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Gaza Balloon Release

When: View in Calendar » January 21, 2012 @ 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Three years have passed, yet the memory of those who innocently lost their lives will constantly be with us. We hope to honor their memory respectably and shed light on the deaths of innocent civilians.

We will have a balloon launch in Dallas, in remembrance of the 300+ children and speakers who will reflect on why never again this should take place.

When: Saturday, January 21, 2012
Time: 1:00 p.m. until 2:30 p.m.

Location: Kennedy Memorial Plaza

National Day of Action Against Guantánamo

 

Dallas activists join nationwide protest,
"10 Years Too Many:
National Day of Action Against Guantánamo"

'Prisoners' ride DART to remind Dallasites they are still there  

 

 

 

DALLAS – In observance of the 10th year anniversary of the first detainees at Guantánamo, Dallas peace and justice activists will be riding the DART trains and walking to several locations in Dallas while dressed as prisoners. The purpose of the demonstration is to call on the Obama administration to finally put an end to unlawful detentions at Guantánamo, to call for the arrest of Bush Administration officials for war crimes including torture, and to remind the public that people are still in prison without a trial.

The group will board the DART train at Mockingbird Station at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, January 11, ride to the Akard stop and disembark. Then they will process down Akard Street to Commerce, turn west and walk past the Earl Cabell Federal Building. At 4:00 p.m., Dallas human rights leaders will make statements to the public. Then the group will proceed up Griffin St. and west on Pacific to the Rosa Parks Plaza. They will pause there to pay tribute Parks' and Martin Luther King's call for justice, and will then board the DART train at the West End stop and return to Mockingbird Station. From there, joined by others at 5:00 p.m., the group will march to the Mockingbird bridge over Central Expressway and demonstrate there until sundown.

This event is just one of thousands that will be carried out throughout the United States including a rally in front of the White House where activists will make a human chain to the Capitol, representing detainees at Guantánamo.

The U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay is a symbol of how the United States failed to respect human rights in its response to 9/11, and how it is still failing a decade later. Unlawful detentions at Guantánamo Bay were in part one outcome of this global approach to counter-terrorism, and have become possibly the best-known and enduring symbol of the assault on human rights principles that the United States unleashed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.

"The existence of the prison at Guantanamo is a very visible blot on the United States' human rights record," said Trish Major, a volunteer at the Dallas Peace Center. "The illegality and inhumanity of these detentions is a burden that rests on the shoulders of both the Bush and Obama administrations. The American public must not forget that there are still people there, far from home, who have not had a trial simply because of political expediency."

This demonstration is endorsed by the Dallas Peace Center, Code Pink Greater Dallas, Amnesty International Group 205, Bill of Rights Defense Committee – Dallas, Pax Christi – Dallas, and North Texas Veterans for Peace.

What: National Day of Action Against Guantanamo

When & Where: Wednesday, January 11, 2012

            3:00 p.m. – Leave Mockingbird Station

            4:00 p.m. – Rally at Commerce @ Griffin

            5:00 p.m. – March and Rally at Mockingbird bridge @ Central Expy. 

 

 

 

National Day of Action Against Guantánamo

 

 

 

Dallas Activists Join Nationwide Protest,
"10 Years Too Many:
National Day of Action Against Guantánamo"

'Prisoners' ride DART to remind Dallasites they are still there  

 

 

 

DALLAS – In observance of the 10th year anniversary of the first detainees at Guantánamo, Dallas peace and justice activists will be riding the DART trains and walking to several locations in Dallas while dressed as prisoners. The purpose of the demonstration is to call on the Obama administration to finally put an end to unlawful detentions at Guantánamo, to call for the arrest of Bush Administration officials for war crimes including torture, and to remind the public that people are still in prison without a trial.

The group will board the DART train at Mockingbird Station at 3:00 p.m. on Wednesday, January 11, ride to the Akard stop and disembark. Then they will process down Akard Street to Commerce, turn west and walk past the Earl Cabell Federal Building. At 4:00 p.m., Dallas human rights leaders will make statements to the public. Then the group will proceed up Griffin St. and west on Pacific to the Rosa Parks Plaza. They will pause there to pay tribute Parks' and Martin Luther King's call for justice, and will then board the DART train at the West End stop and return to Mockingbird Station. From there, joined by others at 5:00 p.m., the group will march to the Mockingbird bridge over Central Expressway and demonstrate there until sundown.

This event is just one of thousands that will be carried out throughout the United States including a rally in front of the White House where activists will make a human chain to the Capitol, representing detainees at Guantánamo.

The U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay is a symbol of how the United States failed to respect human rights in its response to 9/11, and how it is still failing a decade later. Unlawful detentions at Guantánamo Bay were in part one outcome of this global approach to counter-terrorism, and have become possibly the best-known and enduring symbol of the assault on human rights principles that the United States unleashed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks.

"The existence of the prison at Guantanamo is a very visible blot on the United States' human rights record," said Trish Major, a volunteer at the Dallas Peace Center. "The illegality and inhumanity of these detentions is a burden that rests on the shoulders of both the Bush and Obama administrations. The American public must not forget that there are still people there, far from home, who have not had a trial simply because of political expediency."

This demonstration is endorsed by the Dallas Peace Center, Code Pink Greater Dallas, Amnesty International Group 205, Bill of Rights Defense Committee – Dallas, Pax Christi – Dallas, and North Texas Veterans for Peace.

