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Sunday, August 5, 2007
End: 5:00 pm
Start: Jul 23 2007 - 5:51pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 5:00pm

Send a Message or Prayer of Peace. It will take you about 60 seconds, maybe a little longer. All you have to do is follow this link to our website: www.wagingpeace.org/sadako_message.htm

Next month, we will hold our 13th Annual Sadako Peace Day. Your message of peace will become part of our annual recognition of the Japanese girl named Sadako Sasaki who inspired efforts toward peace around the world – even as she was dying from the effects of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

This is what the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation will do with your message:

List it on our website.
Choose a selection of messages to read at our Sadako Peace Day Ceremony on August 9th.
Send all the messages of peace we receive to the President of the United States of America.

In this way, you can follow Sadako’s inspiration, and write out your hopes for peace so they may fly all over the world (via the Internet). See Sadako’s story at 2007/sadako_be_a_messenger.htm...

People often ask us how they can increase the peace. Sadako showed us one way. She never relinquished her hope for a better world. All we need to do is follow her lead.

One voice can become a powerful force for change when it joins millions of others all seeking the same thing.

End: 12:00 pm
Start: Jul 31 2007 - 12:31pm
End: Aug 6 2007 - 12:00pm

Printable Event Flyer available on the website www.gzcenter.org. Also driving and ferry directions, current newsletter and news about trials of those arrested in previous non-violent actions. Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action invites you to join us for our 30th Anniversary on Saturday, August 4 through Monday, August 6 (Hiroshima Day) as we celebrate our history and join in nonviolent direct action to close the Bangor Trident submarine base. On August 4 we will welcome the arrival of Peace Walkers, gather to recall the past and plan for the future, participate in a groundbreaking ceremony as we begin replacing the house lost in a fire, and enjoy a musical fund raiser with artists Linda Allen and Tom Rawson. August 5 will be a day of nonviolent training, vigiling and planning for direct action at the Trident Submarine Base. August 6 will be Take the Day Off for Peace.

Location: Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action (address is correct)is location for all events except Allen/Rawson concert at 7:30 p.m. on August 4, which will be at Kitsap Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4418 Perry Ave., Bremerton, WA.

End: 6:01 pm
Start: Aug 1 2007 - 6:07pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 6:01pm

Meet us on the west side of the capital, at 7am bring your own sign, weekly vigil

End: 6:00 pm
Start: Aug 3 2007 - 5:30pm
End: Aug 5 2007 - 6:00pm

A-Bomb Film Screening on August 3-5, 2007
at New York Buddhist Church
332 Riverside Drive @W. 105th St., NYC

in Memory of late Mr. Iccho Itoh, Nagasaki Mayor

Friday, August 3, at 5:30pm- 8:00pm
“The Last Atomic Bomb”
Documentary film on Nagasaki Experience
with disarmament film-maker and educator, Dr Kathleen Sullivan.

Saturday, August 4, at 5:30pm – 8:00pm
“Angelus Bell” 1945〜アンゼラスの鐘
Animation Film on A-bombing in Nagasaki, 1945
Followed by Music Presentation by Bunken Nagano and Yosuke Maki

Sunday, August 5, at 5:30pm – 6:00pm
“The Last Generation”人間をかえせ
Documentary Film on A-bombing in 1945

*******
Free – Donation is appreciated

Information: 212-678-0305

Start: 1:00 am

Please join us for a presentation by Bruce Gagnon, Coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space. An eloquent speaker on nuclear disarmament and the weaponization of space, Bruce inspires thoughtful, hopeful discussion about bringing peace, social justice, labor and environmental groups together to abolish militarism and transform our economy for a peaceful and sustainable future.

Start: 4:00 am
End: 6:00 am

PRESS RELEASE From: nuke-freeworld.com

Hiroshima: Stopping Bush’s New Nuclear Arms Race

Santa Barbara, July 31, 2007

Peter G, Cohen, artist, activist and author of nuke-freeworld.com, is presenting a free, public event on August 5th from 4:00 to 6:00 at Plaza Del Mar (opposite SB Banos del Mar). The event will feature short talks by Cohen and student peace activist Ellen McClure, followed by a Love of Life Celebration featuring dancing to the LeGrand, Franks & Dodge band.

In his talk, Cohen will show how the aggressive nuclear policy of the Bush administration is stimulating a dangerous new international nuclear arms race and how to reverse this disasterous policy. Ellen McClure, a nuclear peace activist from UCSB, will talk about her participation in the recent student fast opposing UC participation in management of Livermore and Los Alamos National Laboratories.

Cohen’s talk will examine the influence of the military corporations on the Congress and our foreign policy, as well as the severe human and monetary costs of maintaining our nuclear weapons and delivery systems rather than working for disarmament, which we are pledged to do by UN membership and the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

The Love of Life Celebration is an antidote to the current epidemic of valuing money and power (greed) above life itself. The music and dancing on the grass of this beautiful plaza will express the love of life, the most powerful antidote to the greed disease, and the true foundation of action against this suicidal nuclear policy.

The event is sponsored by Veterans for Peace and Santa Barbara Society of Friends.

Peter G. Cohen was a GI on a troopship bound for Japan when the bomb was exploded over Hiroshima. In the nineteen fifties he worked with Sane Nuclear Policy in New York City to oppose the testing of nuclear weapons. In 1968 he was an independent peace candidate for Congress in the Lehigh Valley of Pennsylvania. In 1969-’70 he was executive director of the New Democratic Coalition of Pennsylvania. In ‘72 he was on staff for McGovern. He moved to Santa Barbara in 1999 where he led the first large demonstration opposing the War in Iraq in October 2002.
In 2006 he created nuke-freeworld.com to educate and inspire political organizing against the Bush administration dange nuclear policy.

For more information please call 805-884-0704

End: 2:00 am
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 6:00am
End: Aug 9 2007 - 2:00am

It is a mix of community building and reflection/action/reflection.
We will witness at the Pentagon on August 6, at the DOE and Bechtel on August 7, at the Military Archdiocese site on August 8 and at the White House on August 9. Each of these will be prepared for by reflection and communal planning with an action proposal to start with from the organizing communities - Jonah House and the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker.
Sleeping bag space and simple meals provided. We'll be at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Church, 16th St and Newton Ave N.W, Washington D.C.

Start: 12:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

Our fourth annual PEACE & WORLD FRIENDSHIP FAIR and PEACE BAZAAR, with performance, poetry, music, art, speakers and children's activities, such as origami peace crane folding.

This year's theme: "Create an Environment for Peace"

Peace, Ecological and Social Justice organizations will have tables with information and vendors with crafts, jewelery, environmentally-friendly, cruelty-free and peace-oriented items and items for "free-cycling".

The event will conclude with an "Earth Community" drum circle in which all are invited to participate.

Plenty of free parking nearby.

Sponsored by Union County Peace Council, the Hiroshima/Nagasaki Rememberance Committee, NJ Peace Action, People's Organization for Progress (POP), the North Jersey Dept of Peace campaign, and Word Out!

