Past Events 2008:
BNP
Monthly Meeting...BNP Store Clearance Sale...Food Pantry Fund Raiser.. .Social Gathering
Thursday, December 18, 7:00 -9:00 pm
Bethlehem Town Hall
445 Delaware Ave, DelmarCome
discuss, plan, eat, socialize! We will have a short meeting
at 7:00, and then from 7:30 - 9:00pm, a chance to socialize, and
browse at the BNP store. This will be a pot luck event: snacks,
desserts and non-alcohol beverages.
After 5 years of BNP
selling peace paraphernalia across the state, we've decided it is time
for a holiday sale and clearance. The sale will include
many historic buttons, books, shirts, and stickers as well
as newer items. This is your chance to stock up on peace paraphernalia
before the holidays! We will donate profits on all clearance
items to the local food pantries.
Stop the War! Change the
World! What is next for the peace movement locally and globally? Help
create our upcoming events and actions. So, bring a snack
to share and join us for an evening of fun. Information
439-1968
Solidarity Committee- Film: "What Would Jesus Buy?"
Saturday, December 20, 7:30 pm
First Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
405 Washington Avenue (across the street from the downtown SUNY campus)
The
Solidarity Committee of the Capital District continues its 2008-2009
film series with a screening of "What Would Jesus Buy?" (2007, 91
minutes). This comic documentary follows the Reverend Billy and the
Church of Stop Shopping Gospel Choir as they go on a cross-country
mission to save Christmas from the Shopocalypse: the destruction of the
world through consumerism and the fires of eternal debt! Engaging in
retail interventions, corporate exorcisms, and good old-fashioned
preaching, the Reverend Billy takes us into the heart of
America—exorcising the demons at the Wal-Mart headquarters,
seizing the center stage at the Mall of America, and heading to the
Promised Land (Disneyland). Don't miss this hilarious critique of
corporate culture and globalization! The
film-showing—-cosponsored by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace and
Upper Hudson Peace Action—-will take place at the First Unitarian
Universalist Society of Albany, located at 405 Washington Avenue
(across the street from the downtown SUNY campus). Admission is
free. Refreshments will be served. Everyone is welcome. More
information: 466-1192

Peaceful Economic Conversion
Thursday, December 4, 7:00 - 8:30 PM
Bethlehem Public Library
451 Delaware Ave., Delmar NY 12054
Tom Ellis, a local
activist and educator, will talk with us about the potential for
a Peaceful Economic Conversion of the US economy. He
will describe efforts that were made in the past to initiate it,
and the benefits of replacing military industries with civilian
ones. This will be a very interesting and encouraging
presentation. Contact:
466-1192 for further information.

THE ISRAEL-PALESTINE CONFLICT: A TURNING POINT
Saturday, November 22, 3:00 p.m.
Bethlehem Public Library
451 Delaware Ave., Delmar NY 12054
With
new leadership in the United States, Israel and Palestine, what will be
the new challenges and opportunities for achieving peace? GAITH
AL-OMARI, “Palestinian Perspectives on the Israel-Palestine
Conflict” and DIANE BALSER, “The Israel-Palestine Conflict,
American Politics and American Jews”. Presented by
Brit Tzedek v’Shalom & Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace.
DIANE
BALSER is Executive Director of Brit Tzedek v’Shalom. She has
been active in Middle East peace and women’s issues, and has been
instrumental in developing strong ties between Brit and U.S. public
policy leaders. She has consulted for Hadassah and the Israeli
Women’s Network. Balser earned her Ph.D. at Brandeis, and teaches
in the Women’s Studies Department at Boston University.
GHAITH
AL-OMARI is Policy Director of the American Task Force for Palestine
and Senior Fellow at the New American Foundation. He was advisor to
Arafat and Abbas, participated in the Camp David and Taba negotiation,
and was the lead drafter for the Palestinians of the Geneva Initiative.
A graduate of Georgetown and Oxford, he taught international law in
Jordan and was active in human rights advocacy there.
Admission free: donation appreciated

Solidarity Committee- Film: "No Logo"
Saturday, November 22, 7:30 pm
First Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
405 Washington Avenue (across the street from the downtown SUNY campus)
The
Solidarity Committee continues its 2008-2009 film series with a showing
of "No Logo" (2003, 40 minutes). “No Logo, based on the
best-selling book by Canadian journalist and activist Naomi Klein,
reveals the reasons behind the backlash against the increasing economic
and cultural reach of multinational companies. Analyzing how brands
like Nike,The Gap, and Tommy Hilfiger became revered symbols worldwide,
Klein argues that globalization is a process whereby corporations
discovered that profits lay not in making products (outsourced to
low-wage workers in developing countries), but in creating branded
identities people adopt in their lifestyles." An additional short
film, TBA, may also be shown. The
film-showing—cosponsored by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace and
Upper Hudson Peace Action—will take place at a new
location: the First Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany,
located at 405 Washington Avenue (across the street from the downtown
SUNY campus). More
information: 466-1192

Election Forum and Discussion
Thursday, November 6, 7:00 - 8:45 pm
Bethlehem Town Hall, Rm. 107 (PLEASE NOTE THE CHANGE IN LOCATION OF THIS EVENT)
445 Delaware Ave, Delmar , Delmar
We
will have a discussion of the election results, the economic
situation, the peace movement, and the future of our
country. Was the vote counted accurately?...
What is the make up of the newly elected House and senate? ...
How will the candidates just elected deal with the following
issues: war in Iraq and Afghanistan, health care, the bailout,
rising unemployment, climate change, peak oil, loss of civil
liberties?... There will be an open mic session at the end of
the discussion. Bring your poetry, songs, and your ideas for
future organizing. Should we organize to go to Washington for the
inauguration? Do we need to have a local march to focus on
the need to bring all of our troops home now? Have our past
tactics been effective and how do we need to change to be more
effective with the new administration? How can we best promote
peace in the coming months? How will the current economic
situation affect our organizing and what should our priorities be
now? Join us in this important discussion. See you
there. More information 466-1192.

