The student-led movement to end mass atrocities.

Take Action to Influence the Presidential and VP Debates Now!

On September 26th and October 2nd, Jim Lehrer and Gwen Ifill of PBS will each moderate a presidential and vice-presidential debate. It’s our responsibility to make sure that both moderators ask the candidates about their Darfur policies.

We’re calling on all activists to write letters to Gwen Ifill and Jim Lehrer urging them to ask a question about Darfur. Address letters to each moderator at:

MacNeil/Lehrer Productions
2700 South Quincy Street
Arlington, VA 22206

To increase the impact of your letter, take the time to handwrite it. Handwritten letters demonstrate a personal commitment to stopping genocide, and hundreds of letters from you, members of your chapter, and student activists across the country will make a powerful statement to Ms. Ifill and Mr. Lehrer, one they cannot possibly ignore.

Letters can be as personal as you’d like them to be, but feel free to follow this format:

Dear Mr. Lehrer,

My name is Maggie Tiernan. I am a senior at Wellesley College in Massachusetts and a member of STAND, the student-led division of the Genocide Intervention Network.

I am writing to request that you ask the Presidential Candidates a question about their policies on the Darfur genocide during the September 26th debate you are moderating in Mississippi. In 2004, you asked Senator Kerry and President Bush about their policies on Sudan, and, four years later, the issue is still of great importance.

Since Congress and President Bush declared genocide in Darfur over four years ago, not enough has been done to stop the atrocities. Senators Obama and McCain must understand the importance of responding to the genocide in Sudan. STAND comprises over 1,000 college and high school chapters of student leaders across the country, and we can’t let the Presidential candidates forget about genocide.

Thank you for all your efforts,

Maggie Tiernan.

For tips on writing letters, more info on the moderators, or background information on the debates, email advocacy@standnow.org.

Once you’ve sent in your letters, let us know by emailing advocacy@standnow.org. We have a chance to make a real impact on these crucial debates and ensure that they don’t ignore genocide!

 

Harry Potter and the Fight to End Genocide

WRock for Darfur was a benefit event combining the anti-genocide movement and Harry Potter fandom to raise funds for and awareness of the refugees of Darfur, hosted by the JUUstice LeagUUe of Poughkeepsie who are a chapter of both STAND and the Harry Potter Alliance.

There was live music there; we had wizard rock (wrock) bands such as Nagini, Luna Lovegood Band, and The Moaning Myrtles (three of the wrock bands dropped out the day before due to a family crisis), and some local bands came to play: George Woods, Race to the Finish, The Rhodes, and Futu Futu. We had two truly phenomenal speakers come. The first was Andrew Slack, the creator of the Harry Potter Alliance, and Danny Kadishson from the Genocide Intervention Network. Both were very inspirational to me and re-motivated me to keep doing my part to help end the genocide. We also had a Darfur table with info, a petition, a call-in lemonade stand, and some Save Darfur merchandise. And then there was food, homemade crafts, an artist drawing portraits, and a bouncy castle—in the shape of a panda!

At the end of the day we raised over $4,000! Half of that is going to the Genocide Intervention Network’s Civilian Protection Program and the other half is going to the Jewish World Watch (JWW) Backpack Project.

I think the most gratifying aspect of putting on this event for me was seeing the impact it had on people and watching our words really hitting them. One of my friends who volunteered there said it was THE best day of her summer and that she just felt so good being there. A lady in her early 30’s came up to Jamie (one of the organizers) saying that she hadn’t known anything about Darfur and happened to come down for the day. She told Jamie that she had just donated $3 after hearing that it would protect a women in a refugee camp for a year and now plans to save up so she can buy a backpack full of schools supplies to send down there (through the JWW, a backpack costs $36). And now my friend wants to dedicate his biking trip across America to Darfur! It was stories like these that gave me chills—we really had made a difference. All four of us couldn’t stop smiling the whole day—we were on such a happy high!

So let me tell you a little about the Harry Potter Alliance and why it rocks. The Harry Potter Alliance is a social justice group that connects Harry Potter fans from around the world to fight the Dark Arts in the real world.

“Huh?” was my first reaction when hearing about HPA. But, if you think about it, there are a surprising number of parallels between Harry Potter and the world we live in. For example:

  • Genocide, Poverty, AIDS, and Global Warming are ignored by our media and governments the way Voldemort’s return is ignored by the Ministry and Daily Prophet.
  • People are still discriminated against based on sexuality, race, class, religion, gender, ethnicity, and religion just as the Wizarding World continues to discriminate against Centaurs, Giants, House Elves, Half-Bloods, Muggle borns, Squibs, and Muggles
  • Our governments continue to respond to terror by torturing prisoners (often without trial) just as Sirius Black was tortured by dementors with no trial
  • And my favorite: how the Ministry of Magic’s response to Voldamorts return was to turn a blind eye. Everything’s alright, there’s nothing to worry about. It was up to a student club, Dumbledore’s Army, to fight against Voldamort. So just as our government today has turned a blind eye to the genocide in Darfur, so has STAND risen up to end it.