Start: 12:30 pm
End: 1:30 pm

We gather in a small park in Petoskey, MI where we have planted a peace pole. We will have a women's drumming group from Greensky Indian United Methodist Church in Charlevoix (MI)followed by music and singing, a demonstration with BB pellets of the awesome nature of nuclear weapons, a prayer by Henri Nouwen (A Cry for Mercy), and presentation of our annual peace award. We close with a stroll to a nearby river where flowers will be strewn in memory of the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Start: 1:00 pm
End: 3:00 pm

Please join us for a presentation by Bruce Gagnon, Coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space. An eloquent speaker on nuclear disarmament and the weaponization of space, Bruce inspires thoughtful, hopeful discussion about bringing anti-war, social justice, labor and environmental groups together to abolish militarism and transform our economy for a peaceful and sustainable future. PLEASE NOTE THIS EVENT IS ON SUNDAY, AUGUST 5th!!!

Start: 1:00 pm
End: 2:00 pm

Please join us at the Howarth Plaza (southeast corner of Seventh and Monroe) on Sunday, 8/5 from 1pm to 2pm. This will be the 62nd remembrance of the bombing of Hiroshima, and the first time an atomic weapon - a true weapon of mass destruction - was used against humanity and environment alike. The bombing of Nagasaki occurred on 8/9.

Consider wearing white to remember the dead/for peace/for hope for a world without violence. And join us at 12:30 to make paper cranes which we will distribute in lieu of handouts.

Sponsored By:
Cosponsored by Pax Christi Springfield (others in formation)

Start: 1:00 pm
End: 6:00 pm

An exhibit covering the history of the development and use of atomic weapons, nuclear weapons, and antinucler actions over the decades. Literature will be available. Stop by and read the exhibit anytime Sunday afternoon.

Start: 1:30 pm
End: 3:30 pm

Community Re-dedication to Peace
and Memorial for Victims of War

Sunday, August 5, 1:30 p.m.
At the site of the new memorial on the campus of Lansing Community College,between Dart Auditorium and the outdoor amphitheatre

Peace Pole re-dedication ceremony
Speakers, Music, Inspiration, Peace Cranes

Community Memorial Ceremony For Victims of War
Sunday, August 5th, 2007,1:30 p.m.

At the site of the new permanent memorial on the Lansing Community College Central campus, across from the Outdoor Amphitheater. The Peace Pole and Memorial for the Victims of War site is on the northwest corner of the hilltop above the outdoor amphitheatre at LCC. If you look west from the site, you can see the Japanese garden.

~In honor of Veterans and all who have suffered or died as a
result of war ~

In special remembrance of our dear friend,
Benjamin A. Miller, August 5th, 1979 ~ July 2nd, 2006

Remembering the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who died from atomic bombs dropped on August 6 and August 9, 1945.