Camilo Mejía: The Private Rebellion of a Staff Sergeant
Tuesday, October 28, 7:00 pm
Sanctuary for Independent
Media
3361 6th Avenue, Troy NY
After
serving in the Army for nearly nine years, Staff Sergeant Camilo
Mejía was the first known Iraq veteran to refuse to fight when
he applied for discharge from the army as a conscientious objector,
citing moral concerns about the war and occupation. The principled
stand described in his memoir, “Road From ar Ramadi: The Private
Rebellion of Staff Sargeant Camilo Mejia” (just published on
Haymarket Books), helped rally the growing opposition and embolden
other soldiers. He was eventually convicted of desertion by a military
court and sentenced to a year in prison, prompting Amnesty
International to declare him a prisoner of conscience. BNP is
co-sponsoring this film with the Sanctuary for Independent Media. More
information: 466-1192

CONFERENCE - How To Prevent War On Iran AND On The U.S. Constitution
Saturday, October 18, 2008
9:00 am (sharp) to 5:00 pm
Berkshire Community College
Directions to Berkshire Community College
Susan B. Anthony Building, Pittsfield, MA
Featured
Speakers: Scott Ritter, Joseph Gerson, Brian Corr and Joe
Lombardo. Ritter was a
chief UN weapons inspector who correctly predicted there would be no
weapons of mass destruction found in Iraq. In both August and
September he will travel to Iran. On another occasion before the
conference, he will meet with several Nobel Peace Prize winners on the
subject of avoiding war with Iran, a topic on which he has written a
book, Target Iran. He has also written: Waging Peace - The Art of
War for the Antiwar Movement, a fascinating and challenging account of
how techniques used by the military can instead be used in the pursuit
of peace. Gerson is Program Director for the American Friends
Service Committee in Cambridge, MA. He has written numerous books
on global affairs and has traveled widely in the Middle East and
elsewhere. He is familiar with Ritter's sentiments and likewise
aspires to the goals of warding off war with Iran and creating a more
effective peace movement able to induce our government to abide by the
Constitution, honor the truth and serve the people. However, his
many years of experience working with AFSC have led him to somewhat
different views on strategies and tactics from those of
Ritter. For More Information: Contact George
Desnoyers: Tel.
413-443-4298 e-mail: gdesnoye@berkshire.rr.com Sponsored by Global Issues Resource Organization (GIRO)
of BCC, Berkshire Citizens for Peace and Justice, Bethlehem
Neighbors for Peace. Registration from 8:30 am - 9: 00 am.
Admission: $10.00, Seniors $8.00, Students $5.00

Solidarity Committee- Film: "Hacking Democracy"
Saturday, October 18, 7:30 pm
First Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
405 Washington Avenue (across the street from the downtown SUNY campus)
The
Solidarity Committee continues its 2008-2009 film series with a showing
of "Hacking Democracy" (2007, 81 minutes). This HBO documentary
provides a modern-day David and Goliath story—a tenacious
grandmother from Seattle and a band of citizen-activists who take on
the voting machine corporations and government officials who subvert
democracy at the polls. Examining the record in recent elections,
"Hacking Democracy" uncovers incendiary evidence from the trash cans of
Texas to the ballot boxes of Ohio, thereby exposing secrecy, votes in
the trash, hackable software, and election fraud. As Americans
prepare to cast their ballots once again this November, it provides a
timely reminder of the fragility of democracy. The
film-showing—cosponsored by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace and
Upper Hudson Peace Action—will take place at a new
location: the First Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany,
located at 405 Washington Avenue (across the street from the downtown
SUNY campus). More
information: 466-1192 Although we initially planned for the film screening to start at
7:00 PM, an article in "Solidarity Notes" reported it as beginning at
7:30 PM. Therefore, we have revised this notice to indicate a starting
time of 7:30 PM.

