Barefoot in the War of Ideas for Human Rights

The challenge for our generation is how to fight barefoot in the global war of ideas in support of our universal human rights.  We must learn how to fight such a war of ideas without the traditional weapons of military, political, and even foreign policy campaigns of might, hate, and cunning. The magnificent goal of seeking real change requires real courage and real compassion, not just angry bluster, momentary adrenaline, and the temporary satisfaction of outwitting an opponent.

The war of ideas for our unqualified, universal human rights is one that must equally challenge anti-human rights ideologies, such as totalitarianism, religious extremism, racism, and misogyny.  But while it may challenge such ideologies, a real struggle for human rights does not seek hate and violence against those who hold such ideas, but seeks to change their hearts and minds.  We seek to challenge ideologies, not reject individuals as human beings.  We seek change with an outstretched hand, not an upraised fist.

The question is: do we really believe in our unqualified, universal human rights?

While this is a secular issue, there is a useful analogy in religious text.  There is an example of the barefoot warrior described in the Bible of Joshua in Jericho.  When faced with an angelic commander from God, Joshua asks the angel  (thinking at first it is a man) – are you on our side or the side of our enemies? The angel replies that he is on God’s side, and demands that Joshua takes God’s side, and remove his sandals as he was now standing on holy ground.  Removing one’s sandals required true faith, as while a soldier could lose his shield and weapon, without his sandals (especially in such rough territory), he could not even run away.  But he was not defenseless – he had something more powerful, he believed in something greater than himself.

sandals-2

In the secular war of ideas for universal human rights, we also need to remove our sandals and be barefoot in the rocky hills of humanity.  It is not enough to ask others if they are on our side on any given issue.  We must be on the side of universal human rights for all of humanity.  If we are on the side of our unqualified, universal human rights, then we must be on the side of humanity, even those we don’t agree with, even those on “the other side” of our ideological struggle.  Our universal human rights are also their rights too.  We are not just on “our side,” but we are on “their side” too as human beings.

This requires faith – not only just in our unqualified, universal human rights, but also in humanity itself.  Do we believe in our universal human rights?  Do we believe that humanity is worth fighting for?

Certainly the past could give anyone pause in answering.  We have seen and continue to see great atrocities, the Holocaust, global genocides, global terrorism, continents swept by hate, fear, and senseless violence.  It is understandable that anyone might ask, how can you expect the best from your fellow human beings?

But to march as a barefoot warrior on behalf of our shared universal human rights, we have to believe that together we can change.  For the future of our descendants, we have to believe that humanity is worth the struggle.  What we focus our minds on is what we will surely realize.  If we focus on hate, then we are certain to attract hate.  If we focus on love, then we must believe that we will attract love.

I have urged many times, for us to Choose Love, Not Hate – Love Wins.  It is easy to cynically dismiss this as impractical philosophy.  It requires real courage to believe in the power of love.  It requires real compassion to believe that Love truly does Win.  It is only once we start to make this a part of our lives that we can begin to become a barefoot warrior for human rights.

When we challenge ideologies that defy our human rights and that promote hate, we cannot be a barefoot warrior for human rights and respond to those who promote such ideologies with our own hatred, mocking, and violence.  We have to leave those childish things behind.  We have to grow up as human beings, if want to be barefoot warriors, responsible for equality and liberty.  It is time to be men and women, and to answer the clarion call to our generation for compassion, not just echo the anger of frustration and impatience.

To reach the vistas that are possible together as human beings, we must break the ball and chain of hate and fear that drag us all down.  When we urge our fellow human beings to release the burden of hate and fear from their hearts, we are asking them not just to release that burden from themselves, but also from ourselves as well. Their burdens are our burdens in the grand challenge for humanity to reach towards equality and liberty for all.

Much of the world has changed, and we can reach more of the world than ever before.  Such global communication abilities have given us great power as human beings.  But with great power, comes great responsibility.  We have an opportunity to continue the long march started by so many champions of justice for so many individual circumstances, but this time, not just for one identity group, but in the name of equality and liberty for all.  Never before did those who came before us have the opportunity to reach so much of the world in a single generation.  But with new technologies and a vastly expanded globalism, we now have the opportunity to reach countless others who never had the hope to believe in our shared universal human rights.

Will we rise to the challenge?

Will we dare to have the courage to begin a barefoot march for the universal human rights for all?

Some will ask, will this march for human rights end totalitarianism now, will it end racism now, will it end religious extremism and promote pluralism now, will it end misogyny now?  The answer to that is both yes and no.

A march for human rights can reach some hearts now, but we know we have a long way to go in this generational struggle.  But the march begins with the first steps — within us.   If we end such hate and such disrespect for human rights within ourselves, then we have begun the march as a barefoot warrior for human rights.

It is the march itself for our fellow human beings rights that is the living example we set, the living testimony as to what we can achieve together in respect and love.  We can demonstrate that there is another path to our future, another choice beside endless hate and endless violence.