Speakers: 'Remembering those we have lost'
Acoustic sing-a-long: 'Songs of peace and hope'
Moment of silence
~~~~~
3:00 Reception to follow
Sun Room of the Herman Conference Center
Refreshments provided

Sponsored by People for Positive Social Change
of Lansing Community College
For more information contact Perry at 517-483-9653

Start: 3:00 pm
End: 5:00 pm

Video, followed by discussion; info sheets, action postcards, etc available.

Start: 3:00 pm
End: 5:30 pm

Hiroshima/Nagasaki Memorial: On Sunday, August 5th, remember those killed in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and pray for an end to nuclear proliferation. Pray; watch the DVD, Hiroshima: Repentance and Renewal; and engage in discussion starting at 3:00 PM in St. Joseph's Greenwich Village Parish House Library, 371 Sixth Avenue, one block north of West 4th Street, Manhattan. Then, walk in solemn procession to Washington Square Park for a silent vigil and closing prayer, concluding at 5:30 PM.

Start: 3:43 pm

Fayetteville has commemorated Hiroshima-Nagasaki day since the 1970's. It involves many members of the peace community, and includes a proclamation by the mayor, music, poetry, reading of names of the dead from the current war in Iraq (both military and civilian), and keynote speaker Col. Ann Wright. It is sited around the beautiful Fullbright Peace Fountain on the campus of the University of Arkansas.

Start: 4:00 pm

3rd Annual Hiroshima Memorial Program
Includes Potluck (bring a dish to share)

Sponsored By:
Bloomington Normal Citizens for Peace and Justice

Start: 4:30 pm
End: 7:00 pm

Procession for peace: Women in Black

Sunday, August 5, 4:30 p.m. The Women In Black – women and men who protest silently against violence, militarism, and war – will lead a procession along the Pathway to Peace and by the peace cairns of the Lyndale Park Peace Garden. Brief remarks at each cairn will pose questions of peace in a nuclear age. The Pathway to Peace was designed and created by Greg Ingraham and Teri Kwant as part of the City of Minneapolis Art in Public Places program. Each of the 7 cairns conveys a message related to an aspect of peace: the nature of conflict and peace, the politics of peace, peace in relationships, peaceful actions, inner peace, the future of peace, and the responsibility of peace. The public is invited to join in the procession.
Location: The procession will begin at the first of seven cairns located at the corner of 40th Street and Bryant Avenue South, Minneapolis.

Intergenerational peace event: Storytelling, crane-folding, peace songs

Sunday, August 5, 5:00 p.m. An intergenerational event will feature a recitation of the Sadako story by professional storytellers Key of See Storytellers and Renee Weeks-Wynne, peace songs with Marcia Sanoden, a music teacher who grew up in Japan, and recorder music by Arden Consort. Everyone will have the opportunity to fold paper cranes as a wish for world peace.
Location: Spirit of Peace sculpture at the Lyndale Park Peace Garden, Minneapolis.

Traditional Japanese tea ceremony

Sunday, August 5, 6:00 p.m. For the third year, a traditional Japanese tea ceremony will be held at the exact time that commemoration ceremonies are taking place in Hiroshima. The tea ceremony is a quiet, meditative ritual and is often performed in honor or memory of special people and events.
Location: Lyndale Park Peace Garden, Minneapolis.

Start: 5:30 pm
End: 7:30 pm

The Peace Coalition of Southern Illinois is sponsoring a potluck, speakers, and commemoration of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings:

5:30 pm Potluck
6:15 pm Presentations by students who attended the
U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta, Georgia
7:00 pm Commemoration of the bombings

End: 12:00 pm
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 5:30pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 12:00pm

Jonah House of Baltimore and the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker of Washington invite all to our annual Faith and Resistance Retreat during August 5-9, 2007 in Washington, D.C. This year's theme is 'Global War and the Assault on the Environment', as we remember the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and its relevance to nuclear policy today. Please join us for part or all of the retreat to experience community, prayer, and witness to nonviolence. For more information, visit: http://www.jonahhouse.org /Aug07invite.htm.

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 9:30 pm

All are invited to participate in Mid-Missouri Peaceworks' 21st Annual Hiroshima-Nagasaki Memorial Peace Gathering. The event includes a potluck dinner (6:20), music (6:30-8), lantern making, Speakers (8-9) and floating the commemorative lanterns. The theme for this year's event is Confronting Nuclear Denial.

Note: This is not really a teach-in, as much as a community peace gathering, but none of the other event categories fit it. It will have some aspects of a teach-in, some of a vigil, and some of a gathering for peaceful people of all ages. It's a wonderful opportunity to celebrate our commitment to creating a peaceful, just and sustainable future free from the threat of nuclear anniliation.

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

WHAT: HIROSHIMA/NAGASAKI ANNIVERSARY OBSERVANCE in St.Louis MO
WHEN: SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 6-8:30PM
WHERE: Lewis Park, University City (N side of Delmar, just west of Big Bend)-- St. LOUIS MO
WHO: free and everyone’s welcome! BYO Picnic, blanket and chairs. There will be flute Music, Program and Traditional Floating of Peace Boats and peace songs. For details call: 314-862-5735

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

Greater Fall River Committee for Peace and Justice
Annual Commemoration of Hiroshima Day
Sunday August 5, 6:00 PM
Bristol Community College Reflection Basin
(Elsbree Street, Near the Pond behind the cafeteria)
Prayers, Songs and Facts

Troops out of Iraq and no attack on Iran
Let Peace Reign in our Hearts
Hiroshima Never Again!

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

8/5 Sun 6 pm Lanterns for Peace – Dodgeville. Twin Valley Lake Shelter at Governor Dodge Park, north of town, off Hwy 23. This intergenerational annual event is part of an international movement against nuclear weapons that began in the early ‘80s and continues world-wide today. Lantern-making, story-telling, petition-signing, singing – and at dusk, the unique and beautiful floating of the Lanterns for Peace. Bring finger-food to share – water/juice provided. Car-pooling is suggested, as the park requires a sticker or day pass. Sponsored by the Grassroots Citizens for Peace.

End: 6:00 am
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 6:00pm
End: Aug 6 2007 - 6:00am

Join us in front of Indian Point nuclear plant
Buchanan, NY
August 5th & 6th
for an overnight vigil!

In solidarity with his nuclear free campaigners in the USA, Benny Zable Australian peace and environmental performance artist is available for photo opportunities outside the Indian Point Nuclear Reactor during an overnight vigil 5th and 6th August Hiroshima day commemorations.

Friday the core of the new nuclear reactor at Lucas Heights collapsed.

US President Bush and Australian Prime Minister Howard are to sign a Global Nuclear Energy Partnership deal during the APEC meeting in Sydney.

Good time to meet to talk .

Benny Zable
bennyzable@hotmail.com
http://www.bennyzable.com

You can reach Benny at:
West Side Cultural
212-496-2030

Alice Slater
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
446 E. 86 St.
New York, NY 10028
212-744-2005
646-238-9000 (cell)
aslater@rcn.com
http://www.wagingpeace.org

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

8/5 Sun 6:30 – 9 pm Annual Peace Day – Waupaca. Shadow Lake, South Park shelter. There is no charge for this event. Just come and enjoy the creativity of lantern making, the beauty of our traditional program, and the fellowship of one another as we commemorate those gone before us and hope for a future of peace. 6:30: Lantern making in South Park's upper shelter, materials provided; 8pm: Program on the Beach: music by Tom Pease and Marci Beaucoup and poetry by Maggie Laven and Pat Reckrey; Dusk: Lantern float on Shadow Lake. Sponsored by Waupaca People for Peace. Contact baba@charter.net

Sponsored By:
Sponsored by Waupaca People for Peace.

Start: 6:30 pm