BNP Film Night: Commander 'N Thief
Thursday, October 2, 6: 45- 8:45 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Greg
Palast, introduces the documentary and also provides staggering
information in the body of the film about the RNC’s purposeful
and targeted strategies for disenfranchising millions of minority
voters across the United States, including African-American soldiers
serving in Iraq.
The outcome of the election is that the wrong
candidate was sworn in as President of the United States. The evidence
presented in this documentary, “Commander ‘N Thief,”
should be seen as a warning that our democracy is now in peril and that
ordinary citizens must act quickly and forcefully to restore honesty,
transparency and verifiability to the
American electoral system. More information 466-1192.
Calling All Veterans!
Friday, October 3, 7-9pm
Friends Meeting House
727 Madison Avenue, Albany
Please join us for a meeting of veterans and veteran supporters
who are interested in coming together to discuss forming a local
veterans support network and a Capital District chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW). Adrienne Kinne, member of the IVAW Board of Directors, will
join our meeting to help us understand how to go about forming an IVAW
chapter in Albany and tell us more about the benefits of doing so. At
this meeting we'll also discuss the possibility of holding a public
forum for all veterans, to help educate veterans about the benefits due
to them as a result of their service. Come one, come all--and invite
your friends. It's time for veterans in the Capital District to
unite! For more information call Jason or Elaine, 518-439-8262.
NEPAJAC Planning Meeting
Sunday, October 5, 3 - 5 pm
Albany Public Library, 2nd Floor Conference Room
161 Washington Avenue, NY
North East Peace and
Justice Action Coalition (NEPAJAC) planning meeting. This
will be a gathering of several regional peace and justice organizations
to plan future peace and justice in the Capital Region. We
will discuss: the October 11 Stop the Wars events, organizing of a local IVAw chapter, the upcoming
conference at Berkshire Community College, events planned for after the
elections, the No Bush Bailout event(s) and more. Join us.
Information call Joe at : 439-1968.

Film "Body of War" and presentation by media activist Dee Dee Halleck
Friday, September 12, 7:00 pm
Sanctuary for Independent
Media
3361 6th Avenue, Troy NY
Body
of War is an intimate and transformational feature documentary about
the true face of war today. Meet Tomas Young, 25 years old, paralyzed
from a bullet to his spine - wounded after serving in Iraq for less
than a week. Body of War is Tomas' coming home story as he evolves into
a new person, coming to terms with his disability and finding his own
unique and passionate voice against the war. The film is produced and
directed by Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro, and features two original
songs by Eddie Vedder. Body of War is a naked and honest portrayal of
what it's like inside the body, heart and soul of this extraordinary
and heroic young man.Legendary
community media
activist Dee Dee Halleck, who played a major role in bringing
this story to film, will speak after the screening. BNP is
co-sponsoring this film with the Sanctuary for Independent Media. More
information: 466-1192

BNP Film Night: In Debt We Trust -America Before the Bubble Bursts
Thursday, September 4, 6: 45- 8:45 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Film
presentation of: "In Debt We Trust" ( 98 minutes), directed
by Danny Schechter. "The money we owe and the bill that's
coming due".
The film explores the extent of credit card debt, and the
methods the credit card companies use to encourage an increasing debt
load by everyone from students to the elderly. This film also
takes an in depth look at the connection between Congress, President
Bush and the credit card industry. Join us. More information 466-1192.
4th Anniversary Commemoration of the Arrests of YASSIN AREF & MOHAMMED HOSSAIN
Friday August 22, 2008 from 4:30-6pm
March from Masjid As-Salam Mosque, 276 Central Ave., to Washington Avenue Armory followed by a vigil at the Armory.
The
Muslim Solidarity Committee invites you to join us for this march and
vigil remembering the arrests of these two Muslim men from our
community after a long and costly “sting operation” waged
by the Albany Field Office of the FBI.
One
of the important visual effects of the march is the show of solidarity
by diverse community organizations that work for peace and justice. We
hope that you will carry a sign or banner proudly displaying the name
of your organization (we have the sign made for your organization from
last year). If you want to support this effort but can't send a
representative on August 22nd, would you be willing to have someone
else carry the sign with the name of your group? This would help us to
visually demonstrate the wide range of community support for our Muslim
neighbors.
MUSLIM INNOCENCE PROJECT CONFERENCE
Saturday, August 23,
1-5 PM, ALBANY , NY ,ALBANY LAW SCHOOL, Matthew Bender Room.
LYNNE STEWART will speak about her experiences as an attorney and then
a defendant unfairly charged and convicted for standing up for her
client in the proudest legal tradition. SEAN MAHAR, Attorney for
SYED HASHMI and ABU YOUSEF, Cleric, will speak about that case.
www.freefahad.com KATHERINE HUGHES, Writer, will
speak about the case of DR. RAFIL DHAFIR.
www.dhafirtrial.net STEPHEN DOWNS, One of the attorneys for
YASSIN AREF, and DR. SHAMSHAD AHMAD, President of the
Masjid As-Salam Mosque, will speak about the AREF/HOSSAIN case.
www.yassinaref.com and www.nepajac.org/Aref&Hossain.htm
After
these presentations, we will have workshops on how to identify these
cases and put together a nationwide database; how to reach out to the
public, the media and other groups; and generally how to move forward
from here. For more information, e-mail Kathy Manley at
mkathy1@hotmail.com

Nurturing Peace: The 10th Anniversary, Kateri Tekakwitha Peace Conference
Friday & Saturday, August 15 & 16, 2008
National Kateri Tekakwitha Shrine, Route 5, Fonda, NY
The
10th Anniversary, Kateri Tekakwitha Peace Conference. Featuring:
Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, Fr. Roy Bourgeois, M.M. Colonel (ret.) Ann
Wright. Workshops, Music, Lunch and more. National Kateri Tekakwitha
Shrine, Route 5, Fonda, NY For complete conference information see
www.kateripeaceconference.org Cost: Friday Evening,
August 15th, 2008 Free Will Offering; Saturday, August 16th,
2008, Students and Seniors $10.00, Adults - $15.00 through $40.00. High School students free.

