 00:11:05.600
 We were trying to encourage people
 to move with us.
 
 00:11:05.600 --> 00:11:07.800
 It became unsafe to keep going.
 
 00:11:07.800 --> 00:11:10.700
 If you keep running, you’re going to get shot
 in the back.
 
 00:11:10.700 --> 00:11:15.500
 There were around nine children
 and four women who were also just looking around
 
 00:11:15.500 --> 00:11:17.800
 you know, like didn’t really know what to do.
 
 00:11:17.800 --> 00:11:21.900
 So, we just encouraged them
 to go in the tent with us.
 
 00:11:21.900 --> 00:11:23.000
 And you could hear the gunshots.
 
 00:11:23.000 --> 00:11:24.600
 You could smell the gun powder.
 
 00:11:24.600 --> 00:11:29.000
 You could hear the casings falling on the ground.
 
 00:11:29.000 --> 00:11:33.700
 There were at least three to four attempts
 just trying to get us out.
 
 00:11:33.700 --> 00:11:36.500
 People with weapons coming in and saying,
 “You guys go.
 
 00:11:36.500 --> 00:11:38.000
 You guys go.”
 
 00:11:38.000 --> 00:11:41.400
 And we said, “We\'re not leaving.”
 
 00:11:41.400 --> 00:11:45.200
 After a long time, the women,
 they perceived they were safe.
 
 00:11:45.200 --> 00:11:47.500
 They immediately came out,
 so we came out with them.
 
 00:11:47.500 --> 00:11:52.300
 They were able to present this particular
 approach and hold onto it.
 
 00:11:52.300 --> 00:11:56.500
 And at one point, really have like a few minute
 conversation with somebody
 
 00:11:56.500 --> 00:12:00.100
 explaining their position, that that’s
 what it was that created that space.
 
 00:12:00.100 --> 00:12:11.300
 And so, in the end of what was a very terrible day,
 at least these 14 women and children were safe.
 
 00:12:11.300 --> 00:12:14.300
 If we had a gun in those instances
 and not been like an unarmed peacekeeper
 
 00:12:14.300 --> 00:12:17.800
 we probably would have been killed.
 
 00:12:17.800 --> 00:12:21.100
 You can be assertive without being aggressive.
 
 00:12:21.100 --> 00:12:28.800
 Being confronted with five people with sticks,
 axes, pistols, automatic rifles
 
 00:12:28.800 --> 00:12:30.200
 we have different tools.
 
 00:12:30.200 --> 00:12:35.200
 We have different weapons, if you will.
 
 00:12:35.200 --> 00:12:36.800
 Nonviolence is a powerful thing.
 
 00:12:36.800 --> 00:12:44.000
 It’s underappreciated and underestimated that it
 can have a transformative effect, you know.
 
 00:12:44.000 --> 00:12:45.900
 It can change the stakes.
 
 00:12:45.900 --> 00:12:53.200
 [Women singing]
 
 00:12:53.200 --> 00:12:59.500
 When we talk about unarmed civilian protection,
 the use of unarmed strategies and tools
 
 00:12:59.500 --> 00:13:05.900
 implemented by civilians to increase security
 and to decrease violence
 
 00:13:05.900 --> 00:13:13.200
 it is a pragmatic practical approach to the realities
 of violence that is having direct impact.
 
 00:13:13.200 --> 00:13:14.400
 It’s saving lives.
 
 00:13:14.400 --> 00:13:17.600
 This is not us being, you know, peace activists
 
 00:13:17.600 --> 00:13:21.900
 who are very idealistic, and we hope unicorns
 and rainbows will rule the world one day.
 
 00:13:21.900 --> 00:13:23.200
 This is hard work.
 
 00:13:23.200 --> 00:13:37.300
 There’s nothing easy about it, but it works.
 
 00:13:37.300 --> 00:13:41.100
 The way that one fights a struggle
 really does help to determine
 
 00:13:41.100 --> 00:13:45.000
 the way the country will look in the aftermath.
 
 00:13:45.000 --> 00:13:50.900
 Nonviolent campaigns are about ten times likelier
 to usher in democratic institutions
 
 00:13:50.900 --> 00:13:57.800
 within five years after the end of the conflict
 compared with violent insurgencies.
 
 00:13:57.800 --> 00:14:02.900
 They\'re also four times more likely to usher in
 these institutions, even when they fail.
 
 00:14:02.900 --> 00:14:05.900
 So, nonviolent campaigns are creating a type
 
 00:14:05.900 --> 00:14:17.000
 of oppositional activities or political space that
 couldn\'t have occurred in their absence.
 
 00:14:17.000 --> 00:14:21.700
 From 1900 to 2006, campaigns that relied on
 mass nonviolent struggle
 
 00:14:21.700 --> 00:14:26.600
 were twice as effective as the violent ones.
 
 00:14:26.600 --> 00:14:29.500
 They were also becoming more effective
 over time.
 
 00:14:29.500 --> 00:14:33.600
 So, since about the 1960s nonviolent resistance
 has become
 
 00:14:33.600 --> 00:14:37.200
 a much more powerful force for change
 than violent resistance.
 
