This seminar will attempt to answer some of the following questions. How do peacemaker teams work as a practical process in the field? Is it possible to think about a global army of Christian peacemakers? How does Christian activism affect our faith? How does Christian peacemaking link into our post Christian culture, the individualism of the human rights culture? What might a Christian peacemaking vision look like in Europe? What is worship like in the context of peacemaking?
Saturday 24 January 2009, at the LMC
9:30 a.m. - 4.00 p.m.
Fee: £30 (£15 unwaged)
Fee includes VAT and meal
C-C seminar No 320
Recommended reading: Christian Peacemaker Teams web site and Gene Stoltzfus blog: Peace Talk. Books:In Harms' Way: A History of Christian Peacemaker Teams by Kathleen Kern by Kathleen Kern, 118 Days: Christian Peacemaker Team Held Hostage in Iraq by Tricia Gates Brown, Getting in the Way: Stories From Christian Peacemaker Teams by Tricia Gates Brown (Ed.), At-Tuwani Journal: Hope and Nonviolent Action in a Palestinian Village by Arthur G Gish, Iraq: A Journey of Hope and Peace by Peggy Gish, Hebron Journal: Stories of Nonviolent Peacemaking by Arthur G Gish, Hostage in Iraq by Norman Kember
Gene Stoltzfus has been involved in Christian peacemaking efforts since before that word was used in the modern peace vocabulary, beginning with five years as a civilian worker in Viet Nam in the 1960s, continuing with several years in the Philippines and elsewhere in South East Asia with Mennonite Central Committee in the 1970s. He lived in Chicago IL for 25 years where CPT began in the 1980s. He now lives in Canada with his Canadian wife Dorothy Friesen.