Col. (ret.) Ann Wright, author of Dissent: Voices of Conscience
Tuesday, August 12, 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Albany Public Library
161 Washington Avenue, NY
Ann
Wright will speak at the Albany Public Library while she is in the
Capital Region for the Kateri Tekakwitha Peace Conference. Ann
Wright's new book, Dissent: Voices of Conscience, profiles of those in
government and active-duty military who have spoken out, leaked
documents, resigned, or refused to deploy to protest the war in Iraq.
The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression named Dissent
their book of the month for February 2008. Daniel Ellsberg wrote the
foreword. "This
… illuminating and remarkably impressive … book should be leaked
into the government. … This book could awaken … officials to
withdraw their complicity and … tell the truth to [the public].
This country will not escape further human, legal, and moral
catastrophes, or preserve itself as a democratic, constitutional
republic, if that does not happen. If you're at all like me,
you will have a whole set of new heroes when you finish reading this. …Dissent: Voices of
Conscience could
change your life."
— from the Foreword, by
Daniel Ellsberg. Please see www.voicesofconscience.com for further information. BNP contact: 466-1192..
Reading of John Hersey's "Hiroshima"
Wednesday, August 6, 2008, 11:00 - 3:00 pm
West Capital Park Park (S. Swan Street steps), Albany, NY
On
August 6, 1945 the United States of America used the atomic bomb for
the first time on the city of Hiroshima, Japan, destroying the city; on
August 9, the United States used the atomic bomb again on Nagasaki,
Japan. Over 200,000 people died immediately in the two bombings and
over a hundred thousand more died in the following decades as a result
of the effects of the radiation.
To remember those bombings and
to commemorate the victims, local citizens will be gathering to read
John Hersey’s Hiroshima. Seating will be on the grass,
folding chairs or blankets are suggested. The event is free and open to
the public. Those interested in reading can sign up to participate when
they arrive, or by calling Dan Wilcox, 482-0262, dwlcx@earthlink.net.
Hiroshima
was first published in the New Yorker in 1946; it tells the story of
the bombing on August 6, 1945 by following the story of six of the
survivors. The book version has been in print since 1946.
John Amidon: The Middle East and a Closer Look at Hezbollah and Hamas
Thursday, August 7, 7:00 -8:30 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
From May 14- 27, 2008, John was part of the U.S. Academics For Peace
Delegation which visited, Amman, Jordan, Damascus, Syria and Beirut,
Lebanon meeting with academics, religious leaders and representatives
of both Hezbollah and Hamas. Getting past the rhetoric and
misinformation in the American press will help us understand and give
an expanded insight into the Midldle East and the roles played by
Hezbollah and Hamas. A slide presentation will accompany this session
along with questions and answers.
John Amidon is a
member of Veterans For Peace and has worked dilgently to close the
School of the Americas, keep JROTC out of Albany Public Schools, to
oppose torture and for impeachment of the criminal regime in
Washington, D.C. In September of 2005, John traveled with Academics For
Peace to Iran and Syria meeting with former Iranian President Mohammad
Khatami and Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad. This winter (2008) John
spent as interim coordinator for the Nevada Desert Experience working
to abolish nuclear weapons and for environmental justice. In May of
2008 , John returned to the Middle East as a member of U.S. Acadmeics
For Peace Delegation meeting with academics, religious leaders and
representatives of Hezoballah and Hamas. He has served on the National
Board of
Directors of Veterans For Peace and on the Board of the
Interfaith Alliance of NYS. John is also the founder of the Kateri
Tekakwitha Peace Conference. Information 466-1192
Welcome Picnic for Iraqi Refugees
Saturday, July 19, 1:30 - 5:30 (rain or shine!)
Islamic Center of the Capital District,
21 Lansing Rd. N., Schenectady, 12204
(off Central Ave., just past Ethan Allen on the right, going west)
Please
join the Iraqi Refugee Support Committee for Bethlehem Neighbors for
Peace, Women’s Association for Family Affairs, and Women Against
War in welcoming Iraqi refugees to the Capital District.
Approximately one dozen Iraqi families have been re-settled in the
Albany area in the past 6-8 months, and many new families will be
arriving shortly. We hope you will join us in welcoming them to
our community. The gathering will be hosted by the Islamic Center
of the Capital District. Our generous hosts will provide picnic
foods. You may bring a dish or dessert to share if you
wish. We will break bread with our new Iraqi neighbors and
provide them with dictionaries and other items to help ease their
transition into life in Albany.
This event is free and open to
all members of the peace community. You will have the opportunity
to make a tax deductible donation to support the Iraqi families as they
begin new lives, as well as the Iraqi student who will be studying at
Union College as part of the Iraqi Student Project
(www.iraqistudentproject.org)
If you cannot attend, checks for
support of the refugee families can be made out to the Islamic Center
of the Capital District, memo line: “ Iraqi Refugee
Project”, and mailed to ICCDNY, 21 Lansing Rd. N., Schenectady,
12204. To contribute to the Iraqi student at Union College,
please make your check out to Union College, memo line:
“Restricted to account #45841”, and mail to Records, Attn:
Kathleen D. McCann, Union College Schenectady, NY 12308.
Donations to the Union fund can also be made online:
http://www.union.edu/Alumni and follow the instructions. Please include
the memo: “Restricted to account #45841”
For more information contact: Carole Ferraro, 518.463.0095, cferraro@hotmail.com or Elaine Hills, 518.439.8262.
3rd Annual Picnic for Peace, Grafton State Park
Sunday, July 13, 9:00 AM till Dusk
Grafton State Park, Grafton MY
Entertainment will include Mother Mcrees, with singer Laura Baboulis at 2:00 pm!
We have reserved Rabbit Run Pavillion near
the water at Grafton State Park, Grafton NY again this year to have a restful day for the Peace and Justice
Community. Come one, come all, bring friends and family,...all ages
welcome. Bring a dish to share, your bathing suit, hiking shoes,
kayaks, canoes and plan to enjoy the beautiful park, lake and each other. Musicians, poets, all talents welcome! More to come
but for now mark your calendar and pass it on! We will also have
another Peace award!
Please
bring your own place setting and plan to take home any recyclables that
you bring to the picnic. We would like to try to have as little
garbage as possible and limit that to compostable food waste.We would
like to make this a carry in, carry out event so that we can add sustainability to our theme. Thanks for your efforts to help us achieve this goal. See the Stop Trashing the Climate website, which "provides compelling evidence that preventing waste and expanding
reuse, recycling, and composting programs — that is, aiming for
zero waste — is one of the fastest, cheapest, and most effective
strategies available for combating climate change. "