 00:14:37.200 --> 00:14:42.700
 And it’s also becoming far more frequent.
 
 00:14:42.700 --> 00:14:45.000
 One of the big myths that’s busted
 through our data
 
 00:14:45.000 --> 00:14:50.300
 is that nonviolent resistance takes longer to
 achieve results than violent insurgency.
 
 00:14:50.300 --> 00:14:56.200
 In fact, what we find is strikingly the opposite,
 that nonviolent campaigns, fully mobilized
 
 00:14:56.200 --> 00:15:00.000
 typically take about three years to run their course
 
 00:15:00.000 --> 00:15:05.300
 whereas violent insurgencies
 take about nine to ten years.
 
 00:15:05.300 --> 00:15:12.000
 From 2010 to 2014, we see more new onsets of
 mass nonviolent action around the world
 
 00:15:12.000 --> 00:15:15.300
 than we saw in the entire decade of the 1990s.
 
 00:15:15.300 --> 00:15:37.500
 [Singing]
 
 00:15:37.500 --> 00:15:40.900
 Nonviolent resistance is more powerful
 and effective
 
 00:15:40.900 --> 00:15:44.000
 and becoming the choice de jour, so to speak.
 
 00:15:44.000 --> 00:15:48.000
 Whereas violent resistance is going out of style
 in a major way.
 
 00:15:48.000 --> 00:16:34.900
 [Music]
 
 00:16:34.900 --> 00:16:42.200
 Gandhi: I do dimly perceive that while everything around me
 is ever-changing, ever-dying.
 
 00:16:42.200 --> 00:16:45.800
 There is underlying all that change
 
 00:16:45.800 --> 00:16:48.900
 a living power that is changeless
 
 00:16:48.900 --> 00:16:51.200
 that holds all together
 
 00:16:51.200 --> 00:16:52.400
 that creates
 
 00:16:52.400 --> 00:16:53.300
 resolves
 
 00:16:53.300 --> 00:17:00.100
 and recreates.
 
 00:17:00.100 --> 00:17:03.000
 Michael: “Nonviolence is as old as the hills.”
 
 00:17:03.000 --> 00:17:08.400
 That’s a direct quote from Gandhi.
 
 00:17:08.400 --> 00:17:16.700
 What Gandhi did that was different was to give it
 a local habitation and a name.
 
 00:17:16.700 --> 00:17:21.500
 So, he had this contest in 1908
 and they came up with the word satyagraha
 
 00:17:21.500 --> 00:17:23.800
 which means, “Clinging to truth.”
 
 00:17:23.800 --> 00:17:27.200
 But in ancient India, there had been a term called,
 “Ahimsa,”
 
 00:17:27.200 --> 00:17:31.600
 which means the absence of an intention to harm.
 
 00:17:31.600 --> 00:17:33.100
 What it really means
 
 00:17:33.100 --> 00:17:39.600
 the creative power that’s generated when
 you have controlled any intention to harm.
 
 00:17:39.600 --> 00:17:43.800
 Now, that term translated literally into English
 
 00:17:43.800 --> 00:17:49.000
 which happened sometime in the late 1920s
 became \"Nonviolent.\"
 
 00:17:49.000 --> 00:17:54.300
 So, that shows you, we’ve had a word for violence
 since the Latin language.
 
 00:17:54.300 --> 00:17:59.000
 But we haven’t had a word for nonviolence
 before 1920.
 
 00:17:59.000 --> 00:18:02.200
 That shows you how far behind the curve
 we have been.
 
 00:18:02.200 --> 00:18:16.500
 And it also shows you why we overlook the thing,
 even when it’s right in front of our noses.
 
 00:18:16.500 --> 00:18:28.500
 What kind of self-concept as a species
 do we have?
 
 00:18:28.500 --> 00:18:34.100
 We humans, we think of ourselves, traditionally,
 at least in Western society
 
 00:18:34.100 --> 00:18:36.700
 as driven by selfishness and competition
 
 00:18:36.700 --> 00:18:39.900
 and we aggressively pursue these goals.
 
 00:18:39.900 --> 00:18:42.900
 And that needs to be reflected in our society.
 
 00:18:42.900 --> 00:18:45.800
 Our society should reflect these
 competitive tendencies.
 
 00:18:45.800 --> 00:18:47.600
 That’s sort of the capitalist system.
 
 00:18:47.600 --> 00:18:53.800
 That’s how it operates, and sort of unbridled
 competition is a good thing for society.
 
 00:18:53.800 --> 00:18:59.600
 And it’s sort of interesting how in 2008
 when that whole system collapsed financially
 
 00:18:59.600 --> 00:19:05.300
 and we saw that unbridled competition
 is not going to fix the job that we wanted to do
 
 00:19:05.300 --> 00:19:08.000
 how people started to think differently.
 
 00:19:08.000 --> 00:19:14.400
 That gave us an opening to start talking about
 empathy and cooperation in a different way.
 
 00:19:14.400 --> 00:19:18.400
 Protests are spreading from cyberspace
 to streets all the country.
 