It is the march itself that can reach out to others and help others realize that we are not bound to deny the human rights of others.  We are not bound to the hopeless cynicism that humanity cannot change.  We are not bound to distrust, disrespect, and the disease of hate.  We have a choice.

We can choose love, not hate.  We can choose to be responsible for equality and liberty.

We can choose to leave our sandals on the rocks and believe in our fellow human beings.

sandals-rock

Orange Ribbon for Universal Human Rights - Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
Orange Ribbon for Universal Human Rights – Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

June 13 – Washington DC: “Never Again” to Hate – Freedom Plaza

On Sunday June 13, 2010, at 2 PM, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) invites Washingtonians to a public event to remember the June 10, 2009 attack on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and to remember the loss of Stephen Tyrone Johns.  Choose love, not hate.

Stephen Tyrone Johns Will Not Die in Vain (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)
We Will Remember Stephen Tyrone Johns Sacrifice and Courage (Photo: U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum)

The attack by white supremacist and Holocaust denier James Von Brunn on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum on June 10, 2009, was based on hate.  We will urge our fellow Americans to Choose Love, Not Hate.  We will urge our fellow Americans to say “Never Again” to such hate.

(Flier for distribution: Microsoft Word format flier 1, Adobe Acrobat format flier 1, Word format flier 2, Adobe Acrobat format flier 2).

We will meet at the Freedom Plaza in Washington DC, near where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. worked on his speech “I Have a Dream,” and will stand united in our diverse religions, ethnicity, and races.  We will stand united for equality.  We will also say “Never Again” to hate.

Bullet strikes are seen in one of the doors to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum after a shooting left a security officer dead and the gunman wounded in Washington Thursday, June 11, 2009.(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
"Never Again" to Hate. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

We will remember black security guard Stephen Tyrone Johns who was shot to death on June 10, 2009 while on duty defending a museum that stands in remembrance to the Holocaust.  We vow that his death will not be in vain, but that such sacrifices will remind us of the need to be ever-vigilant and defiant against the forces of hate that seek to spread in Washington DC and throughout America.

As those who promote hate seek to create ever-increasing numbers of hate groups in America, our message to them is that America will never retreat on hate.  But we don’t answer hate with hate. Instead of an upraised fist, we offer outstretched hands and hearts to those who do hate, to urge them to release the burden of hate from their hearts, and join us in defending the universal human rights and dignity of all people.

We urge all – Choose Love, Not Hate.  Love Wins.

We also urge all to make a gift to the USHMM Stephen Tyrone Johns Summer Youth Leadership Program Endowment Fund.

Rally Logistics:

— Date: Sunday, June 13, 2010

— Time: 2 to 4 PM Eastern Daylight Savings Time

— Location: Freedom Plaza, Washington DC, 20004 – on Pennsylvania Avenue NW between 13th and 14th Streets NW

— Contact: Jeffrey Imm, info@realcourage.org, 301-613-8789

The Freedom Plaza in Washington DC is named in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., who worked on his “I Have a Dream” speech in the nearby Willard Hotel. In 1988, a time capsule containing a Bible, a robe, and other relics of King’s was planted at the site.

Directions:

Map Showing Location of Freedom Plaza in Washington DC

Street Level Photographic View of Freedom Plaza Area

— Washington DC Metro Subway Stop: Metro Center (Central Station – for Red, Blue, Orange Lines)

Washington DC Metro Subway Planner Tool

Walking Directions for Metro Center Subway:

— Metro Center Metro Station to Pennsylvania Ave NW & 14th St NW:

1. Exit station through 13TH ST NW & G ST NW entrance.

2. Walk approx. 1 block S on 13th St NW.

3. Turn right on Pennsylvania Ave NW.

4. Walk approx. 1 block W on Pennsylvania Ave NW.

— Driving Directions (see end of posting for Driving Directions to National Theater)

— Parking lots: the nearby National Theater reports the following parking lot areas include:

— PMI

— 1220 E Street, NW – Enter on E Street between 12th and 13th Streets

— 424 11th Street, NW

— 1325 G Street, NW – Enter on G Street between 13th and 14th Streets

— QUICK PARK

— 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW – Enter on 13th Street between E and F Streets

— Freedom Plaza is an open air plaza which is in front of The National Theater, whose address is 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004.  Directions to Freedom Plaza are essentially not much different than going to the front of the National Theater (National Theater driving directions, street map of area, parking directions, Metro directions).

Map of the Area Around Freedom Plaza
Map of the Area Around Freedom Plaza

What if it Rains?

It is summer.  It rains, and hopefully it will not be raining at 2 PM.

But if we get caught in a thunderstorm, we will simply walk across the street under the cover of the National Theater marque, which is literally across the street at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004.

If we have to speak there on the street, then we can also do that as well.  The National Theater has no shows that day, and we have submitted an Assembly Notification for that location with the Washington DC police, as a fallback alternative.