4th and Fireworks Festival
Friday, July 4, Noon - 10:00 pm
Empire State Plaza
Albany
Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace will have a booth and will be selling our
usual assortment of t-shirts, books, bumper stickers and
buttons. NEPAJAC will be leafleting on issues such as : Ending the
War on Iraq, No war with Iran, Climate Change, Single
Payer Health Care and more. Wendy Dwyer will be selling END THE WAR! yard signs. We invite Capital Region
groups that advocate for Peace and Justice, to join us and are
hoping there will be some street theater. This is an event that
draws 20,000 or more people. Let's all be there to remind them
that: War is Not the Answer!! Information:
391-2830.

BNP Film Night: Orwell Rolls in His Grave
Thursday, July 3, 6: 45- 8:45 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Film
presentation of: Orwell Rolls in His Grave. ( 103 minutes) From BBC:
"If Fahrenheit 9/11 lit a match under the Bush administration, this
homemade documentary about the manipulation of the media by America's
ruling elites solemnly stokes the resulting flames of angry discontent.
Filmmaker Robert Kane Pappas's long-winded yet terrifyingly bleak
Orwell Rolls In His Grave argues that the mainstream American media are
no longer the voice of American freedom. Instead, they're part of a
repressive political power structure that has uncanny parallels with
the dystopian world of George Orwell's novel 1984... Exploding the myth
of the American media's liberal bias, the film asks tough questions:
why, in March 2003, did 51% of Americans believe that Saddam Hussein
was personally responsible for 9/11? Why did CBS hurriedly drop a
BBC-led story about electoral irregularities in Florida after the
subject of the allegations - Governor Jeb Bush - denied it was true?..." Join us. More information
391-2830.

NEPAJAC : Summer Peace Events Planning Meeting
Monday, June 30, 6:30 -8:30 pm
Albany Public Library
161 Washington Avenue, NY
North East Peace and Justice Action Coalition Meeting: What's Next and how can we build on the success of our March 22 Walk for Peace and the Conference? One of the greatest strengths of our recent events has been that members
of the many peace and justice organizations in the Capital Region,
worked
together to create these events. Join us as we discuss what we would like to do next to STOP THE WAR!!
Join us. More information
391-2830.

June 21 -22, Clearwater Festival: Great Hudson River Revival. Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace will be tabling again this year at the Clearwater Festival at Croton-on-Hudson.
This
is a wonderful event that brings together people all over the
Northeast. The events is packed with wonderful music, awesome food,
art, crafts and a variety of activists. The list of vendors,
exhibitors and activists is impressive and includes: Climate
Crisis Coalition, Combatants for Peace, Green Peas ( local food
advocates), Iraq Veterans Against the War , Health Care Education
Project ( advocating for universal healthcare), NY Green Fest,
Veterans for Peace and many more. If you would be willing to help
staff our BNP table for a couple of hours during the weekend, while you
are visiting Clearwater, please send an email to Trudy: tquaif@yahoo.com More information
391-2830.


Cost of War Project
Monday, June 9, 5:00 - 6:00 pm
Bethlehem Vigil
Four Corners Intersection of Kenwood and Delaware Avenues, Delmar
The
American Friends Services Committee Cost of War Banners will be at the
Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace vigil on June 9. Bring your sign or
use one of ours. Stay for a few minutes or an hour.
Let's stand together for peace. 391-2830 for further
information.