 00:19:18.400 --> 00:19:31.700
 50 cities now from Salt Lake City to Topeka
 to Knoxville.
 
 00:19:31.700 --> 00:19:36.600
 We’ve been telling ourselves the same old story
 at least since the industrial revolution
 
 00:19:36.600 --> 00:19:44.000
 that we\'re all separate physical beings whose
 needs are in competition.
 
 00:19:44.000 --> 00:19:47.200
 But based on scientific breakthroughs
 that started a century ago
 
 00:19:47.200 --> 00:19:50.000
 and whose significance is now catching on
 
 00:19:50.000 --> 00:19:54.400
 scientists, academics and activists
 are calling this the old story
 
 00:19:54.400 --> 00:20:04.700
 and giving us an entirely different
 and more realistic vision for the future.
 
 00:20:04.700 --> 00:20:08.100
 Cooperation is actually very widespread
 in the animal kingdom.
 
 00:20:08.100 --> 00:20:13.500
 There’s actually very few animals who survive
 without some form of cooperation.
 
 00:20:13.500 --> 00:20:18.800
 This whole notion that deep down we are bad
 and we need to work very hard to be good
 
 00:20:18.800 --> 00:20:27.400
 that’s an idea that’s sort of out of the window now.
 
 00:20:27.400 --> 00:20:30.500
 The new story is building on that.
 
 00:20:30.500 --> 00:20:33.600
 It’s saying we\'re not inherently separate.
 
 00:20:33.600 --> 00:20:40.800
 As the scientific research continues to expand in
 the areas of quantum physics and so on
 
 00:20:40.800 --> 00:20:43.700
 they\'re learning more and more –
 the science community –
 
 00:20:43.700 --> 00:20:49.100
 about how interconnected all of the life is.
 
 00:20:49.100 --> 00:20:53.000
 In 1986, a group of scientists
 from around the world convened
 
 00:20:53.000 --> 00:20:58.300
 and they issued the Seville Statement.
 
 00:20:58.300 --> 00:21:04.500
 They said, “There’s nothing in our DNA
 that says that we are predisposed to violence.\"
 
 00:21:04.500 --> 00:21:08.200
 It’s also scientifically incorrect to say
 that we are separate.
 
 00:21:08.200 --> 00:21:09.800
 That’s just not true.
 
 00:21:09.800 --> 00:21:12.800
 And the more you can realize
 how connected life is
 
 00:21:12.800 --> 00:21:17.600
 It makes it even more important to engage
 in these nonviolent practices.
 
 00:21:17.600 --> 00:21:21.000
 And it also helps you understand
 why it’s so effective.
 
 00:21:21.000 --> 00:21:23.500
 There is something that connects all of us.
 
 00:21:23.500 --> 00:21:28.300
 So when we are helping other people
 we are helping ourselves.
 
 00:21:28.300 --> 00:21:33.500
 Cooperation is just as much a part of us
 as competition.
 
 00:21:33.500 --> 00:21:37.200
 And every disaster proves that.
 
 00:21:37.200 --> 00:21:44.600
 Often, in evolution, the cooperative mode
 was driven by disasters.
 
 00:21:44.600 --> 00:21:50.700
 In our trainings, we get the question a lot
 that isn’t violence just part of human nature?
 
 00:21:50.700 --> 00:21:55.400
 And I used to struggle with that question
 until I heard a guy named Paul Chappell speak.
 
 00:21:55.400 --> 00:21:59.600
 Paul Chappell is a graduate of
 the Military Academy at West Point
 
 00:21:59.600 --> 00:22:01.000
 and is now a peace activist.
 
 00:22:01.000 --> 00:22:06.200
 And he once told me that every study
 that has ever been conducted on violence
 
 00:22:06.200 --> 00:22:17.800
 shows that violence is traumatic.
 
 00:22:17.800 --> 00:22:19.800
 Even if you\'re not a direct participant in it
 
 00:22:19.800 --> 00:22:25.100
 just witnessing violence can cause PTSD,
 trauma, depression, anxiety
 
 00:22:25.100 --> 00:22:33.200
 all these permanent disorders.
 
 00:22:33.200 --> 00:22:35.300
 And yet, not a single person has ever been
 
 00:22:35.300 --> 00:22:44.300
 traumatized by an act of love
 or an act of compassion.
 
 00:22:44.300 --> 00:22:52.600
 And he says, that to him, that is evidence
 that violence is not part of our human nature.
 
 00:22:52.600 --> 00:22:56.100
 That the things that fulfill us as human beings
 
 00:22:56.100 --> 00:23:01.500
 that bring us closer to our potential –
 love and understanding and community.
 
 00:23:01.500 --> 00:23:10.200
 That those things are our truest nature
 as human beings.
 
 00:23:10.200 --> 00:23:15.400
 Michael: If you start from the assumption
 that everybody has a good core in their nature
 
 00:23:15.400 --> 00:23:17.700
 that we\'re all deeply interconnected
 
 00:23:17.700 --> 00:23:24.000
 that there is no problem which cannot be
 resolved to the benefit of all parties.
 