The JUUstice LeagUUe’s plans for the future so far are to host another WRock for Darfur and to pat down our Darfur Lunch Simulation and take it around to places of worship and libraries. A Darfur Lunch Simulation basically takes participants through a meal in the life of a Darfurian refugee in hopes that they will have a better and deeper understanding of what life is now like in Darfur. We also hope to do some lobbying after hearing how effective it is.

After putting on this event, I learned that it’s true: if you’re passionate about something, it can be done. Because we really didn’t know anything about putting on an event and just learned along the way. And finally after MANY hours of work, it all came together, blooming with education, inspiration, fun, and hope.

-Nava Silverstein
 

Moving Past Generation Q

Today’s youth have been nicknamed Generation Q– the Quiet Generation. While this may seem ironic to those who have dedicated themselves to the anti-genocide movement– or any of the other critical movements of our time– the reality is that too often today’s youth are associated with ipods, video-games, MTV addictions, and perhaps most tragically, apathy.

Why should we, as anti-genocide activists, care about such stereotypes when we are perhaps already doing “our part” to enact global change? I would argue that as much as I like to scoff at such stereotypes we should care because on some level they are true. Youth voter registration, up until this election, has been at a low. Youth involvement in politics, advocacy, and community service has declined in many parts of the US. And perhaps youth are not to blame for this– it’s hard to envision yourself as an empowered individual when represented by a government you don’t respect, foreign policy you don’t believe in, and a consumer culture that places you as an object of consumption instead of agency. If you are reading this, chances are that you are an engaged citizen (at least sufficiently engaged to read the STAND blog), but unfortunately you may be in the minority.

Moving beyond our role as students in the anti-genocide movement, it is critical that we also re-position ourselves as agents of social change. Not only do we stand to gain legitimacy for our movement by allying ourselves with our predecessors, but we stand to learn that even in moments of frustration and doubt, youth have always been at the forefront of calls for social justice. As youth, we have the unique possibility to enter this world and challenge that which is so often taken for granted– to imagine change in the way that we fundamentally conceptualize human rights, healthcare, education, the environment, and a host of other issues.

We have a high standard to live up to when we consider those who have gone before us in the times of the Civil Rights movement, Vietnam, apartheid in South Africa, and women’s rights (just to name a few). My mother, who grew up in small town North Carolina, still remembers when the Ku Klux Klan marched in the downtown Easter parade as well as the first day that she was joined by African Americans in school. She still remembers the importance of college not just as a means of education, but as a means of avoiding the draft, and the automatic assumption that she, as a young girl, would never earn as much as her male counterparts. These days were not as long ago as they may seem. But the norms my mother recounts are ones that were fought– and changed– by youth movements such as SNCC, the anti-war protests, international condemnation of South Africa, and the insistence that women deserved equal treatment under the law.

Today these changes remain incomplete when we look around at continued racial inequality in the US, a controversial war in the Middle East, and the remaining gender disparities in opportunity. But when we look at how far we have come, the change is an enormous one– one includes a fundamental alteration in the way that people view and accept the state of our society. As STAND activists and as youth activists it is critical that we look upon these movements as reminders that change can and does happen, and that as youth we have the potential to serve as agents of that change.
Our challenge– mine and yours– is to redefine ourselves, moving from the quiet generation to a generation of ideas and actions like those before us. This is what the past generation did for us and this is what the past generation proved can be done.

And because one day, I want my daughter to ask me about the days when genocide occurred in the same way that I ask my mother about the days where the KKK marched through her neighborhood. I want to hear the mix of sadness and wonder and disgust in her voice as she imagines a past world so antiquated as to allow the slaughter of innocent civilians, the way I imagine a backwards world where white supremacy was paraded about. And finally, I want to be able to know that in the back of her mind brews another vision of the world– one more just than the one I helped create for her– and I want to know that she is thinking of the many ways that she can change that world for her own children.

-Anna Ninan, Northeast College Regional Outreach Coordinator

Get On the Call Tonight!

Tonight, Tuesday, September 9th, STAND will hold a National Conference Call  for all student activists at 8 pm EDT. We’ll discuss our plans for the year including the upcoming National Conference, STAND Out Loud, and our fall Advocacy campaign, Call to Candidates, and much more. Most importantly, you’ll get a chance to get your questions answered by the STAND Leadership Team and give us your feedback and ideas.

So get on the call!  Just dial 269-320-8300 and then press 349902# when prompted.

Register Now for the National Student Conference

You can now register for STAND Out Loud: National Student Conference 2008! The conference will take place November 7-9, less than a week after the election, a perfect time to make an important statement to the new administration.

The conference will equip you with brand-new tools to fight genocide, like fundraising, online organizing tools, and more.  Also, you’ll hear from the experts about the conflicts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Burma and get an update on the situation on the ground in Sudan.  Most importantly, you’ll start to see the connections between all the conflicts and understand why we have to advocate to end all of them.  After the conference, you’ll be completely ready to fight genocide in the next year, wherever and whenever it occurs.