Iran
and The Threat of War: Speaker- Leila Zand, Iran Program Director for
the Fellowship of Reconciliation & Film- “Bam 6.6
Humanity Doesn’t Have Borders”
Thursday, June 5, 6: 45- 8:45 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Film Showing: “Bam 6.6 Humanity Doesn’t Have
Borders”which
explores the humanity of the Iranian people through the prism of the
devastating 2003 earthquake that struck at the heart of Bam, an ancient
Iranian village. After the film, Leila Zand, Iran Program Director for the Fellowship Of Reconciliation, will speak about the threat of war with Iran. For more information: 518-439-1968

Filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
Friday, June 6, 7:00 pm
Sanctuary for Independent
Media
3361 6th Avenue, Troy NY
Sharmeen Obaid-Chenoy will discuss her more recent projects and show her new film "The Lost Generation" (2008)" . At 27 she is the youngest ever nominee for the
Broadcast
Journalist of the Year Award. Five of Obaid-Chinoy's films concern her native Pakistan, but she has
also made documentaries about women in Saudi Arabia, Native American
women in Canada, illegal abortions in the Philippines, Muslims in
Sweden and the ill-treatment of Zimbabwean migrants in South Africa.
Her portfolio is a global tour of gender oppression and social
injustice." Excerpt from the Guardian, June 4, 2007 The photo is from "The Lost Generation" (2008)" Co-sponsored by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace and the Sanctuary for Independent Media. More information: 439-8262

10th Annual May Day Celebration
Thursday, May 1, 5:00 - 9:00 pm
Prospect Park, Congress St. (Route 2) just east of Troy
Troy, NY
blic Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
The
10th Annual Capital District May Day Celebration of International
Workers Day. This year’s theme is “Single Payer Heath
Care.” Among the speakers are: Martha Livingston, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor at SUNY Old Westbury who gives courses on US
healthcare and comparative healthcare systems, and has lectured widely
on healthcare reform; and Dr. Andy Coates, Secretary of the local
chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), member
of the national board of PNHP and a local activist for peace and
healthcare reform. Other speakers and entertainment to be announced; in
addition there will be short video screenings and tabling by local
organizations. The event is free & open to the public; refreshments
will be available. TheHudson-Mohawk May Day Committee includes members
from the Troy Area Labor Council, Solidarity Committee of the Capital
District, The Eighth Step, New York Labor History Association, the
Albany Chapter of United University Professors, Bethlehem Neighbors for
Peace, the Upstate New York International Workers of the World, area
labor unions and other activists. The Committee has planned educational
and entertaining events on Labor history and current social justice
issues held on May 1 throughout the Capital District for the last ten
years. May Day is the International Workers’ Holiday celebrated
in most industrial countries in the world. It began in the United
States in the 19th Century, growing out of the struggle for the 8- hour
work day and the Chicago Haymarket Massacre in 1886. For more
information about the May Day 2008 Celebration contact Dan Wilcox,
518-482-0262, email: dwlcx@earthlink.net; or Art Fleischner, 518-
273-2759, email: alad8@verizon.net or go to the Hudson-Mohawk May Day Committee website.

Film Night: Mother Jones: American's Most Dangerous Woman & Made in LA
Thursday, May 1 , 7:00 -9:00 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Mother Jones: America's Most Dangerous Woman (2007, 24 minutes) is a documentary about Mary Harris Jones, an
amazing labor organizer of the early 1900's . The
documentary shows how Mother Jones' organizing career influenced the
history of early 20th century United States. Quote from
Mother Jones: "I asked a man in prison once how he happened to be there, and he said
he had stolen a loaf of bread. I told him if he had stolen a railroad,
he'd be a U.S. Senator." Made in L.A. (2007, 70 minutes) jumps forward a century to
follow the remarkable story of three Latina immigrants working in Los
Angeles garment sweatshops as they embark on a three-year odyssey to
win basic labor rights from a trendy clothing retailer. Variety called it "a rousing true story of solidarity, perseverance, and triumph." In recognition of May Day, the International Workers’ Holiday. A discussion will follow the films. More information 391-2830.

NEPAJAC : Peace and Sustainability Conference Highlights & Review
Monday, April 28 , 7:00 -8:45 pm
Albany Public Library, 1st Floor Auditorium
161 Washington Avenue, NY
NEPAJAC Meeting. If you missed the conference
and would like to find out more about it and enjoy some of
the highlights, or if you did attend and would like to discuss
and provide feedback, please join us. Steve Wickham will
review his Modern
Day Pamphleteering workshop and talk with us about the carbon offset that we have
purchased. We may have time to watch the 15 minute video that was
highly acclaimed by attendees of the Sanctuary for Independent media
workshop. Hopefully people who took photos or recorded events
will have some of these recordings to share as well. We
will take some time to review what went well at the conference and how
we could improve. The final topic of our meeting will be: What's Next and how can we build on the success of our March 22 Walk for Peace and the Conference? One of the greatest strengths of the event was that members
of most of the peace and justice organizations in the Capital Region
worked
together to create a conference that covered a variety of issues and
gave the participants options. Join us as we discuss what we would like to do next to STOP THE WAR!! (
Photo shown was taken at the April 12 Conference of Cindy Sheehan,
Jason Peterson, Veteran for Peace, and members of the Iraq Veterans
Against the War, attending the conference.) More information
391-2830.