 00:23:24.000 --> 00:23:27.400
 If you start with those assumptions,
 and even if you don’t believe them
 
 00:23:27.400 --> 00:23:33.600
 you take them on as the hypothesis,
 as assumptions, and you test them.
 
 00:23:33.600 --> 00:23:50.900
 And you find out that it works.
 
 00:23:50.900 --> 00:23:55.500
 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has
 designed 50% of the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
 
 00:23:55.500 --> 00:24:03.400
 And some of us troop out there on occasion
 and engage in nonviolent action.
 
 00:24:03.400 --> 00:24:04.800
 One time a group of us went out
 
 00:24:04.800 --> 00:24:08.100
 and we said we were going to lay in the street
 in front of the south gate
 
 00:24:08.100 --> 00:24:13.800
 and not get up when they ordered us to
 as a symbol of our noncooperation.
 
 00:24:13.800 --> 00:24:18.600
 But after a while a police officer comes over
 and says, “Okay, now I want you to get up.
 
 00:24:18.600 --> 00:24:19.200
 You\'re under arrest.”
 
 00:24:19.200 --> 00:24:23.800
 I actually told him,
 “Oh, I’m sorry, I can’t do that today.”
 
 00:24:23.800 --> 00:24:28.100
 So, he grabs my arm
 and just kind of tugged me and pulled me up.
 
 00:24:28.100 --> 00:24:32.900
 His commanding officer
 across the street says
 
 00:24:32.900 --> 00:24:37.000
 “Don’t full around with that guy.
 Just break his wrist.”
 
 00:24:37.000 --> 00:24:44.400
 And so, just automatically,
 he starts to break my wrist.
 
 00:24:44.400 --> 00:24:49.300
 And something came to me at that point.
 
 00:24:49.300 --> 00:24:53.900
 In addition to the pain I was feeling in my wrist,
 I just kind of leaned up a little bit.
 
 00:24:53.900 --> 00:25:00.700
 Didn’t get up, but I leaned up and I said,
 “You don’t have to do that.
 
 00:25:00.700 --> 00:25:03.800
 You don’t have to break my wrist.”
 
 00:25:03.800 --> 00:25:06.500
 And the guy was suddenly very confused.
 
 00:25:06.500 --> 00:25:09.500
 And he continued to try to twist my –
 
 00:25:09.500 --> 00:25:12.300
 and then he let go.
 
 00:25:12.300 --> 00:25:14.900
 So, this guy has given my wrist back to me.
 
 00:25:14.900 --> 00:25:19.200
 So, I feel like I want to give him something,
 so I get up.
 
 00:25:19.200 --> 00:25:21.200
 And I walk with him.
 
 00:25:21.200 --> 00:25:27.500
 We\'re walking along to the police van
 and he turns to me – really, he turns to me
 
 00:25:27.500 --> 00:25:34.100
 and he says, “Thank you so much for telling me
 I didn’t have to break your wrist.
 
 00:25:34.100 --> 00:25:36.300
 I didn’t want to break your wrist.
 
 00:25:36.300 --> 00:25:39.100
 But I got an order and that’s what I do.
 
 00:25:39.100 --> 00:25:41.800
 But you broke the spell.
 
 00:25:41.800 --> 00:25:46.800
 And I said, “Well.”
 I said, “Great.”
 
 00:25:46.800 --> 00:25:52.600
 And we ended up having a wonderful half-hour
 conversation about our lives.
 
 00:25:52.600 --> 00:25:58.200
 Those kinds of moments
 have shown me what’s possible.
 
 00:25:58.200 --> 00:26:02.400
 What we have been calling, “The nonviolent moment,”
 or the “Nonviolent effect,”
 
 00:26:02.400 --> 00:26:06.900
 actually has a physiological component.
 
 00:26:06.900 --> 00:26:09.200
 A physiological pathway.
 
 00:26:09.200 --> 00:26:12.700
 So, let’s say that you are threatening me
 
 00:26:12.700 --> 00:26:20.300
 and I do the nonviolent conversion in my mind
 or my heart or wherever that goes on.
 
 00:26:20.300 --> 00:26:24.800
 And I act towards you with respect
 on the one hand
 
 00:26:24.800 --> 00:26:30.100
 but with refusal to comply with your unjust command
 on the other hand.
 
 00:26:30.100 --> 00:26:33.800
 I am now in a very different mental state
 from what you expected.
 
 00:26:33.800 --> 00:26:39.000
 My mental state is actually being mapped
 in your brain.
 
 00:26:39.000 --> 00:26:42.700
 Marco Iacoboni: You have in your brain some cells
 that control your own muscles
 
 00:26:42.700 --> 00:26:47.800
 but that also when you\'re just watching
 the actions of others fire up.
 
 00:26:47.800 --> 00:26:50.600
 As if by watching the actions of other people
 
 00:26:50.600 --> 00:26:55.100
 you are seeing your own actions
 reflected by a mirror.
 
 00:26:55.100 --> 00:26:58.900
 What you need to do is to suppress
 your immediate tendency to react
 
 00:26:58.900 --> 00:27:00.700
 and to be aggressive yourself.
 
