From Quaker Faith & Practice – December 2022

I have often been asked how we handle the fact that peacemaking involves having a relationship, often a close relationship, with people who are committed to violent solutions to their problems. Do we tell them we disapprove of what they are doing or urge them to repent and desist? And if we don’t, how do we square this with our principles? For my part I reply that I would never presume to criticise people caught up in a situation I do not share with them for the way in which they are responding to that situation. How could I, for example, preach to the oppressed of Latin America or Southern Africa? Nevertheless, I explain that I do not believe in the use of violence as either effective or moral; my job is to try to help people who can see no alternative to violence to find a substitute …

—Adam Curle, QF&P 24.35
Adam Curle was the first professor in the School
(later Department) of Peace Studies, established in 1973 largely through Quaker initiative, in the University of Bradford.


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Forty-Three Newsletter • Number 524 • December 2022
Oxford Friends Meeting
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