Food Not Bombs co-founder Keith McHenry
Thursday, April 17 , 7:30 pm
Humanities Building, Rm. 132
SUNY Albany
Food Not
Bombs co-founder Keith McHenry will give a presentation about the
history of the movement and the many things it has accomplished around
the world. He will show a dvd about his work in Africa and talk
about how to start a Food Not Bombs group. Keith has spent over 500
days in jail for feeding the hungry. Amnesty International declared him
a "Prisoner of Conscience" and worked for his unconditional release.
Today Food Not Bombs is a global movement sharing vegetarian food with
the hungry and working for peace and social justice. Keith has visited
Food Not Bombs groups in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, Australia
and the Middle East and will share his experiences of cooking and
feeding the hungry. BNP is a co-sponsor.

Reading from the anthology "Post Traumatic Press 2007: poems
by veterans"
Thursday, April 3, 6:45 - 8:45 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Bethlehem
Neighbors for Peace, Veterans For Peace & Post Traumatic Press
presents a reading from the anthology "Post Traumatic Press 2007: poems
by veterans", edited by Dayl Wise. The featured readers will
include Dayl Wise, Jim Murphy and Dan Wilcox. "Post Traumatic
Press 2007: poems by veterans" was put together to tell the stories of
veterans with direct experience of the military. For some,
the intense experience of war can only be expressed in poetry, while
others are driven by the need to say something openly political. The
contributors includes veterans from World War II, the Cold War,
Korean
War, Vietnam War, peace time and the current wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Copies of the anthology will be available and
proceeds supports Veterans For Peace. This event free and open to
the public and will include an open mic for community poets.
For more information, call 391-2830.
Planning Meeting for Upcoming 5th Anniversary events in Capital Region
Thursday, March 20, 7:00 pm
Unitarian Universalist Society
405 Washington Ave, Albany, downstairs, Room B3-B4

5th Anniversary March Against the War: Remembering the Fallen
Saturday, March 22,1:30 pm
March to begin at West Capital Park
Albany
This
march for peace highlighted the following demands:
1. Support the Troops, Bring Them Home Now
2. Reparations for the Iraqi People
3. Money for Jobs, Health Care, Education, Community Needs, Not Occupation
4. Full Benefits for Returning Veterans
5. Restore Constitutional Government
6. Stop the Torture
7. No War with Iran
Endorsed by: Students Peace
Action Network, Students for Workers Rights, Woman Against War,
Veterans for Peace, Interfaith Alliance for Peace, First Unitarian
Universalist Society of America in Albany, Bethlehem Neighbors for
Peace and more. Sponsored by Northeast Peace and Justice Action Coalition
(NEPAJAC). More Information: 518 439-1968 or 518 391-2830

Film and Discussion: In the Valley of Elah
Sunday, March 16, 5:30 - 8:00 pm
Bethlehem Town Hall
455 Delaware Ave, Delmar
In the Valley of Elah (100 minutes) is a film about veterans returning
from Iraq. The story is based on actual events and reveals the real
price that our veterans pay for giving up a piece of their humanity to
the war machine. Following the film will be a discussion .
Phyllis Alberici of the New York State Defenders
Association will discuss the legal issues common to many Iraq
veterans. Cost: Free More Information: 391-2830

Film and Discussion: Maxed Out
Thursday, March 6, 6:30 - 8:30 pm
Bethlehem
Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Maxed
Out ( 87 minutes, January 2006) takes viewers on a journey deep inside
the American style of debt, where things seem fine as long as the
minimum monthly payment arrives on time. With coverage that spans from
small American towns all the way to the White House, the film shows how
the modern financial industry really works, explains the true
definition of "preferred customer" and tells us why the poor are
getting poorer while the rich keep getting richer. Hilarious, shocking
and incisive, Maxed Out paints a picture of a national nightmare which
is all too real for most of us. Speaker to be announced.
"The size of our problem out
there is very large. I regret to say that the word billion does not
encompass the nature of the problem." -Alan Greenspan. Cost: Free
More Information: (518)391-2830

