UNCIVIL DISCOURSE IN CIVIL SOCIETY: THE NOVEMBER 2010 ELECTION

Good words for good purposes have been chased from the political marketplace. A personal example: this summer, in a public situation, a friend asked me for the address of the Chicago Network for Justice and Peace with which I work. When I said the words ‘justice and peace,’ a total stranger within ear shot shouted out ‘why are you against Israel.’ I asked some friends to help me understand how it was that the words ‘justice and peace’ could provoke such a strong, negative feeling when, for me, these words express a basic principle of Catholic social thinking, which has inspired Catholics and non-Catholics alike to work for justice in civil society for more than a 150 years. My friends informed me that many people hear the words ‘justice and peace’ as ‘code’ for supporting socialism, or Palestinian rights, or taking nuclear weapons from Israel. This incident bewildered me and caused me to remember the politics of the 1950’s when to be in favor of, let alone to be working for, ‘peace’ meant you were a communist, a communist sympathizer, or a communist dupe. (Sometimes it only meant that you were a hopelessly naïve intellectual ‘egg-head’ a la Adlai Stevenson.)

Reflecting on the debasement of the words ‘justice and peace’ prompted me to consider other words that caused people to shout down the speaker. Here’s a partial listing of what came immediately to mind: immigration; Islam; race; abortion; affirmative action; the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and on Terror; separation of church and state; prayer in public schools; the Catholic church; gay marriage; women priests; NAFTA; global warming; et alia. What I realized in making this list is that I myself had been silenced: I no longer discussed these issues in public situations.

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AN UNDECLARED CIVIL WAR IN CIUDAD JUAREZ, MX: A REPORT. March 2010

Dear friends of Chicago Network, for some weeks now we have been sending you information on the deadly campaign against journalists and other writers in Mexico working to investigate and publish the facts about the destructive effects of drug trafficking on Mexican society. Our board member Lucina Kathmann has just completed a fact finding trip to Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico, a city right across from El Paso, Texas on the USA border.

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Support for the Fray Bartolomé de las Casas Center for Human Rights

For the past two years the Chicago Network for Justice and Peace (CNJP) has given support to the Fray Bartolomé de las Casas (Frayba) Center for Human Rights, a non-profit civil organization located in the state of Chiapas, Mexico. Frayba was founded in 1989 through an initiative of Samuel Ruiz Garcia, then Catholic bishop of the Diocese of San Cristóbol de las Casas. Serving very poor indigenous communities and villages in Chiapas, Frayba works in defense of and promotion of human rights.

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Salesian Project Street Children in Guayaquil

Guayaquil, Ecuador, S.A., Proyecto Saleciano Chicos de la Calle de Guayaquil – Salesian Project Street Children in Guayaquil.

Ecuador’s port Guayaquil is a bustling city that has attracted tens of thousands of people from the country side in search of work and a better life. However, these hopes, in many cases, didn’t materialize, creating a large underclass in which children became the greatest casualty.

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Littérature Provinciale Mexicaine : La Porte S'ouvre

Par Lucina Kathmann

Le Mexique, comme toute l'Amérique latine, souffre d'être excessivement centralisé. L’excès de centralisation a été considéré la cause principale du sous-développement du Mexique, de l'inflation et de presque tous ses autres problèmes économiques ; il est également responsable des problèmes du monde littéraire. Depuis toujours, presque toutes publications, ventes, distribution, critique et publicité pour la littérature ont été concentrées dans la capitale. Si vous vouliez écrire, il fallait aller à la capitale… Et ce n’est pas possible pour tout le monde.

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San Miguel International PEN Scholarship Program

The San Miguel PEN Scholarship Program focuses on students who do well in school and want to continue their education but cannot for economic reasons. Such scholarships have proven themselves effective for enabling students to pursue their educational goals and for improving the general economic and social situation of their families. Please contact Pat Hirschl at mexicanpat@gmail.com, for detailed information about the program and the students. Checks in support of this program should be made out to Chicago Network for Justice and Peace and mailed to:

1132 W. Lunt #3B
Chicago, IL 60626

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