The photo below shows Freedom Plaza on the RIGHT and the National Theater marquee on the LEFT.  We just walk across the street.

What if it Rains?  If we have a brief thunderstorm, will stand under the shelter in front of the National Theater (Left), which is right next to Freedom Plaza (Right)
What if it Rains? If we have a brief thunderstorm, will stand under the shelter in front of the National Theater (Left), which is right next to Freedom Plaza (Right)

DRIVING DIRECTIONS TO NATIONAL THEATER:

FROM MARYLAND AND NORTH OF D.C.
ROUTE #I- 95 SOUTH
Pass Capital Beltway (I-495)
EXIT #22 – BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON PARKWAY
EXIT RIGHT TO ROUTE #50 WEST – TOWARD WASHINGTON
Becomes New York Avenue
Continue about 10 miles
LEFT ON 4TH STREET, NW
RIGHT on E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM SPRINGFIELD AND SOUTH OF D.C.
ROUTE #95 NORTH
EXIT ROUTE #395 NORTH
EXIT 12TH STREET, NW
Stay in Left Lane
LEFT ON E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM BALTIMORE AND EAST OF D.C.
BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON PARKWAY – ROUTE #295 TOWARD WASHINGTON
EXIT RIGHT TO ROUTE #50 WEST – TOWARD WASHINGTON
Becomes New York Avenue
Continue about 10 miles
LEFT ON 4TH STREET, NW
RIGHT on E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM SOUTH ARLINGTON AND ALEXANDRIA
RTE #1 NORTH OR #I-395 EAST
EXIT (Or from Route #I-395 Continue) ONTO 14TH STREET BRIDGE INTO DOWNTOWN D.C.
RIGHT ON PENNSYLVANIA AVE, NW
LEFT ON 13TH ST. NW ONE BLOCK TO E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is to the left at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM ANNAPOLIS AND THE EASTERN SHORE AND ROUTE #50
ROUTE #50 WEST TOWARDS WASHINGTON
Becomes New York Avenue
Continue about 10 miles
LEFT ON 4TH STREET, NW
RIGHT on E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th and 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

UPPER MARLBORO, ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE AND SUITLAND AREA
SUITLAND PARKWAY WEST
EXIT ROUTE #395
Follow signs toward Maine Avenue and Richmond/Downtown exit)
EXIT 12TH STREET NW – DOWNTOWN
LEFT ON E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM FREDERICK, GAITHERSBURG, WEST OF D.C.
ROUTE #270 SOUTH
At the Beltway – Route #495, follow the signs to Northern Virginia
Cross Bridge.
EXIT RIGHT TO GEORGE WASHINGTON PARKWAY.
EXIT RIGHT AROUND TO THEODORE ROOSEVELT BRIDGE ON LEFT
STAY IN MIDDLE LANE TO CONSTITUTION AVENUE
Go 12 blocks.
LEFT ON 12TH STREET, NW
LEFT ON E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM UPPER D.C., CONNECTICUT AVENUE OR 16TH STREET
SOUTH TO H STREET, NW – OR FROM 16TH STREET SOUTH TO K STREET, NW
RIGHT ON 13TH STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is to the left at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM FAIRFAX, NORTHERN VIRGINIA SUBURBS, AND ROUTE #66
ROUTE #66 EAST TOWARD D.C.
CONTINUE STRAIGHT ONTO THEODORE ROOSEVELT BRIDGE
STAY IN MIDDLE LANE TO CONSTITUTION AVENUE
LEFT ON 12TH STREET, NW
Go two blocks
LEFT ON E STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

FROM GEORGETOWN and KEY BRIDGE
M STREET, NW, EAST
M STREET BECOMES PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AS IT ANGLES OUT OF GEORGETOWN
LEFT ON 17TH STREET, NW
Go one block
RIGHT ON H STREET, NW
RIGHT ON 13TH STREET, NW
Parking lots on E Street between 12th and 13th, and on 12th or 13th between E and F Streets.
E Street becomes Pennsylvania Avenue at 13th. The National is to the left at 1321 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW.

June 7 Media Reports Associated with Gaza Ships

June 7 Media Reports Associated with Gaza Ships

Israel: Known terrorists on flotilla

(Iran/Gaza)  Report: Iran to send ships to Gaza
— Iranian Red Crescent planning two aid ships this week

Iran raises Gaza threat by vowing to challenge Israel’s blockade

Turkey calls on Israel to accept probe into raid

(Turkey) Today’s Zaman: “IHH responds to Israeli accusations of terrorism”

(Turkey/U.S.) Schumer Wants Probe into Turkish Flotilla’s Terrorist Ties

Diplomats Ponder How To Investigate Events Leading To Deadly Israeli Raid

Daily Telegraph: “IHH releases pictures of bloody Israeli commando after Gaza raid”
— IHH group linked to radical Islam issues photos of injured Israeli soldiers

US Jews to hold flotilla protest