 00:27:00.700 --> 00:27:04.600
 If you\'re able to suppress that
 and to become the mirror
 
 00:27:04.600 --> 00:27:08.800
 then inevitably you\'re going to have to induce
 in the other person
 
 00:27:08.800 --> 00:27:13.100
 some form of mirroring of your calm demeanor
 which would probably dampen
 
 00:27:13.100 --> 00:27:15.600
 the aggression level of that individual.
 
 00:27:15.600 --> 00:27:18.500
 I believe that in the Western world
 we get a lot of things wrong.
 
 00:27:18.500 --> 00:27:22.300
 We’re so focused on the individual.
 
 00:27:22.300 --> 00:27:25.100
 That is to say, we have the self that is detached.
 
 00:27:25.100 --> 00:27:29.200
 Whereas in Eastern philosophies,
 there’s this notion of connectedness.
 
 00:27:29.200 --> 00:27:33.800
 I think what mirror neurons do when we do
 interact like this, I’m no longer Marco.
 
 00:27:33.800 --> 00:27:35.100
 You\'re no longer Dalia Lama.
 
 00:27:35.100 --> 00:27:39.200
 We are us in this interaction.
 
 00:27:39.200 --> 00:27:43.100
 I think that’s an important concept
 to remember, to propagate.
 
 00:27:43.100 --> 00:27:47.900
 And this could actually increase our potential
 for empathy.
 
 00:27:47.900 --> 00:27:49.400
 Dalai Lama: Wonderful.
 
 00:27:49.400 --> 00:27:57.000
 [Applause]
 
 00:27:57.000 --> 00:28:05.700
 I usually believe basic human nature
 is gentleness, compassionate.
 
 00:28:05.700 --> 00:28:08.100
 So, it seems now you are supporting that.
 
 00:28:08.100 --> 00:28:10.400
 Oh, yeah.
 
 00:28:10.400 --> 00:28:14.800
 There are disciplines that a person
 can practice daily
 
 00:28:14.800 --> 00:28:23.400
 that help you deal with the strong emotions
 that are going to come up in a serious conflict.
 
 00:28:23.400 --> 00:28:27.000
 When you\'re dealing with your own fear
 and your own anger
 
 00:28:27.000 --> 00:28:35.200
 it’s really pretty easy to deal with somebody else’s
 fear and anger that they\'re throwing at you.
 
 00:28:35.200 --> 00:28:37.600
 Kazu: We come out of the tradition of
 Dr. Bernard Lafayette
 
 00:28:37.600 --> 00:28:40.200
 and the leaders of the Nashville Lunch Counter Sit-ins
 
 00:28:40.200 --> 00:28:43.700
 who trained under Rev. James Lawson for
 months and months and months
 
 00:28:43.700 --> 00:28:45.500
 before they took their first step.
 
 00:28:45.500 --> 00:28:49.200
 We also come from the tradition of Gandhi who,
 with his 78 followers
 
 00:28:49.200 --> 00:28:53.500
 lived in an ashram and trained
 and disciplined themselves
 
 00:28:53.500 --> 00:28:57.500
 and strategized and went through
 a 15-year process of self-purification
 
 00:28:57.500 --> 00:29:01.000
 before embarking on the Salt March.
 
 00:29:01.000 --> 00:29:07.000
 Nonviolent people, they don’t recognize
 the necessity of fierce discipline and training
 
 00:29:07.000 --> 00:29:12.200
 and strategizing and planning and recruiting
 
 00:29:12.200 --> 00:29:14.900
 and doing the kinds of things you do
 to have a movement.
 
 00:29:14.900 --> 00:29:21.600
 That can’t happen spontaneously.
 It has to be done systematically.
 
 00:29:19.700 --> 00:29:36.400
 [Shouting and yelling during a training.]
 
 00:29:36.400 --> 00:29:39.200
 Most activists have no training
 in how to wage peace.
 
 00:29:39.200 --> 00:29:42.200
 Most people have no training
 on how to wage peace.
 
 00:29:42.200 --> 00:29:44.300
 Most people are not taught basic peace skills.
 
 00:29:44.300 --> 00:29:49.200
 And what if people were as well-trained
 in waging peace as soldiers are in waging war?
 
 00:29:49.200 --> 00:29:54.700
 And bringing the same level of discipline
 and strategic thinking to the mission of peace
 
 00:29:54.700 --> 00:29:58.900
 that the military brings to war.
 
 00:29:58.900 --> 00:30:01.800
 David: It ended up with 12 of us.
 
 00:30:01.800 --> 00:30:06.000
 We got up our courage,
 did additional nonviolent training.
 
 00:30:06.000 --> 00:30:10.300
 And went down to a People’s Drugstore
 in Arlington, Virginia.
 
 00:30:10.300 --> 00:30:14.500
 Sat down at the lunch counter.
 
 00:30:14.500 --> 00:30:17.700
 It was the most challenging two days of my life.
 
 00:30:17.700 --> 00:30:22.700
 People came up and spat at us in the face.
 
 00:30:22.700 --> 00:30:25.800
 People put lit cigarettes down our shirts.
 