The event is sponsored by the Interchurch Ministries of Nebraska, First Mennonite Church of Lincoln, the Green Party of Nebraska, the Lincoln Friends Meeting, ELCA-NE Justice and Advocacy Ministries, Call to Action-Nebraska (a Catholic group working for social justice in the Catholic church), the Nebraska Coalition for Peace, Nebraskans for Peace, and United Methodist Community Ministries.

Lantern floats in Japan are used to guide the souls of the dead to their rest; for many years in recent times they have been used in Hiroshima and Nagasaki to commemorate the people destroyed by the first atomic bombs. The purpose of the event in Lincoln is to remind us of what happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and to will that such events never again occur. Materials and plans for the lanterns at this site.

Music, readings, public statements, and poetry will be shared throughout the evening.

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Photo: Little Girl with Lanterns

On August 5th we note the 62nd anniversary of the world’s first atomic bombings. In Japan and around the world, people will gather to float lanterns in remembrance of the victims of Hiroshima (Aug. 6, 1945) and Nagasaki (Aug. 9, 1945), and all victims of war. In this moving and beautiful tradition, we reaffirm our commitment to building a peaceful future.

Decorate a lantern shade, fold an origami peace crane, enjoy Japanese taiko drums and shakuhachi flutes, and hear messages from the mayors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Great family event, all volunteer run. Volunteers needed now and the day of the event; visit the Web site for more.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

This is the 21st year of the Freeport Peace Links Lantern Float for Peace. It is a festival for families, with music, face painting, balloons, a speaker and tables of information about peace and justice groups. At dusk we will float three lanterns on the Allegheny. The first will remember those who died at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the second is for peace now and the third will send forth hope that all children will not face war in the future.

Start: 7:00 pm

Sunday August 5 at Lover's Point in Pacific Grove California There will be a Hiroshima-Nagasaki Day Lantern Floating Ceremony. 7 pm Lantern making and program, 8:15pm Launching of peace lanterns on the sea.
all welcome.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Iran – Today’s Hiroshima?
Dayton Hiroshima Anniversary Recognition
Sunday, August 5th 2007 7:00 pm
Dayton, Ohio USA

A rally to address and to protest our Government’s current expressed and pending intent for a U.S. pre-emptive Nuclear Strike against Iran.

We must not allow the U.S. to embark on any mission that has potential to repeat the atomic disasters of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki annihilations of 1945.

Any and all negotiation with Iran’s Government must be pursued on a diplomatic path rather than pre-emptive military action.

The situation in Iraq has proved to be disastrous as a result of a U.S. pre-emptive invasion.

We must not allow a similar travesty and misapplication of the U.S. Military to made with regard to Iran.

Please join us for this important event!

Location:
Downtown Dayton at the Amphitheater on the Great Miami River.

It is located west of Riverscape and near to West Monument St between Wilkerson and Ludlow Streets (adjacent to the First Baptist Church of Dayton, 111 West Monument)

Guest Speakers:

Rev. John Wagner – Aldersgate UMC, Pastor; September11Coalition, DPA; Activist

Prof. Ron Katsuyama – University of Dayton; Dayton Asian American Council, President

Steve Fryburg – Dayton Peace Museum, Director; Veterans for Peace

Gloria Leigh –Catholic Educator; Military Families Speak Out; Activist

* Open Mic Comments are welcome following the speakers

September11Coalition and the Dayton Peace Action are Volunteer Organizations

Donations will be accepted

Opening Music:

Ray Smeltzer – Dwight Sutton

* Please come early, speakers will begin promptly at 7:00pm.

Please contact us if you or your organization would like to be involved as sponsors or participants in the event agenda.

Your activism and participation is important and is appreciated.

Sponsored By:

Dayton September11Coalition, Dayton Peace Action

www.september11coalition.org

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Tom Mullian will perform. He is a singer/songwriter, who has been performing for 42 years. The resident of Media, Pennsylvania is also an activist, whose latest album is entitled SIX STRIGS AGAINST THE WAR.

He began playing the guitar in 1964, inspired by the music and social movements of the times, but also the Martin D1 guitar, Regal Steel Guitar, the classical guitar, mandolin, gourdalin, gourd guitar, banjo, and Fender Stratocaster. His repertoire includes original songs, folk, rock, traditional, blues, and music of social conscience.

Start: 10:01 pm
End: 11:00 pm

Unitarian Universalist remembrance service

Monday, August 6, 2007
End: 5:00 pm
Start: Jul 23 2007 - 5:51pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 5:00pm

Send a Message or Prayer of Peace. It will take you about 60 seconds, maybe a little longer. All you have to do is follow this link to our website: www.wagingpeace.org/sadako_message.htm

Next month, we will hold our 13th Annual Sadako Peace Day. Your message of peace will become part of our annual recognition of the Japanese girl named Sadako Sasaki who inspired efforts toward peace around the world – even as she was dying from the effects of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

This is what the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation will do with your message:

List it on our website.
Choose a selection of messages to read at our Sadako Peace Day Ceremony on August 9th.
Send all the messages of peace we receive to the President of the United States of America.

In this way, you can follow Sadako’s inspiration, and write out your hopes for peace so they may fly all over the world (via the Internet). See Sadako’s story at 2007/sadako_be_a_messenger.htm...

People often ask us how they can increase the peace. Sadako showed us one way. She never relinquished her hope for a better world. All we need to do is follow her lead.

One voice can become a powerful force for change when it joins millions of others all seeking the same thing.

End: 12:00 pm
Start: Jul 31 2007 - 12:31pm
End: Aug 6 2007 - 12:00pm

Printable Event Flyer available on the website www.gzcenter.org. Also driving and ferry directions, current newsletter and news about trials of those arrested in previous non-violent actions. Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action invites you to join us for our 30th Anniversary on Saturday, August 4 through Monday, August 6 (Hiroshima Day) as we celebrate our history and join in nonviolent direct action to close the Bangor Trident submarine base. On August 4 we will welcome the arrival of Peace Walkers, gather to recall the past and plan for the future, participate in a groundbreaking ceremony as we begin replacing the house lost in a fire, and enjoy a musical fund raiser with artists Linda Allen and Tom Rawson. August 5 will be a day of nonviolent training, vigiling and planning for direct action at the Trident Submarine Base. August 6 will be Take the Day Off for Peace.

Location: Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action (address is correct)is location for all events except Allen/Rawson concert at 7:30 p.m. on August 4, which will be at Kitsap Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 4418 Perry Ave., Bremerton, WA.

End: 6:01 pm
Start: Aug 1 2007 - 6:07pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 6:01pm

Meet us on the west side of the capital, at 7am bring your own sign, weekly vigil

End: 2:00 am
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 6:00am
End: Aug 9 2007 - 2:00am

It is a mix of community building and reflection/action/reflection.
We will witness at the Pentagon on August 6, at the DOE and Bechtel on August 7, at the Military Archdiocese site on August 8 and at the White House on August 9. Each of these will be prepared for by reflection and communal planning with an action proposal to start with from the organizing communities - Jonah House and the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker.
Sleeping bag space and simple meals provided. We'll be at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Church, 16th St and Newton Ave N.W, Washington D.C.

End: 12:00 pm