For updates on the conference, keep checking the Blog and the Conference Facebook Group.  We’ll post updates on everything – from speakers, to new workshops, to info on a rally in front of the President-Elect’s transition headquarters!

You don’t want to miss this conference, and space is already filling up so register now!

 

The GI-NET Guide to Appropriations

Check out GI-NET’s new webpage on the appropriations process!

The appropriations process can seem confusing, but GI-NET’s new page clearly lays it out. The appropriations cycle takes place every year, so it’s important to remain vigilant in this area. Knowing more about the process can help us to become more effective advocates for funding related to Darfur, like the peacekeeping budget and funding diplomatic efforts in the region.

Reflections from the Heart of Texas

Last weekend, I attended a retreat meant to train me to be a well-equipped State Outreach Coordinator for Texas! I met some of the funniest, most intelligent people that you will ever meet. But as fellow STANDERs you know we are all pretty much the epitome of kick ass! I cannot begin to tell you how excited I am to kick the year off! Being around so many people as passionate about establishing a constituency of individuals that will no longer allow genocide to take place anywhere in the world is extremely inspirational.

Being able to go to the retreat last weekend allowed me to meet some really awesome people that chapters everywhere will hopefully utilize. We have advocacy, media, education, basically you name what you need and I can most likely find a STAND leader that will help you make everything you do even more amazing. What is really remarkable is the fact that this intricate network of people was established by a few dedicated students in 2004 who realized they had an opportunity to change the world and haven’t slowed down since.

We, the students, are the ones that make the difference! Each student and each chapter are the ones that make STAND such an amazing organization. Students have never been able to organize in such a way, and trying to reach such an extraordinary goal—creating a PERMANENT anti-genocide constituency! I believe more than ever that our goal is a tangible goal. Students are the most creative, innovative, dedicated people in the world in my opinion, and we are equipped with the tools we need to make it happen.

-Katie Malaspina, Texas College State Outreach Coordinator

The STAND Way

As activists we often feel like we are alone in the world and that we are some of the only people that care about making genocide history. However, this outlook on the movement is totally false and thankfully there are other crazy people in this movement (known affectionately as members of the STAND Leadership Team, or SLT) that have no quells staying up till after one in the morning to discuss the ICC indictments and the Responsibility to Protect Doctrine. We are so concerned with moving the movement forward that we seem to lose track of everything else in our lives(sleep included) and can look at our iPods and see that the STAND song has over 100 of plays when everything else only has 5-10.

I spent the last weekend totally living it up in Washington, DC, and I had so much fun! STAND had its Fall planning retreat with all the members of the Managing Committee and the Outreach Team (we are great at filling up a room!) and we put together this totally awesome Fall semester. I have to say that this semester is going to be epic and the upSTANDers across the world will not be let down. Even though we did some amazing things inside the conference room my favorite part of the retreat was hanging out with my fellow STAND Leadership Team members.

My favorite part of STAND is that, we as students, who know how to make people listen to us will work countless hours into making this the fastest and most organized movement in the world today! The wonderful people of the STAND Leadership Team are all students, the STAND chapters are all students, and it is STUDENTS that are calling all the shots. It is students that are juggling STAND, school, work, friends, and everything else to make the world a better place for people so far away that it would take a day of travel to get there.

If you ever feel lonely, call your Outreach Coordinator for your region/state because we know what that feels like to be a student waking up our campuses conscience, and I promise none of us bite (not to mention its impossible to do over the phone).

I will miss our totally amazing retreats in DC this semester but at the same time I cannot wait to make this semester the biggest in STAND’s history and be one step closer to making Genocide a thing of the past.

In Peace, Change, and Activism,

Zach Peirce
Southeast HS Regional Outreach Coordinator

McCain and Obama: Tell Us Your Darfur Plan!

Over the next few months Senators McCain and Obama have the opportunity to develop and present a plan for action against genocide in Darfur.  A plan like this is essential, as it will be the job of the next President of the United States to quickly respond to the genocide with real, concrete actions

It’s up to us to show the candidates that voters want to see a clear plan.  Join a brand-new facebook group that calls on the candidates to tell voters their plan for Darfur! 

We know that students all over the world care about genocide in Darfur; now it’s time to show McCain and Obama!

The STAND Summer Survey is Here!

Check out the STAND Summer Survey!  Just take a few minutes to fill it out, and your voice could help shape the movement for the next year.  You could even win a prize just for filling it out.

Why is it so important to fill out a survey like this?  Because we need to hear your voice.  What makes STAND such a groundbreaking organization is that we are 100% student-run.  Student ideas fuel our campaigns and shape our approaches to other conflicts.  Students on the Leadership Team run the logistics of the organziation.  Student activism across the country and globe inspires us all to keep going.

That’s why it’s so important.  So take a few minutes to let us hear your voice.  We need it.