 00:30:25.800 --> 00:30:30.900
 People called us every name in the book.
 
 00:30:30.900 --> 00:30:34.900
 And we would try to respond
 in a loving, nonviolent way.
 
 00:30:34.900 --> 00:30:37.700
 which was pretty challenging sometimes.
 
 00:30:37.700 --> 00:30:43.400
 Toward the end of the second day,
 I was meditating on loving your enemy.
 
 00:30:43.400 --> 00:30:47.400
 And I heard a guy come up from behind me
 and he says,
 
 00:30:47.400 --> 00:30:53.100
 “If you don’t get out of this store in two seconds
 I’m going to stab this through your heart.”
 
 00:30:53.100 --> 00:30:55.900
 And in his hand was a switchblade
 
 00:30:55.900 --> 00:31:00.400
 which by that time was half an inch or so
 from my heart.
 
 00:31:00.400 --> 00:31:05.000
 And I had two seconds to decide,
 “Well, do I really believe in nonviolence?
 
 00:31:05.000 --> 00:31:09.600
 Or is there any other way I should relate to this guy?”
 
 00:31:09.600 --> 00:31:13.600
 And I just looked him in the eyes, and I said,
 
 00:31:13.600 --> 00:31:21.400
 “Friend, do what you believe is right,
 but I’ll still try to love you.”
 
 00:31:21.400 --> 00:31:23.600
 I was 20-years-old at the time.
 
 00:31:23.600 --> 00:31:25.800
 And it was kind of miraculous.
 
 00:31:25.800 --> 00:31:28.000
 This face that was contorted with hatred
 
 00:31:28.000 --> 00:31:30.100
 his jaw began to drop
 
 00:31:30.100 --> 00:31:35.400
 and his hand that was shaking like this began to fall
 and he left the store.
 
 00:31:35.400 --> 00:31:39.200
 Some friendly media people got us out of there
 alive across the bridge
 
 00:31:39.200 --> 00:31:41.500
 back into Washington D.C.
 
 00:31:41.500 --> 00:31:47.500
 and we literally shook for six days whether
 we had the courage to go and do it again.
 
 00:31:47.500 --> 00:31:53.900
 And on the sixth day, we got a phone call that
 the religious and community leaders had met
 
 00:31:53.900 --> 00:32:00.200
 and talked with the business leaders
 and got a commitment that the drugstores
 
 00:32:00.200 --> 00:32:05.600
 and the eating facilities would be open
 within ten days.
 
 00:32:05.600 --> 00:32:09.000
 Seeing that first-hand,
 seeing the power of nonviolence
 
 00:32:09.000 --> 00:32:15.700
 and feeling we really have the power
 to make history -- to change history.
 
 00:32:15.700 --> 00:32:47.800
 [Music]
 
 00:32:49.700 --> 00:32:55.600
 Gandhi said, “I have not the shadow of a doubt
 that any human being can do what I’ve done.”
 
 00:32:55.600 --> 00:32:58.800
 In other words, every one of us can play a role.
 
 00:32:58.800 --> 00:33:00.100
 My name is Mica.
 
 00:33:00.100 --> 00:33:01.600
 And my name is Valerie.
 
 00:33:01.600 --> 00:33:03.300
 We\'re in the 7th Grade.
 
 00:33:03.300 --> 00:33:07.800
 The reason why we are here is because we want
 a future for our generation.
 
 00:33:07.800 --> 00:33:12.300
 Our evolutionary mandate is to move into
 peaceful cooperation.
 
 00:33:12.300 --> 00:33:16.500
 Because we see now that we\'re destroying
 our own infrastructure.
 
 00:33:16.500 --> 00:33:20.500
 We\'re destroying the planet we depend on.
 
 00:33:20.500 --> 00:33:26.300
 Some would say, like Stephen Hawking, “Well, we
 need to get off the planet and colonize elsewhere.”
 
 00:33:26.300 --> 00:33:29.400
 And I say to that, “If I were on the Galactic Council
 
 00:33:29.400 --> 00:33:37.700
 I wouldn\'t give humans another planet
 before we clean this act up.”
 
 00:33:37.700 --> 00:33:42.100
 Sherri: My hope lies in creating something new.
 
 00:33:42.100 --> 00:33:48.500
 Where I would like to go looks very different from
 the places that we\'ve been.
 
 00:33:48.500 --> 00:33:51.400
 I want to move beyond those systems.
 
 00:33:51.400 --> 00:33:57.000
 I want to actually create something that’s aligned
 with my values.
 
 00:33:57.000 --> 00:34:00.000
 I want to create something that’s aligned with life.
 
 00:34:00.000 --> 00:34:03.800
 I want to create something that’s
 aligned with respect
 
 00:34:03.800 --> 00:34:12.500
 and this balanced sense of wellbeing for all.
 
 00:34:12.500 --> 00:34:17.200
 In ancient India, the great sage Shankara
 had this model of the tapatraya
 
 00:34:17.200 --> 00:34:24.000
 that there are three sources of suffering –
 from the environment, from other people.
 
 00:34:24.000 --> 00:34:28.200
 And finally, and most importantly,
 within ourselves.
 