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 5:30pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 12:00pm

Jonah House of Baltimore and the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker of Washington invite all to our annual Faith and Resistance Retreat during August 5-9, 2007 in Washington, D.C. This year's theme is 'Global War and the Assault on the Environment', as we remember the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and its relevance to nuclear policy today. Please join us for part or all of the retreat to experience community, prayer, and witness to nonviolence. For more information, visit: http://www.jonahhouse.org /Aug07invite.htm.

End: 6:00 am
Start: Aug 5 2007 - 6:00pm
End: Aug 6 2007 - 6:00am

Join us in front of Indian Point nuclear plant
Buchanan, NY
August 5th & 6th
for an overnight vigil!

In solidarity with his nuclear free campaigners in the USA, Benny Zable Australian peace and environmental performance artist is available for photo opportunities outside the Indian Point Nuclear Reactor during an overnight vigil 5th and 6th August Hiroshima day commemorations.

Friday the core of the new nuclear reactor at Lucas Heights collapsed.

US President Bush and Australian Prime Minister Howard are to sign a Global Nuclear Energy Partnership deal during the APEC meeting in Sydney.

Good time to meet to talk .

Benny Zable
bennyzable@hotmail.com
http://www.bennyzable.com

You can reach Benny at:
West Side Cultural
212-496-2030

Alice Slater
Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
446 E. 86 St.
New York, NY 10028
212-744-2005
646-238-9000 (cell)
aslater@rcn.com
http://www.wagingpeace.org

Start: 3:30 am
End: 5:30 pm

Silent vigil at Pantex main gate, with signs and banners.

Start: 5:00 am
End: 6:30 am

Monday, August 6, at 5 PM in the Peace Garden of St. John’s Church, 61 Broad Street, Elizabeth, NJ, a Sadako* Peace memorial ceremony for the remembrance of the dead and injured of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with special speakers, Union County Freeholder Adrian Mapp and Peace and A Sustainable Future author, Alice Slater
*Sadako was a two-year-old girl when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. Ten years
later she developed leukemia. Japanese legend holds that one’s wish will be granted upon folding 1,000 paper
(origami) cranes. Sadako folded 646 before dying. She wrote, “I will write peace on your wings, and you will fly
all over the world.” Her friends finished folding the cranes in her memory. The paper crane has become a global
symbol of peace, and a statue of Sadako now stands in Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.

Start: 7:00 am
End: 8:30 am

George (Haeseler)

The annual Hiroshima Remembrance Breakfast sponsored by BCPA will be held at the First Congregational Church, corner of Main and Front St. in Binghamton, on Monday, August 6th, at 7 AM. Mayor Matt Ryan will speak and officially sign the Mayors for Peace statement calling for the abolition of nuclear weapons by 2020. In so doing, Binghamton will join Syracuse and Rochester in NY State and 85 US cities.

Local organizations that have endorsed the mayor’s signing are:

Broome County Peace Action

Binghamton El Chacon Sister City Project

Justice and Peace Advisory Committee

Binghamton Area Friends Meeting

Broome County Veterans for Peace

Binghamton SOA Watch

St James Peace and Justice Committee

Zacchaeus House Catholic Worker

Teachers for Peace

Broome County Green Party

Social Justice Committee of the UU Cong. of Bing.

Citizen Action of NY

Working Families Party

Social Justice Network of the Wyoming Annual Conference of UMC

Please come and support this historic occasion, as well as enjoy the company of other local peace advocates. Parking space at the church is limited so use street parking or the rear of the adjacent Civic Center.

Following the breakfast and ringing of the Church bell some will drive and others will walk to Peace Park (confluence of rivers off Riverside Drive) to hear Frieda Jacques, Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation, say a few words from a Native American perspective.

The event is free and open to the public but contributions will be encouraged to defray expenses. Your advance reservation will help in planning for the breakfast.

To reserve, call Pat Donohue ASAP at 722-0549.

Start: 7:00 am
End: 8:15 am

HIROSHIMA REMEMBRANCE BREAKFAST
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> WHERE? CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH CORNER---MAIN &
> FRONT ST BINGHAMTON
>
>
>
> TIME? BREAKFAST STARTS AT 7AM
>
>
>
> PARKING? LIMITED IN CHURCH PARKING LOT PLEASE
> USE STREET OR NEARBY
> PARKING AT GIANT MARKET AND TRINITY MEMORIAL CHURCH.
> PLEASE MOVE CARS FROM
> THOSE LOTS BY 9AM AMERICAN CIVIC ASSOCIATION ALSO
> HAS LIMITED PARKING.
>
> PLEASE DO NOT PARK IN THE SOCIAL SERVICES SLOTS
> ALONG THE FRONT ST ENTRANCE
> WAY TO CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.
>
>
>
> FREE WILL OFFERING TABLE BY PATRICIA DONOHUE
>
> SIGN IN AT YOUR EATING TABLE-SERVE YOURSELF AT TABLE
> OF FRUIT, JUICE,
> YOGURT, BAGELS, DONUTS, COFFEE, TEA
>
>
> ****************************************************************************
> *****************************
>
> CHURCH PROGRAM
>
>
>
> INTRODUCTORY REMARKS JACK GILROY, PEACE ACTION
>
>
>
> BRIEF OUTLINE PROPOSAL FOR PEACE CENTER BY ADAM
> FLINT
>
>
>
> GEORGE HAESELER, PEACE ACTION-NUCLEAR WEAPONS PAST
> PRESENT FUTURE
>
> QUESTIONS.
>
>
>
> MAYOR MATT RYAN-SIGNING OF MAYORS STATEMENT ON
> ABOLOTION OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
> QUESTIONS
>
>
>
> RINGING OF CHURCH BELL ON FRONT ST LAWN OF
> CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH -8:10?
>
>
>
> PEACE PARK ----WALK OR DRIVE TO PEACE PARK AT
> CONFLUENCE OF CHENANGO AND
> SUSQUEHANNA RIVERS-ABOUT ONE HALF MILE WALK TO
> RIVERSIDE DRIVE
>
> START WALK OR DRIVE ABOUT 8:20AM PROGRAM AT PARK
> BEGINS AROUND 8:45
>
> THERE IS STREET PARKING NEAR THE HOLIDAY Inn ARENA
> THE ARENA MANAGEMENT HAS
> NOT OBJECTED TO PARKING IN THEIR BACK LOT. SHORT
> WALK TO PEACE PARK FROM
> HOLIDAY INN ARENA.
>
>
>
> ONONDAGA SPOKESWOMAN FREIDA JACQUES WILL BE OUR
> GUEST SPEAKER. EVERY ONE OF
> US WHO HAVE HEARD HER FIND HER WONDERFUL. FREIDA
> WILL DRIVE DOWN FROM NEDROW
> RESERVATION NEAR SYRACUSE TO SPEAK. FEEL FREE TO ASK
> HER QUESTIONS. SHE IS A
> VERY BRIGHT AND ARTICULATE WOMAN WHO LIKES
> QUESTIONS.
>
>
>
> PEACE ACTION'S PORTABLE MICROPHONE WILL BE AVAILABLE
> TO EXPRESS WHAT YOU
> FEEL IS IMPORTANT TO SAY ON PEACE/JUSTICE ISSUES.
> LET'S ALL BE BRIEF.
>
>
>
>
>
>

Start: 7:30 am
End: 9:00 pm

Music and reflection to mark the A-bomb explosion on Hiroshima

Monday, August 6, 7:30 a.m. The Ceremony of Cranes begins with music by Kathleen Olsen and Bret Hesla and concludes at 8:15 a.m., the time of the dropping of the bomb, with a moment of silence. Audience members will be invited to hang origami peace cranes at the Peace Garden. During the ceremony, a message from the mayor of Hiroshima will be read. Featured speaker: 5th district U.S. Congressman Keith Ellison. After the moment of silence, Leo Hansen, shakuhachi (Japanese flute) player, will lead the participants to the Spirit of Peace sculpture. Kairos Intergenerational Dance Theatre will conclude the ceremony at the Spirit of Peace sculpture. All day vigil.
Location: Lyndale Park Peace Garden, Minneapolis.

Peace Concert: Rockin’ for peace

Monday, August 6, 7:30 p.m. The fourth annual Peace Concert will feature Rabbi Sim Glaser and the Social Action Figures, performing songs of peace, love, fellowship and summer fun.
Location: Lake Harriet Bandshell, Minneapolis.

Start: 7:30 am
End: 11:00 am

 

HIROSHIMA COMMEMORATION

In the Shadow of the Bomb

Monday, August 6, 2007 7:30 AM

On the morning of August 6, 1945, the U.S. dropped the first atomic bomb used in war on the people of Hiroshima, Japan. Three days later, a second nuclear bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. We gather to say "never again" at the nuclear weapons lab that is developing the NEXT U.S. nuclear weapon, euphemistically-named the "Reliable Replacement Warhead." Join us for a solemn vigil and memorial for the victims, and to advocate for an end to nuclear weapons and war.

Featured musicians are singer/songwriters robert temple and Kaylah Marin.

For those who so choose, there will be an opportunity to nonviolently risk arrest following the ceremony and rally. Location: Westgate entrance on Vasco Road, Livermore.

