Contagious Love Experiment
Sun, 22.10.2009 04:10
Iraq War Vets, Josh Stieber and Conor Curran, are biking across the country on a personal mission of peace. They will be making a stop in Ashland,Oregon next week. Hear the amazing story of their journey and how their war experiences spurred this effort.
Thursday, October 29th 7pm
SOU Commuter Resource Center
(SOU Stevenson Union – Room 202, Main Floor; Ashland)
FREE
Two Young Veterans Walk and Bike Across the Country with a Message of Peace
Armed with only backpacks containing essentials and items to document their journey, Josh Stieber and John Conor Curran are on the move.
The Iraq War veterans are traveling across the country on foot and bicycles, spreading a message of peace on what they call the “Contagious Love Experiment.”
A soldier turned conscientious objector, Stieber, 21, decided that if he believed war created more problems than it solved, that he would journey to learn about, promote, and invest his "war-money" to peaceful alternatives. Stieber says one of his inspirations is "a guy who said 'give away your wealth to those in need and love everybody"
This is a very different view of what religion means than when Stieber, a Gaithersburg, Maryland native, with the backing of his conservative church, enlisted in the army as an infantryman based on his religious beliefs.
“My view of strength and duty was that I was right, everyone else had it wrong and one way or another people needed to be forced into what I believed-religion, democracy, etc. and that would make the world a better place. Listening to other perspectives” says Stieber "was what I considered to be weak".
After a 14-month tour in Iraq, Stieber became a conscientious objector.
“When it got to the point to where our strategy seemed like we were trying to out-intimidate the supposed terrorists, I realized that forcing somewhat to agree with you at the point of a gun doesn't change much, when that force is gone, nothing has changed. What does matter is the internal condition which can be guided by love just as easily as fear.” says Stieber.
Stieber started the cross-country journey in Gaithersburg, Maryland on May 28, 2009, and will be stopping in Ashland, Oregon on Thursday, October 29th, 2009 . On his journey, Stieber is attending speaking engagements and visiting a number charities whose objectives he admires and donating to them the money he was paid in Iraq. To date, Stieber has walked from his home in Maryland to Boston to Cincinnati before beginning on foot, visited seven charities, spoken at dozens of venues and encountered the kindness of countless strangers for food, shelter, and wisdom.
“When it is culturally encouraged to be the most recognized, own the nicest stuff, and to beware of somebody possibly doing better than you, it has been extremely refreshing to meet so many people who consider others as important as themselves and have a strong faith in common humanity” says Stieber.
But the journey has not been without contention.
"Some people say that this trip is just me working off my guilt or something and that I simply don't understand how the world works. Most people say it respectfully, but there has been some criticisms stated harsher.” says Stieber.
Traveling with Stieber is Curran, a Perrysburg, Ohio resident and former Marine. Also a veteran of the Iraq War, Curran, 25, served two tours in Iraq before his 2008 discharge. Now a peace activist, Curran felt to join Stieber after learning about the project.
“In this new generation of warfare against an insurgency, time is our enemy’s primary weapon,” says Curran. “The only way to fight back against a weapon like time is with peace, understanding, and an active dialogue. If we continue to fight an insurgency with violence and the U.S. military machine of force, our resources will be devastatingly depleted, while having created a wake of enemies in the process.”
Curran joined Stieber in Toledo, Ohio and is accompanying him on the remainder of the journey. The men plan to reach San Francisco by the beginning of November.
For more information call 541-482-9625 or go to
http://contagiousloveexperiment.wordpress.com/
Sponsored by Ashland WILPF, Rogue Valley Veterans for Peace Chapter 156, Peace House, Collateral Repair Project, Medford Citizens for Peace & Justice, SOU Women’s Resource Center, and SOU Commuter Resource Center.
| Download this article in pdf format >> |
| Add this article to your pdf newsletter selection >> |
| Checkout and Download your PDF-newsletter selection >> |
| Email this article to someone >> |
| Make a quick comment on this article >> |
|
Rally at Fort Lewis to Support GI Resisters 23.10.2009 - 01:18 Check out Seattle IMC and coverage of this past Sundays rally at Fort Lewis in support of GI resisters Travis Bishop and Leo Church. http://seattle.indymedia.org/en/2009/10/274311.shtml
sun> Iraq War resister Tony Anderson released 25.10.2009 - 18:48 Iraq War resister Tony Anderson released from stockade Courage to Resist. October 21, 2009 Last week Army private Tony Anderson was released from the Ft. Sill stockade after serving a full year in prison for refusing to fight in Iraq. Tony, now 20-years-old, was court martialed last November and sentenced to 14 months of confinement and given a dishonorable discharge from the military for "desertion with intent to avoid hazardous duty" and "disobeying a lawful order." He was released two months early for good behavior. Tony refused to deploy to Iraq in July 2008 on the grounds of conscientious objection to war. Courage to Resist supporters contributed $2,200 to pay for Tony's civilian legal defense led by attorney James Branum of Oklahoma. "I know in my heart that it is wrong to willfully hurt or kill another human being. I simply cannot do it. I don't regret following my conscience," he said at his trial as he struggled to compose himself. "I know there must be consequences for my actions and I must accept this fact." rogue imc volunteer> |