 00:34:28.200 --> 00:34:32.200
 So, my teacher, Eknath Easwaran,
 he kind of turned that around and said,
 
 00:34:32.200 --> 00:34:35.200
 “Okay, we need to establish the three harmonies then.”
 
 00:34:35.200 --> 00:34:37.400
 Harmony 1 – with the outer world, yes.
 
 00:34:37.400 --> 00:34:39.500
 Harmony 2 – with other beings.
 
 00:34:39.500 --> 00:34:48.100
 Most important and actual starting point
 is the harmony within ourselves.
 
 00:34:48.100 --> 00:34:57.800
 To do that first part,
 we recommend five steps.
 
 00:34:57.800 --> 00:35:00.300
 Avoid violent media.
 
 00:35:00.300 --> 00:35:06.400
 We have so many alternatives today.
 
 00:35:06.400 --> 00:35:10.000
 We need people to get involved in this work.
 
 00:35:10.000 --> 00:35:20.500
 Which inspires our communities to understand
 that are effective ways of dealing with conflicts.
 
 00:35:20.500 --> 00:35:30.900
 Take up a spiritual practice.
 
 00:35:30.900 --> 00:35:37.900
 Try to relate personally, wherever you can.
 
 00:35:37.900 --> 00:35:43.000
 And from there, that harmonic energy
 can be radiated out
 
 00:35:43.000 --> 00:35:45.200
 into our relationships with other people.
 
 00:35:45.200 --> 00:35:51.900
 And then finally, to the whole world.
 
 00:35:51.900 --> 00:35:54.500
 We’re on the river with
 a couple hundred kayakers
 
 00:35:54.500 --> 00:35:58.700
 who have staged in front of the Fennica –
 that’s an icebreaking ship for Shell Oil.
 
 00:35:58.700 --> 00:36:00.500
 It’s behind that tarp.
 
 00:36:00.500 --> 00:36:04.600
 Now, these folks here today, very lively chanting,
 “Climate justice.
 
 00:36:04.600 --> 00:36:06.200
 Shell no, we won’t go.”
 
 00:36:06.200 --> 00:36:09.800
 And they have banners also saying,
 “Save the Arctic,” and other sentiments.
 
 00:36:09.800 --> 00:36:32.000
 [Music]
 
 00:36:32.000 --> 00:36:35.400
 Avoid commercial media.
 
 00:36:35.400 --> 00:36:41.100
 Learn about nonviolence by reading about
 it’s rich history and taking a training.
 
 00:36:41.100 --> 00:36:46.300
 Take up a spiritual practice, such as meditation.
 
 00:36:46.300 --> 00:36:51.100
 Find a personal connection with people around you.
 
 00:36:51.100 --> 00:36:54.000
 Find where your special skills
 meet the world’s urgent needs
 
 00:36:54.000 --> 00:36:57.100
 and find a project to work on.
 
 00:36:57.100 --> 00:37:01.600
 We\'re in a time where it is no longer us versus them,
 but it’s all of us or none.
 
 00:37:01.600 --> 00:37:03.600
 And everyone has something to contribute.
 
 00:37:03.600 --> 00:37:11.100
 So, identifying what people want to give,
 be it time, money, ideas, other things
 
 00:37:11.100 --> 00:37:23.800
 is a way that we can build how wide
 a nonviolent movement can be.
 
 00:37:23.800 --> 00:37:28.800
 Nonviolence can be practiced individually
 in our day-to-day interactions.
 
 00:37:28.800 --> 00:37:30.300
 But don’t stop there.
 
 00:37:30.300 --> 00:37:35.600
 There are all these institutions
 that put nonviolence into the picture.
 
 00:37:35.600 --> 00:37:40.000
 In the country we have restorative justice
 in schools and in prisons.
 
 00:37:40.000 --> 00:37:45.000
 It’s a way for someone to take accountability
 and be brought back into the community
 
 00:37:45.000 --> 00:37:48.300
 so that they can repair the harm
 that has been done.
 
 00:37:48.300 --> 00:37:52.300
 They’re able to sit down with the people
 that had been harmed.
 
 00:37:52.300 --> 00:37:56.900
 And somebody to kind of mediate
 that conversation.
 
 00:37:56.900 --> 00:38:01.300
 And everybody can come to sort of
 middle ground.
 
 00:38:01.300 --> 00:38:02.500
 I use a lot of “I” statements.
 
 00:38:02.500 --> 00:38:06.300
 I try not to point the figure
 and say, “You’re doing this.”
 
 00:38:06.300 --> 00:38:07.300
 Or, “You make me feel a certain way.”
 
 00:38:07.300 --> 00:38:14.300
 Try and say, “I see at as,”
 or, “I feel that it could go this way.”
 
 00:38:14.300 --> 00:38:18.800
 It’s really trying not to point the finger
 and make somebody feel cornered
 
 00:38:18.800 --> 00:38:22.600
 because that’s how conflict starts.
 
 00:38:22.600 --> 00:38:28.500
 Michael: Internationally even,
 we have civilian peacekeeping.
 