Driving directions: Take I-580, exit south at Vasco Road. The West Gate is approximately 0.3 mile south of the intersection with Patterson Pass Road.

Public Transportation: In order to arrive at Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab by public transportation you must arrive at the Dublin/Pleasanton BART station in time to catch WHEELS, the bus that will take you to Daphne Dr. and Vasco Rd. The #20 WHEELS leaves the BART station at 6:59 AM and arrives at Daphne Dr. and Vasco at 7:25 AM. WHEELS drives down 580 to Greenville Rd., then Las Positas Rd. before turning left on Vasco. When you board the bus, please tell the bus driver that you want to get off at Daphne Dr. and Vasco Rd. (directly across the street from the rally). The cost for WHEELS is $1.50 for adults and children and 65 cents for seniors. If you miss this bus, the next one leaves at 7:29 AM and arrives at the lab at 7:55 AM. Click here for BART schedules.

A downloadable flier is available here. (pdf)

Sponsors: Tri-Valley CAREs; Western States Legal Foundation; Livermore Conversion Project; American Friends Service Committee; First Congregational Church of Oakland; Ecumenical Peace Institute; Physicians for Social Responsibility-SF Bay Area; Berkeley Friends Church; Communist Party USA, N. Calif. District; Declaration of Peace San Mateo County; Fr. Bill O’Donnell Social Justice Committee; Friends of the People’s Weekly World; Global Action to Prevent War; Grandmothers for Peace International; Northern CA 9/11 Truth Alliance; Orange County Friends; Santa Cruz Weapons Inspection Team, Fresno Center for Nonviolence, Monterey Peace and Justice Center, Grandmothers for Peace, Hayward Chapter, Marin Peace and Justice Coalition, Social Justice Center of Marin, Bay Area United for Peace and Justice.

End: 11:00 am
Start: Aug 6 2007 - 8:00am
End: Aug 9 2007 - 11:00am

Hiroshima, the pictures they didn't want us to see : The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki killed about 250.000 people and became the most dreadful slaughter of civilians in modern history. However, for many years there was a curious gap in the photographic records. -us_05.html... Folks; Below is a reminder and invite to join us at Offutt AFB for out annual Aug 6-9 vigil. Avove is a link and attached are some readings that can help you start thinking about why we vigil every Aug 6-9. peace frank cordaro --------------------------------- Invite to Annual Aug 6 to 9 Vigil at the gates of Offutt AFB The DM and Omaha CW Communities invite you to join us for our annual 3 1/2 day "shake and bake" vigil at the gates of Offutt Air Force Base, in Bellevue, NE. home of the Strategic Nuclear (StratCom) and the US Military Space Commands. Come stand, pray and do penance with us. Or come and sit, bring a blanket, or foldeable chair, water jugs, ice chest, umbrellas for the sun and rain and food to share. Just come for an hour or two and share your hope for peace as we commemorate the Anniversary of the USA atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan on Aug 6 and 9, 1945. Contemplate with us the work and mission of these god-awful Offutt Commands, the challenges they pose to all life on our planet and the demonic claim it holds on the soul and spirit of our nation. This year's vigil begins Monday Aug 6th at 8 a.m. the hour the USA dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, at the Kinney gate and main entrance of Offutt AFB. The vigil ends Thursday Aug 9th at 11 a.m., the hour the USA dropped the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki. The vigil will begin at 8 a.m. each day and last until 8 p.m. (12 hours) to Thursday Aug 9th. On Aug 9th the vigil concludes with a prayer circle and possible line crossing at 11 a.m. Over night hospitality is available at Holy Family Parish in Omaha (1715 Izard St) starting Sunday evening Aug 5th. The church only offers floor space. Bring your own bed roll and pillow. If you need a bed, you really need to contact us before hand to insure we find one for you. Everyone is welcome, especially those in the Omaha area! Come for an hour or for the whole three days. Contacts: Frank Cordaro, DMCW, Cell Ph (515) 490 2490 , E-mail frank.cordaro@gmail.com Jerry Ebner, Omaha CW, Ph (402) 502 5887, E-mail omahacw@hotmail.com

End: 8:00 pm
Start: Aug 6 2007 - 8:00am
End: Aug 9 2007 - 8:00pm

Preparation starts July 14 with Nuclear Education/communication training, followed on July 18 by a letter writing workshop with a nuclear issue focus. The annual Peace Choir concert will be on July 30. The choir travelled to Hiroshima for the August 6 memorial last year and received front page coverage in the Portland Oregonian as well as reports in local papers and Japan. The event sponsors have also arranged a radio ad which will play frequently on a station popular with area young people.

On August 6 is the ceremony and day long vigil on Ashland Plaza. August 7 and 8 there will be speakers, films and discussions followed by another day long vigil and twilight closing ceremony August 9 on Ashland Plaza.

Co-sponsors include local chapters of Physicians for Social Responsibility, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom,Southern Oregon University Women's Resource Center, Veterans for Peace, United Church of Christ, Citizens for Peace and Justice and others. The Mayor of Ashland is a Mayor for Peace.

Start: 8:00 am
End: 9:00 am

Vigil commemorating the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. Silent vigil with ringing of church bells followed by a few short speeches, signing of solidarity peace flag to send to Hiroshima, co-signing of Woolsey Dear Colleague letter to co-sponsor H. Res. 68 calling for the U.S. to abide by the NonProliferation Treaty; and bike ride around perimeter of fire and blast area caused by Hiroshima size bomb exploding in central New Haven.

End: 11:00 am
Start: Aug 6 2007 - 8:00am
End: Aug 9 2007 - 11:00am

Invite to Annual Aug 6 to 9 Vigil at the gates of Offutt AFB

The DM and Omaha CW Communities invite you to join us for our annual 3 1/2 day "shake and bake" vigil at the gates of Offutt Air Force Base, in Bellevue, NE. home of the Strategic Nuclear (StratCom) and the US Military Space Commands.

Come stand, pray and do penance with us. Or come and sit, bring a blanket, or foldeable chair, water jugs, ice chest, umbrellas for the sun and rain and food to share. Just come for an hour or two and share your hope for peace as we commemorate the Anniversary of the USA atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan on Aug 6 and 9, 1945. Contemplate with us the work and mission of these god-awful Offutt Commands, the challenges they pose to all life on our planet and the demonic claim it holds on the soul and spirit of our nation.

This year's vigil begins Monday Aug 6th at 8 a.m. the hour the USA dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, at the Kinney gate and main entrance of Offutt AFB. The vigil ends Thursday Aug 9th at 11 a.m., the hour the USA dropped the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki.

The vigil will begin at 8 a.m. each day and last until 8 p.m. (12 hours) to Thursday Aug 9th. On Aug 9th the vigil concludes with a prayer circle and possible line crossing at 11 a.m.

Over night hospitality is available upon request starting Sunday evening Aug 5th. Call and let us know you are coming. Expect floor space, so bring your own bed roll. If you need a bed, you really need to contact us to insure we find one for you.

Everyone is welcome, especially those in the Omaha area! Come for an hour or for the whole three days.

Contacts:

Frank Cordaro, DMCW,
Ph (515) 282 4781, E-mail frank.cordaro@gmail.com

Jerry Ebner, Omaha CW,
Ph (402) 502 5887, E-mail omahacw@hotmail.com

Start: 8:00 am
End: 8:00 pm

Monday, August 6 - HIROSHIMA DAY OF REMEMBRANCE & RESISTANCE AT LOCKHEED MARTIN [world's largest weapons corporation, U.S.'s chief nuclear and space weapons contractor, and the Iraq War's chief profiteer]in Valley Forge, PA (Mall & Goddard Boulevards, Valley Forge/King of Prussia, PA - behind the King of Prussia Mall) 8AM (Hiroshima bombing occurred at 8:02am) - Noon, Bell-Tolling Vigil, with banners, puppets, Hiroshima and nuclear age graphics, and hourly siren blast; Noon - Commemoration with music, readings, broadcast of audio account of the Hiroshima bombing 62 years ago, "DIE-IN" dramatization, and Nonviolent Resistance (those willing to face arrest for nonviolent civil disobedience need to call the Brandywine Peace Community, 610-544-1818, by July 28 and attend a preparation and planning meeting in Philadelphia. Lockheed Martin in Valley Forge is Headquarters to the corporation's Management & Data Systems which, among numerous weapons systems, produces fire-control systems for Tomahawk cruise missiles and battlefield computer systems used in Iraq. Lockheed Martin is an ongoing focus of the Brandywine Peace Community's 30 year campaign of nonviolent direct action.