What: National Day of Action Against Guantanamo

When & Where: Wednesday, January 11, 2012

            3:00 p.m. – Leave Mockingbird Station

            4:00 p.m. – Rally at Commerce @ Griffin

            5:00 p.m. – March and Rally at Mockingbird bridge @ Central Expy. 

 

 

 

Every Child Has a Name, Dallas Holocaust Museum

When: View in Calendar » January 3, 2012 @ 9:30 AM – March 18, 2012 @ 5:00 PM
Where: View Map » Dallas Holocaust Museum, 211 N Record St,Ste 100,Dallas,TX 75201-3361, USA

Dallas Holocaust Museum:
Every Child Has A Name 

 
The Dallas Holocaust Museum/Center for Education and Tolerance hosts a new special exhibition, Every Child Has A Name. 
 
The exhibition features a selection of a travelling exhibit from Yad Vashem, Israel's living memorial to the Holocaust located in Jerusalem, called "No Child's Play." In addition, the exhibit will feature reproductions of children's artwork created in the ghetto, Terezín. The exhibition will also include a visual display of a portion of the 1.5 million pennies collected by Dallas children as a memorial to the 1.5 million children murdered during the Holocaust.  
 
Cost: $6-8  
Thru March 18
9:30 – 5 p.m. 

 

 

Location: Dallas Holocaust Museum/Center for Education and Tolerance Presented by: Dallas Holocaust Museum 
 

Life & Death in the Northern Pass Exhibit UTA

When: View in Calendar » January 3, 2012 @ 3:30 PM – January 14, 2012 @ 4:30 PM
Where: View Map » 702 Planetarium Pl, University of Texas - Arlington,Arlington,TX 76013, USA

"Life and Death in the Northern Pass" Exhibit  

Through Jan. 14, 2012 

Monday thru Saturday    

 

The fall 2011 exhibit in the Central Library sixth floor parlor is "Life and Death in the Northern Pass."

 

This exhibit is the anchor of a fall lecture series called "The War Next Door: Narco-Violence and the U.S. Mexico Border."

Dominic Bracco II, a distinguished photojournalist and 2008 graduate of The University of Texas at Arlington, has documented the horrors of Mexico's drug war through evocative images of violence and its aftermath, of grieving families and tender scenes of day-to-day urban life. His photos are the heart of this new exhibit.

More information  

Location:

The UT Arlington Central Library's Sixth Floor Parlor, 702 Planetarium Place

Price: Free and open to all

Contact: Chris Conway

@uta.edu?" shape="rect" style="color:rgb(51,51,51);font-weight:bold;text-decoration:underline" target="_blank">conway@uta.edu


For a campus map and information about campus parking, visit www.uta.edu/maps/

Youth Voices

YOUTH VOICES

"There’s a radical – and wonderful – new idea here… that all children could and should be inventors of their own theories, critics of other people’s ideas, analyzers of evidence, and makers of their own personal marks on the world. Its an idea with revolutionary implications. If we take it seriously." – Deborah Meier

Thoughts on the Dismantling of Dualism

Cathryn Payton

University of North Texas

Psychology Major, Women’s Studies Minor

 

We live in a world that is constructed of dualities. Whether the binary be modern or traditional, eastern or western, first world or third world, us or them—we isolate ourselves from the opposing “other” in such a way that has caused severe cultural dislocation on a global level.

Othering is a concept used to polarize two groups, isolating them so that the individuals involved, no matter how similar, will feel as if they cannot relate to individuals of the opposing group—sometimes allowing hatred to manifest. A key component of the concept of “othering” is context. Feminist author, Uma Narayan explains this best through her example of Indian dowry-murders in juxtaposition to domestic violence in western society. What is most important about this example is first looking at the way in which each of these topics are framed by our national media, talked about within our social circles, and portrayed in special interest groups. Both of these issues deal with physical violence against women, but many westerners would not connect the two to see their cultural similarities, even though thousands of western women are killed each year due to relationship violence. The example of dowry-murder is immensely efficient in elucidating the concept of “other” because it is assumed to correspond with the commonly stereotyped “backward, traditional, third world,” Indian culture. Immediately, westerners take a stance of opposition, because to them this issue is connected to Indian culture, and in no way correlates to how women are treated in the United States. Furthermore, Narayan uses the phrase “death by culture” to illuminate the connotation some Westerners create from a complex issue such as Indian dowry-murder. Here the issue of “othering” is used to deny the obvious parallels seen in the treatment of women in both the United States and India.

In teaching the concept of “other” as a vehicle of empowerment, horizontal comradeship is key. Uma Narayan defines horizontal comradeship as the act of reaching above country/culture/community lines and connecting ourselves with women across the globe by asking questions, and listening with open minds to understand what is best for each woman and each community. It is important for one to be aware of the looming possibility of dualism and “othering” within each society. Empowerment through “othering” is not feasible, but empowerment through dismantling the concept and realizing that you are apart of a much larger community—a global community—is empowering.

Upon teaching the concept of “other”, it is evident that these binaries not only construct the world we live in but also the words we use to describe the world we live in. In order to deconstruct this, social change has to occur. We must squander the isolating vocabulary we use, as well as the “us against them” mentality that eliminates the likelihood of horizontal comradeship to take place. Implementation of a comprehensive pedagogy, as well as an inclusive vocabulary will engender more fruitful dialogue and a more peaceful environment.

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