 00:38:28.500 --> 00:38:31.900
 Thanks to the work of Nonviolent Peaceforce
 and some other groups
 
 00:38:31.900 --> 00:38:35.500
 Like Metta peace teams
 and Christian Peacemaker Teams
 
 00:38:35.500 --> 00:38:37.100
 Peace Brigades International
 
 00:38:37.100 --> 00:38:45.200
 The United Nations is actually starting to take
 a serious look at Unarmed Civilian Peacekeeping.
 
 00:38:45.200 --> 00:38:50.800
 Mel Duncan. I represent Nonviolent Peaceforce, U.S.
 
 00:38:50.800 --> 00:38:55.900
 We are here today to urge you to include
 Unarmed Civilian Protection
 
 00:38:55.900 --> 00:39:01.900
 as a recommended activity within
 the state foreign operations
 
 00:39:01.900 --> 00:39:04.300
 and related programs budget for 2020
 
 00:39:04.300 --> 00:39:07.000
 including in the following programs –
 
 00:39:07.000 --> 00:39:08.300
 Women, Peace and Security
 
 00:39:08.300 --> 00:39:11.300
 Transition Initiatives.
 
 00:39:11.300 --> 00:39:18.300
 The Office of Reconciliation in South Sudan.
 
 00:39:18.300 --> 00:39:20.000
 The more that we apply nonviolence
 
 00:39:20.000 --> 00:39:24.500
 and the more that we use Unarmed Civilian Protection
 in areas of violent conflict
 
 00:39:24.500 --> 00:39:29.100
 the more that we see behavioral change
 where decisions made
 
 00:39:29.100 --> 00:39:32.800
 at the interpersonal and the inter
 and intracommunal level
 
 00:39:32.800 --> 00:39:37.000
 local governance levels, and moving on up
 to larger decision-making
 
 00:39:37.000 --> 00:39:40.400
 start taking on the characteristics of nonviolence.
 
 00:39:40.400 --> 00:39:49.500
 And characteristics of constructive change
 rather than destructive change.
 
 00:39:49.500 --> 00:39:53.700
 I request respectfully that we have
 a hearing in this committee
 
 00:39:53.700 --> 00:39:55.900
 where we bring the Attorney General before us
 
 00:39:55.900 --> 00:40:00.300
 to tell us what we are doing with these camps
 on the southern border.
 
 00:40:00.300 --> 00:40:01.000
 We have to think big.
 
 00:40:01.000 --> 00:40:02.700
 Sojourner Truth didn\'t think small.
 
 00:40:02.700 --> 00:40:03.800
 Martin Luther King didn’t.
 
 00:40:03.800 --> 00:40:04.800
 Gandhi didn’t.
 
 00:40:04.800 --> 00:40:10.900
 They had big, bold ideas.
 
 00:40:10.900 --> 00:40:15.400
 And I want our young people to not get cynical
 about having big bold ideas
 
 00:40:15.400 --> 00:40:19.300
 and to really be willing to fight with love.
 
 00:40:19.300 --> 00:40:20.300
 We are united.
 
 00:40:20.300 --> 00:40:23.200
 We are called the United States of America
 for that reason.
 
 00:40:23.200 --> 00:40:25.900
 Together, we are whole. Together we are one.
 
 00:40:25.900 --> 00:40:27.900
 Look to your left and look to your right.
 
 00:40:27.900 --> 00:40:30.300
 Brothers and sisters is what I see.
 
 00:40:30.300 --> 00:40:33.200
 It’s actually patriotic to fight for peace.
 
 00:40:33.200 --> 00:40:42.500
 And to de-militarize, de-nuclearize, and to think
 about national security as economic security
 
 00:40:42.500 --> 00:40:44.800
 domestic security, peace and justice.
 
 00:40:44.800 --> 00:40:49.600
 I mean these are not separated concepts.
 
 00:40:49.600 --> 00:40:52.200
 Erica: Governments have spent billions and billions
 of dollars
 
 00:40:52.200 --> 00:40:56.600
 getting violent science right in the past 400 years.
 
 00:40:56.600 --> 00:41:10.600
 And I think that it’s time that we invest some time
 and energy into alternatives.
 
 00:41:10.600 --> 00:41:14.200
 Rivera: We actually don’t have 100 years
 to figure this out.
 
 00:41:14.200 --> 00:41:15.200
 We don’t have that luxury of time.
 
 00:41:15.200 --> 00:41:23.000
 We have actually things on our plate in this
 moment on earth – like the climate crisis.
 
 00:41:23.000 --> 00:41:34.200
 It is a ticking clock on those of us who would like to see
 nonviolence make some significant changes in this world.
 
 00:41:34.200 --> 00:41:40.500
 So, what are we waiting for?
 
 00:41:40.500 --> 00:42:27.500
 [Music]
 
 00:42:27.500 --> 00:42:30.600
 I and some others are beginning to believe that
 
 00:42:30.600 --> 00:42:40.700
 not only is nonviolence a natural endowment for the human being,
 it is the defining endowment of the human being.
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 44 minutes
Date: 2020
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 9-12, College, Adults
		Color/BW: 
		 
	
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