The Situation in Iran-
Film:
“Bam 6.6 Humanity Doesn’t Have Borders” and Speakers:
Scott Ritter, Fatemeh Keshavarz, Jahangir
Golestan-Parast
Saturday, March 8, at 2 PM
Unitarian Universalist Society of Albany
405 Washington Ave., Albany , NY 12206
Film Showing: “Bam 6.6 Humanity Doesn’t Have Borders” which explores the humanity of the Iranian people through the prism of
the devastating 2003 earthquake that struck at the heart of Bam, an
ancient Iranian village. Followed by a panel discussion on the
situation in Iran. Speakers: Scott Ritter: former
chief UN weapons inspector in Iraq and prominent critic of the US war
on Iraq and threats towards Iran. Fatemeh
Keshavarz: Iranian author of the book; Jasmine and
Stars, reading more than Lollita in Tehran. Jahangir
Golestan-Parast: Director of the film; Bam 6.6 Humanity Doesn’t
Have Borders
Sponsored by: Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace
– www.bethlehemforpea ce.org, Fellowship Of
Reconciliation – www.forusa.org, Women Against War –
www.womenagainstwar .org, US Tour of Duty -
www.ustourofduty. org
For more information: 518-439-1968
Benefit Concert for Iraq Veterans Against the War: Winter Soldier Project
Saturday, March 1 , 7:00 pm
Northern Lights, 1208 Route 146, Clifton Park
A concert to raise funds for Iraq Veterans Against the War's project
"Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan" which will take place in
Washington DC March on 13 to 16, 2008. Veteran and civilian survivors
of the modern conflicts in both countries will give public testimony
and share the eyewitness stories "... to confront the policy makers
with the unvarnished truth about what they saw and did in Iraq."
Mother Mcrees, a funk rock jam band from Albany NY played at the
Sep 29th Syracuse Peace Rally, and were so impressed by the IVAW
members that they wanted to help out further. They gathered three other
bands; Alta Mira from Clifton Park, Deep Chemistry from Orange County,
and Cooper Union from Albany, to put on a benefit show at the club
Northern Lights. Cost: $8 advance tickets, $10 at the
door. Contact: 518 765-4386, or via the email address : info4co@yahoo.com . Sponsored by: Veterans for Peace, Iraq Veterans
Against the War.
Vietnam Veteran Richard Boes
Monday, February 25, 6:30 pm -8:00 pm
Java Jazz Cafe, 318 Delaware Avenue, Delmar, NY
Vietnam Veteran Richard Boes will read from his book: The Last Dead Soldier Left Alive. For more information call Java Jazz at 439-1727.
Anniversary Vigil For Peace
Friday, February 15, 6:00 pm
4-Corners ( Kenawood and Delaware Avenues), Delmar
WE
WILL GATHER TO DEMAND A PROMPT END TO THE WAR IN A SOLEMN CANDLE-LIGHT
PROCESSION TO THE BETHLEHEM TOWN HALL.Bring candles or flashlights.
Immediately following the procession we will show a 56 minute film
“Think Peace: Portrait of a 21st Century Movement” in the
Fellowship Hall of the Delmar Reformed Church, which is on Delaware
Avenue immediately past the four Corners. "We urge all people who want
peace to join us at the Four Corners in Delmar (Delaware and Kenwood)
at 6 PM on Friday, February 15th, 2008. Let's renew our commitment to
peace and once again illuminate the winter sky with the flame of
peace." -Joe Lombardo

Iran: Personal Experiences, Reflections, and Suggestions for Action
Thursday, February 7, 7:00 - 8:30 pm
Bethlehem Public Library
451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
People-to-People Mission to Iran. Barbara Spring and Priscilla
Fairbank traveled to Iran in December 2007 with Fellowship of
Reconciliation (www.forusa.org) as part of a citizen diplomacy
effort. They will share their experiences, photos, and discuss
issues they encountered. Come with your questions and see if
their experiences match your own impressions.. Cost: Free More
Information: 391-2830

Film and Discussion: Redacted
Friday, February 1 and Saturday, February 2, 8:00 pm
Sanctuary for Independent Media
3361 6th Avenue, Troy NY
There
will be audience discussions following each screening of the film:
Friday night--with Dr. Edward Tick (author of the groundbreaking book
"War and the Soul,and founder of Soldier's Heart, practicing
psychotherapist specializing in veterans with PTSD) and Dan Black, Iraq
Veterans Against the War. Saturday night--with Dan Black, Iraq
Veterans Against the War.
De Palma won the Silver Lion for Best Director at the 2007 Venice Film
Festival for this film, a fictional story inspired by true events. Redacted is a unique cinematic experience that pushes viewers to radically
reconsider the filters through which we see and accept events in our
world, the power of the mediated image and how presentation and
composition influence our ideas and beliefs.Centered around a small
group of American soldiers stationed at a checkpoint in Iraq, Redacted alternates points of view, balancing the experiences of these young men
under duress and members of the media with those of the local Iraqi
people, illuminating how each have been deeply affected by the current
conflict and their encounters with each other. Sponsored by Sanctuary for Independent
Media and co-sponsored by Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace. Tickets are $5-$10.
Call (518) 272-2390, email info@MediaSanctuary .org, or visit
www.MediaSanctuary. org for directions and more information.

Film
: War Made Easy
Saturday, January 26, 7:00 - 9:00 pm
Social
Justice Center
33 Central Avenue, Albany NY
War
Made Easy: How Presidents & Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death
(2007, dirs. Loretta Alper and Jeremy Earp, 72 mins., http://www.warmadeeasythemovie.org/
) A new documentary featuring Norman Solomon and narrated
by Sean Penn, chronicling how propaganda has been used to sell wars
to the public. Sponsored by The Solidarity Committee of the
Capital District and co-sponsored by BNP and Peace Action.
Cost: Free

Film and Discussion: SiCKO
Thursday, January 3, 6:30 pm
Bethlehem Public
Library, 451 Delaware Ave, Delmar
Michael Moore's latest documentary compares
the US healthcare system to
the free universal health coverage in Canada, England, France and
Cuba. Following the film, Dr. Andrew Coates, Bethlehem
Neighbors for Peace member, local physician and secretary of the
Capital District Chapter of Physicians for a National Health Program http://www.pnhp.org/, will tell us more about
Single Payer Healthcare and lead a discussion on this very
critical issue. More Information: ( 518) 391-2830
"SiCKO: 18,000 Americans will die this year simply because they're uninsured. According
to the Institute of Medicine, "lack of health insurance causes roughly
18,000 unnecessary deaths every year in the United States. Although
America leads the world in spending on health care, it is the only
wealthy, industrialized nation that does not ensure that all citizens
have coverage." Insuring America's Health: Principles and Recommendations, Institute of Medicine, January 2004.http://www.iom.edu/?id=19175"
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