P o rtla n d © b scru cr Martin Luther King Jr. Special Edition Jan. 13, 1999 c5 The Peacemaker And The Machine self, the community, even the world costs, medical care, supervision, and how he chooses to react within monitoring and a decrease in crimes. that world. The application o f this Apparently, we know what doesn’t political method o f nonviolence on work and we know it well.Part o f the the part o f the Eastern Indians To­ answer is going to the true source of day, the British people within the what are the contributing factors that commonwealth and the Eastern Indi­ come into play to create the behav­ ans have a mutual friendship based iors. Let’s address the ones that we on total equality.The great Martin can. Let’s go to the schools in the Luther King saw the need for man to nation and begin to seriously edu­ overcome oppression and violence cate the children on the meaning of without resorting to violence and op­ verbal and physical abuse. W hat the pression. After his trip to India, he force o f violence means and its im­ was convinced more than ever before pact. A realization needs to take place that Gandhi’s nonviolence, truth- that humiliation and defeat is not force and love method for social re­ truly winning, it is losing...M artin form had been what he had been Luther King said, “It is the evil that we seeking for so many months. Over are seeking to defeat, not the person the centuries, men have sought to victimized by evil.” discover the highest good. It has Gandhi was probably the first per­ been the chief quest o f ethical phi­ son in history to lift the love ethic of losophers King believed, “that love Jesus above interaction between in­ is the most durable power in the dividuals to a powerful and effective world.” “He who loves is a partici­ social reform. It was a powerful ele­ pant in the being o f God and he who ment in uplifting the thoughts of man. hates does not know God.” He altered the way man views him­ B y S ophia K at Historically, there have been the peacemakers, great men with great words and through these words came great deeds. The peacemakers have used something positive, yet potent - a uni fied force that can be channeled for maximum results and without in­ jury to others. They have pursued nonviolent methods for conflict reso­ lution through compromise, negotia­ tion, organized resistance, non-co- operation, civil disobedience and civil based defense. Gandhi, simply stated, that he knows no other way. ’ The way clearly being one o f Nonviolent Resistance. Nonviolent Resistance as a philoso­ phy is a distinctive way o f acting and thinking that typically permeates the entire being, but like all things it is developed by practice. Another as­ pect o f G an d h i’s philosophy is Satyagraha which means holding on to the truth and therefore, literally is the use o f truth as a force. In that it makes people see the truth as op­ posed to untruths. This is a powerful force in its own right. A force o f true peace, goodwill, brotherhood, jus­ tice. It is not some negative chaotic, dark force lurking in the shadows, it is one o f light not o f wrongs, but o f right. Critics would argue that the prison system is one that uses fear, force and punishment to maintain order and the oppression is the out­ come. The prison system is one that is a politically charged arena and a costly one at the spending staggering bil­ lions o f tax dollars. If we continue to drain our resources at this rate, there is reason to evaluate. The never end­ ing increasing costs ofbuilding more prisons - the key word here is in­ creasing costs created by a system that is an outworn form, that is having its final spasms struggling to main­ tain itself before it is forced into change. If the prison system was working effectively and to its full potential, then we would clearly see decreased costs in terms o f food, housing, court costs, transportation In 1849, the Oregon Territorial Legislature passed the Exclusion Act (repealed in 1926), which banned “Negroes and Mulattoes” from the Oregon Territory. This year, one hundred and fifty years later, Oregon Uniting will acknowledge Oregon's discriminatory history, condemn the attitudes that led to that discrimination and acknowledge the people of ALL races and ethnic backgrounds who have worked for positive change. “Whereas, situated as the people of Oregon are, in the midst of an Indian population, it would be highly dangerous to allow free Negroes and mulattoes to reside in the territory or to intermix with the Indians, instilling into their minds feelings of hostility against the white race, therefore: Be it enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the territory o f Oregon that it shall not be lawful for any Negro or Mulatto to come into or reside within the limits o f this l territory.. ” Martin Luther King was arrested sixteen times.