On Thursday, August 9, 6PM, the Brandywine Peace Community will also hold a NAGASAKI DAY PEACE DEDICATION on the steps of SS Peter & Paul Roman Catholic Cathedral*, 18th & Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Phila., PA (August 9, 1945, the Urakami Roman Catholic Cathedral was ground zero for the Nagasaki bombing which destroyed at the time the largest Catholic city in all of Asia). Click here for more details about that event.

Start: 2:30 pm

From Hiroshima to Hope annual LANTERN FLOATING CEREMONY to commemorate
> the victims of the Aug 6, 1945 bombing of HIROSHIMA, and of other acts
> of violence.
>
> Monday, August 6,
>
> 6:30 pm Gathering and lantern preparation
>
> 8 pm program
>
> Dusk: Lanterns are floated out onto the lake
>
> If you've never been, this is a spellbinding sight. I know; it has
> religious overtones, something about the lanterns representing the
> "souls" of the victims, but I don't let that get in the way of my
> enjoying one of the most beautiful sights to be seen on a summer evening
> in Seattle
>
> Green Lake, Northwest shore,
> just south of the Bathhouse Theatre, Seattle;
>

Start: 5:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Pot Luck supper at Riverside Park on the banks of the beautiful Connecticut River.
Program includes speakers, music and poetry and ends with the lighting of remembrance candles which float on the river's edge.

Sponsored By:
American Friends Service Committee- CT CT Coaltion for Peace qand Justice CCPJ Bread and ROses, Charter Oak Cultural Center,CTUP, People of Faith, Palestinian American Congress, Hope Out Loud Peace and Music Festival, Promoting Enduring Peace, Veterans for Peace, West Hartford Citizens fdor Peace and Justice http://hopeoutloud.org

Start: 5:00 pm
End: 7:00 pm

new jersey Hiroshima/Nagasaki Remembrance committee

19th annual observance. including exhibit, poetry, music, origami

Start: 5:30 pm
End: 7:30 pm

August 6 is Hiroshima Day. As discussed in our Wednesday night meetings, we will hold a rally to protest against plans to increase the U.S. nuclear arsenal. Such increases make us less safe and pollute the environment, in order to line the pockets of the weapons makers. We will also take this opportunity to hold up peace signs.

We will hold signs in view of rush hour traffic, from 5:30 to 7:30 pm on August 6, at the corner of Murphy Rd. and West End Ave., in front of the offices of Senators Corker and Alexander. For related information see the websites august6.org and stopthebombs.org.

Start: 6:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

On the 62nd anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we are reminded of the evils of war and the horror of nuclear catastrophe. The lessons: war is not the answer. We must strive for a nuclear-free world. Yet with the US waging a brutal war in Iraq, the possibility of war in Iran, continued US nuclear proliferation, and over 700 US military bases in over 72 countries, we must continue to work towards peace. The Widening War Tour seeks to make the connections between the peace and justice movements and to build a network of activists striving to end war and the roots of war.

Speakers:

Yuko Nakamura
Hiroshima survivor; Secretary General of Kanagawa Atomic Bomb Sufferers Association; National Council member of Hidankyo (Japan Confederation of A- and H-Bomb Sufferers Organizations)

Bal Pinguel
Coordinator of the American Friends Service Committee Peacebuilding & Demilitarization Program

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:28 pm

From Hiroshima to Hope annual LANTERN FLOATING CEREMONY to commemorate
> the victims of the Aug 6, 1945 bombing of HIROSHIMA, and of other acts
> of violence.
>
> Monday, August 6,
>
> 6:30 pm Gathering and lantern preparation
>
> 8 pm program
>
> Dusk: Lanterns are floated out onto the lake
>
> If you've never been, this is a spellbinding sight. I know; it has
> religious overtones, something about the lanterns representing the
> "souls" of the victims, but I don't let that get in the way of my
> enjoying one of the most beautiful sights to be seen on a summer evening
> in Seattle
>
> Green Lake, Northwest shore,
> just south of the Bathhouse Theatre, Seattle;
>

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 8:00 pm

No to Nuclear Weapons! No to War! No to War Profiteers!

Hiroshima Day, Monday, August 6, 6:30-8:00 p.m.

62 years after the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, we find ourselves still "in the shadow of the bomb." Join us for a Candlelight Vigil to commemorate the 62nd anniversary of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and to call for the global abolition of nuclear weapons.

Gather in front of the Midway Carrier Museum on Harbor Drive (one block south of Broadway) at 6 p.m. for bannering; program at 6:30 p.m. followed by candlelight procession on the Embarcadero.

Speakers include representatives from the Network of Spiritual Progressives and Veterans for Peace. Music by Peggy Watson. Please bring candles.

More information: info@prcsd.org or 619-263-9301

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Annual Hiroshima Remembrance Potluck. Candlelight vigil at the Tuolumne River after potluck supper. Bring food and drinks to share.

Travel to end of Santa Cruz Ave. at the river. Look for sign.

Start: 6:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Two peace groups are sponsoring a Lanterns for Peace ceremony to be held Monday, August 6th, at the Tenney Park shelter on Madison’s east side. The event, which will begin at 6:30 PM, commemorates the victims of the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima, Japan on Aug 6, 1945, and of Nagasaki, Japan, on Aug. 9, 1945. This community gathering also commemorates all victims of war, and encourages the creation a safe future by abolishing nuclear weapons and wars.

Families with children are encouraged to attend. Family activities will include decorating paper lanterns, peace crane folding, and music. Performers will include local musician and storyteller Clare Norelle and the Raging Grannies of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). Refreshments will be provided. The event will include displays suggesting actions to take and messages to send to elected representatives.

At dusk, around 8:15 PM, participants will light the lanterns and release them into the Tenney Park lagoon. This event is sponsored by the Madison Area Peace Coalition and Physicians for Social Responsibility-Wisconsin.

If driving to Tenney Park, enter from Sherman Avenue side. Shelter is near East Johnson Street and Thornton Avenue.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:30 pm

A gathering to remember the victims who died in the mushroom clouds of war and the victims worldwide of the echoes of violence inherent in nuclear technology.
Songs, poetry, dance, meditations and community building in the Rose Garden at the Carter Center in Atlanta.
7pm.
Hosted by Nuclear Watch South and Atlanta WAND (women's Action for New Directions). Other groups include Dancing Flowers for Peace, United Nations Association/Atlanta, Every Church A Peace Church, Georgia Coalition for the People's Agenda, S.C.L.C. W.O.M.E.N., Inc and Partnerships in Peace.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

A public discussion on Bechtel Corporation and the current nuclear crisis. Bechtel develops nuclear weapons, pushed for us to go to war with Iraq, and is now opening up a new Navy facility in Monroeville. Featuring David Robinson, Pax Christi USA Executive Director, who recently visited Iran as part of a US religious delegation. Sponsored by Demilitarize Pittsburgh and AFSC Pittsburgh.

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Great Neck SANE/Peace Action and the Long Island Allliance for Peaceful Alternatives Invite You to

HIROSHIMA DAY 2007
No More Hiroshimas! No More Iraqs!
Bring the Troops Home Now!

Program:
HABEEB AHMED, President, Islamic Center of Long Island
SUE DONNELLY, Code Pink LI
BRUCE GAGNON, Global Network Against Nuclear Weapons
LEAH LIBRESCO, 2007 Presidential Scholar, Mineola High School
REV. MARK LUKENS, Bethany Congregational Church and The Interfaith Alliance—Long Island Chapter
HON. MICHELLE SCHIMEL, NYS Assembly Member
RABBI RICHARD SHAPIRO, Senior Rabbi, Temple Beth El, Great Neck
Co-Chairs: HON JON KAIMAN, supervisor, Town of North Hempstead and STAN ROMAINE, Chair, Great Neck SANE/Peace Action

Music by Lotus Blossom Youth Music Group with Edel Sanders at the keyboard

Directions: LIE exit 33 (Great Neck/Lakeville Rd.). Left (from west), right (from east) @ light onto Lakeville Rd. (becomes Middle Neck Rd. @ Northern Blvd.) Continue to bridge over LIRR. Go 1 block , turn right @ large clock- Grace Ave. Park 2 blocks down.

Sponsored By:
Code Pink LI, Ethical Humanist Society of LI, Five Towns Forum, The Interfaith Alliance—LI Chapter, Pax Christi LI, Reach Out America, Shelter Rock Forum, Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock, Womanspace

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Hiroshima memorial film showing

HIBAKUSHA: In this new fifteen-minute film, Japanese citizen Keiji Tshuchiya uses 12 powerful watercolors which he painted five years ago to tell the story of his experiences in Hiroshima as a 17-year old soldier during the month immediately following the dropping of the atomic bomb. While the film addresses a horrific moment in history, it emphasizes how Mr. Tsuchiya has directed his life towards purpose and healing through his life-long commitments to advocating for the atomic bomb survivors, opposing nuclear war and preserving the Japanese horseshoe crab. Co-produced by Kathy Sloane, photographer, director and editor, and Michele Mason, interpreter (2007).

Also showing, Emiko Omori’s film, “Rabbit in the Moon.”

Start: 7:00 pm
End: 8:00 pm

"From Hiroshima to Iraq: Take the Nuclear Option off the Table", a commemoration. Welcome from Chapel Hill Town Council Member Mark Kleinschmidt, proclamation of Mayor Mark Chilton, University of North Carolina historian Wayne Lee speaks on "War, the Nuclear Option, and Habits of Mind", readings, music by Catherine Grodensky and Jim Magaw, candle lighting ceremony and chanting led by members of the Chapel Hill Zen Center. Children's activities.

Start: 7:00 pm

There will be a program of speakers from 7 - 8:30 p.m. People can make lanterns for themselves prior to the program with the supplies provided. There are usually additional lanterns available for those who don't make their own, however. The lantern ceremony itself begins about 8:30 for any who want to attend (and bring their children to) this beautiful, meditative ceremony that is accompanied by drumming and last until about 9 p.m.

Start: 7:04 pm
End: 9:00 pm

Maui Interfaith-Community Peace Coalition presents Dr. Seiji Yamada, faculty member of the U. of Hawaii School of Medicine and formerly of Hiroshima, to speak in an interfaith program which will include slides and information on survivors or nuclear bomb and other radiation testing in the Marshall Islands where Dr. Yamada has worked.
Place: Kahului Hongwanji Mission, 291 Puunene Av.,Kahului, Maui, Hawaii
Free to the public.

Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:30 pm

We Remember: prayer,film and discussion. Join us as we view the History Channel's film, "Hiroshima: The Decision to Drop the Bomb," with historians, militry experts, survivors explaining facts and attitudes that affected President Truman's decision to use atomic weapons.

Examining new material presented in the film, now available through memoirs and declassification of documents, we enccourage viewers to discuss the morality and necessity of Truman's decision to begin nuclear war.

Sponsored by the Pax Christi ministry of St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Parish, this commemorative gathering will be on the 62nd anniversary of the bombing, August 6, 2007, at 7:30 p.m. in the St. Thomas ministry center, lighthouse meeting room, at 1500 Brookdale Rd., Naperville, IL. The event is free and open to all.

Start: 7:30 pm
End: 9:00 pm

We will meet at 7:30p.m. the Charleston Naval Weapons Station in Goose Creek, SC to remember the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and to demand that the Bush administration abandon plans to increase production of nuclear weapons, end the occupation of Iraq, and stay out of Iran. We are inviting the media and creating informational flyers and a large mushroom cloud, and we will bring our 9' "cruise missile."

Start: 7:30 pm
End: 8:30 pm

Monday, August 6 is the 62nd anniversary of the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima, which was followed three days later by another nuclear bomb, this one aimed at Nagasaki. To date this is the only time nuclear weapons have been used in war. The two bombs cost the lives of over 200,000 people, most of whom were civilians, and the remaining traces of radiation continue to kill people in both cities today.

In the decades since the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, some progress was made toward ending the threat of nuclear war. The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which became effective in 1970 and now has 188 signatories, specifies that nuclear weapons states will not assist others in the development of nuclear weapons and will work toward nuclear disarmament. The elder President Bush enacted a testing moratorium in 1992 which caused several other states to stop testing nuclear weapons. Disarmament efforts continued during the Clinton presidency, when nuclear weapons were withdrawn from ten additional states and several European bases. It was during this time that the Charleston area lost the distinction of harboring more nuclear weapons at the Naval Weapons Station in Goose Creek than any other facility in the Eastern United States.

The current administration has reversed the trend toward disarmament. It has made little progress toward reducing the current stockpile of about 5,400 strategic warheads to 2,200 or less, the level mandated by the 2002 Treaty of Moscow (SORT); it has rejected Russian requests to negotiate further reductions as “insincere,” and it is promoting the Complex 2030 plan to build more nuclear weapons and rebuild the supporting infrastructure to levels not seen since the end of the Cold War.

Charleston Peace and ThinkingPeople invite you to join them on Monday, August 6 at the Charleston Naval Weapons Station, 2316 Red Bank Road in Goose Creek, to remember those who died in Hiroshima and to tell the Bush administration NEVER AGAIN – no more nuclear weapons, no more war!

End: 11:00 pm
Start: Aug 6 2007 - 8:00pm
End: Aug 9 2007 - 11:00pm

Invite to Annual Aug 6 to 9 Vigil at the gates of Offutt AFB

The DM and Omaha CW Communities invite you to join us for our annual
3 1/2 day "shake and bake" vigil at the gates of Offutt Air Force
Base, in Bellevue, NE. home of the Strategic Nuclear (StratCom) and
the US Military Space Commands.

Come stand, pray and do penance with us. Or come and sit, bring a
blanket, or foldeable chair, water jugs, ice chest, umbrellas for the
sun and rain and food to share. Just come for an hour or two and share
your hope for peace as we commemorate the Anniversary of the USA
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan on Aug 6 and 9, 1945.
Contemplate with us the work and mission of these god-awful Offutt
Commands, the challenges they pose to all life on our planet and the
demonic claim it holds on the soul and spirit of our nation.

This year's vigil begins Monday Aug 6th at 8 a.m. the hour the USA
dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, at the Kinney gate and
main entrance of Offutt AFB. The vigil ends Thursday Aug 9th at 11
a.m., the hour the USA dropped the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki.

The vigil will begin at 8 a.m. each day and last until 8 p.m. (12
hours) to Thursday Aug 9th. On Aug 9th the vigil concludes with a
prayer circle and possible line crossing at 11 a.m.

Over night hospitality is available upon request starting Sunday
evening Aug 5th. Call and let us know you are coming. Expect floor
space, so bring your own bed roll. If you need a bed, you really need
to contact us to insure we find one for you.

Everyone is welcome, especially those in the Omaha area! Come for an
hour or for the whole three days.

Contacts:

Frank Cordaro, DMCW,
Ph (515) 282 4781, E-mail frank.cordaro@gmail.com

Jerry Ebner, Omaha CW,
Ph (402) 502 5887, E-mail omahacw@hotmail.com

Start: 8:00 pm
End: 9:30 pm

Candlelight vigil at Pritchard park in remembrance of the victims of war. Starts at 8 PM and goes until 9:30 PM. Candles will be provided.